Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Global Economy Is Closer to Collapse Than Anyone Wants To Admit


The Global Economy Is Closer to Collapse Than Anyone Wants To Admit
Brandon Campbell


When disruptions strike the deepest layers of the global economy, their consequences do not arrive with spectacle but with delay. The most destabilizing feature of a systemic shock is often not its immediate violence but the deceptive calm that follows it. Cargo vessels already underway continue to reach their destinations, warehouses continue to dispatch inventory manufactured months earlier, and supermarket shelves remain stocked with goods produced in a previous season under conditions that no longer exist. 

This temporal inertia creates an illusion of stability at precisely the moment when the foundations of that stability are eroding. In the case of escalating conflict affecting energy infrastructure across the Gulf and maritime passage through the Strait of Hormuz, the world is experiencing this quiet interval between cause and consequence, a period in which daily life appears normal while the logistical arteries of the global system are progressively constricted.

The Strait of Hormuz is not merely a geographic feature but a structural dependency embedded into modern economic life. A significant share of globally traded oil, liquefied natural gas, petrochemical feedstocks, and refined fuels must transit this narrow corridor. The global economy is therefore organized around the assumption that passage through this route will remain uninterrupted, predictable, and secure. Insurance contracts, shipping schedules, refinery throughput, agricultural input planning, and manufacturing procurement cycles all incorporate this assumption. 

When that assumption is violated, the disturbance propagates outward in complex ways that are not immediately visible to consumers or even to many policymakers. What appears to be a regional disruption is, in practice, a stress event for a system designed around continuous flow.

The first reason the impact is not felt immediately lies in the layered structure of supply chains. Energy commodities are extracted, processed, shipped, stored, refined, transformed into industrial inputs, embedded into manufactured goods, transported again, warehoused, distributed, and finally sold. At each stage, inventories exist that can temporarily mask interruptions upstream. Tankers that departed weeks before escalation continue to arrive. Refineries operate on crude reserves already purchased. Manufacturers draw on stored plastics, chemicals, and packaging materials. Retailers sell goods assembled under prior conditions. This buffering capacity is often interpreted as resilience, yet it is better understood as delay. It postpones the visible manifestation of stress without removing its cause.

The second reason for delayed impact lies in the degree to which modern economies depend on energy not only as fuel but as material. Oil and gas are not simply burned; they are transformed into plastics, synthetic fibers, fertilizers, solvents, coatings, adhesives, and industrial intermediates that form the physical substance of modern life. When energy infrastructure is damaged or shipping lanes are restricted, the effect is not limited to electricity generation or transportation costs. It extends into the availability of packaging, textiles, construction materials, medical supplies, and agricultural inputs. Because these materials are embedded into complex production processes, shortages do not appear as immediate absences but as gradual constraints that slow manufacturing, raise costs, and reduce output over time.

Another critical but less visible dimension of the crisis lies in petrochemical supply chains. Plastics and synthetic materials depend on feedstocks derived from oil and gas, many of which originate in the Gulf. Compounds such as monoethylene glycol and purified terephthalic acid are foundational for producing PET plastics and polyester fibers used in packaging, clothing, medical supplies, and industrial materials. Disruptions to refining, processing, or shipping therefore threaten the availability of materials embedded in countless products. Unlike fuel shortages, which are immediately noticeable, petrochemical shortages manifest as delays in manufacturing, reduced product availability, or increased prices months later when inventories are exhausted.


The interconnected nature of these systems means that stress multiplies as it propagates. Transportation depends on fuel. Packaging depends on plastics. Manufacturing depends on packaging and transportation. Agriculture depends on fertilizer and fuel. Retail depends on all of the above. When multiple nodes in this network are strained simultaneously, the effects compound rather than add. The result is not a single shock but a sustained period of cost escalation and supply constraint that becomes increasingly difficult to mitigate as time passes.

Perhaps the most challenging aspect of such a crisis is psychological and political rather than logistical. The absence of immediate scarcity encourages complacency. Policymakers and consumers alike may underestimate the severity of disruptions because daily life appears largely unchanged. This perception delays corrective action and complicates communication about risk. By the time shortages and price spikes become undeniable, the processes set in motion months earlier have already limited available options. Agricultural cycles cannot be reversed, damaged infrastructure cannot be rebuilt instantly, and alternative supply routes cannot be created overnight.


What makes this situation particularly significant is that it exposes the structural trade-offs of globalization.


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Discernment And Discipline In The Age Of AI


Christians Will Need Discernment And Discipline To Prosper In The Age Of AI
JOHN STONESTREET



Randall Christopher Niles has been leveraging information technology to share the Gospel, proclaim truth, and counter lies for a few decades now. Through GotQuestions and AllAboutGod, he has used the internet as a tool to point people to Christ. Recently, he tackled the question of AI. How he described its perils and promises is something every Christian needs to hear. Here's Randall: 

Every generation is shaped by its tools. The Industrial Revolution replaced muscle with machines and reshaped labor, cities, families, and time itself. Steam engines led to factories. Factories led to mass production. Mass production led to modern economies. Then came radio--the first technology to speak to millions at once. For the first time in history, a single voice could enter every living room, shape public opinion, unify nations . . . or divide them.  

Movies followed. Then television. Those behind the images learned how to move us. Those behind the stories learned how to scale. Culture became centralized. Reality became curated.  

And then, the internet. A decentralized miracle with instant access to information and the promise of global connection. Knowledge was no longer guarded by gatekeepers. Anyone could publish, and anyone could speak. Then came smartphones. In an instant, the internet wasn't something we visited--it was something we carried. A screen was in our hands from the moment we woke to the moment we fell asleep.  

With smartphones came social media. It didn't just connect us, it trained us. It rewarded outrage, amplified fear, affirmed dysfunction, and monetized attention. Truth became negotiable, identity became performative, and algorithms quietly learned what made us tick.  

Then, in November of 2022, a tool called ChatGPT was released to the public. No press conferences. No fanfare. Just a simple chat box. Within five days, it reached one million users--faster than any consumer technology in history. Within two months, over 100 million people were using it. Faster adoption than Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok.  

Artificial intelligence (AI) didn't feel like science fiction had predicted. It was personal. You could talk to it and ask it questions. You could watch it write, summarize, and create. However, this isn't just another tool. Something bigger is happening.  

For decades, AI had existed behind the scenes, powering search engines, smartphone maps, and digital ads. But now, AI was front-facing and could think out loud. What followed was not slow adoption but sparked an "arms race" unmatched in history. Trillions of dollars in investment. Massive data centers rising across the globe. Energy demands rivaling small nations. The largest infrastructure build-out in human history isn't for roads, bridges, ports, or cities. It's for intelligence itself.  

The goal? Agentic AI, or systems that can plan, reason, act, and improve themselves. Beyond that? Artificial general intelligence (AGI), or machines that can outperform humans at all cognitive tasks. And beyond that? Artificial super intelligence (ASI), or disembodied intellects we can no longer meaningfully comprehend, let alone control.  

Driving the AI race are the most powerful nations, the most influential technologists, and the most well-funded elites in human history are.  

Sam Altman, leader of OpenAI, speaks openly about systems that may surpass human intelligence--and the need to "align" them before it's too late: 

This will be the most significant technology humanity has yet developed. In some sense, ChatGPT is already more powerful than any human who has ever lived. We're past the event horizon--the takeoff has started. This changes the human story. 

Elon Musk has compared advanced AI to, 

. . . summoning a demon . . .. AI is likely to either be the best or worst thing to happen to humanity. The biggest risk we face as a civilization . . .. The danger of AI is much greater than the danger of nuclear warheads. By a lot. 

Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, says AI may eliminate "50% of entry-level white-collar jobs within five years," creating a "permanent underclass of unemployed or low-wage workers." He says AI will act as a "general labor substitute for humans," causing long-term employment disruption that will be "unusually painful."  

Geoffrey Hinton, "the Godfather of AI," left Google in May 2023, citing his concerns about AI safety: 

We don't understand what we've built. We have no experience of what it's like to have things smarter than us. I console myself with the normal excuse: If I hadn't done it, somebody else would have. 

Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Meta, envisions AI companions, digital identities, and immersive virtual worlds--"a personal superintelligence that empowers everyone."  

In a nutshell, ultra-influential, mega-wealthy elites are driving towards technology's greatest triumph while warning it could be humanity's last great achievement. Different eccentric personalities. Different worldview visions. But a shared belief, that this cannot be stopped.  

Many say we should trust the builders. After all, they're brilliant and well-intentioned, and they've brought us this far. But the concerns are deep, and not merely generated by "doomers" and conspiracy theorists. Alarm bells are sounding from the builders themselves--in their own speeches, warnings, and admissions.  

They speak of a coming crisis of truth, the erosion of human agency, the loss of control, and the possibility that intelligence itself may no longer belong to humans. Yet, the race accelerates because to slow down is to lose, and to lose is unthinkable.  

In the next five years, the builders project:  

Tens of millions of jobs disrupted or replaced.  
Entire professions redefined or erased.  
Synthetic media indistinguishable from reality.  
AI companions replacing human relationships.  
Digital selves that outlive biological ones.  

For Big Tech elites, all of this is necessary and inevitable. In the transhumanist dream, humanity merges with the machine, to evolve our species beyond biological limits into a new golden age. Along the way, they promise world-changing innovation, medical cures, economic abundance, and a renewed planet.  

But who is asking the more important (and ancient) question: What does this do to us? To vocation. To family. To identity. To meaning. To truth. Soon, our workplaces will change, our children's education will change, our economy will change, and our sense of reality will change. And none of us were ever consulted.  

Shouldn't an orchestrated attempt at human evolution (and societal revolution) involve some level of individual choice? But no choice is being offered. This transition is happening to us. Opting out isn't an option.  

We may be approaching the greatest societal change in the history of humanity. Not merely incremental. Not another economic cycle. But a shift so profound it will alter how we work, how we relate, how we understand truth, and how we define identity, meaning, and purpose. And it's not far off. It's coming quickly.  

We are at a crossroads unlike any in history. Not a political revolution or military conflict, but a civilizational transformation--one that will reshape what it means to be human.  

What do thoughtful humans do? The answer is not panic or withdrawal. It's formation. Throughout history, whenever civilizations faced upheaval, like wars, plagues, empires rising and falling, those who endured did not do so by controlling the moment. They endured because they were rooted. Rooted in faith. Rooted in truth. Rooted in practices that form resilient souls.  





Iran Fires On Third Ship In Hormuz Chokepoint, Says US Navy Blockade 'No Different Than Bombing'


Iran Fires On Third Ship In Hormuz Chokepoint, Says US Navy Blockade 'No Different Than Bombing'
TYLER DURDEN



  • IRGC seized the MSC Francesca and a Greek-owned ship named Euphoria, which had been attempting to transit the Hormuz chokepoint earlier today.

  • Within hours, a third ship comes under fire by the IRGC

  • Senior Iranian adviser says the US naval blockade is "no different than bombing" and must be met "with a military response".



    Third Ship Attacked by IRGC

    The IRGC on Wednesday attacked a third vessel of the day in the Strait of Hormuz, rapidly escalating tensions further in the dangerous standoff. The container ship Francesca, owned by Mediterranean Shipping, was targeted while waiting to enter.

    "An Iranian gunboat fired on a containership northeast of Oman, before a second vessel reported being fired at off the coast of Iran," according to WSJ. "Then the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps fired on a third ship. The incidents within hours of each other demonstrate that while the aerial war between the U.S. and Iran is on pause, the fight for control of the strait continues." The same publication offers the following outline summary of where things stand on the diplomatic front:

    The semi-official news agency Fars reports on X that Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps seized the MSC Francesca and a Greek-owned ship named Euphoria, which had been attempting to transit the Hormuz chokepoint earlier today. In total, three ships were targeted this morning by IRGC naval forces, and two were seized.

    "The IRGC Navy seized two violating vessels and transferred them to Iran's coast. IRGC Navy Command: Disruption of order and safety in the Strait of Hormuz is our red line," Fars said, adding that both vessels had been "immobilized."

    Earlier, the British military's United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations Center reported that the two vessels had come under heavy fire in the narrow waterway.

    Current snapshot of the waterway via Bloomberg ship-tracking data of tankers:


    All three maritime incidents in the Strait come as President Trump has kept the U.S. blockade of Iran in Hormuz in place, and U.S. naval forces seized an Iranian ship over the weekend before boarding another tanker linked to Iran.


    Overnight, Trump extended a ceasefire with Iran so negotiators "can come up with a unified proposal," but said the naval blockade will continue, while Tehran says it is an "act of war."

    Iran's semi-official Tasnim cited the country's envoy to the UN, Amir-Saeid Iravani, as telling reporters: "We have received some sign that they are ready to break it and as soon as they break this blockade, I think that the next round of the negotiations will take place in Islamabad."

    Iravani added, "If they want to sit at the table and discuss and find a political solution, they will find us ready. If they want to go to war, in this case also Iran is ready."

    The status of the next round of US-Iran talks remains unclear. Vice President JD Vance has not departed for Pakistan as expected on Tuesday.


Ceasefire, No Peace: Prophetic Lesson Iran Keeps Teaching


Ceasefire, No Peace: Prophetic Lesson Iran Keeps Teaching


Reports from The Epoch Times, Breitbart, and Fox News all point to the same outcome: Iran walked away rather than commit to abandoning nuclear ambitions. That mirrors what multiple outlets confirmed: the talks collapsed because Iran refused key conditions, especially any long-term restriction on nuclear weapons capability.

Twenty-one hours of diplomacy ended where decades of diplomacy usually end: stalled, unresolved, and tilted in Iran’s favor. This isn’t negotiation failure; it’s a predictable pattern. Tehran engages just enough to relieve pressure, then retreats when real concessions are required.

That pattern goes back at least twenty years in Iran’s relationship with the International Atomic Energy Agency. In 2005, the IAEA formally found Iran in non-compliance with its nuclear safeguards obligations after repeated failures to fully disclose activities. Reports cited incomplete declarations, restricted access, and continued enrichment activity despite agreements. Even when cooperation appeared to improve, as in the early phase of the 2015 nuclear deal, compliance was partial and temporary.

More recently, the IAEA again raised concerns about undeclared nuclear material and lack of transparency, reinforcing a long-standing trust deficit. The through line is unmistakable: agreements are signed, inspections are promised, and then the process erodes.

Iran’s negotiating style also mirrors the broader playbook seen with their aligned and proxy groups like Hamas and Hezbollah. Ceasefires are not conclusions; they are pauses. Current reporting shows even this latest round of talks was tied to a fragile ceasefire and broader regional conflict, with no real resolution on core issues like nuclear capability or control of strategic waterways.

Iran even channeled its Obama and Biden days, demanding the unfreezing of $27 billion in assets.

Ceasefires only create time to regroup, resupply, and reposition. Negotiations become a tool, not for peace, but for advantage. While diplomats talk, realities on the ground shift. That dynamic has played out repeatedly, whether in Lebanon, Gaza, or across the region where Iran exerts influence.

History keeps pointing to the same conclusion. Without a decisive and fundamental change in the governing structure of Iran, long-term peace remains out of reach.

Since the days of Jimmy Carter and the rise of the ayatollah-led regime, the approach has been consistent: preserve power, project influence, and resist accountability. Temporary deals may lower tensions for a moment, but they do not alter direction.

Jeremiah 6:14 puts it plainly: “They have also healed the hurt of My people slightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace!’ when there is no peace.”

That warning fits today as much as it did then. Without decisive and lasting change, the cycle continues, and the promise of peace remains just that, a promise.



Iran will not commit to longer ceasefire; US assessment points to Khamenei as obstacle


Iran will not commit to longer ceasefire; US assessment points to Khamenei as obstacle


Trump posted overnight about Iran’s economic collapse, claiming security forces are going unpaid and losses in Hormuz have reached '$500 million a day'; an IRGC-linked outlet warned the blockade means 'continued war,' while CNN said aides opposed easing pressure

The U.S. believes one reason the Iranian government has not delivered its response to the American proposal is the effort by Mojtaba Khamenei, the supreme leader, to remain in hiding to avoid harm. That was reported overnight, between Tuesday and Wednesday, by CNN.

According to the report, the U.S. does not know whether Khamenei is issuing clear instructions or whether Iranian officials are being forced to "guess" what he wants without specific guidance. Despite that hurdle, the report said, U.S. officials still believe there is a chance of a meeting between teams from Washington and Tehran.

Trump said overnight in a post on his Truth Social platform that the Iranian government was deeply divided, which he said was unsurprising, and that at the request of Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, the U.S. had been asked to pause its strike on Iran until its leaders and representatives could present a unified proposal.
In Iran, state television reported that "Iran will not recognize the ceasefire announced by Trump, may not abide by it and will act in accordance with its national interests." The Tasnim news agency, which is affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, wrote that Tehran had not asked to extend the ceasefire and that, in practice, the continued naval blockade — a step announced by Trump — "means the continuation of the fighting." Iran also made clear that it would not reopen the Strait of Hormuz and that Tehran "will break the blockade by force if necessary."

"Trump may claim the ceasefire has been extended, but then that same U.S. government, or Israel, will carry out terrorism," the agency affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard said. "This possibility is being considered by Iranian officials. Iran is not dismissing it. Another possibility is that the U.S. will withdraw from the war and Israel will remain in it under the pretext of a ceasefire violation in Lebanon. The Americans have already been warned that the U.S. cannot unilaterally escape the war and leave Israel in the war."

In another post overnight on his social media platform, the American president addressed the Strait of Hormuz, writing: "Iran doesn’t want the Strait of Hormuz closed, they want it open so they can make $500 Million Dollars a day (which is, therefore, what they are losing if it is closed!). They only say they want it closed because I have it totally BLOCKADED (CLOSED!), so they merely want to “save face.” People approached me four days ago, saying, 'Sir, Iran wants to open up the Strait, immediately.' But if we do that, there can never be a Deal with Iran, unless we blow up the rest of their Country, their leaders included!"

This morning, Trump added: "Iran is collapsing financially! They want the Strait of Hormuz opened immediately- Starving for cash! Losing 500 Million Dollars a day. Military and Police complaining that they are not getting paid. SOS!!!"

In the post he published overnight, Trump avoided setting a new deadline for the Iranians, raising the possibility of a new waiting period — perhaps a very long one. Trump’s advisers, according to CNN, warned the president that easing pressure on Iran could allow it to drag out the negotiations. The Americans, the network reported, believed they could create a framework of understandings that would lead to more detailed talks in the coming weeks on the more sensitive issues. That approach, the report said, had its critics, who warned that Tehran could draw out the talks and play for time while using it to recover systems and missiles buried during the war.