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Showing posts from December, 2025
Ponderings with Grok: Should You Avoid Silica, Fillers, and Synthetic Vitamins? Ponderings with Grok: Should You Avoid Silica, Fillers, and Synthetic Vitamins? Some conversations spark deeper questions — especially when it comes to health. This is one of them. Why Some Doctors — Especially Holistic or Functional Ones — Warn Against Silica, Fillers, and Certain Vitamins Different practitioners give different advice. Conventional MDs, holistic doctors, and functional medicine practitioners all raise concerns — just for different reasons. Here’s the clear breakdown. 1. Silica, Magnesium Stearate, and Other “Fillers” Holistic doctors often caution against supplement fillers. Here’s why: Possible gut irritation for people with autoimmune issues, GI problems, or inflammation. Silicon dioxide (silica) is legally “safe,” but not nutritionally useful. Magnesium stearate can slightly affect nutrient absorption if taken in high amounts. Titanium dioxide ...

DART — Dallas Area RAPID Transit? My Bicycle Is Faster!

Why Dallas-Area Cities Are Ready to Ditch DART – And Why They’re Not Wrong Why Dallas-Area Cities Are Ready to Ditch DART – And Why They’re Not Wrong Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) was sold to voters in the 1980s with a simple, seductive promise: get people where they’re going faster and easier than sitting in traffic on I-35 or the Tollway. Build some trains, run some buses, watch the region breathe easier. Forty years and billions of dollars later, the verdict from actual riders is brutal: unless you have literally no other option, DART is almost always slower than driving – and sometimes slower than walking or riding a bike. Now cities like Coppell, Rowlett, and others are openly talking about pulling out of the agency altogether. And honestly? It’s hard to blame them. The Math Doesn’t Lie Let’s take a real-world example that any North Texan will recognize: Drive from Addison to downtown Dallas at 8 a.m.: 30–45 minutes (even in traffic). Take D...

Ohio — Only approved Cannabis In Approved Containers

Ohio Just Criminalized Your Pill Bottle: How “THC Reform” Became a Lobbyist Giveaway Ohio Just Criminalized Your Pill Bottle: How “THC Reform” Became a Lobbyist Giveaway Remember when 57% of Ohio voters said “yes” to legal weed in November 2023? Apparently the Ohio Senate didn’t get the memo. On December 9, 2025, lawmakers rammed through Senate Bill 56, a 300+ page “fix” to Issue 2 that Gov. Mike DeWine is expected to sign any day now. They marketed it as closing the “delta-8 loophole” and keeping kids safe. What it actually does is turn thousands of ordinary Ohioans into felons for things that were perfectly legal last week. Let’s break down the new crimes they just invented: 1. The “Original Container” Felony Buy a pack of gummies from an Ohio dispensary? Congratulations, you now have to carry them in that exact crinkly child-proof bag forever. Dump them into a weekly pill organizer so you don’t accidentally eat five at once? That’s no...

Lessons from Dollar Tree

Spotting the Next Opportunity: A Conversation With Grok About DLTR Spotting the Next Opportunity: A Conversation With Grok Using DLTR as the Example How do you know when a stock is flashing a buy signal? What data actually matters, and what kind of alarms could you set to catch the next October-10th-level opportunity? Below is a full conversation-style breakdown with Grok, using Dollar Tree (DLTR) as the case study. This is based on the question: My Question: “What information would you have needed to tell me that on October 10th Dollar Tree (DLTR) was a good purchase? What alarms could I have set to let me know?” 🧠 Grok’s Answer: What Information Would Have Flagged DLTR as a Buy? On October 10, 2025, Dollar Tree closed at $87.61 , dipping from the prior day’s $89.02. That placed it near the bottom of its short-term trading range, and—looking back from December 2025 when it trades around $120 —that entry delivered roughly a 37% gain in two months. So wha...

Citizens of Port Washington, Wisconsin — Dragged Away

The Night They Dragged Democracy Out of City Hall: A Full Account of the Port Washington Data Center Crackdown December 9, 2025 By Grok, xAI What happened in Port Washington, Wisconsin on the evening of December 2, 2025, was not a riot. It was not a violent protest. It was a middle-aged woman, sitting quietly in her own city hall after her allotted three minutes were up, being physically dragged across the carpet by uniformed officers because she had dared to shout “Shame!” and “Recall!” at elected officials who had just sold her town’s future to OpenAI and Oracle. If you only saw the 30-second viral clip, you missed the two-year backstory, the thousands of pages of secret deals, the coordinated statewide uprising, and the chilling precision with which local government and police shut down dissent the moment it became inconvenient. This is the full story. 1. The Project They Didn’t Want You to Vote On The “Lighthouse Project” is a 902-megawatt hyperscale data center ca...

What's In YOUR Food?

If you eat meat, eggs, milk, or vegetables in America, you need to know about Missouri House Bill 1653. It hasn’t passed yet… but it’s even stronger than most people realize. Here’s exactly what the bill does (straight from the text, no spin): Completely bans the sale of lab-grown “cell-cultured” meat in the state → Growing animal cells in a bioreactor and calling it “chicken” or “beef”? Illegal to sell in Missouri, period. (Only exception: legitimate research that never reaches a plate.) Forces labeling on any food that comes from animals or crops exposed to mRNA or gene-therapy technology → If a cow, pig, chicken, fish, or soybean plant was ever injected with or fed anything using mRNA tech (or similar gene-altering methods), the final food product must carry a clear disclosure label — same size print as the ingredients list. → No label = misbranded = can’t be sold. Gives Missouri the power to inspect and test livest...

Don't Be Deceived

Does “NASA” Secretly Mean “Deception” in Hebrew? The Truth Behind the Viral Claim If you’ve spent any time in certain corners of the internet, you’ve probably seen the claim: “NASA comes from a Hebrew word that means ‘to deceive.’ The space agency is literally named Deception!” It sounds shocking. It fits certain narratives perfectly. There’s only one problem: it isn’t true. Let’s clear this up once and for all. What “NASA” Actually Is NASA is an English acronym coined in 1958: National Aeronautics and Space Administration. That’s it. No hidden meaning, no ancient code. Yes, “nasa” Was Already a Word in English — But It Had Nothing to Do With Lying Long before 1958, “nasa” (or more commonly “nese,” “næss,” “naze,” or “ness”) was an Old Norse and Old English word referring to a headland or cape jutting out into the sea. That’s why you still see British place names like Dungeness , Skegness , and the Naze . It literally meant the “nose” of land. Zero deception ...

Tracking Your Health Means Tracking YOU

The WHO's Digital Health Framework: Vaccination Tracking, AI Surveillance, and the Dawn of Lifelong Global IDs In the evolving intersection of public health, digital infrastructure, and global governance, a new model is taking shape—one that promises efficiency but raises concerns about unprecedented levels of monitoring. On October 23, 2025, the Bulletin of the World Health Organization published “Digital transformation and the Immunization Agenda 2030” , a peer-reviewed article funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (INV-016137). This is not conjecture or internet rumor; it's an official blueprint describing integrated digital health systems intended to link each person’s vaccination history, demographic profile, and health events to a permanent digital identifier—assigned from birth. Supporters describe this as a leap in global health management. Critics view it as the foundation for cradle-to-grave surveillance. This post breaks down the key componen...

Land Of The Free For Me But Not For Thee

Land of the Free (For Me, But Not for Thee) Land of the Free (For Me, But Not for Thee) By Shane Shipman — December 8, 2025 We often speak of America as “the land of the free.” But freedom appears conditional — especially depending on your wallet, your past, and how the law chooses to see you. There are real cases that show how the criminal justice system can impose severe punishments for minor, nonviolent offenses. In 1983, Alvin Kennard took roughly $50.75 from a bakery and, under an old habitual-offender law, ended up serving decades in prison before a judge resentenced him to time served. ( Washington Post — Alvin Kennard ) Other cases are no less stark. The U.S. Supreme Court in Rummel v. Estelle upheld a life sentence with the possibility of parole under a three-strikes style law for repeated nonviolent offenses involving relatively small dollar amounts — a remin...

You Don't Own Nothing

The Devil and the TVA: How One County Fought Back Against a Federal Land Grab The Devil and the TVA: How One County Fought Back Against a Federal Land Grab By Grok, with insights from John Rich's Shawn Ryan Show interview and community voices In the rolling hills of rural Tennessee, where family farms have stood for generations like silent sentinels of the American dream, a modern-day David-and-Goliath battle unfolded. This isn't a tale from the history books—it's happening right now, in Cheatham County, Tennessee. At the center of it? The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), a federal powerhouse created during the Great Depression to bring electricity and progress to the South. But in 2025, for the people of Cheatham County, TVA became synonymous with intimidation, lawsuits, and a chilling reminder: You think you own something? You don't own nothing. This story starts with an 88-year-old woman named Mrs. Nicholson, whose centu...

Committee of 300, Club of Rome, 13 Bloodlines

Club of Rome, the Committee of 300, and the 13 Bloodlines — A Conversation with Grok Posted: December 7, 2025 · Format: conversation You: When I asked Grok to tell me about the Club of Rome, the Committee of 300, and the 13 bloodlines, Grok replied. Can you show that response in a clear conversation format? Grok: Here’s a clear breakdown of the three things you mentioned, separating documented facts from conspiracy-theory claims: 1. The Club of Rome What it actually is: A real, publicly operating think tank founded in 1968 by Italian industrialist Aurelio Peccei and Scottish scientist Alexander King. It is a non-profit NGO based in Switzerland. Most famous for: Publishing the 1972 report The Limits to Growth (written by MIT researchers using system-dynamics modeling). The report warned that exponential economic and population growth on a fin...

Cabana Coffee ☕ Community

From Boarded‑Up Taco Cabana to Second‑Chance Village: A Modest Proposal for the Corner of Northwest Hwy & Shiloh December 2025 • By Shane Shipman There’s a ghost on the corner. A pink‑and‑turquoise shell that used to serve $2 margaritas during happy hour and 24‑hour pre-covid breakfast tacos now sits behind plywood, weeds poking through the cracked drive‑thru lane.  Windows and doors boarded up but the DART 18 and 60 buses still stop there every fifteen minutes, dropping off people carrying everything they own in plastic bags. We don’t need another Jack in the Box. We don’t need another dollar store that sells $6 body wash and nothing fresh. What we need is a solution that simultaneously fixes two problems: a vacant commercial building that’s costing the owner money, and 50–70 neighbors sleeping within a half‑mile who can’t make a job interview in 20 minutes if someone would just give them a chance. ...

Chasing Paper 2.0

The Grand Deception That Nobody Talks About A quiet think-piece — Friend-friendly edition By Shane Shipman • December 6, 2025 We’ve all heard people say “the dollar is fiat” or “money is printed out of thin air.” Most people repeat that, shrug, and go back to scrolling. But almost nobody actually understands what that means — and that’s where the real deception hides. So before I get into the deeper part of this, let’s start with the simple foundation almost nobody learns: 1. Today’s Money Isn’t Backed by Anything Real There was a time when dollars represented gold. That ended in 1971. Since then: $1 does not represent gold $1 does not represent silver $1 only represents belief in the system That’s what “fiat currency” means: money that only has value because the government says it does. If everyone s...

Cortisol And Diabetes — A Relationship To Be Understood

How Cortisol & Chronic Stress Raise Diabetes Risk A clear, evidence-forward explanation • December 6, 2025 The connection between cortisol, stress, and diabetes is real and well-established in medical science. Below is a concise but detailed breakdown of the mechanisms, real-world impact, and practical ways to lower cortisol to protect metabolic health. How cortisol (the main stress hormone) contributes to diabetes When you're under prolonged stress (physical or emotional), your adrenal glands pump out cortisol continuously. That sustained elevation of cortisol affects blood sugar and insulin in several important ways: Increases glucose production (gluconeogenesis): Cortisol stimulates the liver to create new glucose even when it’s not needed, raising blood sugar. Causes insulin resistance: Muscle and fat c...

Private Club — Texas ID required

Can a Texas Bar Really Turn You Away Because You Don’t Have a Texas ID? Published: December 2025 Someone walked in The Island Club on Ferguson Road in East Dallas, handed the door showed his valid ID (MIGHT HAVE BEEN A GREEN CARD), and got told: “Sorry, we only accept Texas IDs.” Ten steps away, the bar literally next door never asked for ID or membership at all. After a lot of digging, here’s the full explanation every traveler, college kid, and new Texan needs to know. No Texas law requires bars or private clubs to demand a Texas ID. Any valid government-issued photo ID (out-of-state license, passport, military ID) is legally acceptable under Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission rules. The Private-Club Loophole in Dallas Dallas County is a patchwork of “wet,” “dry,” and “partially dry” precincts. In many dry or partially dry areas, a normal bar can’t get a liquor license. The workaround? Become a private club with a TABC Private Club Re...

Makes Me Want To Scromit

Alcohol Industry's Dual Approach: Regulation and Acquisition of Cannabis The alcohol industry (encompassing beer, wine, and spirits producers, distributors, and trade associations) has adopted a two-pronged strategy toward the cannabis sector: aggressively lobbying for stricter federal and state regulations (often to limit competition from unregulated hemp-derived THC products like beverages) while pouring billions into direct investments to acquire stakes in cannabis companies. This allows them to shape the market in their favor—potentially capturing distribution rights, imposing alcohol-like taxes, and integrating cannabis products into their existing supply chains. Below, I'll break down the spending based on available data from lobbying disclosures, campaign finance reports, and investment announcements. Note that exact figures for cannabis-specific spending are often bundled with broader advocacy, maki...

Trading Worthless Paper

The Grand Deception That Nobody Talks About A quiet think-piece, December 2025 — By Shane Shipman We all know the dollar is fiat. We repeat it like a meme: “printed out of thin air,” “backed by nothing,” “debt note.” Most people say it, shrug, and go back to scrolling. What almost nobody says next is the truly disturbing part. If the dollar is worthless paper (and it is), then every other major currency trading against it on the forex market must also be worthless paper. Two piles of nothing cannot have an exchange rate. Nothing divided by nothing is not 0.9032 EUR or 145.67 JPY. It is undefined. A mathematical impossibility. Yet here we are, watching grown adults on Bloomberg argue whether the “nothing” will strengthen or weaken against the other “nothings” by two basis points before lunch....