Monday, 13 April 2026

...in a close potential future...

Incorporated with DeepSeek

Sktr Br 

The rain wasn't water. Not really. It was a chemical mist, a byproduct of the arcology's atmospheric scrubbers mixing with the unfiltered exhaust of a thousand illegal hover-rigs. It tasted of ozone and burnt copper, slicking the permacrete of Level 12's Sktr Br in a film of rainbow-hued petrochemical sheen.

He stood at the bar. Not leaned. *Stood*. Spine ramrod straight despite the oppressive bass frequencies of the hardcore gabber track vibrating through the floor. He was a cut of sharp, outdated Savile Row wool in a sea of patched neoprene, reactive carbon fiber, and scarred synth-leather. His name was Bond. James Bond. And he was an anachronism so severe it was a physical provocation.

The bartender, a woman named Cogs whose left arm was a beautiful, whirring mess of titanium rods and hydraulic pistons from a skating accident ten years prior, stared through him.

"Martini."

She didn't blink. The ice in the well didn't shift. The chrome-plated skull of a long-dead pit-bike served as the tip jar; it just stared with empty eye sockets. *...stares...*

"Steard not shaken."

Her gaze moved from his face to the heavy iron handle of the "Jameson" tap, then back. *...stares...*

"Martini!!"

A sliver of irritation, cold and precise, entered his grey-blue eyes. The music was a wall of noise. "Do you hear me?"

*...stares...*

"I want..."

He didn't finish. The sheer, dense wall of indifference was too thick. He pivoted on his heel—handmade leather, real leather, not vat-grown—and walked toward the door. The walk was a statement. It said, *I am leaving because this establishment is beneath my notice.*

"HEY!!"

The shout came from a table of sktrs near the broken jukebox. Bond didn't turn. The heavy, lead-lined door swung shut behind him with a pneumatic hiss. *...does not come back...*

"Ah." Cogs exhaled, a sound of profound relief. She pulled the lever on the Gentleman Jack and filled a chipped ceramic mug with the amber liquid. *...keeps serving others...*

The night wore on. The chemical rain fell harder. The music got louder.

Then the door hissed open again. It was the same man. But the wool suit was now damp, and he held a crumpled, laminated flyer in a gloved hand. He looked less like a predator and more like a confused tourist who'd taken a wrong turn into a combat zone. He slapped the flyer onto the sticky, beer-logged bar top.

"Look. Sir." He pointed a gloved finger at the smeared ink. "It says there Jameson, JB, LaPhroaig, Ardberg, Bullit, Rye Bulleit, Connemara and the special ain no Martini. Ever." His voice was clipped, precise, and utterly alien in this place. "Girls do not come here. We drink out of misery or go dancing. Its a Sktr Br as it says outside." He tapped the glass door. "Redbreast today. Only long drinks and hard music."

He stared at Cogs, waiting. His eyes, for just a second, flickered with something other than arrogance. Confusion. *???* "Did you get lost?"

He turned, taking a step toward a table where two sktrs nursed beers and watched him with the detached curiosity of alley cats observing a wounded pigeon. *...one table away...*

"Did he get we only serve Jack Daniels with Pepsi?" one of them muttered, his voice a low rumble like bearings grinding on dry concrete. His name was Jolt. His leg was carbon-fiber from the knee down, the boot a custom-machined SoulPlate.

"Nah." The other, a wiry girl with fiber-optic dreadlocks pulled back tight, didn't look up from adjusting the mag-clamps on her gloves. Her street name was Wires. "And its Gentlemen Jack."

Jolt tilted his head, taking in the cut of the stranger's suit, the antique watch on his wrist. "What he ask for?"

"Beans." Wires finally looked up, her eyes hard as the anodized aluminum of her skate frame. "Wet Beans."

---

They found him two blocks over, in the acid-rain shadow of a collapsed mag-lev pylon. He wasn't lost anymore. He was bleeding.

Three RazorBoyz, a splinter faction of the larger Yakuza-affiliated Ronin-gumi, had him pinned against the crumbling ferrocrete. Their cheap, military-surplus cyberware sparked and hissed. One had a monofilament whip coiled around Bond's forearm, drawing a line of bright red through the soaked wool.

Bond’s movements were economical. Brutal. A palm strike crushed a trachea augmented with a cheap respirator implant. A low kick, perfect form even in the slick muck, snapped the patella of the one with the whip. But he was outnumbered. Out-teched. And he was old.

Jolt and Wires watched from the top of a nearby ramp, perched on their boards.

"Should we?" Jolt asked, his hand resting on the worn grip tape of his deck.

"He's a suit. Works for the people who own the people who try to bulldoze our spots," Wires said, her voice flat. "Let the chrome-junkies have him."

But then they saw the fourth figure. Not a RazorBoy. A shimmering, almost invisible distortion in the rain. Thermoptic camouflage. Military-grade. The kind that cost more than the entire Sktr Br block. A long, slender rifle barrel materialized, aimed at the RazorBoyz.

The sniper didn't fire. Not yet. They were *herding*. The sniper was with the RazorBoyz. This was a play. And Bond was the piece being moved into position.

Jolt sighed. "Aw, frag it."

He dropped into the ramp. The sound of his board hitting the wet permacrete was a sharp *thwack* followed by the low, guttural hum of ceramic bearings spinning at 60,000 RPM. Wires was right behind him, her board silent, her fiber-optic hair streaming behind her like a data-spike.

Jolt hit the RazorBoy with the broken knee first. A simple skateboard deck, gripped with coarse 36-grit, slammed edge-first into the back of a skull. The sound was a wet *crack* that cut through the gabber beat still echoing in their ears. Wires used her board like a shield, deflecting a wild swing from a razor-edged cyberarm, then slammed the trucks into the thug's temple.

In three seconds, it was over. The RazorBoyz were down. The thermoptic shimmer retreated, vanishing into the urban canyons.

Bond straightened his tie, ignoring the blood dripping from his wrist. He looked at Jolt and Wires, not with gratitude, but with a cold, clinical assessment. He pulled a thin, flexible datapad from his inner pocket. On it was a grainy image of a man with dead eyes and a nose corroded by years of "Blue Heaven" cocaine aerosol.

"Francis Sterling," Bond said, his voice carrying perfectly despite the rain. "CEO of Apex-Dynamic BioSolutions. He's funded three different terror cells in the underlevels this quarter alone. One of them is moving a bioweapon through the old drainage canals—the ones that run directly under your primary skate park on Level 9."

He flicked to another image. A schematic of the drainage system, with the Level 9 park—a cathedral of smooth concrete and rebar known as "The Cathedral"—highlighted in red.

"Sterling wants a war down here. Keeps property values low so his shell companies can buy the mineral rights. He uses the gangs as a smokescreen and an asset-denial weapon. And he pays me to make sure the *right* assets are denied."

Wires stared at him, her eyes narrowed. "You're a fixer. A trigger-man for the people who put the poison in the rain. And you want *us* to do your wetwork."

Bond didn't deny it. He just stared back, his face an unreadable mask of cold professionalism. He was a weapon. He had always been a weapon. But for the first time, staring at these two kids on boards, with their homemade gear and their clear, drug-free eyes—the only sober people in a city drowning in chemical bliss and digital nightmares—he felt the weight of the trigger he pulled.

He worked for the toxics. He was the instrument of their elegant, destructive whims. And he had just conscripted the only pure thing left in the sprawl to clean up a mess made by a man who snorted coke off platinum mirrors while whole blocks sank into toxic sludge.

"Sktr Br," Bond said, putting the datapad away. He turned and began to walk back toward the bar, his silhouette swallowed by the neon-tinted chemical fog. "I believe I owe you both a Redbreast." 

The Redbreast sat untouched between them. Jolt used his thumbnail to peel the label off his bottle of Ballygowan water—the only drink they actually paid for. Bond nursed his whiskey, the blood from his wrist now dried to a dark crust on the bar's ancient wood. The gabber had softened to something low and industrial, a grinding bassline that felt like the city's heartbeat.

"You're dead, y'know," Wires said, not looking at him. She was drawing patterns in the condensation on her glass. "Sterling finds out you gave us those schematics? He'll have a drone-strike rerouted to your flat before you can pour your morning tea."

"I'm aware," Bond replied.

"Then why do it?" Jolt asked. "You're his man. You're the sharp end of the stick he pokes the world with."

Bond swirled the whiskey, watching the legs run down the glass. "Even a sharp stick can be turned around."

Silence. The bass throbbed. Cogs wiped down the other end of the bar, her titanium arm whirring softly.

"There's someone," Wires said finally, her voice low. "One man. The reason the Yaks don't touch skaters. The reason no dealer offers us product twice. The reason Sterling's bioweapon runs through *our* drainage and not our veins."

Bond's eyebrow lifted a fraction.

"He's old. Older than the sprawl. Older than the arcologies." Jolt leaned forward, his carbon-fiber leg scraping the floor. "Provo. IRA. But the old kind—the kind that came from France, when the Irish were learning war from monks and knights. *Probus fortis*."

"Cuirasse," Wires said. The name fell like a stone into still water. "French for 'breastplate.' No one knows his real name. No one knows what he's running—what his real game is. He's geared up. Full conversion? Maybe. But he's still a sktr. He rides the Cathedral every full moon, alone, and he doesn't miss a line."

Jolt nodded. "He taught us everything. Not just how to skate—how to *be*. He said viruses don't harm the sober and athletic. They just make the immune system stronger. Turn it into a fortress. He said skaters are the only ones who understand that. We're not runners or gangers or corpo-puppets. We're Trolls."

"Trolls," Bond repeated, the word foreign on his tongue.

"Aye. Ugly to the world. Strong inside. Under the bridge, watching the billy goats cross. And we don't break." Wires met his eyes for the first time. "He won't like you. You're an arrogant feudal lord on cocaine, even if you don't snort it yourself. You work for the people who make the poison. You wear their colors."

"Then why tell me about him?"

"Because you asked." Jolt's voice was simple, final. "And the code is the code. *Qui demande aide, sera aidé*. 'Who asks for help will be helped.' Since Charlemagne. For eternity."

---

The Cathedral was not a church. It was a forgotten flood-control basin three levels down, where the old city's storm drains converged into a vast, domed chamber of smooth, ancient concrete. Over decades, skaters had sculpted it—adding ramps, grinding ledges, quarter-pipes that curved like flying buttresses. Bioluminescent moss, the only thing that thrived in the chemical damp, painted the walls in shifting blues and greens.

Bond descended a rusted ladder, his handmade shoes slipping on the wet rungs. The air smelled of stagnant water and ozone. In the center of the basin, under the faint glow of the moss, a single figure stood motionless on a battered longboard.

He was not what Bond expected. He was tall, lean, clad in what looked like articulated plate armor made of scavenged carbon-fiber and ceramic composite—actual *cuirasse*. A full helmet obscured his face, the visor a single slit of polarized glass. The board under his feet was a work of art: inlaid wood, metal trucks that gleamed with a dull, oiled sheen, wheels that looked like they'd been turned from solid polymer blocks.

He didn't move as Bond approached. The only sound was the drip of water and the faint hum of some internal system within the armor.

"You're the Brit," the voice came, filtered through the helmet's speakers. It was calm, with the faintest lilt of the west of Ireland, but educated. Precise. "The one who drinks his whiskey neat and his loyalty shaken."

"James Bond," Bond said, stopping ten feet away. "I need your help."

"Need." The word was a scalpel. "Need is a currency you've never had to spend, Mr. Bond. You trade in wants. The wants of men who think they own the rain because they paid for the cloud-seeding license."

Bond said nothing. The silence stretched.

"A man named Sterling wants to flood the underlevels with a bioweapon. You know this. You've given the children a map." The helmet tilted slightly. "Why?"

"Because even a weapon can choose its target."

A long pause. Then, a sound from within the helmet—a soft, low chuckle that held no warmth. "You think that's noble. You think turning on your master makes you a free man. It doesn't. It makes you a stray dog. Dangerous, but still a dog."

Bond's jaw tightened. "I didn't come here for philosophy."

"No. You came here because the children told you I would help. And I will." The figure on the board shifted, the trucks creaking softly. "But not for you. For the Cathedral. For the Trolls under the bridge."

He reached up and unlatched the helmet. As he lifted it, Bond saw a face that was not old in years, but old in weight. Pale skin, a close-cropped grey beard, eyes the color of a winter sea. A thin scar ran from temple to jaw, old and white.

"My name was Séamus. Once. Cuirasse now. And I will help you burn Sterling's house down, Mr. Bond. But you will do it on my terms. No more wetwork for the toxics. No more looking away. You will become a Troll, or you will become nothing."

He stepped off the board, the wheels rolling silently to a stop against a cracked coping. He extended a hand—not in greeting, but in command. Bond hesitated, then clasped it. The grip was metal under the glove, cold and unyielding.

"Now," Cuirasse said, his voice carrying the weight of Charlemagne's oath. "Tell me about the drainage canals. And tell me about the man who pays you. Because if we're going to war, I want to know whose throat I'm cutting first."

The moss glowed blue-green on the ancient concrete. The bass of the city above was a distant thunder. And in the Cathedral, the knight and the stray dog began to plan. 

PS

Martini.
...stares...
Steard not shaken
...stares...
Martini!!
...stares...
Do you hear me?
...stares...
I want...
...walks off...
HEY!!
...does not come back...
Ah.
...keeps serving others... 
 
 
...comes back with a flyer in plastic...
Look. Sir. It says there Jameson, JB, LaPhroaig, Ardberg, Bullit, Rye Bulleit, Connemara and the special ain no Martini. Ever. Girls do not come here. We drink out of misery or go dancing. Its a Sktr Br as it says outside. Redbreast today. Only long drinks and hard music.
???? 
Did you get lost? 
...
...one table away...
Did he get we only serve Jack Daniels with Pepsi?
Nah. And its Gentlemen Jack. 
What he ask for?
Beans. Wet Beans.
 

#cyberpunkcoltoure - Mind Set

 Imagine James Bond shows up there, because the Bloody Sunday Unit ran a Human Trade operation. 

And that one guy its all about turned out to be a Pirate Child. No sweet baby girl, but at all. 

Plus ... that Valley wasn't save and GI meant Gang Inflicted.

So... they put quite some Mycelium into quite a Petri dish. And that reacted.

 

IRA PROVOS
& Cuirassé 
 

 #undergroundwars
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

PS

 So, beside on beat. Who believed MTV?

#provos #GIs 
#undergroundwars #gfyCIA 
 
The Kingdome of Hell
Here we fight 
 
Dome
Kings
 
European monarchs were the primary drivers of art production for centuries, treating patronage as a tool for political propaganda, national prestige, and cultural legitimacy. Their sponsorship ranged from funding individual masterpieces to amassing collections that now form the bedrock of the world's most famous museums.  
 
Sponsorship for modern street art and graffiti has moved from the shadows into the boardroom. While it often retains a "rebel" look, it is now heavily funded by global corporations, non-profits, and local governments who use it to reach younger audiences or revitalize urban areas.
 
The AI said shadows and fools us.
 
The scale of modern sponsorship is not comparable to the absolute dominance of European Kings, though the financial figures are much larger today. While a modern nation or brand might spend millions, they represent a small fraction of a diversified economy; for a King, art was the state's primary voice of power. 
 

 
You fuck us, we fuck you. The Tyranny of Nations.

#MODInc

 What you think how often can I watch this??

#nevergrowup
#MODInc
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: I actually saved it to a private playlist and if anyone would find it there all I drop would be: "Yeah. D'you like id??" ... "Dancing?" ... "They are perfect on beat. Watch it"

#angermanagement

 Check what is feasible...

#TIE The Kingdome of Hell 

1000 years Germans Vs #neversurrender Europeans

Here we fight

from or for

 

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 He builds the case scenario by the first minute up on Hearsay in a trial simulation. 

This man is a University teacher level trained lawyer, but in Germany. There is no way to educate Germans about the deeply routed misconceptions and problems they have and create, instead they doubt the Jury system of the U.S.A., actually rejecting it completely.

You cannot start a trial scenario with: "There are rumors around among the Rockers that another murder is ordered. He has had a weapon in his house." 
 
Consider the implications just based on the introduction:  
The German Police rioted, despite the dedicated constitutional protection of the home as such, a home to find a weapon by a man they have no solid prove about the intention of obtaining and bearing an illegal fire arm other than hearsay by drugged street gangsters with a domination issue.
 
In the U.S.A. you shoot them dead trying... based on that scenario, going free no matter having no license for the weapon.

There is a chance that in the procedure they add information, like D. Successful having shared his wife's telephone number with his new hire manager, but not with his pillar of getting the job done, when asking him for something way of his job description and thereby strictly speaking illegal. 
 
Anyway; I fight like a Pit Bull and managed to get old here beneath the Germans for that very reason.
 
#TIE The Kingdome of Hell
#youoweusallies
 
Here we fight

#thedomesticenemy

 What you think?


 Arrests or Seals?

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has been involved in numerous controversial, illegal, and covert operations since its inception in 1947. These actions, often uncovered through congressional investigations, declassified documents, and whistleblowers, frequently involved meddling in foreign governments, human rights violations, and surveillance of American citizens. 
 

Here is a list of known CIA crimes and unethical operations:
 

1. Latin America and the Contras Scandal

    The Iran-Contra Affair (1980s): The CIA, alongside National Security Council officials like Oliver North, secretly facilitated the sale of arms to Iran—at the time a sworn enemy—to fund right-wing Contras rebels in Nicaragua. This was a direct violation of the Boland Amendment, a congressional ban on funding for the Contras.
    Contra Drug Trafficking: Evidence surfaced that Contra supporters, with the knowledge of CIA officials, trafficked drugs into the United States to fund their war, in a scandal that linked Contra planes to the crack cocaine epidemic in Los Angeles.
    "Neutralizing" Officials: The CIA produced a manual for the Contras—Psychological Operations in Guerrilla Warfare—that discussed "neutralizing" (assassinating) Nicaraguan officials.
    Mining Nicaraguan Harbors (1984): The CIA directly orchestrated the mining of Nicaraguan harbors, an act condemned by the World Court as a violation of international law. 

2. Iraq War Intelligence Lies (2002-2003)

    WMD Falsehoods: The CIA, particularly under Director George Tenet, exaggerated and provided faulty intelligence regarding Iraq's alleged Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) programs.
    Ignoring Contrary Evidence: A Senate report stated that the CIA ignored dissenting views and failed to verify unreliable sources (including Iraqi exiles) in order to produce a 2002 National Intelligence Estimate that conformed to the Bush Administration’s desire for war.
    Misleading the Public and Congress: The CIA’s October 2002 "white paper" on Iraq’s WMDs left out caveats and hedged language, painting a more certain picture of danger than the underlying intelligence supported, which was used to convince Congress to authorize the invasion. 

3. Human Rights Violations and Torture

    "Black Sites" and Torture: Following the 9/11 attacks, the CIA operated secret prisons—"black sites"—across the globe, where detainees were held incommunicado.
    Enhanced Interrogation Techniques: The CIA used techniques widely considered torture, including waterboarding, shackling in stress positions, and extreme sleep deprivation, violating both U.S. and international law.
    Extraordinary Rendition: The CIA kidnapped foreign nationals and transported them to countries known for brutal interrogation practices. 

4. Domestic Surveillance and Illegal Activities

    "Family Jewels" Report: In the 1970s, the CIA complied with a request to list its illegal domestic activities, known as the "family jewels." These included:
        Operation Mockingbird: Wiretapping and surveillance of journalists, such as those at the Washington Post, to uncover their sources.
        Domestic Spying: Tracking down anti-war protesters and tracking financial activities of citizens like John Lennon.
        Opening Mail: Secretly opening mail correspondence between U.S. citizens and the Soviet Union/China.
    Spying on Congress (2014): CIA officials spied on the computers of Senate Intelligence Committee staff members who were investigating the CIA’s torture program. 

5. Foreign Coups and Assassination Plots

    Iran Coup (1953): The CIA (Operation Ajax) orchestrated the overthrow of Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh after he nationalized the country’s oil resources.
    Guatemala Coup (1954): The CIA (Operation PBSUCCESS) engineered the overthrow of President Jacobo Árbenz to protect American corporate interests, leading to decades of dictatorship.
    Assassination Attempts: The CIA engaged in plots to assassinate foreign leaders, including Cuba’s Fidel Castro (which involved cooperating with the mafia), Patrice Lumumba in the Congo, and Rafael Trujillo in the Dominican Republic.
    Bay of Pigs (1961): A failed CIA-led paramilitary invasion of Cuba aimed at overthrowing Fidel Castro. 

6. Mind Control and Biological Experiments

    MKUltra (1953-1973): The CIA conducted illegal experiments on unwitting citizens—including prisoners, patients, and civilians—using LSD and other drugs to study mind control.
    Operation Midnight Climax: A subproject of MKUltra where prostitutes were hired to lure unsuspecting men to CIA safehouses, where they were dosed with LSD while agents watched from behind two-way mirrors. 

7. Assisting War Criminals 

    Operation Paperclip/Bloodstone: After World War II, the CIA and other U.S. intelligence services smuggled former Nazi intelligence officers and scientists out of Europe to work against the Soviet Union.  

I either fucking enlist or just do it. Then... No way I miss all the fun after that shit show.

#ironcladthegoblin 
#undergroundwars
#noblessoblige 

#Misconceptions

 That has to be Death Row or an immediate execution by a citizen. 

I wonder who asks why?

The point is not even, as a lesson against bullshit like "infringement" talks, that this disease can jump over to humans, it is about the value of life in America.

You cannot murder chickens for profit.

You may kill chicken to feed the hungry and get payed for that.

That is like "men" in "All men are made equal." including women being obvious to all Americans except ...

#51sts

#cyberpunkcoltoure

#neversurrender 

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 We know that from "Hollywood" movies world wide:


 Just for the record: That is a real U.S. Police car interior. That is no fake for a Dystopian Hollywood movie production exaggerating reality into fiction. That is what American Police uses for business.

I kid you not  !!! :


Now imagine trying to explain them that you are not the "best prisoner is the one who is not aware of being a prisoner", but a hardcore trained Knight in a brutal terrorist gang that considers one enough against Nazis out of efficiency reasons.

Dude, fuck me. The flattest learning curve ever.

#provos #IRAmovement #centurion #deadhead
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#Misconceptions

 That is the sweet talk. The reality, as a Racial Jew in Germany today, is this:

 I walk into the Office of the Manager. I ask him to consider giving me a Consultant Contract after two other Departments became curious about my work and everyone knowing that all strategic and work and tools created responsible to fix the Help Desk problems came from me and no second. I was also know for analyzing errors saving some Pharma Companies millions in potential losses by fixing the Study Set Up and thereby the company law cases.

He stared at me, saying nothing and told me to leave.

Then they started bullying me. Dedicated persons of the Help Desk and the tone of my Superiors changed dramatically. Eventually, the same Manager asked me into his office telling me I would scare others.

I stared at him, saying nothing and he told me to leave.

I took a Sabbatical deciding to change my life and never bow to any German again.

#undergroundwars #topfloorhits #igotstuck
#TIE 
 
They started. Soon, they will complain about the Game we play here... #gfyBKA I never showed what I also was, beside a fine work bee and "Dukatenscheisser" to a network of Nazis alive by CIA and Allies false decisions. A few years ago I was told by a Crew having a serious death wish they ignored that I had a Poverty Oath and "Tom" had my Copy Rights received. Just the Crew of six officers to get me in, did not show up, despite my effort...
 
PS: In the story of D. Erfolg (58), who noticed that no one until the New Manager mentioned his wife ever despite her telephone number? That's how they screw you over. Deals are made off barracks. If we do that... #provos #IRAmovement

 

AI - Status Update - Second Brain

 So, some are starting with Obsidian. My Obsidian-Deck, part of the Cyberdeck Nexus System, is a way more advances version of that Second Brian idea.

They are connecting and online AI with a local Obsidian installation creating that way more Notes for the note structuring software Obsidian.

Then they stare at a view nodes having a Graph. They fall short of that Second Brain, to be honest.

Obsidian is software, that is not fully free of charge by the way and making profit while using it in an enterprise should lead you here at some point, to structure nodes and display that in a graph. Each note is represented by a node and clicking on it will show you the keyword creating the connections to other nodes and the note file itself.

The idea is that a user looks at the connections of one node, being one note, and than reasons about that node and the surrounding nodes. It is a bit like playing Sherlock Homes with your notes, thereby your thoughts, and it does make sense to note down a lot of what goes on in your brain thinking carefully about the keywords. In my Obsidian-Deck made for large sets of note files a LLM does that for you and notes can be Clustered at which point the Graphing Tool of Obsidian turned secondary, having been a great beginning.

So, using Doc Google to find a logic chain:

Scored Leather (Observation) - Scraping Mud (Context) - Careless Action (Inference) -
Clumsy Servant (Character). 

as Sherlock Homes would, a CFO of a Financial Corporation would reasoning over his Obsidian:

"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data, yet the data in your Obsidian graph speaks with quite a singular voice. Observe this node, 'Q3 Margin Compression'—a clumsy servant to your balance sheet, is it not?
You see, but you do not observe.
I followed the digital trail to 'Raw Materials,' noting the heavy weight of the connection. A lesser mind might blame the 'Global Market,' that convenient scapegoat for every financial mystery. But by eliminating the impossible, we find a curious link to the 'Green Initiative' node.
The deduction is elementary: you have traded your margins for a conscience. You opted for 'Low-Carbon Aluminum' at a fifteen-percent premium, yet failed to adjust your 'Pricing Model' to compensate. The 'clumsy servant' did not steal your profits; he simply spent them on a virtue you forgot to invoice.
The case is closed. The solution lies not in the markets, but in the recalculation of your contracts." 

Now read this chat in full length I had with the Google AI to understand what Obsidian is actually made for, and my Obsidian Deck puts to the extreme:

Can you give me a Sherlock Holmes like logic chain of keywords, please?

To think like Holmes, you must move from observation to deduction by stripping away the impossible. Here is a logic chain of keywords to guide that process:

    Observation: Notice the trifles; the dust on a sleeve or the wear on a watch [1].
    Data: Gather every raw fact before theorizing to avoid twisting facts to suit theories [3].
    Inference: Connect the "seen" to the "unseen"—the muddy shoe implies the specific path 
    walked [1, 2].
    Exclusion: Systematically eliminate every explanation that contradicts the evidence [4].
    Probability: Weigh the likelihood of the remaining scenarios against human nature and 
    physics [4].
    Deduction: Accept whatever remains, however improbable, as the truth [4].
    Verification: Test the conclusion against a new set of facts to ensure it holds [3].

Would you like to apply this chain to a specific mystery or a real-life puzzle you’re currently facing?
AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
 
Now abstract that onto a user of Obsidian highlighting a node and following its connections. Take as an example a possible set of nodes for a Manager in a CFO position.
For a CFO navigating a complex knowledge graph in Obsidian, the logic chain shifts from physical clues to structural patterns.
 
Imagine highlighting a central node—for example, "Q3 Margin Compression"—and tracing the edges:

    Anchor: Select the core node; identify the primary symptom or "crime scene" (e.g., 
    Operating Expense Spike).
    Breadcrumbs: Follow the backlinks; see which departments or projects are feeding into 
    this specific node.
    Cross-Reference: Toggle the Graph View to find "bridge nodes"—entities that connect 
    seemingly unrelated folders (e.g., Rising Logistics Costs linking to Global Port Strike).
    Anomaly Detection: Look for "orphaned" nodes; data points that should be connected to 
    the strategy but are floating in isolation.
    Synthesis: Group the clusters; recognize that three separate "issue" nodes all point back 
    to one "vendor" node.
    Root Cause: The Holmesian moment—eliminating "market trends" because the data 
    shows the leak is internal and systemic.
    Mapping: Create a new Canvas or "Map of Content" to visualize the final deduction for 
   the board.

Should we build a specific folder structure or a tagging system to help you surface these connections more quickly?
AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
 
Can you give me an example chain, please?
 
For a CFO, using Obsidian is about moving from "What happened?" (the spreadsheet) to "Why did it happen?" (the knowledge graph). By highlighting a single node, you can follow a trail of evidence across different domains of the business.
The Scenario: Investigating a Gross Margin Drop
You notice a red flag in your monthly report: Gross Margin is down 4% despite steady sales. You open Obsidian, find the [[Q3 Gross Margin]] node, and begin the logic chain:

    Select the Anchor Node:
        Node: [[Q3 Gross Margin]]
        Observation: The node is heavily linked to [[COGS - Cost of Goods Sold]]. You open the 
        Local Graph to see the immediate neighbors.
    Follow the Primary Connection:
        Node: [[COGS - Cost of Goods Sold]]
        Observation: You see a thick connection (multiple mentions) to [[Raw Material - 
        Aluminum]].
        Deduction: The issue isn't labor or overhead; it's a specific supply chain input.
    Trace the External Influence:
        Node: [[Raw Material - Aluminum]]
        Observation: This node has a backlink to a meeting note: [[Meeting: Vendor Review - 
        AlumiCorp]].
        Deduction: There was a price hike discussed three months ago that wasn't fully 
        mitigated.
    Identify the "Bridge" Anomaly:
        Node: [[Meeting: Vendor Review - AlumiCorp]]
        Observation: You notice a surprising connection to [[Project: Green Initiative]].
        Inference: Why are the Green Initiative and the aluminum price linked? You follow the 
        edge.
    Uncover the Hidden Correlation:
        Node: [[Project: Green Initiative]]
        Observation: A note inside this project reveals a decision to switch to "low-carbon 
        aluminum," which carries a 15% premium.
        Deduction: The margin drop isn't a "market" problem; it's the financial fallout of a 
        sustainability pivot that wasn't factored into the pricing model.
    Formulate the Action (The Holmesian Conclusion):
        Conclusion: The "impossible" (sudden market inflation) is eliminated. The "improbable" 
        (a sustainability project causing a silent margin collapse) is the truth.
        Action: Create a new node [[Decision: Q4 Pricing Adjustment]] and link it back to the 
       [[Project: Green Initiative]] to close the loop.

Would you like to see how to use Dataview queries to automatically list all nodes that share these specific financial tags?
AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
 
Phrase it like the Sherlock Homes conclusion of the Clumsy Servant, please
 
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data, yet the data in your Obsidian graph speaks with quite a singular voice. Observe this node, 'Q3 Margin Compression'—a clumsy servant to your balance sheet, is it not?
You see, but you do not observe.
I followed the digital trail to 'Raw Materials,' noting the heavy weight of the connection. A lesser mind might blame the 'Global Market,' that convenient scapegoat for every financial mystery. But by eliminating the impossible, we find a curious link to the 'Green Initiative' node.
The deduction is elementary: you have traded your margins for a conscience. You opted for 'Low-Carbon Aluminum' at a fifteen-percent premium, yet failed to adjust your 'Pricing Model' to compensate. The 'clumsy servant' did not steal your profits; he simply spent them on a virtue you forgot to invoice.
The case is closed. The solution lies not in the markets, but in the recalculation of your contracts."
Shall we now codify this logic into a Template so you may catch the next 'clumsy servant' before the quarter ends?

#cyberpunkcoltoure
 

Sunday, 12 April 2026

...in a close potential future...

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

She came off the stage with a ripple of light still clinging to the edges of her silhouette, the projection on the screen behind her dissolving into abstract neon geometry. She moved through the crowd like a current finding its own channel. People stepped aside without seeming to realize they were doing it. Her dress was something liquid and expensive, dark green catching the purple glow of the room. Her hair was pulled back tight enough to lift her cheekbones.

Jako watched her approach without turning his head. He'd positioned himself with his back to a load-bearing pillar, sightlines clear to the stairs and two of the exits. Old habit. Not paranoia. Just architecture read the right way.

She stopped in front of him. Up close, the stage makeup was heavier than it looked from a distance, but under it she was the same woman who'd stood in the parking lot at midnight, holding her daughter's scraped elbow, watching five skaters carve lines into concrete like they were writing a language she couldn't read.

"You came," she said. The music swallowed the words, but he read her lips.

"You said free drink."

She laughed. It was a real laugh, not a hostess laugh. She signaled to a server who materialized from the smoke like he'd been waiting for the cue.

"What do you want?"

"Something with cream," Jako said. "Lots of it. Fruit underneath."

Her eyebrow arched. "Seriously?"

"Four more of whatever he's having," she told the server, tilting her chin toward the rest of the Crew who had drifted back into visual range without appearing to have moved at all. The server nodded and vanished.

She led them to a booth tucked into a curved alcove at the back of the third room, past the VIP curtains and the low tables crowded with bottles wearing sparklers. This space was quieter. Still loud, but you could hear a voice without leaning in. The booth was leather and dark wood, and the table already had a Reserved plaque that she flipped over with two fingers.

They sat. Not all at once. Staggered. Eyes scanning. Old habit. Not paranoia.

The drinks arrived on a tray carried by a woman with silver eyelashes and a smile that cost something. Tall glasses, whipped cream domed over the rim like soft serve architecture, the pink of strawberry bleeding up through the white. The Crew accepted them without comment. Vanya took a long pull through the straw and closed his eyes like he was reviewing the structural integrity of the flavor profile.

"Okay," she said. "That's not what I expected."

"What did you expect?"

She leaned back against the booth, rolling her glass between her palms. The condensation left wet trails on her rings. "Honestly? I read that magazine. The one with the skatepark spread last spring. You know the one."

Jako did. Glossy pages. Fisheye shots of empty pools and kids with hollow cheeks and pupils too wide for the sunlight. The article had been titled something about rebellion and self-destruction. It had sold well. It had also gotten three of the spots featured in it burned within a month.

"That was a fashion editorial," Jako said. "They hired models. Half of them couldn't stand on a board."

"I figured that out when I saw you." She gestured with her chin at the five of them arranged around the booth. "You don't look like those photos. You look like..." She searched for the word. "Athletes. Not the ones on television. The real ones. The ones who do the thing because the thing needs doing."

Mira set her glass down. She'd removed her beanie and her hair fell in a dark wave that she tucked behind one ear. "We train," she said. "Every day. Rain or not. Concrete doesn't care about your excuses."

"We fall," Vanya added. "A lot. Then we get up. That's most of it, actually. Falling and getting up. The rest is just the space between."

She looked at them for a long moment, her fingers still turning the glass. The cream was beginning to melt into the pink below.

"The magazine didn't mention that part."

"They never do."

She nodded slowly. Then she reached into a small clutch purse she'd set on the seat beside her and pulled out a slim device, tapped it twice, and set it on the table. A small holographic interface flickered above it, showing a calendar grid.

"My daughter wants to learn," she said. "She's been asking since that night. I told her no. Then I saw the way you moved tonight. How you walked in. Like the floor was something you were reading."

"We can teach her," Jako said. "If she wants to learn properly. Not the magazine version. The real one. Repetition. Bruises. Wind. Concrete."

"And?"

"And maybe some weed after," Vanya said. "For the swelling."

She blinked. Then laughed again, a different laugh this time, surprised out of her.

"That's it?"

"That's it. We don't do the other stuff. Performance isn't the same as escape. We're trying to be here. Not leave."

She was quiet for a moment. The music shifted into something deeper, a bass frequency that vibrated in the sternum. She reached for her glass and took a sip through the cream. When she set it down, there was a small white mustache on her upper lip that she didn't wipe away.

"Okay," she said. "Let's talk about it. But first, tell me your names. All of you. The real ones."

And so they did. 

#cyberpunkcoltoure - Expectations

 So, this here, right.

...in a close potential future...
It rained again, like always. Jako and his Crew came two rides. They parked a bit off, turned on the alarms and surveillance system not knowing if they had reception in the place. They walked through the night, vests below, slim 1911s concealed with no intention to drink anything else, but something usually only girls would order with a lot of cream best covering the fruits.
The place was in a cellar. They waited inline, cued as supposed being no regulars. It was quick, the Selector told everyone if they would fit or not and even let some have a look. 
It worked, all walked out again except those he welcomed.
 
You look calm and easy. Usually, we don't have Skaters in here and everyone dresses up. That beanie? 
Water resistant. I can take it off.  ... Sir.
Okaaaayyyy.
Ahm, Yin Lee asked us to come by anytime actually.
Aehh?
...
...
Her daughter had hurt herself on our spot and she came to pick her up.
Aahh. Yeah. You can have a look if you like.
Thanks.
 
The five guys walked by, entered the place down the stairs being watched as the only ones by the every single Bouncer eye. They moved differently.
 
The place was packed with neon lights, smoke filled the rooms and Euro Dance Floor music with a much heavier beat below pumped through the speakers. The Crew spread out a bit. Created distance, but stayed within the formation of the rides they came with.
Everyone checked their smart watches. Reception. Nice. 
The place stretched out through a cellar across several rooms, some of them VIP with service. Upper Class to Mid Class clientele and a lot of from the Corporate World dressed up in an excuse of their usual corporate outfits. No business casual, but a an awful lot designer brands, printed Ts, cloth trousers and hardly any no skinny jeans. 
The Crew looked remarkable different in what all thought was sneakers, but actually the lightest combat boots on the market, heavy duty cotton and hemp trousers in a wider than boot cut almost baggy style typical for the hardcore skaters they were and fine Shirts from the same underground brands all home made by some mum earning a few extra bugs. The pistols fitted in the pockets no matter their size and the vests did no show under the button up shirts, which were tailored and showed their Troll shoulders and muscles.
They had seen her immediately. At a side, on a stage, with no pole, but a bright visualization effects running screen she was dancing. She had said it was her place and I'd get a free drink. I could bring friends.
So, here we were. Deep in Corporate Elven territory. 

Big Boys Club

 Ok. ... Is that relative to the business of the Gym or General, please?
 
#MODInc #rockerturff
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: Don't ask if he just shot that half gram! But ever. 

#Climatechange

 This is a simulation of what will most likely manifest in a few years. Consider the consequences.

#TIE The Kingdome of Hell 

World,

 do you get it? To be stuck in their main nest, where corrupt cops are kings???

#igotstuck #TIE

The Kingdome of Hell
Here we fight
 
PS: I relax watching that. Pyramid no upside down. 

#TussyInc - Mind Set

 That is the best hit on them ever.... She'll never met her, but he had to meet hers, being judgmental first second on throughout the entire analytical procedure.

#TussyInc
#MODInc
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

...in a close potential future...

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

**Cold Extraction Protocol**
*A Shadowrun Noir Story*

---

**Prologue: The Collapse**

By the time the Main River began to flood its banks for the fourth time in a decade, Würzburg had already forgotten what normal felt like. The climate models had been wrong—catastrophically, exponentially wrong. What the corps had promised would be a gradual shift became a runaway collapse. Harvests failed across Franconia, the Rhine shipping lanes turned to sludge, and Berlin’s orders stopped making sense sometime in ’69.

Deindustrialisation followed, swift and surgical. When the last auto plant in Schweinfurt shuttered, the region collapsed into something resembling post-war Sicily: local warlords, church-sanctioned protection rackets, and a plague of synthetic opiates flooding the streets. The Germans called it *der Zerfall*—the Decay.

Street gangs fought running battles with what remained of the *Polizei*. The virus waves came in cycles, each mutation deadlier than the last. The heat never broke; the rain never stopped.

That was when the Army SEALs arrived.

They came on a Tuesday night in October, riding the leading edge of a thunderstorm that had been seeded with enough nanite chaff to blind every sensor within fifty klicks. The first sign was not a sound—it was a sudden, unnatural quiet. Every drone, every security camera, every half-working traffic grid in the old city went black. Then the sky filled with silk.

---

**Chapter 1: Ghosts Over Giebelstadt**

Staff Sergeant Marcus Cole hung in his harness, staring down through the rain-streaked canopy at the dark sprawl below. At two hundred meters, Würzburg looked like a circuit board submerged in ink—scattered lights, the serpentine gleam of the Main, and the hulking silhouette of the Marienberg Fortress squatting on its hill like a stone toad.

“Thirty seconds,” the jumpmaster’s voice crackled over the encrypted LASH. “Primary LZ: Giebelstadt. Secondary: Dom-Neumünster. Tertiary: Hubland Campus. You know the drill, gentlemen. Clean sweep. No survivors. No witnesses. No trace.”

Cole’s HUD painted a ghostly overlay across his vision—thermal signatures, structural weak points, and the glowing waypoints of his squad. He was one of forty-two operators from the 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne), a unit that officially did not exist. The media called them “Army SEALs”—a bastardized term coined after the Pentagon had quietly folded the surviving Green Berets into a new, cross-trained force. Every man in the stick had passed the Navy’s BUD/S course; every man had spent a decade fighting in the corporate wars that had replaced national conflicts. They were the sharp end of a very long, very dark spear.

The jump light flicked from red to green.

Cole released his static line and dropped into the storm.

---

The Giebelstadt airfield had been a ghost for decades. The U.S. Army had pulled out in 2006, leaving behind a cracked runway and a scattering of derelict hangars. During the Collapse, a local militia—the *Mainfranken Freiwillige*—had seized the site, hoping to use it as a smuggling hub for black-market pharmaceuticals. They’d fortified the perimeter with scrap metal and sandbags, confident that no one would bother contesting a forgotten airstrip in rural Bavaria.

They were wrong.

Cole’s boots hit the tarmac hard, the impact absorbed by the shock-absorbing gel in his combat suit. Around him, twelve other shadows materialised out of the rain, their chutes dissolving into biodegradable slurry seconds after touchdown. The suits they wore were not standard-issue—these were **M-77 Marauder Combat Frames**, scaled-down descendants of the old BattleMech designs, built for urban warfare rather than open-field dominance. At three and a half meters tall, they were classified as “heavy power armour,” though the engineers who built them preferred the term “close assault systems.” Each frame mounted a gauss rifle in the right arm, a rotary missile pod on the left shoulder, and a cyberwarfare suite that could hack any civilian grid in under three seconds.

Cole’s Marauder hummed to life as he synced his neural link. The world sharpened: he could hear the heartbeats of the militia sentries huddled in the hangar, could see the heat leaking from their poorly insulated shelter, could *feel* the micro-tremors of footsteps three hundred meters away.

“Sierra-1, you are green,” came the voice of Captain Reyes over the comm. “Take the tower. Sierra-2, the fuel depot. Sierra-3, with me. Primary objective is the control room. We secure the runway, we secure the entire operation. Move.”

They moved.

---

At Dom-Neumünster, the jump was messier. The collegiate church sat in the heart of the old city, its Baroque façade scarred by decades of neglect and the occasional stray round. The unit assigned to the secondary LZ had to thread the needle between the spires and the dense tenement blocks that had grown up around the cathedral like cancerous fungus. One operator misjudged the wind shear and smashed into a gargoyle, his frame’s auto-med system flooding him with painkillers as he crashed through a stained-glass window and into the nave.

By the time he was back on his feet, the rest of the squad had already cleared the church. The *Freiwillige* had been using the crypt as an ammunition dump; two Marauders with flamethrower attachments turned it into a furnace. The screams echoed up through the ancient stonework, mingling with the crackle of burning gunpowder.

“Dom secure,” reported Lieutenant Voss, her voice flat. “Moving to Phase Two.”

---

Hubland Campus, once the pride of the University of Würzburg, had been transformed into a fortified compound by a coalition of student radicals and deserters from the *Bundeswehr*. They’d turned the old Leighton Barracks into a maze of razor wire and improvised explosives, convinced that their cause—some muddled blend of eco-anarchism and anti-corporate rhetoric—was worth dying for. They were about to test that conviction.

The tertiary strike team came in via fast-rope from a quartet of stealth-modified Comanche attack helicopters, their rotors muffled to near-silence by the storm. The Marauders dropped in pairs, their jump jets flaring briefly to cushion the landing. Within ninety seconds, they’d established a perimeter around the central lecture hall and begun the systematic clearance of every building on campus.

The students fought back with whatever they had: hunting rifles, homemade bombs, a single antique Panzerfaust that bounced harmlessly off a Marauder’s reactive armour. It was not a battle; it was an extermination. By dawn, the only sounds on Hubland were the hum of the SEALs’ portable fusion generators and the distant wail of the city’s last surviving siren.

---

**Chapter 2: Fortress**

Marienberg Fortress had stood for nearly a thousand years, a symbol of ecclesiastical power and military might. Its walls had withstood cannon fire, aerial bombardment, and the slow erosion of time. It had not been built to withstand the Army SEALs.

Cole’s team arrived at the fortress two hours after securing Giebelstadt. They’d ridden in on stolen civilian trucks, their Marauders folded into transport configuration beneath canvas tarps. The *Freiwillige* had posted guards at the main gate, but the SEALs didn’t use the gate. They scaled the western bastion using gecko-grip climbing pads, silent and unseen.

By the time the fortress commander realised something was wrong, Cole was already in his office, standing over his bed.

The man’s name was Oberstleutnant Krause, a former Bundeswehr officer who’d gone native. He reached for the pistol under his pillow; Cole’s gauss rifle punched a hole through his chest before his fingers touched the grip.

“Fortress secure,” Cole reported. “We’ve got the high ground.”

Reyes acknowledged with a click. “Copy that. Set up the com relays. I want full network coverage by 0600.”

The SEALs spent the next three hours transforming the ancient fortress into a modern command post. Portable satellite dishes sprouted from the battlements. Drone launchers were bolted to the medieval stonework. In the old prince-bishops’ chambers, they installed a tactical holo-table that could display every street, every building, every warm body in the city below.

From that perch, they would direct the next phase: the sweep.

---

**Chapter 3: The Sweep**

The Germans who had survived the initial assault did not understand what they were facing. They’d fought each other for so long—gang against gang, militia against militia—that they’d forgotten what real war looked like. They thought they could hide in the narrow alleys of the Altstadt, that the SEALs would get bogged down in the maze of medieval streets.

The SEALs did not get bogged down.

They moved in packs of four Marauders, leapfrogging through the city with the precision of a surgical instrument. At each intersection, a sniper drone would hover into position, scanning for thermal signatures. When a target was identified, a Marauder would step around the corner and eliminate it with a single gauss round. Then the pack would advance, the lead Marauder scanning for the next threat while the others covered the flanks.

The *Freiwillige* tried to set ambushes. They learned, quickly, that the Marauders’ sensor suites could detect the metallic signature of a hidden firearm from a hundred meters away. They tried to use the sewers. The SEALs flooded the tunnels with nerve gas. They tried to rally at the old train station. A pair of Comanches levelled the building with Hellfire missiles.

By noon, the German resistance had collapsed. Those who weren’t dead were fleeing the city in a ragged exodus, streaming across the bridges into the countryside. The SEALs let them go. Their orders were to secure Würzburg, not to annihilate its population.

By sunset, the city belonged to the Army SEALs.

---

**Epilogue: Rain**

I stood in the shadow of the Marienberg Fortress, watching the rain wash the blood off the cobblestones. My name is Katarina Vogler, and I used to be a journalist. Now I’m just a woman with a camera and a death wish.

The SEALs had set up checkpoints at every major intersection: concrete barriers, automated turrets, and a Marauder frame standing silent guard like a steel gargoyle. They’d strung communication cables through the old tram tunnels, creating a network that could monitor every corner of the city. They’d turned Dom-Neumünster into a barracks and Hubland into a helicopter base. And they’d made the fortress their beating heart, a black tower from which they could see everything and everyone.

I raised my camera and took a single, silent shot of the fortress silhouette against the grey sky. The shutter click was lost in the rain. I didn’t know who I’d sell the image to—maybe Saeder-Krupp, maybe Ares, maybe some shadowrunner with a grudge. It didn’t matter. In this city, everyone was for sale, including me.

A Marauder turned its head—a slow, deliberate motion—and I knew it had seen me. I lowered the camera and walked away, the water seeping into my boots.

Behind me, the fortress waited, and the rain kept falling. It always did.

---

*This is Würzburg, 2076. The climate’s gone. The industry’s dead. The Germans are gone. And the Army SEALs are here to stay. 1* 

Big Letter Crew - The Kingdome of Hell

 So, Underground war is more interesting than open warfare?

We have two nations left if Iran is liberated that are based on tyranny. North Korea and Germany that was build by Nazis and their Affiliates. North Korea is a constant threat, but they are honest about that and a homogeneous group. Their leaders most likely do find strong support among each of the people.

Germany exists to maintain the battleground for a war that never came.

We now can go through medical records and look for cases like mine. You check the x-ray done in Aubagne and wonder how German diagnosis on atypical-neuroleptica use differs significantly from a Parisian Hospital doctor. 
You can look for patterns in Ritalin descriptions and force German Polizei to drug and medication tests.
 
This just creates a lot of paperwork and will miss the core of the German idea. The Germans attacked in their history, like as the Teutonic Order both Jerusalem and Gdanzk, to loot. They consider theft by war a legitimate way of profit throughout history like no other social group. This is why they denunciat the Jews, the Pirates, The Pols and who ever had, by lies.
 
This also means that the most successful and driving of the Germans are not those having read Goethe or Schiller, that speak English and French, that reason before they speak... it means those making most profit must the leading driving edge managing to push that social group today known as TheGermans into their worst actions and most stupid statements no matter the cost, like 75% dead Soldiers on just the side against Russia in WW2. 
 
We may assume that, based on Germans being humans, not every single one of them is of bad character, but we have to consider that they just lie to the rest of the world about their real national intentions and system legitimacy.  
 

 It does not matter in this context from which human that screenshot is, but the surrounding Secret Services preferring an Underground War over a direct escalation to avoid millions of dead other humans might want to scan Germany for simple business concepts that have higher than to be expected profits by manipulation like lower interest rates, market abuse or obvious money laundering... and focus on those.
 
#provos #undergroundwars
#cyberpunkcoltoure
 
The Kingdome of Hell 

#Misconceptions

 You can actually play with them. He behaves right now exactly like a dog. So, Bears are defensible animals and mainly hunt fish. The transformation and destruction caused by an illicit way of industrialization almost entirely extinguished them in Europe.  
 
Europe is the worst battle ground of two leadership concepts and no side minds the terror. Like, I strongly believe the Germans were punished much to soft and executions should have continued no matter their surrendering after WW2. Instead they have now territory over former opposing lands. 
 
Like, if you have Germans as tenants above you they consider no matter sun impact on you marching and stomping in that flat above you very normal even supported by Polizei. 
 
Wolfs and Bears were an important part of our European forests until by the German offensive wars Nations were created. They also most aggressively promote false pictures and conceptions about animals. Interestingly so, the consider Rats being intelligent survival artists and no mass breeding plague also leaving out that they are the main prey for Wolfs.
 
Like Dogs, Bears are empathic animals. So, if you are a main asshole with bad intention you better hide and run.
 
#noblessoblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

Saturday, 11 April 2026

Scarlette

 Ce que'se quelle dit la, en pologne. ja comprends rien, mais crack une coer, ca ne fait pas un chevallier. Je prefere de mourir avont. L'amour ca le coer die vie, ca pourqua Adam prenne le verite. Pour garde dans un autre monde mieux est ca just va marche avec plus d'amour.

Je va tue tous. TOUS!!! Aucun reason de vivre, mais la lutte, le gurre de l'amour!

Iron Clad The Goblin.

Lasse moi etablir le riom de diable ici, tous creature de noir... Une autre monde pour moi etre cuirasse pure!

#rosecrusaders  

...in a close potential future...

 Incorporate with DeepSeek

The rain hadn't started yet, but the air over La Défense was thick with the promise of it. The kind of wet that made the city's neon bleed into the asphalt like a wound that wouldn't close. I watched her through the 360-stitched feed on the center tablet, a tiny figure in a white synth-silk coat cutting through the corporate drones outside the Renraku Arcology. Her escort—two slabs of muscle with obvious move-by-wire twitches—scanned the street with the dead-eyed efficiency of men who'd had their survival instincts surgically removed and replaced with subroutines.

The passenger door of the Maserati opened with a pneumatic hiss I'd installed myself. She slid in, bringing a cloud of expensive pheromone perfume and the faint ozone crackle of a high-end personal jammer. Her eyes, augmented with gold-flecked iris displays, swept the cabin. I saw her register the roll cage integrated into the roof, the three-screen dashboard, the complete absence of luxury.

She'd expected leather and wood. She got carbon-fiber switch panels and a fire extinguisher.

"You're the Troll," she said. Not a question. A statement of disappointment.

"People call me Kaine." I didn't look at her. My eyes were on the thermal overlay painting the street in blues and reds. The escort was retreating. Two blocks north, a heat signature crouched by a vent. Ambush potential. Low. "Seatbelt."

She didn't move. "I was told you were fast."

"I am."

"This car is old."

"It's older than you. It's also faster than anything Renraku builds that doesn't require a pilot's license." I reached up and flipped a guarded switch. The active stabilizers—my wing that wasn't a wing—extended from the front and rear on their linear rails. A faint hydraulic whine, then silence. "Seatbelt. Or this ride ends here."

She clicked it in place with exaggerated slowness.

I pulled away from the curb at exactly the speed limit. The electric motors from the Lexus hybrid unit in the rear tunnel pushed us forward in eerie silence. No engine note. No drama. Just the wet hiss of tires on pavement.

"The engine isn't on," she observed.

"Don't need it yet. City driving is for electrons." I tapped the rightmost screen. It showed a live top-down view of the car, stitched from the four cameras. A red laser line projected forward from the front fenders, calculating clearance. "See those lines? They tell me if we fit. You'd be surprised how many alleys in this city were built for horses, not widebody Maseratis."

She watched the display with something that might have been curiosity. Or might have been contempt. Hard to tell with the rich ones.

---

We cleared the Périphérique at 23:47. The rain started in earnest as we hit the A1 north. I let the V8 wake up.

The sound was—and I say this as someone who has heard a lot of engines die—religious. Four hundred horsepower of Ferrari-derived fury, muffled only slightly by the custom exhaust routing I'd welded around the new transmission tunnel. It sang a song of cast connecting rods and high-revving death wishes. The hybrid motor filled the gaps. Zero lag. Just a seamless shove into the back of the Recaro seat.

She gripped the door handle. "It's loud."

"You wanted fast."

We hit 220 km/h on a straight stretch between Compiègne and Saint-Quentin. The rain turned to streaks on the windshield, deflected by the Teflon coating. Lotus effect. Water beaded and fled. The thermal camera painted the road in ghostly green, revealing the heat signatures of a wild boar family trundling along the shoulder a kilometer ahead. I adjusted my line by half a meter.

She noticed. "How did you—"

"I see heat. Living things glow."

"That's... unsettling."

"It's practical. Hitting a boar at this speed would ruin both our evenings."

Silence for a while. The French countryside blurred past. Abandoned service stations. Wind turbines with blinking red lights. The occasional arcology dome, glowing like a bioluminescent tumor on the horizon.

She broke the quiet. "Do you ever get lonely? Driving all night. Alone."

I considered the question. The answer was complicated. I had the car. I had the drone docked on the roof, a DJI Mavic I could launch to scout ten kilometers ahead. I had the cyberdeck waiting back on the péniche, loaded with a local LLM that analyzed every kilometer I drove and suggested improvements to the rule-based hybrid controller. I had the Shabbat rum and the occasional joint when the week's work was done.

"No," I said. "I have good company."

She looked around the empty cabin. "Who?"

I patted the dashboard. "Her."

---

We stopped once. A charging station outside Lille that also had a toilet that didn't require a SIN check. She bought a soy-caf from a vending machine and stood under the awning, watching me check the oil. The rain had stopped, leaving the air smelling of wet concrete and ozone from the nearby maglev line.

She asked, "Why a Maserati? Why not something... modern?"

I wiped the dipstick on a rag. "Because modern cars are computers with wheels. They phone home. They have mandatory autopilot overrides. They can be bricked remotely by a corp decker having a bad day." I screwed the oil cap back on. "This car is analog where it matters. The engine is mechanical. The steering is hydraulic. The brakes don't need a software update to work. The electronics I added—the cameras, the lasers, the hybrid brain—those are *my* electronics. They answer to me."

"You don't trust the corps."

"I don't trust anyone who can turn off my car with an email."

She was quiet again as we got back in. The highway stretched north, toward the Belgian border. The light pollution map in my head—a mental overlay from years of driving this corridor—showed the glowing spine of Europe curving down through the Ruhr, the Rhineland, toward the Alpine passes and the Italian industrial plains. We were just a tiny moving dot on that spine. One of thousands. But faster than most.

I pushed the throttle. The V8 screamed toward its redline. The hybrid motor added its silent shove. The G-force meter on the center screen climbed past 0.7. The active stabilizers adjusted their angle by two degrees to keep the rear planted.

She didn't grip the handle this time. She leaned back and closed her eyes.

"Wake me when we hit the Alps," she said.

"Four hours," I replied. "Maybe three and a half."

"That's impossible."

"For a normal car, yes." I reached up and tapped the drone launch icon on the tablet. On the roof, the Mavic detached and shot forward into the night, its camera feeding me a hawk's-eye view of the empty autobahn ahead. "For this one, it's just Tuesday."

---

Dawn came as we crested the Brenner Pass. The Italian side was socked in with fog, but the thermal cameras cut through it like a hot knife. She woke as I slowed for the border checkpoint—a ghost of what it once was, now just a toll booth with a bored guard and a cred-chip scanner.

She watched the guard wave us through without even looking at our faces. "How did you—"

"I have seventeen different SINs loaded in the car's broadcast system. One of them is a certified Renraku diplomatic courier. The guard's scanner saw it and decided we weren't worth the paperwork."

"That's illegal."

"So is breathing in some parts of Europe now." I accelerated into the fog. "You wanted to get to Milan before breakfast. We're on schedule."

She was quiet for the final stretch. The fog lifted as we descended into the Po Valley. The sun rose over the industrial sprawl, painting the smog in shades of orange and pink. I pulled into the drop-off point—a private villa behind a ten-meter wall—at exactly 07:43.

She unbuckled and paused with her hand on the door. "You really aren't impressed by anything, are you?"

I thought about it. Thought about the V8 holding together at 7000 RPM for four straight hours. Thought about the hybrid brain seamlessly blending torque. Thought about the drone returning to its dock automatically as we slowed. Thought about the data waiting for me back on the péniche, ready for the LLM to chew on and suggest new rules.

"Not by money," I said. "Not by status. Not by beauty." I met her gold-flecked eyes. "But I am impressed by machines that do exactly what they're built to do. And by people who do the same."

She held my gaze for a moment. Then she nodded, once, and stepped out into the Italian morning.

I waited until the villa's gate closed behind her. Then I turned the Maserati around, pointed it north, and let the V8 sing me home.

The péniche rocked gently against its moorings, a low-frequency rhythm that had become the baseline of my existence. The boat was a hundred-year-old cargo hauler, steel-hulled and stubborn, converted by three previous owners before I'd claimed it as my own. I'd welded the two shipping containers to the deck myself—one red, one blue, stacked like a child's forgotten blocks. The lower container held the Maserati, its roller bench system gleaming under strips of warm-white LED tape I'd run along the ceiling seams. The upper container was the lab. My temple.

It was 03:47. The stretch of canal between Paris and Bruxelles was dead quiet. No corporate patrol boats. No smugglers. Just the distant hum of a maglev line and the soft lap of black water against the hull. The light pollution map in my head showed me exactly where I sat: a dim pocket of darkness wedged between two glowing metropolitan tumors. I liked it here. The stars were almost visible.

I climbed the steel staircase bolted to the side of the red container, each step ringing hollow under my weight. The door to the upper container hissed open on salvaged pneumatic rams—same model I'd used on the Maserati's doors. Inside, the air was cool and smelled of solder flux, cooling fluid, and aged rum. The LED strips along the ceiling were set to a dim amber, calibrated to preserve night vision while I worked. I never used white light after sunset. White light was for people who'd forgotten how to see in the dark.

The cyberdeck dominated the far wall: three 28-inch 4K monitors on a reinforced swing arm, positioned low to accommodate my height. Trolls don't slouch; we just exist in a world built for smaller species. The left screen showed a live feed from the Maserati's roof camera—a static view of the canal bank, the occasional bat flitting through the frame. The center screen was a terminal, currently running `btop`, showing the local LLM idling at 2% CPU usage. The right screen displayed a Grafana dashboard, waiting for data.

I settled into the custom-welded chair—a car seat from a wrecked Peugeot, mounted on a swivel base—and pulled the rum bottle from the drawer. One finger. No ice. The Shabbat was still three days away, but tonight's drive had earned it. I lit a hand-rolled cigarette, the sweet smoke curling up toward the ventilation fan, and plugged the Maserati's data umbilical into the deck's primary port.

The screens came alive.

The first thing I always check is the engine log. Not the sanitized OBD2 summary—the raw data stream from the array of sensors I'd embedded throughout the drivetrain. The center screen filled with a cascade of numbers and graphs. I scrolled past the standard metrics and focused on the cast connecting rods' stress indicators.

I'd added three piezoelectric strain gauges to each bank, epoxied directly to the rod bolts. They measured micro-flexion. Tonight's run from Paris to Milan had pushed Bank 2, Cylinder 3 to 87% of its theoretical failure threshold during that long pull up the Brenner Pass. The rule-based controller had done its job, cutting hybrid assist slightly to reduce the torque spike when the V8 hit its power band, but the data told the truth: that cylinder was tired. It needed a lighter touch on future Alpine climbs.

The LLM noticed before I did.

A notification popped up on the terminal:

```
[ANALYSIS COMPLETE] Trip ID: 2026-04-11_23-47_Paris-Milan
[CRITICAL OBSERVATION] Bank2_Cyl3_Strain: 87.3% of yield strength.
[CONTEXT] This occurred at GPS segment: BrennerPass_Climb_North_v2.
[PROPOSED RULE CHANGE] Reduce hybrid torque fill at RPM 4500-5500 when GPS matches "Alpine_Gradient_>6%".
[PROPOSED PARAMETER] Set MG2_Torque_Limit = 220Nm (previously 250Nm) for this segment only.
[CONFIDENCE] 94%
[APPLY?] Y/N
```

I took a drag of the cigarette and stared at the numbers. The LLM was right. It had correlated the strain gauge data with the GPS coordinates, the incline data from the IMU, and the hybrid motor's torque output. The rule change would soften the punch exactly where it was needed, without affecting performance on flat ground. This was the beauty of a system that learned. It didn't guess. It didn't have ego. It just looked at the data and told me what the car needed.

I typed `Y`.

The terminal responded:

```
[RULE UPDATED] BrennerPass_Climb_North_v2 profile modified.
[NEW PARAMETER] MG2_Torque_Limit_Gradient = 220Nm
[BACKUP SAVED] Previous config archived to /rules/archive/2026-04-12_03-52.bak
[SYNCING] Pushing update to vehicle control unit... DONE.
```

The Maserati, sleeping in its container below, received the update through the hardline connection. Next time I climbed that pass, it would protect itself better. This was the relationship I had with the machine. I didn't own it. I curated it.

I switched my attention to the right screen, pulling up the G-force and suspension travel traces. The Citroën-inspired hydraulic system—actually a custom setup using Xantia spheres and a modified pump—had performed beautifully. The IMU data showed body roll never exceeded 2.1 degrees, even through the tight switchbacks before the Italian border. The active stabilizers, those wing-like appendages that lived on linear rails, had adjusted their angle seventeen times during the trip, each movement logged and timestamped. They'd added exactly 3% to the car's high-speed stability while creating effectively zero additional drag. The data confirmed what my hands had felt on the wheel: the car was planted. Confident. Almost smug.

I pulled up the thermal camera footage from the moment we'd passed the wild boar family. The timestamp read 00:14:22. The rich girl—she'd never told me her name, and I'd never asked—had been looking out her window at the rain-streaked darkness. She hadn't seen the heat signatures glowing green on my screen. She hadn't known we'd missed a collision by half a meter. She'd just felt the subtle lane adjustment and assumed I was a very smooth driver.

She wasn't wrong. But smoothness was just the surface. Underneath was a nervous system of sensors, a brain that processed threats before they became threats, and a Troll who'd spent too many years on these roads to be surprised by anything.

The left screen caught my eye. The canal outside was still. The water reflected the faint glow of a distant arcology, a smear of orange on the horizon. But the Maserati's roof camera had picked up movement near the bow of the péniche. A small heat signature. A cat, probably. Feral. Smart enough to avoid the electrified rails I'd installed to keep the river rats from chewing my data cables.

I leaned back and let the rum warm my throat. The LED strips dimmed further, responding to my bio-signs—a simple script I'd written that read my heart rate from a chest strap and adjusted ambient lighting to match. Low heart rate meant calm. Calm meant dim. The container glowed like a cave lit by dying embers.

The LLM was still chewing on the data, now analyzing the hybrid battery's charge cycles. I watched it work, lines of inference scrolling past on the terminal. It had flagged an anomaly: during the long stretch between Saint-Quentin and Lille, the regenerative braking had harvested 8% less energy than predicted for that speed profile. The cause wasn't mechanical—the Lexus unit was solid. It was environmental. The rain. Water on the road surface reduced tire grip just enough to lower the regen efficiency. The LLM was now proposing a new rule: when the rain sensor detected precipitation above a certain threshold, it would reduce the maximum regen torque to prevent the rear wheels from losing traction during deceleration.

Smart.

She'd asked me if I got lonely. Driving all night. Alone.

I looked around the container. At the three screens. At the server rack humming quietly in the corner, its hard drives holding every kilometer I'd ever driven. At the drone docked on its charging pad, its rotors folded like a sleeping insect. At the Maserati below, its V8 still warm, its hybrid brain already updated for tomorrow's unknown journey. At the canal outside, black and endless, reflecting the faint glow of a Europe that had forgotten how to be dark.

"No," I whispered to the empty room. "I have good company."

I finished the rum. Stubbed out the cigarette. And let the data keep me company until dawn. 

#cyberpunkcoltoure - Mind Set

 I feel so understood, because that was not me...


 So, that is the ideal low passing ride in Europe. This being said, do I for well remember pushing off a Bundeststrasse onto a side country side road an old CL having a V8 and ABC suspension system. That thing is substantially wider, but much more comfortable seats and the stock engine is fine already, with an unmet window set up.

#cyberpunkcoltoure


 

#TIE The Kingdome of Hell

 How they really move... A bit stiff, innit?

Those I miss being stuck with the Corrupt among the Nazi babies for comparison. 

#provos
#noblessoblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: Imagine they managed to turn their own race by their lifestyle, in about four generations. 

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 Do you think they have enough brains to understand what they are saying by stating the mind set of a rich person would make them rich?

In a healthy and fair society the capability and ability must make someone rich, not how he sets his mind up.

Even so they have a saying that the weakest link in a chain defines the strength of a chain, they miss that the strongest links are the most important ones. The strength of a chain link is its capability the mind set is to hold to gether no matter where chained to.

These born poets and philosophers, while living on our blood, sacrifice and suffering remaining aliens to us Europeans.

#noblessoblige 

#TIE - The New Order for Europa

Count each group he mentions and never mind them wearing about the same colours...

...So we are on one page were we go, on order of the Spartans, and how do define diversity and European coltoure properly. That there is just one Town, in one region and you all will comply. Resistance is futile. 

This Is Europa. So FUCK YOU!!!

#noblessoblige 


 No Nations. No Privileges.

A Nazi is any good dead only

Chacun à sa façon

TIE