Monday, March 30, 2026

Mission Creep ...



Mission creep applies. The more troops, the deeper the US sinks into the quagmire of it's own making. No plan, hubris rules as no problem, we got this according to the troika of the Orange Menace, Nosferatu (Stephen Miller) and Pentagon Pete because god is on our side and fighting and dying for Israel is the right thing to do, right?


In the FT interview, Trump said that “my favorite thing is to take the oil in Iran but some stupid people back in the U.S. say: ‘why are you doing that?’ But they’re stupid people.”

“Maybe we take Kharg Island, maybe we don’t. We have a lot of options,” Trump said. “It would also mean we had to be there [in Kharg Island] for a while.” The White House and the U.S. State Department didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.

The president then added to the commentary Monday morning, warning that the U.S. would “completely” obliterate Iran’s electric generating plants, oil wells and Kharg Island if the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz is not “immediately” reopened and a peace deal is not reached “shortly.” Iran has not yet commented on Trump’s latest remarks.

Mission creep ...

The arrival of 2,500 Marines and another 2,500 sailors is keeping the number of American troops in the Mideast region at over 50,000 — roughly 10,000 more than usual — as President Trump decides on his next step in his month-old war in Iran.

While it is still unclear just what the Marines, from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, will be charged with, U.S. officials say the president is weighing whether to try a larger attack, like venturing to seize an island or other ground as part of Mr. Trump’s effort to open the Strait of Hormuz.

The narrow waterway, through which around 20 percent of the world’s oil usually traverses, has been largely closed because of attacks by Iranian forces who are retaliating against the U.S. and Israeli war on their country.

Usually there are around 40,000 American troops scattered around at bases and on ships at any time around the region, including in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. But as Mr. Trump has escalated the war in Iran, that number has reached more than 50,000, according to a U.S. military official.


Nosferatu lives

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Onward Christian Soldiers ...


Trump with his eyes closed as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivers remarks during the Cabinet meeting
at the White House on March 26, 2026.

Boots on the ground?



Boots on the ground? This is the existential question because if this happens, it's over. The kill zone is just the beginning as a small coltinngent of 7000 troops vs a massed array of drones, missiles and mines, not to mention Iranian soldiers equipped to the max with serious ordinance reminds one of the Dardanelles disaster in WW I, aka Gallipoli, where Churchill did the ultimate blunder and hundreds of thousands of soldiers died or were injured doing a op just as foolhardy as this one if said incursion actually happens.


The battle






Now think of Trump, Pentagon Pete and 7000 soldiers possibly being deployed on Kharg Island.



I thought so.

Saturday, March 28, 2026

In the eye of the beholder



Interesting study regarding creativity and it's connect to AI. This is SOOOOO subjective because the eye of the beholder remains forever subjective and varied to the max. As a creative guy, the work I do is, on the tech side, realistic but abstract in concept. In painting, it's abstract so in looking at the end result of these entities creating work using the line sets on the left to apply to the art on the right, just about all of the art works for me as the pieces flow. They aren't stiff and many of the examples shown are whimsical and fun in feeling. 


Waiting for Melissa - Acrylic 1974



The same opinion from yours truly applies to this set as well. Not trying to get off the hook but rather just expressing my view because the notion of what constitutes art always remains in the eye of the beholder ... forever. :)

In real time ...


“we’ll just keep bombing our little hearts out”



The art of the flail, of dementia, of malignant narcissism 24/7. It's the appearance of a dead man walking, leaving a legacy of incompetence, corruption and the possibility of Armageddon,
all running lockstep in real time.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Random pix ...

 

Off in the Distance


11:00PM Yet Again


Chasing the light


Open For Dinner


Curvature


A Touch of Indigo

Winter - the big fundemental


Two States of Matter


Wisps


Frozen in Time


Suspension's Bridge

The immediate problem ...


Dark Sun - Vue/Robert E.

Yours truly posted this image before but the pix relates to the current insanity happening in the world as we speak. The Great Filter looms as AI, climate change and the possibility of WW III looms as this civilization moves further into the 21st century and we haven't even discussed the Anthropocene, the 6th major extinction event happening 24/7 due to ongoing environmental collapse driven by pollution, habitat loss and the continued plundering
of the world's resources.


The immediate problem, war with Iran





The insanity gambit


Kharg Island - The third rail option




Question, What is the betting pool for the Orange Menace
to do the unthinkable while receiving a present from Iran?

I thought so.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Knowing something ...



 As often stated in BRT, competency and knowing something at deep level requires effort and commitment as true knowledge and expertise is not a given but AI is giving the illusion that it is. 

Knowing the name of something doesn’t mean you understand it.
We talk in fact-deficient, obfuscating generalities to cover up our lack of understanding.
Richard Feynman

Whether AI ...

For years, we have been outsourcing pieces of cognition so gradually that the shift barely registered. We outsourced memory to search engines after the well-known “Google effect” showed that when people expect information to remain accessible online, they are less likely to remember the information itself and more likely to remember where to find it. We outsourced navigation to GPS, even as research began to show that heavy reliance on it can weaken spatial memory when we have to find our own way. And we outsourced more and more of our social coordination to platforms that decide what we see, when we respond, and how we stay in sync with one another. 

Now we are beginning to outsource something far more consequential: not memory, not route-finding, not scheduling, but thought itself. Or, more precisely, the labor of forming a judgment before expressing one. 

That is the real cultural shift hidden behind the current enthusiasm around generative AI. The technology is often presented as a productivity layer, a creativity booster, or a universal assistant. And yes, in many cases, it is all of those things. But it also creates a dangerous temptation: to confuse frictionless output with actual understanding, and fluent answers with earned judgment. Research from Microsoft Research found that higher confidence in generative AI is associated with less critical thinking, while an open-access study in Acta Psychologica linked greater AI dependence to lower critical thinking. A recent Nature Reviews Psychology commentary put the distinction perfectly: performance gains from generative AI should not be confused with learning.