Monday, July 13, 2026

Did You Know? The Birth Registration Process Is Now Being Used to Create Investment Accounts for Newborns

For generations, the birth-registration process has served one primary purpose: to officially record the birth of a child. It documents when and where a baby was born, identifies the parents, and creates the vital record used to issue a birth certificate. It is supposed to establish a birth, not initiate a financial application. 

That is why the Social Security Administration's recent announcement should concern every American, regardless of political affiliation.

According to the SSA, states will be asked to modify their hospital birth registration forms, used through the Enumeration at Birth (EAB) program, to include the automatic creation of a "Trump Account." In other words, the same process that parents use to obtain a newborn's Social Security number is now being linked to the creation of a government-authorized investment account.

The issue is not the $1,000 government deposit being offered to eligible children. The issue is that a newborn’s birth registration and Social Security identity are being used as the entry point for creating a financial investment account. Whether the account begins with $1,000, $100, or nothing at all, the precedent is the same: a document meant to record a birth is being tied to the financial system from the first days of life.

A birth certificate should establish a birth, not initiate a financial relationship.

For decades, the government's birth registration process has remained remarkably simple. Hospitals record the birth, states issue the birth certificate, and parents can request a Social Security number through the same paperwork. These records establish identity. They are not designed to enroll a child into financial products.

Whether someone supports or opposes the new Trump Accounts is beside the point. The fundamental question is much larger:

Why is a birth registration system being transformed into a financial enrollment system?

Identity and finance have historically been treated as separate legal functions. One proves that you exist. The other requires an intentional decision to enter into a financial relationship.

Opening an investment account has traditionally required affirmative consent, specific disclosures, and a deliberate decision by the account owner or legal guardian. Birth registration has never served that function. Yet the SSA's announcement suggests that the same administrative process used to establish a newborn's legal identity will now also be used to establish an investment account.

Supporters argue that every eligible child receives a government-funded $1,000 investment, creating a head start toward financial security. That may sound appealing, but good intentions do not eliminate legal, privacy and ethical questions.

Should a child's first interaction with the financial system occur automatically through the same paperwork used to record their birth?

Should hospitals become enrollment centers for investment products?

Should identity documents evolve into gateways for financial accounts?

These questions deserve serious public debate.

Even more confusing is that current Treasury and IRS guidance still describes the Trump Account as something an authorized adult must elect to establish through a separate process. Meanwhile, the SSA's announcement speaks of "automatic creation" through hospital birth forms. Those two descriptions do not clearly align, leaving parents without a clear understanding of exactly what will occur when they complete birth paperwork. That uncertainty alone should concern lawmakers.

Government systems have a tendency to expand incrementally. What begins as administrative convenience often becomes standard practice. Today's justification may be a $1,000 government contribution. Tomorrow it could be another financial program, another digital credential, or another automatic enrollment tied to birth registration.

The principle matters because birth certificates exist to document a birth and investment accounts exist to hold financial assets. Those are two fundamentally different legal functions.

Once government begins merging identity systems with financial systems, the burden should be on officials, not the public, to explain why that merger is necessary and why long-standing administrative boundaries are being erased.

Americans deserve a transparent conversation before a newborn's first government record becomes something more than proof of birth. Because once identity and finance become intertwined from the very first day of life, it is reasonable to ask where that integration ends.

You Are Intentionally Being Poisoned: The Invisible Monopoly Rules Everything You Eat, Wear, and Use

This article was written by Julie Telgenhoff

Look around you right now. The shirt on your back. The snack on your desk. The prescription pill in your medicine cabinet. To the untrained eye, these are just the standard benchmarks of modern, convenient living. But if you trace the chemical chains of these everyday items backward, they don’t lead to a laboratory focused on human health and longevity.

They lead straight to an oil refinery.
We live in a world where the human population is being quietly, systematically poisoned by almost everything we touch, eat, and consume. We don’t notice the trap because we were born inside it. It requires no secrecy from the elites who engineered it because it has successfully masqueraded as "the status quo" for over a century. You are trained never to look, never to question, and never to connect the dots.
But once you see the blueprint, you can never unsee it. And it all traces back to one man, one empire, and a ruthless obsession with industrial waste.
The 6,000 Product Trap: Hiding in Plain Sight
This isn't an exaggeration or a fringe theory. It is a matter of official government record. The United States Department of Energy openly publishes an infographic detailing the sheer scale of our dependency, confirming that crude oil and natural gas byproducts are used to manufacture over 6,000 everyday products.
Source: U.S. Department of Energy "Products Made From Oil and Natural Gas" Infographic
Take a look at that list. The petrochemical empire has infiltrated every single layer of human existence:
  • What You Wear: Cotton and wool were aggressively sidelined by synthetic polyester, nylon, and acrylic—meaning your skin absorbs microplastics from your clothing every day.
  • What You Eat: Packaged foods are loaded with petroleum-derived preservatives like TBHQ and BHA (made from butane byproducts) to artificially extend shelf life, alongside artificial food dyes (Red 40, Yellow 5) synthesized directly from crude oil fractions.
  • What You Use: Your soaps, shampoos, toothpastes, cosmetics, and detergents are built on petroleum-based surfactants and mineral oils.
It is a perfect, inescapable gridlock. The system ensured that from the moment you wake up, you are absorbing synthetic chemical fractions. It is a literal setup. By surrounding humanity with non-biodegradable, toxic synthetics, the modern environment guarantees one inevitable outcome: You will get sick.
And when you do get sick, the exact same empire is waiting to cash in on your illness.
The Medical Setup: Creating Customers for Life
How did we get to a point where human beings willingly ingest and wear fossil fuel byproducts? To understand the trap, you have to understand how the robber barons of the 20th century conquered the human body.
In the late 1800s, Rockefeller’s Standard Oil controlled 90% of U.S. oil refining. The primary product back then was kerosene for lamps. But refining crude oil left behind massive amounts of sludge-like, toxic chemical waste. Driven by a legendary, ruthless frugality, Rockefeller refused to let this waste go to waste. His chemists quickly realized that these hydrocarbon chains could be manipulated into synthetic chemicals, plastics, and crucially patented, synthetic molecules for medicine.
There was just one major problem standing in his way: You cannot patent a plant.
In the early 1900s, American medicine was diverse, holistic, and heavily reliant on natural, botanical, and homeopathic remedies. If people could cure themselves using natural herbs and dietary changes, Rockefeller could not monetize their health. To turn his oil byproducts into a multi-billion dollar pharmaceutical empire, he had to completely dismantle the existing medical system and replace it with one that relied exclusively on his chemical factory lines.
Step 1: The Hijacking and Blackballing of Medical Education
To push patented synthetic chemicals onto the masses, the existing medical landscape had to be completely wiped clean. In 1910, the Rockefeller Foundation, alongside the Carnegie Foundation, funded and released the Flexner Report. Ostensibly written to "standardize" medical care, the report had a far more sinister undercurrent: it systematically blackballed every medical institution that refused to align with the allopathic, chemical-drug framework.
Nearly half of all medical schools in America, those teaching homeopathy, naturopathy, holistic healing, and botanical remedies, were instantly labeled unscientific "quackery." Rockefeller then poured hundreds of millions of dollars exclusively into institutions that agreed to build their curricula around synthetic, petroleum-based pharmaceuticals. Schools that resisted were defunded, starved of resources, and forced to permanently shutter their doors. By controlling the checkbooks, Rockefeller didn't just buy the schools; he bought the very definition of what counted as medicine.
Step 2: Hiring Chemists to Standardize the Poison
With the educational pipeline securely locked down, the corporate machine went to work on the manufacturing line. Rockefeller and his cartel hired armies of industrial chemists to manipulate the molecular structures of their crude refining sludge.
They realized that the long carbon chains found in industrial waste could be isolated, synthesized, and patented. The herbs, tinctures, and natural mineral compounds that had successfully treated human ailments for centuries were replaced with chemical lookalikes born in a test tube. Doctors were no longer trained to look for root causes or utilize natural, unpatentable cures; they were trained as glorified salespeople for a new class of synthetic, chemical-laden drugs.
If you think this corporate collusion is a conspiracy theory, look no further than the official United States government record. In 1942, the Truman Senate Committee exposed a massive scandal reported by Time Magazine under the headline 'Dinner-Table Treason.' The investigation revealed that John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil had entered into a multi-million-dollar cartel agreement with I.G. Farben, the monstrous global cartel that owned Bayer and pioneered synthetic pharmaceutical chemistry. The U.S. government openly accused them of a conspiracy to monopolize world control of the chemical, petroleum, and drug industries, effectively cementing the petrochemical-pharmaceutical loop that dictates human healthcare to this day.
Step 3: Closing the Circle (The Frugal Monopolist’s Masterpiece)
But a truly frugal monopolist doesn't stop at medicine. Once the petrochemical industry gained total control over the medical system, they realized they could expand their profits exponentially by integrating their chemical byproducts into every other consumer market on earth.
Instead of disposing of industrial waste safely, they found ways to slip it into our everyday lives under the guise of "modern convenience." If they could force these byproducts into our textiles (polyester), our farming inputs (synthetic fertilizers), our household goods (plastics), and our processed food (TBHQ and synthetic dyes), they could extract health from us every single hour of the day.
And the corporate paper trail proves it. The industry didn't hide it; it proudly published it in their own engineering journals and advertisements. The Industry took volatile, toxic refinery gases that they used to burn off into the sky as waste, ran them through chemical plants, and repackaged them as the "conveniences" of modern clothing, preservatives, and household plastic. You can read about it in the article "The refining and petrochemical industries: 170 years of innovation" published in October 2020.
And this is exactly where the trap snaps shut, creating a flawless, self-sustaining loop of corporate dependency:
  1. They surround you with it: You wear plastic clothes, eat synthetic foods, and wash with chemical surfactants.
  2. The environment makes you sick: Your biology cannot handle constant exposure to petrochemical derivatives; you inevitably develop chronic illness.
  3. You go to their doctors: You visit a medical system whose educational foundation was built by the oil cartel.
  4. They prescribe their drugs: You are handed a lifetime prescription for synthetic, petroleum-based pharmaceuticals designed to manage your symptoms, not cure them.
It is a masterpiece of corporate engineering. They make the products that make you sick, and then they sell you the medicine to manage the illness. You become a customer for life, ensuring the petrochemical empire profits from your life, your lifestyle, and your ultimate decline.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

If my work has helped you in any way, you can support my independent writing here:  https://buymeacoffee.com/asheepnomore

Every bit helps me keep researching, writing, and sharing outside the corporate-approved narrative. Thank you. 


Sunday, July 12, 2026

The Video They Didn't Want You to See: Revisiting "Collateral Murder" 19 Years Later

On July 12, 2007, a pair of U.S. Apache helicopters carried out a series of devastating air to ground attacks in the New Baghdad district of Iraq. The incident remained hidden from public view until April 2010, when the transparency organization WikiLeaks released 39 minutes of classified gunsight footage under the title "Collateral Murder." The graphic video exposed the helicopter crew opening fire on a crowd of Iraqi men, killing a dozen people, including two Reuters journalists, photographer Namir Noor-Eldeen and driver Saeed Chmagh. The footage further captured the crew launching a second strike on an unarmed civilian minivan that had stopped to rescue a wounded survivor, severely injuring two children inside. The release sparked intense global outrage, particularly due to the audio of the pilots laughing, celebrating their hits, and displaying a callous disregard for civilian life. While the Pentagon maintained that the pilots mistook a camera lens for an RPG and cleared the crew of wrongdoing, the video became a defining symbol of the lack of accountability in modern warfare.

The individual responsible for bringing this footage to light was Chelsea Manning, then known as Bradley Manning, a 22 year old U.S. Army intelligence analyst stationed in Iraq. Disturbed by the graphic nature of the video and what he perceived as a systemic cover-up stored inside a military legal database, Manning transferred the encrypted video alongside hundreds of thousands of classified battlefield logs and diplomatic cables to WikiLeaks. He was arrested in May 2010 after an online acquaintance turned government informant alerted authorities. In 2013, a military court-martial convicted Manning under the Espionage Act and sentenced him to 35 years in a maximum-security military prison. Though his actions were heavily condemned by the U.S. government as treasonous, human rights organizations hailed him as a historic whistleblower exposing war crimes. After serving seven years in prison, Manning's sentence was commuted by President Barack Obama in 2017.

Below is the 13 minute excerpt of the classified gunsight footage released by WikiLeaks. It shows the initial Apache helicopter attack on a group of Iraqi men, followed by the second strike on the civilian van that stopped to rescue the wounded.

.
This is the longer 39 minute version released by WikiLeaks, offering the fuller context of what became known around the world as “Collateral Murder.”


Tuesday, July 7, 2026

When Did Life Begin Feeling So Empty?

Maybe it began when everything became digital.

Article by Julie Telgenhoff

There is a strange emptiness settling over modern life, and most people feel it even if they cannot name it.

Everything is connected, yet people feel more alone. Everyone is reachable, yet real conversations are harder to find. We can message, post, comment, react, like, share and scroll all day long, but somehow the human presence behind all of it feels thinner, more distant, and more manufactured. Life has gone hyper-digital, and it is changing the way people relate to themselves, to one another and even to reality.

Social media was once sold as connection. It was supposed to help people stay in touch, share memories and find community. But somewhere along the way, it became something else. It became a nervous system hooked up to an algorithm.

People do not simply share anymore. They perform, chase reaction, and seek approval. They post fear, outrage, pain, trauma, beauty, success, failure and humiliation into the digital machine, waiting for the feedback loop to tell them they still exist.

A like becomes a pulse. A comment becomes validation. A share becomes proof that the emotion landed.

And so much of what gets shared now is not even meant to create real understanding. It is meant to create a hit. Fear porn. Rage bait. Crisis content. Emotional bait. One more little burst of dopamine to briefly relieve the anxiety of living in a world that feels increasingly unstable and unreal. People are not really engaging with one another. They are often just using each other as mirrors, medication or fuel.

The same hollowing out is happening in the job market. A person is no longer treated as a whole human being with experience, character, endurance, pain, talent, intuition and grit. They are filtered. Scanned. Ranked. Rejected. Reduced.

You are either AI compliant or you are not.

Your resume does not pass through human eyes first. It passes through systems. Keywords. Algorithms. Automated screenings. Personality assessments. Digital gates. You are no longer a person trying to explain your story. You are data trying to survive a filter.

Years of work become searchable terms. Loyalty becomes irrelevant. Human struggle becomes a gap in employment. Reinvention becomes a liability. A person who lived, survived, cared, learned and adapted is flattened into zeros and ones, and this does something to the soul.

Because humans were not designed to be constantly translated into data. We were not designed to beg machines to recognize our worth before a person ever gets the chance to see us.

And now AI has been attached to everything.

Everywhere you turn, there is another tool promising convenience. Let AI write the email. Let AI summarize the meeting. Let AI respond to the message. Let AI create the post. Let AI think through the idea. Let AI write the apology, the love note, the condolence, the article, the birthday wish, the cover letter, the personal statement.

But what happens when human beings stop doing the very things that made them human?

Writing was never just about words. Writing was thinking, feeling, and sitting with an idea long enough to discover what you actually believed. It was wrestling with memory, emotion, logic and imagination until something real appeared on the page. A full sentence had breath in it. A paragraph had movement, and a story carried the reader somewhere. It gave them a path to follow, and it asked them to slow down, imagine, feel and understand.

Now language is being chopped into dopamine fragments.

Just like this ----> One sentence. One punch. One hook. One viral line. One emotional slap. Keep scrolling. Keep reacting. Keep consuming.

The human paragraph is being replaced by the digital hit, and slowly, people are being trained to write like the machine. Be short, clean, polished, and empty, with no scars and no dent.

But the dent is where the human lives.

The dent is the pause, the imperfection, the odd phrasing, the emotional detour, the sentence that runs too long because the person was trying to get somewhere honest. The dent is the thing that shows there was a real mind behind the words. A real person with a real life, with wounds, stories to tell, and a human voice.

When AI writes to another human on behalf of a person, it may be convenient, but something sacred is removed. The message may be grammatically correct, flow smoothly, and may even sound kind, but it is not the same as human engagement. It is synthetic connection, and people can feel the difference, even when they pretend they cannot.

This did not begin with AI. The isolation started way earlier. Reality television helped train people to watch other people live instead of living themselves. It normalized surveillance as entertainment, turned private emotions into public spectacle, and taught people to consume conflict, romance, humiliation, family breakdown and personal collapse from a safe distance, normalizing it all.

Then social media put the reality show into everyone’s hand.

Now every person can be the star, the audience and the product at the same time. Your life, work, pain, beliefs, outrage and dinner become content for audiences eager to absorb. Meanwhile, actual life gets quieter and lonelier.

People sit in rooms alone watching strangers. They scroll through other people’s vacations while not taking their own walk outside. They watch other people cook, clean, parent, date, decorate, cry, fight and heal while their own dishes sit in the sink and their own relationships go untouched, even avoided.

We are seriously living through a mass displacement of attention.

Attention that once went into friendships, creativity, prayer, family, gardens, neighborhoods, books, letters, music, repair, conversation and imagination is now being harvested by digital screens we carry with us wherever we go.

And relationships are also changing because our brains are changing.

The brain adapts to what it repeatedly does. If it is trained to expect constant novelty, it begins to struggle with stillness. If it is trained to consume quick emotional hits, it begins to lose patience for depth. If it is trained to react instead of reflect, it becomes easier to manipulate. If it is trained to outsource thought, it becomes less confident in its own ability to think and communicate.

This is why so many people feel restless but exhausted, overstimulated but empty, connected but lonely, informed but confused, and surrounded by content but starved for meaning.

The digital world offers constant contact without true closeness. It offers information without wisdom. It offers entertainment without nourishment. It offers convenience without character. It offers expression without intimacy.

And now, with AI woven into everything, the danger is not only that machines will become more humanlike. The danger is that humans will become more machinelike. Humans becoming more efficient, compliant, optimized, searchable, and predictable. Humans becoming less patient, embodied, grounded, and original. Less able to sit inside their own thoughts without needing a device to rescue them from the silence of their own thoughts.

A human life is not supposed to feel like a dashboard. It is supposed to have texture, boredom, mystery, conflict, misunderstanding, love, long conversations and handwritten words. Awkward pauses, sharing full stories on long walks while making eye contact and sharing real laughter and real tears. The kind of presence no app can simulate.

The emptiness people are feeling is not imaginary. It is the natural result of being pulled further and further away from the physical, emotional and spiritual experiences that make life feel real.

Humans need more than connection speed. They need meaning, to be seen beyond data, heard beyond reaction, loved beyond performance, and understood beyond keywords. They need spaces where they are not being measured, monetized, scanned, sorted, prompted, ranked or replaced.

We ALL need to remember how to be human before the machine convinces us that convenience is the same thing as life.

A life lived through screens is not the same as a life lived through the body, the heart, the senses and the soul. And maybe the ache so many people feel right now is not depression alone. Maybe it is grief. Grief for the world that still had room for full thoughts, and for the conversations that were not optimized.

Grief for the handwritten letter, the long phone call, the neighbor who stopped by, the friend who remembered, the job interviewer who looked you in the eye, the paragraph that unfolded slowly and trusted the reader to stay with it. A grief for that human dent, that beautiful, imperfect human dent, which is the one thing the machine can imitate but never truly possess.

The transition to a hyper-connected, data-driven world often leaves us feeling hollow and empty. Because everything is available instantly, we lose the fulfillment that comes from patience, physical participation, and genuine, offline connection. Reclaiming your life requires stepping away from the screen and actively re-engaging with the physical world.