Forwarded from Ice Age Farmer
Plastics Crisis: 22% of global plastics supply affected by Strait of Hormuz
Prices have already risen 15% and companies inside supply chains are buying up as much product as they can.
“The uses of petrochemicals are wide-ranging and, essentially, impact everything we use and consume. It would be hard to identify something that didn’t have an oil or natural gas-based component unless it was constructed entirely of wood.”
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/28/iran-war-strait-of-hormuz-petrochemicals-oil-plastics.html
Prices have already risen 15% and companies inside supply chains are buying up as much product as they can.
“The uses of petrochemicals are wide-ranging and, essentially, impact everything we use and consume. It would be hard to identify something that didn’t have an oil or natural gas-based component unless it was constructed entirely of wood.”
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/28/iran-war-strait-of-hormuz-petrochemicals-oil-plastics.html
CNBC
Worried about Strait of Hormuz inflation to come? The world economy has one word for you: Plastics
Worried about consumer inflation to come from Strait of Hormuz closure? The economy has one word for you other than oil: plastics.
Forwarded from NoGoolag
Yemen officially joins fight against US, Israel by firing missiles at occupied territories
The Yemeni Armed Forces says it has officially joined the war against the US-Israeli front in support of the Islamic Republic of #Iran and the Resistance Front in #Lebanon, #Iraq, and #Palestine.
@PressTV
#Yemen
The Yemeni Armed Forces says it has officially joined the war against the US-Israeli front in support of the Islamic Republic of #Iran and the Resistance Front in #Lebanon, #Iraq, and #Palestine.
@PressTV
#Yemen
Forwarded from Brian Berletic's New Atlas Channel
Media is too big
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🇺🇸🇮🇷NEW VIDEO: 1 Month: US War on Iran Escalating Globally - Russia Sees US Aggression Growing into World War
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Forwarded from ResistanceTrench mirror (Dew)
🇮🇳 The global consequences of the US–Israel imposed war on Iran are starting to be felt over time.
Fertilizer plants in India are shutting down due to LNG shortages. India is also the world’s second-largest sugar producer—raising concerns about broader global food supply.
Fertilizer plants in India are shutting down due to LNG shortages. India is also the world’s second-largest sugar producer—raising concerns about broader global food supply.
Forwarded from Jeffrey Peterson - jeff.pro
If you're one of the several hundred learners in the Linux for Beginners class run by this channel, your invitations for tomorrow's Weekend Linux Workshop are being sent out to your e-mail now!
You've probably heard that "the cloud" is just a fancy word for someone else’s computer. It's true. Most of us are forced into using things like OneDrive or Google without even realizing it, and suddenly our private files, banking info, or photos are sitting on Big Tech servers where we don't really control them and others can get our data (China, among others). This week, we’re revisiting taking back your digital sovereignty by setting up your own home server or Network Attached Storage (NAS) which is a powerful step to getting your files OUT of the Big Tech "cloud(s)".
It's a lot easier and cheaper than you might think—you can actually build a basic, secure, private file system using a Raspberry Pi for under $50 if you're technically inclined and on a budget. You might even set up a NAS on a old computer you have in your garage, that you bring back to life, clear off, and re-install linux on.
On that same theme, we’re also diving into NextCloud, which is an awesome open-source alternative that lets you have all the convenience of Dropbox (for beginner to intermediate level Linux users) but on a machine that sits right in your own house under your own rules. We review why Linux is so much safer from the constant headache of Windows viruses and malware. It’s all about getting your data out of their hands and back into yours so your technology finally starts working for you again, instead of for them.
New Linux user? This is the course you need! Inquiries, email: [email protected]
Linux for Beginners streaming video viewers: See you online tomorrow @ 5:00pm Eastern!
You've probably heard that "the cloud" is just a fancy word for someone else’s computer. It's true. Most of us are forced into using things like OneDrive or Google without even realizing it, and suddenly our private files, banking info, or photos are sitting on Big Tech servers where we don't really control them and others can get our data (China, among others). This week, we’re revisiting taking back your digital sovereignty by setting up your own home server or Network Attached Storage (NAS) which is a powerful step to getting your files OUT of the Big Tech "cloud(s)".
It's a lot easier and cheaper than you might think—you can actually build a basic, secure, private file system using a Raspberry Pi for under $50 if you're technically inclined and on a budget. You might even set up a NAS on a old computer you have in your garage, that you bring back to life, clear off, and re-install linux on.
On that same theme, we’re also diving into NextCloud, which is an awesome open-source alternative that lets you have all the convenience of Dropbox (for beginner to intermediate level Linux users) but on a machine that sits right in your own house under your own rules. We review why Linux is so much safer from the constant headache of Windows viruses and malware. It’s all about getting your data out of their hands and back into yours so your technology finally starts working for you again, instead of for them.
New Linux user? This is the course you need! Inquiries, email: [email protected]
Linux for Beginners streaming video viewers: See you online tomorrow @ 5:00pm Eastern!
Forwarded from Wartime Media - Ukraine / Russia / China / Etc
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New York Is Proposing a Massive State-Wide ‘Lights Out’ Rule After 11 PM
The would require businesses and residents to turn off non-essential lighting between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. to conserve energy.
The would require businesses and residents to turn off non-essential lighting between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. to conserve energy.
Forwarded from Ice Age Farmer
Spying on Farmers? the Global Carbon Compliance Grid:
Years ago I covered an Al Gore-backed project called Climate TRACE, which promised to fuse satellite data and other data sources using AI to "detect greenhouse gas emissions" anywhere in the world. "So we can track down that last cow fart!"
Now, the data is live, and public, with resolution down to 1km². That means:
- Emissions from individual buildings can be tracked
- Fertilizer application — especially nitrogen (which they want to ban!) — can be inferred from spectral analysis
- CROPS can be identified, field by field.
And what's crazy is, not only are they spying on every square kilometer on earth, they are publishing the data for anyone to look at. That means Climate TRACE needn't bother with enforcement; that is left to governments, insurers, or ESG-based funding. Automated fines or denying funding is a mere flip of a switch from here.
BOTTOM LINE: the mechanism to enforce the carbon emissions or fertilizer restrictions that WEF et al are discussing is already in place.
https://climatetrace.org/data
- @iceagefarmer
Years ago I covered an Al Gore-backed project called Climate TRACE, which promised to fuse satellite data and other data sources using AI to "detect greenhouse gas emissions" anywhere in the world. "So we can track down that last cow fart!"
Now, the data is live, and public, with resolution down to 1km². That means:
- Emissions from individual buildings can be tracked
- Fertilizer application — especially nitrogen (which they want to ban!) — can be inferred from spectral analysis
- CROPS can be identified, field by field.
And what's crazy is, not only are they spying on every square kilometer on earth, they are publishing the data for anyone to look at. That means Climate TRACE needn't bother with enforcement; that is left to governments, insurers, or ESG-based funding. Automated fines or denying funding is a mere flip of a switch from here.
BOTTOM LINE: the mechanism to enforce the carbon emissions or fertilizer restrictions that WEF et al are discussing is already in place.
https://climatetrace.org/data
- @iceagefarmer
Forwarded from Cyberspec News (Tony Cyberspec)
Footage of 2 x MQ-9 Reaper drones shot down at:
1. Shiraz area in the Fars province
2. East of the Strait of Hormuz.
1. Shiraz area in the Fars province
2. East of the Strait of Hormuz.
Forwarded from Cyberspec News (CP)
March 27, 2026. Prince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia.
A combined Iranian attack—simultaneous ballistic missiles and drones—strikes one of the most heavily defended bases in the region.
The toll: an E-3 Sentry AWACS completely destroyed on the ground. Several KC-135 tankers destroyed. At least 12 American soldiers wounded, several seriously.
The verified photos are indisputable: the aircraft cut in half at the radar dome. The tail pulverized. The AN/APY-2 radar—the system’s brain—reduced to debris.
👁️ An irreplaceable eye in the sky
The E-3 Sentry is no ordinary aircraft. It is the eye and brain of U.S. air warfare.
Unit cost: ~$500 million.
Role: early warning, air coordination, real-time command across the entire theater.
Iran did not target the aircraft at random. It specifically targeted the AN/APY-2 rotating radar—the most critical and irreplaceable component.
Its successor, the E-7 Wedgetail, is not yet fully operational. The replacement will take years.
📡
This is not an isolated incident. It is the culmination of a methodical campaign.
As early as the beginning of March, Iran had already destroyed or damaged several AN/TPY-2 radars—the heart of the THAAD system—at multiple bases simultaneously:
▪️
▪️
▪️
AN/FPS-117 long-range radars were also hit.
Result: partial blinding of regional missile defenses — even before the interceptors are depleted.
Iran does not attack at random. It follows a precise sequence:
▪️ Phase 1 — Blind ground-based radars → THAAD AN/TPY-2 destroyed
▪️ Phase 2 — Blind airborne radars → AWACS destroyed today
▪️ Phase 3 — Strike when the target can no longer see anything coming
The combined loss of ground and air sensors drastically reduces the redundancy of the U.S. surveillance network.
Early warning capabilities degraded.
Air coordination compromised.
Increased reliance on the few remaining assets.
🔍 Conclusion
This is not just the destruction of a $500 million aircraft.
It is proof that Iran is methodically targeting the coalition’s eyes—before aiming for its muscles.
When you can no longer see—you can no longer defend yourself.
When you can no longer defend yourself—the window opens.
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Forwarded from Cyberspec News (CP)
The Iranian Army's air defense system shot down a large UAV in the Strait of Hormuz area. It was reported to be an American MQ-9, but in my opinion, it looks more like this version of the Israeli UAV from the Heron-1/Heron-TP family.
After the appearance of higher-quality footage, I agree that the UAV here looks more like a small American RQ-21A..
After the appearance of higher-quality footage, I agree that the UAV here looks more like a small American RQ-21A..
Forwarded from Information Liberation
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No Kings protest organizer Leah Greenberg after being confronted on Soros funding: "Look, I think there's a long history of anti-Semitic tropes suggesting that shadowy Jewish billionaires are behind genuine movements in this country."
Leah Greenberg and Ezra Levin's org, Indivisible, as a matter of public record has received millions of dollars from George Soros and Reid Hoffman. Many have noted their muted opposition to the Iran war/Gaza genocide.
Leah Greenberg and Ezra Levin's org, Indivisible, as a matter of public record has received millions of dollars from George Soros and Reid Hoffman. Many have noted their muted opposition to the Iran war/Gaza genocide.
The war was unpopular. We understood that. Yet we had no say in the decisions that sent us there. We were ordered to go. We went. When we came back, the country’s frustration with the war found the nearest available target.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/mar/26/ordered-vietnam-never-welcomed-back/
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/mar/26/ordered-vietnam-never-welcomed-back/
The Washington Times
We were ordered to Vietnam; we were never welcomed back
When my plane landed at Norton Air Force Base in January 1972, the captain came on the intercom before anyone stood up and gave us the welcome home briefing.
That is what National Vietnam War Veterans Day asks of us. It asks us to do the harder thing, to see these men clearly, to hear what they have carried in silence and to reckon honestly with what this country owes them.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/mar/26/ordered-vietnam-never-welcomed-back/
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/mar/26/ordered-vietnam-never-welcomed-back/
The Washington Times
We were ordered to Vietnam; we were never welcomed back
When my plane landed at Norton Air Force Base in January 1972, the captain came on the intercom before anyone stood up and gave us the welcome home briefing.
Forwarded from Demographics Now and Then
The average farmer in Malaysia is 60; in the Philippines 56. Taking South-East Asia as a whole, a third of all farm workers are 55 or older, up from less than a fifth a decade ago. As fertility rates crash & young move to cities the problem is growing.
https://www.economist.com/asia/2026/01/22/ageing-farmers-threaten-south-east-asias-growth
https://www.economist.com/asia/2026/01/22/ageing-farmers-threaten-south-east-asias-growth
The Economist
Ageing farmers threaten South-East Asia’s growth
Few parents want their offspring to end up working in the fields