31 December 2025

The major stories of 2025 -- and a look ahead

Usually the most important things that happen are processes that unfold over time, not single events.  Here, in my view, are the most major stories of 2025:

1.  The erosion of Russian and jihadist power by Ukraine and Israel respectively.  This seems indisputably first in importance.  Russia and jihadism are the most dangerous enemies of the West, though China is also a rising threat.  Russia spent 2025, like the previous three years, failing to conquer Ukraine while losing hundreds of thousands of soldiers in the process, its incompetent and corrupt leadership feeding them into the battlefield meat grinder with seemingly no regard for casualties.  At the same time, Ukraine increased its attacks on military and economic targets deep within Russia, seriously damaging its oil industry in particular.  The June drone attack on Russia's long-range nuclear bombers, hitting targets all over the country, was a devastating and humiliating blow -- and directly reduced Russia's power to harm the West.  However the war ultimately ends, Russia seems certain to emerge seriously weakened.

At the same time, Israel's retaliatory campaign for the October 7 atrocities has wiped out most of Hamas's leadership and wrecked its infrastructure in Gaza, while Hezbollah remains weakened after the 2024 pager attack which killed or crippled thousands of its terrorists.  Israel's twelve-day June attack on the Iranian theocracy's nuclear program probably did substantial damage, though it's always difficult to know with such a secretive and well-protected project.  The attack could have been even more effective if Trump had not pressured Israel into stopping before the job was done (Trump's own strikes on a few Iranian targets at the end of the war probably had little effect).  Much of the Gaza strip has been left looking like Dresden and Berlin did at the end of World War II, and it seems fairly likely that Israel will end up permanently taking some "Palestinian" territory, as Poland did with some German territory in 1945 -- a dire warning to others who might be considering allowing jihadists to operate from their land.

2.  Progress against global warming.  While much of the US right wing absurdly continues to deny the very existence of the problem, the rest of the world is dealing with reality.  The global energy transformation is happening incredibly fast.  Advancing technology has now made clean energy cheaper than fossil-fuel energy, even without government subsidies or other assistance.  As a result, use of solar power is growing rapidly throughout the less-developed world, where most of the human population is, because it's less expensive.  Several major countries' greenhouse-gas emissions have already peaked and begun to decline slightly, and China -- by far the world's largest greenhouse-gas emitter -- is clearly approaching that point.  (This video sums up the situation well.)  In India, too, fossil-fuel use is dropping rapidly as clean energy grows.  The EU has reduced emissions by 37% since 1990, while its economy grew by 70%, showing that progress on this issue need not mean a fall in living standards.  Even in the US, 92% of the new power-generating capacity added in 2025 was clean energy.  There's still a lot of work to do, but we are beating this thing.

3.  Trump's impact on international relations.  His first term might have been dismissed as a fluke, but his re-election has made it clear that the US is an unreliable partner.  As a result, many allies are rapidly working on becoming more self-reliant.  Germany is re-arming on a massive scale, with Poland doing the same.  Japan has elected a strongly nationalistic prime minister who is taking a tougher line on China.  There is persistent talk of Poland possibly building its own nuclear arsenal, and it would be astonishing if Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, and even Germany were not at least thinking about doing the same.  Even the UK has stopped sharing Caribbean drug-smuggling intelligence with the US because it doesn't want to be implicated in the US's random attacks on Venezuelan boats.  On the economic front, China is investing billions in trade infrastructure in South America, indicating that it intends to permanently shift to importing from there the agricultural products it used to buy from the US, in response to Trump's tariff warfare.  Even after Trump is gone, there will be no "back to normal" on the global scene.

4.  US mass resistance to TrumpismThis post provides a good overview.  The No Kings protests included some of the largest nationwide rallies in US history.  Local groups arose in several cities to disrupt ICE operations and protect potential targets.  The Tesla Takedown rallies and boycotts punished Elon Musk for the depredations of DOGE, while a wave of cancellations of Disney+ forced the reinstatement of Jimmy Kimmel.  Most of this activity happened spontaneously, without the involvement of politicians and with little leadership of any kind.  It was a true grassroots mass movement.

5.  The backlash against "AI".  Public rejection of this intrusive, plagiaristic, and environmentally-destructive technology reached the boiling point in 2025.  With growing desperation, corporations tried to force "AI" into every possible gadget and program, while more and more people refused to use it and popular tech sites spread the word on how to remove or disable it.  Awareness grew of how error-prone it is, while companies which replaced human workers with "AI" quickly learned that it couldn't do the job.

o o o o o

The future is always uncertain, but here are two important events which are more likely than not to happen during 2026:

1.  The death of Trump.  His increasingly incoherent and deranged social-media posts and public speeches make it clear that his dementia has grown substantially worse over the last year, and there are signs of failing physical health as well.  At 79, he's obese, eats a horribly unhealthy diet, refuses to exercise, and reacts to crises in a way that subjects him to frequent high stress.  I will be surprised if he is still alive when the 2026 election arrives.  The country needs to be prepared for a Vance presidency soon, not as a remote possibility in 2029.

2.  The collapse of the "AI" bubbleThis video gives a good overview of the problem.  "AI" companies are spending hundreds of billions of dollars while generating very little revenue, and this is unlikely to change -- "AI" doesn't work reliably enough to be used for anything really important, and the public increasingly doesn't want it and certainly doesn't want to pay for it.  However, absurd hype has grossly over-inflated the stock prices of these companies, accounting for almost all the rise of the stock market in the last year or two.  When it finally dawns on investors that these companies will never make a profit and that their stocks are in fact worth almost nothing, the stock market will crash and those entities which have been investing hundreds of billions in the "AI" companies to support their spending will be ruined.  The resulting economic collapse will probably not be as bad as the Great Depression, but it will certainly be far worse than the 2008 crash or the dot-com collapse.

Even if both of these things happen, the impact of the "AI" crash will be much greater than that of Trump's death.  It will dominate the 2026 and 2028 elections, outweighing all other issues.  The party which convinces the public it has the best plan for recovery will sweep the board.

[Image at top:  One of the numerous Ukrainian attacks on Russian oil infrastructure]

30 December 2025

Image round-up for 30 December 2025

More pictures from my collection -- click any image for full size.

[For the link round-up, click here.  For the "shithole country" video, click here.]












An optical illusion -- the horizontal bars are actually parallel







A map of our galaxy according to current astronomical knowledge (best at full size) -- the galaxy's average diameter is around a hundred thousand light years, or six hundred million billion miles


Hohenzollern castle, Germany





The Milky Way (cross section of the galaxy) visible above Queenstown, New Zealand


Budapest, Hungary


The Acropolis of Athens, in Classical times and now



Germany


Olympus Mons on Mars, the highest mountain in the solar system, almost three times higher than Mount Everest


Stirling castle, Scotland









28 December 2025

Video of the day -- the real shithole country


The truth behind the gleaming photos and propaganda statistics.  2:42 to 4:38 is a skippable ad.

27 December 2025

Link round-up for 27 December 2025

Various interesting stuff I ran across on the net over the last week.

o o o o o

Here are some signs of the times.

Santa has come to this house.  And he's using this road.

You're doing that wrong.

Confuse the alligator.

Idiot.

This motorcyclist is very angry.

Looks like colonists from Lilliput are building a settlement.

Catch the wave.

Do not labor for the oppressor.

There's an extended version of that "scary giant Santa" mini-video that's been going around.

Where did Krampus come from?

These are the Vijayanagara temples of southern India (NSFW blog, requires Blogspot login).

This is Phobos, Mars's larger moon, seen transiting in front of the planet.

How well you sleep affects your longevity even more than diet or exercise.

This new drug appears to stop the progress of Alzheimer's, based on tests in mice.

Even the fireplace now has irritating pop-up ads.  (It's a virtual one -- this never used to happen with an actual fireplace with actual wooden logs.)

ChatGPT has some special Christmas tie-ins that don't work.

Who is this meant for?  Having all that crap going on around me would make me nauseous in a couple of minutes.

Mozilla claims it will provide a "kill switch" so users can easily get rid of all the "AI" stuff in Firefox.  I'll wait and see.  This doesn't sound good -- it may be time to start thinking about switching to a different browser if Firefox gets completely buggered up.  See the comments for a few suggestions.

This program claims it can remove all the "AI" from Windows 11.  I can't evaluate it, but I'd suggest doing some research before you use it in case it also damages something.

This is what happens when you rely on a chatbot for information.

YouTube is about to start buggering up certain videos with "AI".  If you're a video creator, here's how to stop it.

Here are some tests of methods for blocking facial recognition technology.  Here's a follow-up video with more tests.  Despite the notes, I could not find a third video in the series.

A former CIA officer explains how to disappear.  Becoming truly untraceable sound pretty challenging.

Users are furious at the invasion of "AI" into "smart" TVs.  Read the comments too.

Social media algorithms are poison.

"AI"-generated video ads on TikTok are selling seeds for plants that don't exist.

The Cybertruck is a death trap, partly due to features other Teslas also have.

Batocchio at Vagabond Scholar blog has posted 2025's Jon Swift Roundup -- "the best posts of the year, chosen by the bloggers themselves".

The fall of Bitcoin is good news for most people.

German engineer Michaela Benthaus has become the first wheelchair user in space.

Here's a real-life Christmas story from 1967.

The  percentage of Americans who drink alcohol has fallen to 54%, the lowest in nearly a century.

Hollywood embraced "AI" this year, but nothing good came of it.

This is the world of the Amish.

Uber has been approving some convicted felons to serve as drivers, resulting in several rapes of passengers.

An experiment with an "AI"-run vending machine turned into a ludicrous fiasco.  Just imagine relying on this failed technology for anything important.

See Stephen King make a fool of himself.

The FBI has thwarted a major planned terrorist attack in Los Angeles.

Missouri voters are suing to stop the Republican gerrymandering of their state.  It seems that red-state voters are more willing to defend democracy than California voters, who flat-out voted in favor of election-rigging last month.

Mamdani's incoming administration in New York is infested with anti-Semites and terrorism supporters.

Younger people are giving up on the "American dream", which the present economy puts out of reach.

Portland is a shithole.  Some of it isn't like this, but a lot of it is.

Mitt Romney explains why rich people should be taxed more.

Growing public support for socialism is making the US ripe for a new "New Deal".

Home care workers in Michigan have formed a statewide union.

The Catholic archdiocese of New York is desperately trying to raise money to pay settlements to victims of clergy sexual abuse.  Its insurance company refuses to help, for interesting reasons.

Elon Musk's SpaceX has bought over a thousand Cybertrucks from Elon Musk's Tesla, probably as a face-saving measure since hardly anyone else is buying them.

See a tough woman hit a sniveling, lying politician with some unvarnished truth.

92% of new power capacity added to the US grid in 2025 was clean energy.

Humanoid robots, like "AI", are all hype and no substance.

The Streisand effect applies to political censorship.  The 60 Minutes segment on CECOT can be viewed here.

The censoring of the tiny portion of the Epstein files released so far was utterly incompetent.

A discredited book from 1871 is resurfacing to support modern bigotry.

In January, one of Elon Musk's exploding rockets endangered three passenger planes carrying about four hundred and fifty people.

New York state's ban on smartphones in schools is bringing abundant benefits.

Here are the main reasons why Americans are leaving religion (note that the actual survey mentions "negative religious teachings about or treatment of gay and lesbian people", not "anti-LGBTQ", which is not the same thing).

You're either a US citizen or you aren't -- there are no Americans who are more American than others.

Communities across the US are rising up in resistance against "AI" data centers -- and they're winning.  Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer's support for the hated centers is so unpopular that it may be turning the state against the Democrats.  One center was approved by a state-level commission without allowing public input, which will further infuriate voters.

Most people in other countries don't like or respect Trump.

A British judge issued a ruling riddled with factual errors and bogus citations -- almost certainly the work of "AI".

The BBC whitewashes and obfuscates anti-Semitism.

Germany's anti-nuclear-power policy is a disaster, resulting in sky-high prices and continued high usage if fossil fuels.

Iranian women continue to defy the theocracy's dress code.

Turkish authorities prevented a Dā'ish-linked terrorist plot against Christians in Turkey.

The Saudi regime has executed at least 347 people in 2025.

Here's what Houthi rule in Yemen is like.

Ghana has prison-like camps for women ostracized due to accusations of witchcraft.  Some members of the country's legislature are trying to outlaw the practice.

More links at Red State BluesWAHF, and Comedy Plus.

My posts this week:  some truths and inspirations, the origins of Christmas, and a lighthearted video based on "The Shadow over Innsmouth".

o o o o o

Some straight talk on what's really going on with the economy right now:


Chatbots seem more like an addictive drug than anything else:


If your computer is on Windows 11, you need to watch this.  It's not just clunky and annoying, it's dangerous.  It will spy on your most critical private data and will eventually lock you into a subscription model where you need to keep paying and paying forever just for the operating system.  There are alternatives -- easy, cheap, convenient ones.  Join the global revolt:

25 December 2025

Video of the day -- Fishmen


A Lovecraftian take on an old favorite.

24 December 2025

The reason for the season

Secular Americans are sometimes accused of waging a "war on Christmas".  I don't see why any knowledgeable secularist would bother.  Almost nothing about Christmas has anything to do with Jesus or Christianity.

The concept of December 25 as the birthday of a god originates with the cult of Mithra (depicted above), the ancient Persian god of light and wisdom.  Mithra's cult dates back to at least 1450 BC, but became much more widespread after it was absorbed by Zoroastrianism and carried all over the Middle East by the expansion of the Persian Empire under Cyrus the Great in the sixth century BC.  Later Mithraism became popular in the Roman Empire, with the god's name being Latinized as "Mithras"; he was also known as Sol Invictus, "the Unconquered Sun".  For the first few centuries of Christianity, several different dates around the year were celebrated as Jesus's birthday (the Gospels do not assign a date, though they make it fairly obvious that the birth did not happen in the winter).  Eventually Mithra's established birthday was assigned to Jesus in order to Christianize the date and celebrations which were already popular throughout the Roman domain.

The gift-giving and revelry we associate with Christmas come from the pagan Roman festival of Saturnalia, which was celebrated from December 17 through 23.  After the triumph of Christianity, these practices became associated with Christmas simply because the two events are close together on the calendar.  Another feature of Saturnalia was social role reversal in which, for example, slaves were seated in places of honor at meals, while their masters waited on them.  A few traces of this practice survive in Christmas today, such as a British army tradition that officers wait on enlisted men.

Other trappings of modern Christmas, such as Christmas trees, the Yule log, and Santa Claus, were derived much later from Germanic paganism.  Santa Claus may even be partly based on the Germanic god Odin, though the basic concept originates with the fourth-century Greek Bishop St Nicholas of Lycia (now in Turkey), and many other strains have been woven into the character.

So we have an ancient Persian holiday with celebrations based on an ancient pagan Roman festival, with some pagan Germanic imagery added on.  There's no connection with Christianity except an arbitrary glomming on to the date as Jesus's birthday in late Roman times, which has no basis in the Gospels or in anything else.  I see no reason why any secularist would wage a "war" on Christmas, because there is nothing Christian about it.

In modern times, however, something else has been happening.  As the early Christians took over "Christmas" from various pagan traditions and repurposed it for their own ends, so today capitalism has taken it over from Christianity and repurposed it as a mass frenzy of consumerism.  Very little of the activity surrounding Christmas nowadays even purports to have anything to do with Jesus.  The focus is on spending money (or going into debt) to buy things for people who in many cases may not even particularly want them, but it has to be done out of a sense of social obligation.  Some of the trappings of the holiday are fun for small children, but for most adults it seems to be dominated by stress and a sense of irksome obligation, exacerbated by the general gloom of the season and the imperative to keep up a façade of cheer and celebration (here are some coping tips for those who need them).  And each year the media evaluate all this, not for any religious significance, but for how much the increased spending stimulated the economy.  I don't think Jesus -- or Mithra -- would be impressed.

22 December 2025

Truths and inspirations for 22 December 2025

If something's hard to see or read, click for full size.

[For the link round-up, click here.]























Almost entirely, in fact.  If it weren't for the succession of new generations of children being raised religious, within a few decades this nonsense would almost totally vanish.





If the Democrats actually adopted all of this as their platform, and dropped the identity-politics crap, I'd probably get interested in supporting them again.




Source










.....but there's nothing European about them.









Freedom for the broad mass of people is possible only via socialism.