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Showing posts from March, 2026

Oh Boy. Easier And Cheaper To For Our Government To Borrow

Stablecoins: The Sneaky Way Crypto Is Helping the U.S. Government Borrow Trillions Hey—if you're reading this late at night (maybe here in Richardson, Texas or wherever you are), grab a coffee… or just skim. This is the no-fluff version of a massive financial shift happening right now in 2026. While headlines scream about geopolitics and daily drama, something much bigger—and quieter—is unfolding: Stablecoins are being wired into the heart of American banking… and they’re funneling billions into U.S. government debt. Think of it like this: everyday dollars are getting rerouted through digital tokens to buy U.S. Treasury bonds. The government gets cheaper borrowing Crypto gets legitimacy Traditional banks… start to sweat What Even Are Stablecoins? Stablecoins are digital versions of the U.S. dollar that don’t swing wildly in price like Bitcoin. You send $1 to a company (like Circle for USDC or Tether for USDT) They create 1 digital token on the bloc...

1984 A Surveillance State

Where Is the Line? Surveillance, Technology, and the Death of “Public” Your phone leaks Bluetooth and Wi-Fi signals constantly. Flock Safety cameras automatically capture every license plate, vehicle make/model/color, direction of travel, and timestamp as vehicles pass. Private companies and police departments feed this into massive, searchable databases that log movements over months or years. Ring doorbells, traffic cams, and even vehicle telematics add layers. All of it gets aggregated, queried retroactively, and used to build profiles. The old polite debate was: “Is license plate data public if you're on a public road?” The brutal reality now: When does automated, persistent, aggregated observation cross into accusation—and why does the system so easily shift the burden of proof onto the accused citizen? The Legal Foundation: Expectation of Privacy (That's Been Hollowed Out) It began with Katz v. United States (1967) : the Fourth Amendment protects whereve...

1913

1913: The Year the System Changed 1913: Coincidence… or Installation? 1913 wasn’t just another year. It was a turning point—quiet, legal, and almost invisible to the people living through it. Federal Reserve. Income tax. Major foundations. Policy influence. All within the same window of time. Coincidence… or something more coordinated? The Setup In 1912, the Titanic sank. On board were some of the wealthiest men in America—John Jacob Astor IV, Benjamin Guggenheim, and Isidor Straus. There are claims—often debated—that some of these figures opposed the creation of a central banking system. J.P. Morgan, connected to the ship, canceled his trip at the last minute. One year later, the financial system of the United States changed forever. 1913: The Financial Reset The Federal Reserve Act was...

Sleep Study Brainstorm

Why Aren’t Sleep Studies Done in Hotels? While driving past a sleep lab recently, I had a strange thought. Why are sleep studies done in medical buildings instead of places where people actually sleep? If the goal is to observe how people sleep naturally, the typical setup seems a little backwards. Patients go into a clinic or hospital room, get connected to monitoring equipment, and try to fall asleep in an unfamiliar environment while knowing they’re being observed. That’s not exactly the recipe for a normal night’s sleep. Hotels, on the other hand, are places people already associate with rest. We travel, check in, close the curtains, adjust the thermostat, and wake up somewhere new the next morning. No fluorescent hospital hallways. No medical anxiety. So it made me wonder: why not combine the two? A Different Kind of Sleep Study Imagine a sleep study that takes place in a comfortable hotel-style setting. Instead of a clinical lab, patients stay overnight in a qui...

Programming at 8 years old

Remember When Software Came From a Magazine? Remember When Software Came From a Magazine? Before the internet, before app stores, and even before most people owned software on disks, there was another way to get programs: you typed them yourself. Magazines in the 1980s would print entire programs line by line. Kids like me would sit at the keyboard and type hundreds of lines of code, hoping we didn't make a mistake somewhere along the way. One magazine I remember from childhood was 3-2-1 Contact Magazine , connected to the PBS show 3-2-1 Contact . It was full of science experiments and technology ideas, and occasionally you’d see computer listings you could try at home. Other magazines went even deeper into it. Titles like Compute! , Creative Computing , and BYTE regularly published full programs that readers could type into their home computers. Most of the code was written in BASIC , which came built into many machines at the time. If you had a Comm...

Gas is predicted to go down.

Gasoline Price Forecast: What Experts Expect Over the Next Few Years Gasoline prices are one of the most visible economic indicators for everyday Americans. Unlike many other prices, we see them posted on large signs along major roads. Because of this visibility, even modest changes can feel alarming. However, analysts who closely follow energy markets often see gasoline as part of a larger system driven by crude oil supply, refinery capacity, and seasonal demand. Many recent forecasts suggest gasoline prices may remain relatively stable in the near future. Current Forecasts According to projections from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) , gasoline prices are expected to average just under $3 per gallon in the coming years. The agency notes that increased global oil production and moderate demand growth could help keep prices contained. Consumer fuel tracking service GasBuddy has also projected average gasoline prices near $2.97 per gallon for 2026...

The Needle Tears a Hole

Why Some People Question Vaccine Standards Vaccines are often presented as one of the most thoroughly tested and safest medical interventions available. Public health agencies such as the CDC and the FDA emphasize that vaccines go through clinical trials and ongoing safety monitoring before and after approval. However, many people still question whether vaccines—especially routinely updated ones like the influenza vaccine—are held to the same standards as other medical products. These concerns often revolve around three main issues: effectiveness, safety monitoring, and transparency. This article explores that perspective while also looking at what scientific research and regulatory systems say about the issue. The Concern: Are Vaccines Approved Without Strong Proof They Work? One criticism that sometimes comes up is the perception that vaccines can be recommended based on the idea that they might help, even when their effectiveness varies from year to year. The influe...

Gentlemen Start Your Engines — Fuel Alternatives

From Fryer Oil to Hydrogen: The Wild World of Alternative Fuel Vehicles From Fryer Oil to Hydrogen: The Wild World of Alternative Fuel Vehicles Diesel prices are high, and for anyone running trucks, farm equipment, or just curious about fuel alternatives, it’s easy to start thinking: there’s got to be a better way . And, as it turns out, there are lots of ways — some practical, some experimental, and some downright sci-fi. Let’s take a tour of the wild world of alternative fuels. Everyday Alternatives: What Works Now 1. Biodiesel Made from soybean oil, animal fats, or recycled grease , biodiesel can often be blended with diesel in ratios like B20 (20% biodiesel, 80% diesel). Pros: Renewable, lubricates engines, sometimes cheaper than diesel. Cons: Can gel in cold weather; not ideal for some newer diesel engines. 2. Waste Vegetable Oil (WVO) Old cooking oil from restaurants can be filtered and run in older diesel engines . Pros: Often free, surprisingly rel...

The Benefits Cliff

The Full Benefits Cliff: From Low Income to “Miracle Income” This table shows how multiple benefits interact for a single SSDI recipient in 2026. It includes SLMB (Medicare savings), Extra Help (low prescription copays), behavioral health subsidies (psychiatric visits and meds), and SSDI payments. As income rises, small increases can cause a dramatic net loss. Monthly Income Benefits Lost Out-of-pocket Costs SSDI Adjustment Net Effective Cash Notes $1,500 None $0 Full SSDI (~$1,470) $2,500+ Full SLMB, Extra Help, behavioral health subsidies. Very low out-of-pocket costs. $1,650 SLMB, Extra Help, behavioral health subsidies ~$500 Full SSDI (~$1,470) $1,050–$1,150 Small raise actually results in net loss of hundreds of dollars. $1,825 SLMB, Extra Help, behavioral health subsidies ~$500 ...