Saturday, 21 March 2026

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 Maybe it was just an expensive place and he got ripped off on a high level anyway. Just, if I was the Chef of a place like that, I would post my second Michelin Star, working on the third, let them all leave for poring sauce over my Tartar and ban them for life on ever getting a table again. 

You come and eat what you get on the table to pay for that, exactly that and that deal is under no negotiation which is confirmed by in no need of by the Michelin Stars.

Overcharging is fine, I am just a militant guy and prefer violence against disrespect of especially ego tripping Germans. This being said, may that not be a reason to be poor by fucking rip off by the Germans, no matter what The City really was and who'd better stayed a Gardener. 
 
#ticktack #TIE 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#TheGermans - Status Update on

 Expedition Corps. Bets on Bali?

So, their best made it not past the Tourist Gyms being light years of Muay Thai Schools. Now, the Thai Chi guys are starting to be pissed.

Hell's Kitchen did not give any warnings, ever. 

They might rise prices first. Kick some ass targeted and never mind. It is not South Africa. 

#undergroundwars 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

 

#onlinewars

 So, ISIS is hit being Trolled. The psychological profile of ISIS is the same as of a Fascist an asshole also known as Supremacist.

Every time the Ego of such human receives a reality check by a lesser human being they become angry up onto mad levels.

Fascism is no genetic disease like down syndrome. It is a decision made we can best describe by God's given Free Will being used for being stupid.
We also have to accept that some people create more and worse of those than others and that we do not exactly know why that happens and therefore cannot predict who will by which cause. We just know where we find more and more likely find that kind of human.
 
That profile in softer form is the Reservists in Generation Kill. Survival of the Fittest is the first law found by humans that explaines why they don't walk over straight to ISIS and join them against those they keep shooting and ordering around at no matter what...
 
Get it... 
Enjoy the trip. For most that Bullshit Bingo of an Event is fucking Hollywood.
 
#provos #GIs #gangcoltoure The Kingdome of Hell 

#climatechange - TIE - Status Update

 

Here.

That is a meteorological snapshot of a possible weather situation in about 11 days. Post 3 weather forecasts go Rolex 24h. They do not show the precise situation anymore and become vague.

(side node: pronounce vague and rogue to understand what ue does with a vowel over and learn propa english from a real rouge anglophile who is not in vouge at all)

I predict that this situation and the inverted will become the new weather climate over all of Europe. Until here the two influences slowly connected and created a mild climate zone with hardly any storms like Typhoons or Hurricans. Tornados are softer and the Mistral is a fine breeze compared to those two. Arctic cold weather facing Norwegian mountain ranges until Central European Mid-Mountains and finally the Alps with Massive Central and the Pyrenees was forced into softly joining the Sahara hot weather striding over Italian hill lands and Mid-Mountains reaching deep into Yugoslavia until facing Alps and Pyrenees. 

Oceania has great sea ocean surfaces and hardly high mountains while Americas has mountains running from pole to pole instead of creating defusing blocks.

The time of soft weather is done.

Climate Change will bring cold weather and hot weather against each other in harsh exchange causing new levels of snow, rainfall, cold weather and heat waves. 
Eventually, that must cause thunder and lighting clashes. I see a great change that there will be no heavy storms, even so storms become more frequent and stronger, but instead long stretched rain and snow weather carpets will become normal with long frontline like stretches in which cold and hot weather clashes cause Thunder and Lighting.

I am gonna love that!!!! Hear that whip sound and cracking??? That is typical for Franconia and will become much less special, but a perfect time.

#TIE #noblessoblige 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

While trying a nap despite the tenents

 I thought: Germany in an oil crisis. Zombies that can drive cars. Germans not driving cars. Maybe it helps, to share my perspective. In no movie Zombies drive cars.

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

PS

 In full secrecy the Volkswagen Corporation designed in their remore facility of Osnabrück MV1 and MV2. Military Vehicle 1 and 2.

Secrecy?



 Transparency and open conversation in all military projects within the stake holders is very important to understand the needed requirements and design requirements.

So, try that instead:

one fits all, The Morgenstern;

 

#itoldyou #igotstuck #thegermans
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
I get why everyone thought they are no problem anymore. But, pleaaaaaase, that's not how it works. Intelligence is relay important in mankind. So, Fuck You Allies!!!!

 

 

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 As soon as one realizes that this is very realistic, they will say that it is America.

America is a place far far away full of stupid people, per German definition. Some even tell they speak American.

#help
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
I am telling you. Corrupt Cops are the Bosses in especially Germany, not the predictable liability with a calculatable expiration date.  
 
Come here! Where ever GeStaPo took over Police, it is all upside down run on illusions, bluffs, fakes and blunt stupid lies. Cold War chaos created that structure here, only here, on Earth.
#ironcladthegoblin #provos #centurion #deadhead 

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 So, two American or Brits, or what ever they are, turn out to having made success by chatting as girls dirty talk with men while women were shown.

The Tates do not regret.

Now, I figured what that fella pulled.

That's how he looks in public not even any close to 5 am on a Monday after a bad mistake weekend. I guess 8 pm, maybe, at a Gala.

He did the Tate, but on Linkedin and "The Internet Porn part" with his ex having not clearly communicate that. I personally assume he has had mentioned it, but was not understood, considering his acting style and taken of that by TheGermans.

He will soon in public.

The balls in Europe are clearly distributed, straight aliened with brains.

 #TIE The Kingdome of Hell
Here we fight. 
 
PS: In the rest of the world, everyone will only think: "When will he do stupid and what will it be", but "sweet dumb." Dude. 

#cyberpunkcltoure - Mind Set

 Imagine until today no LAPD of FBI ever figured out where that Police Crew came from that bought the AR-15s and how they had the Credit Card of the Police Chief.

Imagine. Just.... off those scenes than added.

#undergroundwars #provos #cyberpunkcoltoure 

#TIE - The Kingdome of Hell

What you think?

When will they meet the first that wait for them?

#terroristgangs #undergroundwars
#copyrighttrials 
#TheGermans #provos
 
Here we fight 
 
PS: When he says: Shootouts (Schiesserei) he means shots fired like blanks or unaimed into the rough direction of something. Not shoot outs or fire fights. By incredible far... That is all only "Hollywood", but the movies, not that peak here in the 90iesm when FBI was almost defeated and the Drug Trade retreated, so they said goodby to the Cops having had to accept the new rules after facing early campaign Provitional IRA tactics and strategies. No Dealing in Our Burroughs, by No One.
MTV and Thrasher are still... supporting Toxic Gang Culture. 
#gangcoltoure #cripsnbloods #IRAmovement  

The Time Travel Paradoxum Post Scriptum

 Just as a hint. If someone tells the answer to a dead mother or in time travel was the Paradoxum, than you will have to understand that he considers the question the answer. That person is so stupid that rephrasing the question into more detail is an achievement considered the answer, not just the very same issue in more detail.

Then, have a camera ready before you say: I see you understood the question. Now tell me the solution of the Paradoxum. 

In mathematics they won't accept anything like: The equation is wrong. No matter that an equation is a mathematical statement asserting that two expressions are equal, indicated by an equal sign (=) logically means that some are not equal. You would not believe what sign exists for such situations. So simple. 

#jedi 
#thedarkmodernity 

 


The Fashionista Club

 Finally, two Max Headrooms of Fashion that are a great example. 
 
The Big Boy Club is interesting out of its psychology and rather simple. They are the actual heroes in a people facing obvious and understandable concerns showing pride and fascination based on: Again. They are based on Strenght, yet Body Building does not give strength, it gives looks.
That is a fine cross over to the Fashion Industry. The peaks are also as elitarian and closed to easy access having long hang-around and prospect times. 
The main difference is that the BBC has no Avant-Garde Section. They are compared to The Fashionista a bunch of Commis that do all the same, at the same time, into the very same, clear direction.
Both do not really use arguments to make their point. No muscle dimensions are put down in inches and symmetry relations as much as looks are not judged under such criterias, yet there is a norming factor and that is based on psychology, Freudian Psychology, to be honest, reaching its very limits there.
 
Avant-Garde can be translated by its core meaning: Infront of the Soldiers. That is a small group that explores the future path by heading ahead, but onto several paths, at the same time, to tell the others still busy making a way out of the previously selected and agreed upon path.
 
Urs dancing on stage is not that. That must be discussions behind the scene explored by insiders in sealed places.
Sean-Paul Gaultier instead managed to create a full movie based on that part within the Fashion Industry. The Fifth Element made Millionaires, Sugar Daddies and Fashion victims agree that we all need Space Travel to actual wear the most expensive, strongest and most extravagant items of Hart-Couture, like that was not obvious. 
 

 Berlin and at this point that brand Unvain they talk about is in their self-reflection that position. This being said:
 
"Unvain" 
is an adjective meaning not vain. It describes someone or something that is humble, modest, and free from excessive pride, arrogance, or conceit regarding their appearance or achievements. It can also describe actions that are not futile or worthless.
 
...does the very word meaning for Joe Sixpack suggest Wall-Mart durable cloth from large parts of polyester. You need some balls and ignorance to actually wear that brand in most parts of the world, yet it is not an obvious Museum item like the French take.
 
They are like Body Builders on a construction site or military base and that actually means they are doing a great job.
 
Also, they are all around the Party Scene and Nightlife Industry, have ties into the Music Industry and an as high drug affinity as the BBC. They will face harsh changes in these times. Drugs change, violence creeps up, authorities loos position, new guys will be in and all around them the world is now changing, but harder and faster than ever.
 
#TIE The Kingdome of Hell
Here we fight 

Friday, 20 March 2026

#thedarkmodernity #TIE

 He is not Marius anymore, he is a Monster, says a lesser known European royal with doubtful education and attitude, yet common to post Katyn European Aristocracy.

He is Swede, so. Same family, they say.

...And I look at a head that has a face smaller than the Forehead.

So, to be really honest, if that guy showed up at my Ship with his Guards. Fuck You you collect taxes. That we sort with swords, in the Mid-Ages and throughout Renessaince. In WW2 they saved Jews, today IKEA is owned by a SS collaborator instead of by a morally sound man. One that killed such upright walking creatures.

Actually, I'd come back and Settle at that very shore with more people like me on an empty spot, but close.

Trade Hub. Free Port.

#TIE #noblessoblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure

#TheGermans - Status Update

 That is racist, but creative racism. No driving jokes here, about that Hells Angels owned Bitch.


 We can't laugh, not even smile, but it does kinda make sense. The Black Guy Gangster Rapper as a Chocolate Ball for 5 years old, to suck and swallow in sweet delight in a world of sensation. 

#cyberpunkcoltoure

Imagine what bad racist jokes they can drop, TheGermans. Then the Jew. How did you make that pic, he is supposed to face the Temple Wall or look at the Torah? 

He might have dropped out of School before mentioning Der Stürmer. 

#igotstuck

PS

 Let's face it. I either go terrorist and kill people or get enough for a blue Zegna and all black Ferrari, to ever deal with Germans again.

period.

#gfyAll



 

Poverty Oath... and Copy Right deals, 0% Me 100% Mysterious Tom, because Clochard in Paris was the best time ever in Europe, professionally. Pay Vs Job description.

That thing is All Wheel Drive, 650hp. I mean the Bucket Seats.


fucking aliens 
 
...in a close potential but unlikely future...
All she said was he had some scratches in his car, it was factory, he would not mind, staring at my Porsche keys.
Mh. She told me nice SUV I had in the lot. Must be comfortable.
What is he driving?
He said its Italian, Fiat Corporation and never mind.
He came with a Fiat here?? 
Mh.
Who is she?
Business Escort she said. She knows German culture. 
Mh.
He seems quiet. 
 

#igotstuck

 So, I read this and think if I can bear him being humble for an hour straight. He ain the best actor around. 

Than, I open "How Namibia changed my life" by Tim Krassen Brink of Blink, almost at the Forbes 30 under, and he kicks me with: "That's how I defeated my money anxiety"

I did not see that coming.

Hard. First phrase. Headshot. 

#provos #undergroundwars 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
...next thing happening...
Music. I did not sign up for that, I am just the best for that. 

Every true American, World.

 Each single one.  The only thing you ever know when you have found it.

Freedom is easy to describe. All get what is needed without a fight or pain.

#51sts 

...in a close potential future...

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

 The rain doesn’t fall in Würzburg anymore. It *drums*—a constant, leaden fist on the tin roofs of the old town, a sound that scrapes the inside of your skull. It’s been three years since the climate jumped the tracks, a century ahead of schedule. The Main is a brown, swollen beast that’s swallowed the lower Altstadt. The air is a sauna, thick with the smell of rot, diesel smoke, and the sweet, acrid tang of *Wahn*—the psychosis drug being cooked in every abandoned factory from Frankfurt to Nuremberg.

They call it the *Burning Time*. A civil war with no sides, only factions held together by the desperate charisma of drug lords and former colonels who’ve traded their epaulets for Kevlar. Europe isn’t a continent anymore; it’s a network of walled city-states, scavenger clans, and no-man’s-lands where the only law is the crack of a rifle.

My name is Silas. At least, that’s the name the U.S. Army gave me after they finished rebuilding me. The process was called “Project Golem”—enhanced muscle density, bone reinforcement, a nervous system rewired for pain suppression and endurance. I was meant to be the perfect operator, a ghost in the machine. Then the oil crisis hit, the funding dried up, and the bases were overrun. I was a piece of hardware left behind.

Now, I’m a ghost for real. A creature of the wet, hot night.

My vehicle is a paradox in this world of gas-guzzling technicals and armored Humvees. A bicycle. A *trike*. But not just any trike. It’s a custom-built beast: an aluminum 6061 T6 main frame with a steel rear fork. Its low seat puts my center of gravity just 81cm off the ground, the track width a stable 85cm. It’s 204cm long, a silent, dark serpent with a 26-inch rear wheel shod in a narrow Maxxis 26x1.25” slick for speed, and two Kenda 20x1.35” fronts for precise, whisper-quiet steering. No engine whine, no heat signature to draw the thermal drones the militias sometimes use. Just the soft hum of Shimano hubs and the whisper of rubber on wet asphalt. Net weight, 20kgs. With me, my gear, and the crossbow, we push 125kgs. Max load. Perfect.

I’m taking it south. To Africa. The last word from the world came from a cracked satellite relay a year ago: the Straits of Gibraltar were a war zone, but the southern coast was green, anarchic, and alive. A place a mutant could disappear.

Tonight, I’m leaving from a storm cellar in the rubble of Heidingsfeld. My gear is minimal. A short sword, a blade of folded Crucible steel, balanced for a single, decisive arc. My primary silent weapon is a custom slingshot—a flatland cattapult with surgical tubing, capable of putting a .50-cal lead ball through a skull at thirty meters. And for the real work, my 150-lb recurve crossbow, bolts fletched with scavenged crow feathers. Quiet. Lethal. Perfect for a man who can only move under the cover of darkness and chemical storms.

The trike is a living thing as I slip it out of the cellar. I swing my leg over the low-slung Ergo-mesh seat. It feels like settling into a cockpit. The Avid BB7 brakes give a reassuring click as I test them. I have a mental map—not of roads, but of shadows. The Main river bike path to the Odenwald, then cutting southwest, avoiding the Autobahns that are death traps of burned-out caravans and militia checkpoints.

I pedal. The first few kilometers are a glide through the shattered suburbs. The rain slicks my poncho. I see the glow of fires in the distant hills—some faction burning out another’s poppy fields. A drone, a cheap commercial quadcopter with a rifle taped to it, hums overhead, its spotlight slicing the mist. I pull into the alcove of a gutted gas station, heart steady, breathing controlled. The drone passes, its light a pale, searching eye. My trike sits low, the matte-black frame absorbing the wet darkness. I am just another pile of rubble.

I am a creature of the old doctrine: *Patience. Position. Penetration.* The Army gave me the strength to pedal for eighteen hours straight, to carry a 150lb load, to heal from wounds that would cripple a normal man. But it’s the training that keeps me alive. The trike is my partner. It’s silent. Its turning circle is a tight 4.1 meters, letting me reverse course in a narrow alley. The 3x9 Shimano gears—Sora crank, Alivio rear—let me crawl up the sodden, landslide-wrecked hills of the Spessart or sprint on the flats when a patrol’s lights appear in the mirror I’ve rigged to the left handlebar.

Near Wertheim, I encounter my first threat. A roadblock. A fallen oak and a burned-out LKW, with two men in mismatched camo huddled under a tarp, a single halogen lamp on a generator casting a sickly pool of light. They’re passing a bottle and laughing. *Wahn-users*. The drug makes you feel invincible, turns fear into euphoria. It also makes you sloppy.

I dismount, the trike’s low center of gravity making it easy to lay flat. I crawl into the brush, the cold mud seeping through my fatigues. I load the cattapult, a 12mm lead ball seated in the leather pouch. I take a breath. *Target: the light.*

I draw back to my ear, the surgical tubing stretching with a soft, oiled creak. I release. The ball flies true. The halogen lamp explodes in a shower of glass and sparks. Darkness. Panic. One man screams in chemical-fueled paranoia, firing his rifle into the woods. The other shouts, his voice cracking. I’m already moving, not at them, but around them. I remount the trike, pedal hard, my thighs burning, the narrow Maxxis tire hissing over the wet pavement as I find a deer path around the blockage. The gunfire fades behind me, swallowed by the drumming rain.

The nights blend. The Odenwald is a labyrinth of washed-out trails. I use the trike’s low gear to grind up slopes that would break a normal bike. I sleep in the hollows of ancient oaks, wrapped in a ghillie tarp, waking to the sounds of the new European fauna—wild boar grown bold, and packs of feral dogs that have tasted human flesh. I don’t use the crossbow on them. It’s for bipedal predators.

Crossing the Rhine is the first great ordeal. The bridges are all held by armed gangs. I find a place near Speyer, where the river has widened into a lake. The old cathedral is a dark, drowned silhouette in the distance. I spend a full night fashioning a small raft from debris and a plastic tarp, using the trike’s frame as a keel. I lash it all together, my heart in my throat as I paddle across the mile-wide expanse. The current is vicious. The 20kgs of the trike feels like an anchor, but its low, balanced form is stable. Mid-river, a dead man floats by, face pale and bloated, an eye missing. I say nothing, just paddle harder, my enhanced muscles screaming.

On the far side, in the Alsatian ruins, I’m spotted. A three-man patrol with a thermal scope. They must have seen the heat bloom of my body as I emerged from the cold water. The first shot pings off the steel rear fork, a sound like a struck bell. I’m already in motion, the trike’s acceleration deceptive. I cut a hard turn, the 4.1m circle bringing me behind a collapsed wall. I unclip the crossbow, the familiar weight a comfort. I roll the trike onto its side, using it as a low-profile barricade. I wait. They are aggressive, flush with *Wahn*, spreading out.

The first one rounds the wall, his rifle up. My crossbow is already tracking. The 150-lb draw sends a bolt through his throat before he can squeeze the trigger. He falls with a gurgle. The second one fires wildly, his muzzle flash giving him away. I roll, grab the short sword. I’m not as fast as I was in the Golem program’s prime, but I’m fast enough. I close the distance in a low crouch, the sword a silver flicker in the rain. A wet, percussive arc, and his rifle clatters to the ground with two hands still attached to it. His scream is cut short by the third man, who in his drug-fueled rage, fires his own weapon into his comrade to get a clear shot at me.

I dive back behind the trike. The third man is laughing, a high, hysterical sound. He’s walking toward me, emptying his magazine. The rounds chew up the mud around me. One tears through the Ergo-mesh seat, another clips the aluminum frame, a wound that makes me wince. He stops to reload. That’s his last mistake.

I let the sword go, snatch the cattapult, load a lead ball, and in one fluid motion—a motion honed by a thousand hours of practice in silent cellars—I fire. The ball catches him in the eye socket. He drops like a sack of wet cement.

The silence that follows is absolute. Just the rain. My breath. The soft hiss of the crossbow’s string settling.

I don’t loot them. I don’t have time. I check the trike. The frame is dented but true. The seat has a hole, but it’s usable. I pack my weapons, clip my helmet, and pedal on. The wound to the frame is a reminder. Everything has a cost.

France is a swamp. The Rhône valley is a corridor of hell, choked with refugees and the warlords who prey on them. I avoid the roads entirely, using the trike on ancient Roman paths, on canal towpaths, through fields of rotting sunflowers. My nights are a litany of small terrors: a pack of *Wahn*-crazed children who throw rocks, a militia technical with a .50 cal that chases me for a mile before I lose it in a flooded quarry.

The trike begins to fail. The chain, the Shimano CN-HG73, is stretched and rusted despite my constant oiling. The brakes squeal with a metallic fatigue. I’m running out of bolts for the crossbow, down to my last three. My body, for all its enhancement, is a map of bruises, insect bites, and the beginnings of a fever.

One night, near the Mediterranean coast, just before the final push toward the Spanish border and the sea, I break down. The rear derailleur, the Alivio RD-M4000, seizes. I’m in the scrubland of the Camargue, the air hot and thick with the scent of brine and wild herbs. I have no spare. I spend a day—a terrifying, sun-scorched day—in a hidden drainage culvert, stripping the derailleur, cleaning it with spit and a rag, forcing it back into a functional, single-speed state. I’m down to one gear. A low one.

I can’t outrun anything now.

That night, I see the sea. A black, oily expanse under a bruised sky. The lights of a smuggler’s boat are a distant flicker. I have to make it. I have to.

I pedal the final fifty kilometers in a fugue state, my legs moving with the mechanical, unthinking rhythm of a machine. The trike, now a heavy, single-speed beast, feels like it’s made of lead. But it’s stable. It’s silent. It’s mine.

I reach a crumbling marina near Sète. A man—a wiry, dark-skinned figure with a satellite phone and a knowing look—is waiting by a dilapidated fishing boat. He doesn’t ask my name. He sees the trike, the sword, the scarred hands, the pale, rain-washed skin of a mutant. He sees the price.

“You get to Algeria,” he says, his accent French-Arabic. “From there… you find your own way.”


I nod. I pay him in the last of my currency: a block of medical antibiotics, sealed, and a flawless, uncut synthetic ruby from the Golem program’s experimental stores.

As the boat pulls away, I sit in the stern, the trike lashed to the deck beside me. I look back at the coast of Europe. A continent consumed by its own madness, drowning in rain and blood. Behind me, the lights of the shore are a funeral pyre. Ahead, only darkness and the promise of an unforgiving sea.

I run my hand along the dent in the aluminum frame. The trike got me out. Silent, low to the ground, a shadow in a world that had forgotten what shadows were. I am a ghost, and my steel-and-aluminum steed is a ghost with me.

The rain begins to fall again, warm even in the night, as we head south into the unknown. I unclip my sword, lay it across my lap, and wait for the African dawn.

I recap falling a sleep on the smuggler ferry. 

The journey south is a lesson in hunger. Not the hunger of training—the controlled caloric deficit they forced on us in Project Golem—but the raw, gnawing need that turns men into animals. I refuse to become that. My military training gave me a gift: the patience to hunt, to scavenge, to take only what I need, and to leave no trace. In the Burning Time, that discipline is the only thing between me and the *Wahn*-eaters who would peel the skin from my back for a can of beans.

I move at night, when the rain is heaviest. Sound dampens, visibility drops to a few meters, and even the most paranoid sentry seeks shelter. The trike is my ghost horse—silent, low, its black frame invisible against wet asphalt. I’ve wrapped the aluminum tubes in salvaged matte tape, dulled every reflective surface. When I dismount, I lay it flat in a drainage ditch or behind a collapsed wall, covering it with my ghillie tarp. A 20kg machine can vanish if you know how.

Food is a matter of reading the territory.

**Franconia: The Cellars**

In the first nights, winding through the villages east of Würzburg, I raid the old wine cellars and *Keller* that burrow beneath every Franconian farmhouse. These were built for centuries, cool vaults of sandstone and brick. Before the collapse, families stored their preserves, their sausages, their potatoes. Now many lie abandoned, their owners either dead or fled south before me.

I never enter through the main door. Too obvious. Too many traps laid by the desperate. Instead, I look for the external cellar hatches—rusted iron doors set into the hillside, often hidden under brambles. I use a thin pry bar, working it slowly, millimeters at a time, listening for the creak that would echo. I’ve learned to wait a full minute between movements. Patience is a weapon.

Inside, the air is cool and heavy with the smell of earth and rot. I use a red-lensed LED, cupped in my palm, to sweep the shelves. What I find: glass jars of pickled beets, their brine still clear; vacuum-sealed bags of *Knödel* mix, the flour still dry; and in one cellar, a cache of *Landjäger*—those hard, dried sausages that last forever. I take only what I can carry without weighing down the trike: a few jars, a bag of flour, a coil of sausages. I leave the rest. A ghost takes only what he needs.

Once, in a cellar near Marktbreit, I hear breathing. I freeze, hand on the short sword. The red light catches a figure huddled behind a wine barrel—an old woman, eyes wide with terror, a kitchen knife in her trembling hand. She hasn’t eaten in days, that much is clear. I set down a jar of beets and a sausage, then retreat, backing out the way I came. I don’t speak. Words are noise. She will live another week. That is my charity.

**The Tauber Valley: The Supermarkets**

As I cross into Baden-Württemberg, the villages grow larger, and the cellars become rarer. Here, the looters have already stripped the obvious targets, but they were amateurs. Their greed makes them blind.

The supermarket in a town called Weikersheim is a skeleton—windows smashed, shelves toppled, the smell of spoiled dairy and dried blood hanging in the air. I watch it for three hours from a water tower a kilometer away, using a small monocular. No movement. No lights. But I see the signs: a tripwire of fishing line strung across the entrance, connected to a tin can filled with bolts. Crude. Effective for the careless.

I don’t enter through the front. I find a roof access—a metal ladder bolted to the back wall, rusted but sound. I climb, my enhanced grip making short work of it. The roof is tar paper, soft from the rain, and I move on hands and knees to distribute my weight. I find a ventilation shaft, the grating long since pried off by someone else. I lower myself into the darkness, dropping silently onto a stack of collapsed shelving.

The supermarket is a maze of fallen pallets and shattered glass. I move with my back to the walls, red light barely a pinprick. The looters took the obvious: canned goods from the center aisles, the expensive coffee, the alcohol. But they missed the things that require patience.

I find the bulk storage in the back—a room behind the loading dock, its door disguised by a fallen shelf. Inside are fifty-kilo sacks of rice and flour, untouched. The looters saw only the empty shelves and assumed the place was cleaned out. I slit a sack of rice with my knife and fill two waterproof bags I carry for this purpose. I also find a case of olive oil, the bottles unbroken, and a crate of dried pasta. These I lash to the trike’s rear rack, balanced low to keep the center of gravity.

I am out before dawn, the rice and oil adding twelve kilos. I pedal slower, but I pedal. The trike’s steel rear fork takes the weight without complaint.

**The Odenwald: The Hunters’ Caches**

In the forested hills, the food changes again. Here, there are no cellars or supermarkets. There are only the old hunting lodges and the *Jagdhütten*—small cabins used by hunters before the world burned. These men knew how to preserve meat, and they built hidden caches.

I find one near the Katzenbuckel, the highest point in the Odenwald. The cabin is burned, but the cache is underground, marked by a pile of stones that looks natural but isn’t. My training in fieldcraft—learned at Fort Bragg, refined in places I’m not supposed to remember—tells me to look for the unnatural geometry. The stones are too symmetrical.

Under them is a sealed plastic barrel, buried two feet down. Inside: smoked venison in vacuum packs, jars of honey, a brick of hard cheese wrapped in wax. Also, a case of 9mm ammunition. I take the food, leave the ammo. I have no gun. The weight is useless to me.

I also take a small, leather-bound journal I find tucked into the lid. It belonged to a man named Klaus, a forester who wrote in careful German about the “new climate,” the “breakdown of order,” and his plans to hide in the forest until “the madness passes.” The last entry is dated ten months ago. He never got to eat this venison. I bury the journal in the hole before I fill it back in. Some ghosts deserve to be remembered.

**The Rhine Plain: The Fields**

Crossing the Rhine, the landscape flattens into what was once France’s breadbasket. Now it’s a patchwork of flooded fields and scrub. But food is here, if you know what to look for.

I harvest at night, using a small hand trowel from my kit. The fields are full of volunteer potatoes—descended from crops planted years ago, gone wild. They’re small, knobby, but they cook into a meal that keeps me pedaling. I also find feral carrots and parsnips, their flavor bitter but nutritious. Near abandoned farmsteads, I raid the orchards: apples that have fallen and fermented, but the firm ones I can carry.

This is the riskiest time. In the open fields, there’s no cover. I move in the deepest dark, before the moonrise, and I never stay in one spot for more than fifteen minutes. The trike is my sentinel—I leave it at the field’s edge, pointed toward my escape route, the parking brake engaged. If I hear anything—a dog, a voice, the crunch of boots—I am gone, the 4.1-meter turning circle letting me reverse course and disappear into the tree line before anyone can get close.

The food of the Rhine plain is raw, vegetable, pagan. It lacks the salt and fat of the German cellars. I feel my body beginning to thin despite the calories, my enhanced metabolism demanding more than roots and apples can give.

**The Rhône Corridor: The Dead**

By the time I reach the Rhône, the territory has changed again. This is a war zone, and the food comes from the dead.

I avoid the main roads, but the side lanes are littered with the aftermath of skirmishes. Burned-out trucks, overturned cars, and sometimes bodies. I’ve learned to recognize the smell of a fresh kill—copper and voided bowels—from a hundred meters downwind. When I find one, I approach with the crossbow loaded, moving in a crouch, using the trike as a low-profile sled to carry what I gather.

I don’t touch the bodies. Too much risk of disease, and the dead have their own dignity. But the vehicles often contain supplies. A burned-out *camion* near Vienne had a shattered crate of military rations—French *ration de combat*—scattered in the mud. I gathered fourteen packets of pâté, crackers, and powdered coffee. The coffee, even instant, is a treasure. I save it for the nights when the fever from my infected mosquito bites makes my teeth chatter.

Near Avignon, I find a dead militia truck that must have hit a landmine. The front is shredded, but the cargo area is intact. Inside: crates of dates from North Africa, sacks of couscous, and tins of sardines. Someone was running supplies from the coast. They never made it. I take what I can carry, leaving the rest for the crows.

The food here tastes of the sea and the desert—a promise of what lies ahead. I eat sardines mashed with couscous, cold, squatting in the shadow of a Roman aqueduct while the rain drums on my ghillie tarp. It is the best meal I have had in months.

**The Coast: The Catch**

On the final stretch, near the Camargue, the food comes from the water. I am no fisherman, but I learn. In the salt marshes, I set simple traps—cones of wire mesh I find in abandoned sheds—in the shallow channels. By morning, they hold eels and mullet. I gut them with my short sword, cook them on a small fire of driftwood that I build in the lee of a dune, using a mirror to hide the flame from the seaward side.

The salt air dries the fish, and I carry strips of it wrapped in leaves. It is a clean food, a food of transition. I am no longer in Europe; I am on the edge of it, a liminal space where the old rules are already fading.

When the smuggler’s boat finally appears, I have three days’ worth of dried fish, a pouch of dates, and half a liter of olive oil in a plastic bottle. My body is lean, the muscles standing out like cables under my pale skin. I am twenty kilograms lighter than when I started, but the trike is still true, and my weapons are clean.

The smuggler eyes my supplies as I lash the trike to his deck. “You eat well for a dead man,” he says in rough French.

“I don’t eat well,” I reply. “I eat smart.”

He laughs, a dry sound, and casts off.

As the shore recedes, I open the last of the dates. They are sweet, sticky, a taste of the continent I am leaving behind. Europe gave me nothing but scars and nightmares, but it also gave me these: the discipline to take only what I need, the patience to move like a ghost, and the knowledge that every territory has its own flavor of survival. The German cellars were salty with preserved meat. The French fields were bitter with wild roots. The Rhône was metallic with the taste of rations taken from the dead.

Africa will have its own taste. I will learn it. I will survive it.

I bite into the date, chew slowly, and watch the lights of Europe blur into a single, drowning smear on the horizon. 


The drone of the engine, the slap of waves against the hull, the weight of exhaustion pressing me into the coil of rope I use as a pillow—it all pulls me under. I dream of nothing, which is a mercy. When I wake, the quality of the light has changed. The rain has stopped. Through a crack in the tarpaulin, the sun is a white blade, cutting across my face. I haven’t felt true sunlight in months. It burns.

The engine cuts. Silence, then the scrape of the hull against sand. Voices—Arabic, fast and argumentative. The smuggler, Hassan, is bargaining with someone on the shore. I sit up slowly, my hand finding the short sword, then stopping. If this is a trap, the blade will not save me. I am out of bolts for the crossbow. The cattapult is in my pocket, but against rifles, it is a child’s toy.

I push the tarp aside and step onto the deck. The air is hot, dry, alien. No humidity, no drumming rain. The sky is a pale blue, the kind I remember from another life. We are beached on a wide, sandy shore, dunes behind it, scrub and the distant shape of buildings—a village, maybe. A dozen men stand on the beach, all in mismatched clothing, all armed. Some have Kalashnikovs, others older rifles. They wear keffiyehs against the sun, their faces weathered. They are not the emaciated, *Wahn*-mad creatures of Europe. They are hard, but their eyes are clear.

Hassan is speaking rapidly, gesturing at me and the trike. He is telling them I paid well, that I am no one’s enemy. I see one of the men—older, with a gray beard and a scar running from temple to jaw—shake his head slowly. He looks at me. Not at my weapons, not at the trike. At *me*. At my pale skin, my scarred forearms, the too-straight posture that marks me as something built, not born.

I make a decision. I unclip the sword belt and let it fall to the deck. I pull the cattapult from my pocket and set it beside the sword. I climb over the side of the ferry, dropping into the shallows. The water is warm, a shock after the cold rivers of Europe. I wade to shore, my hands empty, held slightly away from my body.

The men raise their weapons. Not aiming, not yet. Watching.

I walk ten paces up the beach, onto the dry sand. Then I stop. I kneel.

It is an old reflex, one the Golem program drilled into me for missions in places where capture meant a show of submission could buy a second of hesitation. But here, it is something else. I am tired. I am finished. If this is how it ends—on a beach in Africa, executed by strangers—then let it be quick. Europe taught me that death is just another form of silence.

I bow my head. The sand is hot against my knees. I hear the men speaking, a rapid exchange. Then footsteps. I do not look up.

A shadow falls over me. The old man with the scar. He says something in Arabic. I do not understand. He says it again, slower. Then, in broken French: “You kneel. Why?”

I keep my head down. “Because in Europe, a stranger on your shore is a threat. I am a stranger. I am armed. I have no papers, no name they would accept. I expected to die.”

A long silence. I hear the wind, the distant cry of a gull. Then the old man laughs. It is not a cruel laugh. It is the laugh of a man who has seen too much to be surprised by anything.

“Europe,” he says, the word a curse. He spits into the sand beside my knee. “You come from that hell. You expect hell here.”

I say nothing.

He steps closer. I feel his hand on my shoulder, not rough. “Stand up,” he says. “We are not Europe.”

I look up. His face is close, the scar a pale line through his beard. His eyes are dark, but there is something in them I have not seen in years. Not kindness, exactly. Recognition. He has been broken too, I realize. He has been remade by his own wars, his own losses. He sees the same in me.

“There is a verse,” he says. His French is careful, the words chosen. “In the Koran. *Whoever kills a soul… it is as if he has killed all mankind. And whoever saves a life, it is as if he has saved all mankind.*”

He gestures to the men behind him. They have lowered their weapons. One of them is already pulling the trike from the ferry, admiring the frame, the low seat, the silent hubs.

“You come with a machine that makes no noise,” the old man says. “You carry a blade and a child’s sling. You do not carry a gun. You did not come to kill. You came to live.” He nods, once. “Then live.”

He gives his name: Rashid. He is the *sheikh* of a small fishing village called Sidi Moussa, thirty kilometers down the coast. The ferry brought me here because Hassan knew this was the only stretch of Algeria not controlled by the warlords who prey on refugees. Rashid’s people have been taking in the survivors who wash ashore, the ones who come without guns, without greed.

“Most are dead when they arrive,” Rashid says as we walk up the beach. “Or they die soon after. The crossing, the hunger, the…” He searches for the word. “The madness. You are different. You are strong. But you are also empty.” He taps his chest. “Here. You have nothing inside.”

I do not answer, because he is right.

The village is a sprawl of low stone houses, whitewashed, with a central square and a well. It is poor—the fishing boats are patched, the nets are frayed—but it is alive. Children run in the dust. Women hang laundry. Men repair engines under awnings. They stop when they see me, the pale giant with the strange machine, but Rashid speaks to them in quick Arabic, and they return to their work. Trust, I realize. They trust him.

He gives me a room in a half-ruined building at the edge of the village—an old olive press, the machinery long since stripped. It has a roof, four walls, a door that closes. It is more than I have had in three years. I park the trike against the inner wall, lay my sword on a stone ledge, and sit on the dirt floor for a long time, listening to the silence. No rain. No gunfire. No screams.

The first weeks are a blur of exhaustion and slow healing. The fever I had been fighting breaks on the third night. Rashid sends a woman—a healer, with herbs and a quiet manner—to tend me. She does not ask about my scars, the unnatural density of my muscles, the way my pupils contract too slowly in the light. She just brings me soup, bread, mint tea. She tells me her name is Leila, and she is not afraid.

I learn the rhythms of the village. Fishing at dawn, repairs in the afternoon, prayers at sunset. I am not Muslim, but I learn to sit quietly when the call to prayer echoes from the village’s single loudspeaker. I learn to keep my hands still, my eyes down, to take only what I am offered.

Rashid asks me, one evening, what I can do. We are sitting on the roof of his house, looking out at the sea. The sunset is orange and red, a sky I had forgotten could exist.

“I can fight,” I say. “I can kill. I can move without being seen. That is what they made me for.”

He nods slowly. “We have men who can fight. We have boys who can kill, now. The warlords come, and the boys pick up rifles, and they die, and more boys pick up rifles.” He looks at me. “What else?”

I think. The question has no place in the mental architecture they built in me. What else? I remember the cellar raids, the way I harvested potatoes in the dark, the patience of gathering without being seen. “I can find food,” I say. “I can move through difficult terrain. I can keep a machine running with no parts.”

He smiles. It is a tired smile, but genuine. “Then you are not a soldier. You are a farmer, a mechanic, a hunter. That is what we need.”

He gives me a plot of land outside the village, near a brackish stream. It is rocky, useless for most crops. But I remember the volunteer potatoes of France, the way they thrived in poor soil. I plant cuttings, tend them at night when the sun is not so fierce. I use the trike to haul stones, to build low walls that hold the moisture. I rig a simple irrigation system from discarded tubing.

Leila brings me seeds—tomatoes, peppers, herbs she says came from her grandmother. I plant them in the shadow of the walls. I learn the taste of this new territory: the sharpness of wild mint, the sweetness of sun-dried figs from the village market, the salt of fish grilled over coals.

The trike becomes something else. Not a escape vehicle, but a workhorse. I fashion a cart for it, a flatbed of scavenged wood, and use it to carry water from the well, to transport the catch from the boats to the smokehouse, to carry the old ones to the square when they cannot walk. The children call it *el-jerada*—the grasshopper—for the way it squats low and leaps forward when I pedal.

One night, a year after I arrived, the warlords come. They are from the east, a band of perhaps fifty men with technicals and a captured armored car. They have been burning villages, taking what they want. I hear the rumor two days before they arrive, from a fisherman who saw smoke on the horizon.

I go to Rashid. “Let me fight,” I say. “Let me do what I was made for.”

He studies me. I have changed. The hollow emptiness he saw on the beach has filled with something—not hope, not peace, but a purpose. I am not the ghost of Europe anymore. I am a man with a garden, a place, people who know my name.

“No,” he says. “You will not kill for us. That is not why you are here.”

Instead, he asks me to use the skills they gave me. I spend the night before the warlords arrive moving through the darkness, placing obstacles on the only road into the village. I dismantle the bridges over the irrigation ditches, dig pits in the soft sand, string fishing line between trees to dismount the riders on motorcycles. I do it all in silence, the trike a black whisper beside me, carrying the tools I need.

When the warlords come at dawn, they find a village that is not there. The road ends in a tangle of wrecked bridges and hidden traps. Their lead technical sinks into a pit I dug the night before. The motorcycles fall, their riders thrown into the scrub. And the villagers—old men, women, boys with slingshots and stones—stand on the rooftops, not fleeing, not begging. Waiting.

The warlords pause. They have lost the advantage of surprise. They have lost a vehicle. And in the morning light, they see that this village has no wealth worth taking, no fear worth feeding. After an hour of shouting, of firing a few shots into the air, they retreat.

I watch from the dunes, the cattapult in my hand, a lead ball loaded, waiting. I do not fire. I let them go.

Afterward, Rashid finds me. He puts his hand on my shoulder, the same gesture as on the beach. “You see,” he says. “You are not a weapon. You are a wall.”

I do not know the Koran. I have not read it, though I have listened to the men recite in the evenings, the sound of it a music I am beginning to understand. But Rashid teaches me, slowly, the verses that matter. *And hold fast, all together, by the rope which God stretches for you.* *God loves those who do good.* *With every hardship, there is ease.*

One evening, as the sun sets over the sea, I kneel on the sand outside my house. Not in submission. Not in expectation of death. I kneel because the earth is warm, and I am tired, and for the first time in my life, I am not running. Leila comes and sits beside me. She does not speak. She just rests her hand on my back, a light touch, and we watch the light fade together.

The trike is parked against the wall, its tires half-buried in the dust. A child has tied a string of shells to the handlebars, a gift. The short sword hangs above my door, a relic of a life I am learning to leave behind. The cattapult is in my pocket, because some habits are not worth breaking—in a world of warlords and warlords’ guns, a quiet weapon is still a comfort.

But I am no longer the ghost. I am no longer the Golem, the weapon left behind. I am Silas, the man who pedals through the night to bring water to the old ones. The man who plants potatoes in the rocky soil and watches them grow. The man who kneels on the sand and finds that he is not afraid.

Rashid told me once that the Koran says: *Perhaps you hate a thing and it is good for you; and perhaps you love a thing and it is bad for you.* I hated Europe. I fled it, left it to its rain and its madness and its *Wahn*-eaters. I came to this shore expecting a bullet. Instead, I found a garden.

The ferry that brought me is long gone. Hassan travels the coast now, smuggling not refugees but oranges and olive oil, the trade of a country slowly stitching itself back together. Sometimes I see his boat on the horizon, a dark speck against the gold of sunset. I do not watch it long. I have work to do.

Tomorrow, I will ride the trike to the next village, the one the warlords razed before they came to us. I will carry cuttings from my garden, seeds from Leila’s grandmother, tools I have forged from scrap. I will teach them what I learned in the fields of France and the cellars of Franconia: how to harvest what is hidden, how to move without being seen, how to take only what you need and leave the rest for those who come after.

The trike’s chain, the same Shimano CN-HG73 that I oiled with spit in a drainage culvert outside Avignon, is clean now, oiled with proper grease. The dent in the aluminum frame is still there, a scar I will not erase. I have replaced the seat, patched the tires with salvaged rubber, and fashioned a new rack from the bed of a burned-out truck.

It is the same machine. I am the same man. But the world around us has changed, or we have changed within it. I do not know which.

I only know that when I pedal at night now, it is not to escape. It is to arrive.

And in the darkness, between the stars of a sky unclouded by rain, I sometimes hear Rashid’s voice, reciting the verse that pulled me from my knees on that first day: *Whoever saves a life, it is as if he has saved all mankind.*

I saved my own life, that day. I let them save it. And in the saving, I found something I had lost so long ago I had forgotten its name.

I found a place to kneel without fear.

I found home. 

Misconceptions

 Oil crisis like more like an soft energy crisis?

Well, there is a chance, and who would have thought that Iran believes they do not need no friends at all, that Iran decides to show its muscles by destroying the World Oil Industry through attacking its very neighbours with material "officially" dedicated to Active Anti-Zionism? 

As a matter of fact can Iran focus onto more hits against Arab Nations, slow down on attacking Israel, and thereby severely interrupt Middle-Easts OIl production. The West will go down on its knees facing several years of high Oil prices having avoided ethanol and alternative energies for a centralized fossil fuel dependent oligopoly, Russia won't care at all and neither China, but the Middle-East be punished for being in bed with the U.S.A. sacrificing only its Terrorism Allies by creating an economic crisis even worse in the poor areas of Arabia.

From there, even under an Regime Change, they unite with the Taliban and hook up onto their Heroin connections to hit The West by drugs and terror while Arabia tries to rebuild its oil industry.

That might be a decade of oil crisis and terror, especially if the attacks against Iran stop, based on Greta Thunberg being a bitch among the Greedy. Idiots and Idiots multiply...

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

The back up strategy...


 ...while the rest is on Cocaine and Heroin.

 

#TIE 
The Kingdome of Hell
we'll all sweat 

Thursday, 19 March 2026

The Law of Energy Conservation

 The law of conservation of energy states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed; it can only be transformed from one form to another or transferred from one object to another. This means that the total amount of energy within an isolated system remains constant over time. 

I think that's wrong and the purpose of the expanding Universe is to create more energy.
The Universe can be described as an isolated system. A very ultra large one, but an isolated one. We do not know what is past its limits and what was before, but we know it is expanding.

I wonder, if gravity is the key. Growth happens in our Universe and on Earth by molecules, atoms and latest found quarks connecting with each other, bond by gravity. This way a Baby turns a Child and a Seed a Plant, Leaves become bigger.

If energy could not be created, but just transformed, ultimately all energy would have been created at the moment of the Big Bang.
So, you Inquisition go ahead now and calculate the maximum expansion possible of the Universe and I ... continue that Jedi thing.

#jedi

PS

 If it is the French Secret Service, Military Intelligence of the French Foreign Legion or ex-French nationals and exLegionairs being part of Algerian forces since the attack against deGaulle and school system reforms in the 60ies, is one thing.

The other is that Freedom is not the problem in Africa since Apartheid ended, but a lack of finances. They could have all weapons, trucks and companies, but no on can afford the entire set.

Burkina Faso is a good example and the current Shorts on YouTube worry me a bit. He speaks French, he is Military and needed to found a bank to push money into local businesses, while Boko Haram receives, being close, funding from abroad. The West.

Freedom is limited everywhere in Afrika. Only in Apartheid South Africa freedom did not exist at all.

Check the row of Amandaments. Than calculate what building a Church, Radio station and News Agency, a Colt rifle and ammo cost.

Now tell me why that one man having all cannot get any bank to have the rest around him get the same having a U.S. banking licence?

Freedom comes with duty. You may serve, too.

We also can make you.

#provos #terroristgangs 
#cyberpunkcoltoure

Primate Societies

 That you buy. Looks light, simple English, could be a Hollywood Character, is on YouTube...

...but that BKA runs a KZ.

#neversurrender

Insider Jokes?

 That, might be actually hilarious for some German Right Wing Fraternity boys....

I just wonder how many languages were spoken in Vienna before Hitlers troops arrived in the Monarchy? Hungarian might have been with Serbian actually accepted other languages.

Europe was different than old SS men in Democracy wrote for their pupils.

#TIE The Kingdome of Hell

We never stopped fighting. I'd, honestly, would love to put a bullet through her head having beaten her down first.... I think it would feel great and righteous after what The Germans did to that Monarchy and its people, as an extension of all the fist fights I had.

PS

 And then they tell him it was better for him to come with them peacefully...

Today, standard DIN doors fit only one fully Armoured of them. You cant take six in one stroke anymore.

5.000 years.

#spartans 
#cyberpunkcoltoure

Misconceptions

 Which Rich Western Wanker would move just his hands out of the pockets, for a tenner, please?

Despite, make a step forward and lean over. 

The amount is the insult, not the deal as such, to the lesbian.

#thedarkmodernity #cyberpunkcoltoure

PS: I'd take the tanner. But I'd try in a moment she blinks, just for the fun of it.

#centurion #deadhead

The distance is a bit challenging to be honest, even so I must be taller, but accepted.

Little Reminder

 what I definitely wanted to do with 15 was attend that School Party they practice for. But by God seriously.

Instead, Allies.

#wegotstuck #coldwarkids

The Iron Curtain. The biggest Virginity Belt ever formed. Go Fuck Yourself Politics.

#cyberpunkcoltoure

#provos - Mind Set

 Fucking Idiots. Do you wanna join the Reservists?
Being in range of alternative supplies creating secondary options, the covered pick up place must be a minimum of one click away, if there is no straight line of fire. Ideally a junction or house clearly communicatable to the civilian local helper.
Then, an appropriate hiding spot for taking on the supply must be found and both forward and retreat pathways decided.
They do noodles, too. But we now need chewing gum. You can't order that.
#GIs #armystrong
#racoons

#provos - Mind Set

 You can not comprehend how much this clip calms.me. I feel understood, welcomed and in company of twins.

We can create a better place. Our way..

I am here!

#provos #OMGunits 

The base of the plan

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

Excellent question. Comparing Chess and Go reveals two fundamentally different philosophies about how to achieve victory, reflecting different worldviews and approaches to conflict, strategy, and life itself.

The core difference can be summed up like this: **Chess is a game of absolute hierarchy and analytical conquest, while Go is a game of relative balance and organic development.**

Here are the fundamental philosophical differences in how one aims to win:

### 1. The Objective: Assassination vs. Acquisition
- **Chess (The Kill):** The goal is a singular, decisive event: checkmate. Every move is a step towards the capture of a single, all-important piece—the King. All other pieces derive their value from their relationship to the King. This creates a philosophy of **centralized power**. Victory is achieved through a targeted strike at the heart of the enemy's command.
- **Go (The Harvest):** The goal is to control more of the total board (territory) than your opponent at the end of the game. There is no single, most important piece. Victory is achieved through **decentralized accumulation**. It's about building efficient structures and surrounding empty space. The philosophy is one of gradual expansion and resource management.

### 2. The Nature of Pieces: Intrinsic vs. Situational Value
- **Chess (The Aristocracy):** Each piece has a fixed, hierarchical value (Queen=9, Rook=5, etc.). This creates a philosophy of **inherent worth**. A Queen is always immensely powerful, a Pawn always weak. Strategy is largely about the efficient exchange of these absolute values and the protection of your most valuable assets. The pieces are specialists, and their power is defined by their unique movements.
- **Go (The Collective):** Every stone is equal. A single stone is almost valueless. Its power is purely **situational and relational**. A group of stones working together becomes strong; an isolated stone is weak and vulnerable. This creates a philosophy of **emergent power**. Value is not intrinsic but is created through context, cooperation, and position.

### 3. The Process of Conflict: Linear Deduction vs. Holistic Intuition
- **Chess (The Calculation):** The game is driven by powerful, localized battles. Because pieces have high mobility and value, a single engagement can be decisive. Success relies heavily on **tactical calculation** and the ability to visualize complex sequences many moves ahead. The philosophy is one of **linear, logical deduction**: "If I do X, he will do Y, then I can do Z..."
- **Go (The Evaluation):** Conflict is more frequent, but rarely instantly decisive. Battles can spread across the entire board and are resolved through a process of encirclement and cutting off escape routes. While calculation is important, success relies more on **strategic evaluation and intuition**. The question is not just "what happens next in this fight?" but "how does this fight affect the balance of power in the four corners of the board?" The philosophy is one of **holistic, spatial reasoning**.

### 4. The Relationship of Parts to the Whole: Local Victories vs. Global Balance
- **Chess (Synergy for a Single Goal):** All pieces work together for the ultimate goal of checkmate. A successful localized tactic (winning a Queen) is a massive step towards that goal. The whole is defined by its ability to serve the singular objective. The philosophy is **teleological**—everything is directed towards a final, specific end.
- **Go (The Flowing Battlefront):** The game is a constant interplay between local fights and the global situation. A move that wins a local battle might be a disaster if it weakens your position in a more important area of the board. The concept of *sente* (initiative) is paramount—making a move that forces your opponent to respond, allowing you to then dictate the flow of the game elsewhere. The philosophy is one of **dynamic equilibrium**, a constant push and pull for overall influence.

### Summary: The Metaphors

- **Chess is like a decisive battle.** It's a clash of armies with a clear command structure. Victory comes from a brilliant, calculated strike that decapitates the enemy leadership. It values logic, foresight, and the efficient use of specialized tools.
- **Go is like a colonial war or economic development.** It's about claiming and developing land. Victory comes from patiently building a network of interconnected outposts that, in sum, control more resources than your opponent's. It values intuition, balance, and the understanding that strength comes from adaptability and cooperation.

In essence, one philosophy seeks victory through **domination and elimination**, while the other seeks it through **accumulation and balance.** Both are profound paths to winning, but they require entirely different mindsets. 

For millennia we fought the Primates using structure. Than, they almost destroyed planet earth. They are not bad, they just create more often bad, than the rest of mankind.


The Kingdome of Heaven
and death on that path and not one step aside 

#cyberpunkcoltoure - Mind Set

 Do you know who I am?

Top Floors . Dropping what it will say on the business card or repeats what in the calendar under that meeting note was put.

The Streets . Dropping names, position and connections and tell you.

The Underground . Say "No" and they'll wont talk themselves out, but smile at you: "Good!" 

#TIE The Kingdome of Hell
Here we fight 

PS

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

 The call came on a Tuesday, which was already strange—Tuesdays were for maintenance, for slow mornings, for the rhythm of routine that Jake had spent a decade perfecting. The sat phone buzzed against the wood of the porch table like an angry insect, and Marta looked up from her book with an expression that said *who calls on a Tuesday?*

Jake answered. The voice on the other end was wrong in ways he couldn't immediately identify. Too calm. Too amused. The kind of calm that came from having seen everything burn and deciding to roast marshmallows over the ashes.

"You're the American with the Bearhawk," the voice said. No question. European accent—Dutch, maybe, with something else underneath. "The one who flies supplies to researchers and pretends he's retired."

"I am retired."

"You're talking to me. That's not retired." A pause, filled with what sounded like wind and water, the deep thrum of machinery. "I have generators. Three tons of them, stacked in a warehouse in Iquitos, waiting for someone who can move them upriver to people who need them. The river people can't reach them. The river is—" A sound that might have been a laugh. "The river is having opinions."

Jake stood up, walked to the edge of the porch. The Amazon was visible from here, a silver thread through the green. It looked calm. It always looked calm, right up until it wasn't.

"Who is this?"

"My name is Pieter. You don't know me. You will, probably. I'm the one who shows up when things stop working." Another pause. "I'm coming to see you. Three days. Clear the big strip, not your little one. I need room."

The line went dead.

---

Marta watched him lower the phone. "Trouble?"

"I don't know yet."

"Will you know in three days?"

"Probably."

She nodded, returned to her book. That was the thing about thirty years together—she knew when to ask and when to wait.

---

Three days later, Jake was sitting on the porch with coffee gone cold when the sound hit.

It wasn't an engine sound, not exactly. It was a *pressure*, a deep thrumming that vibrated through the floorboards and into his chest. The birds went silent. The insects stopped. The jungle held its breath.

Then it crested the ridge.

The thing was *wrong*. Thirty meters of pitch-black carbon, low and wide and predatory, skimming the canopy like a stone skipped across water. It had wings—no, it *was* wings, a delta shape that seemed to absorb light rather than reflect it. As Jake watched, the wings extended, spreading wider, and the thing began to climb, rotors tilting from concealed compartments, transitioning from ground-effect skim to vertical ascent like a nightmare learning to levitate.

It set down on the big strip—the one Jake kept mowed for emergencies, half a klick from the house—with a delicacy that seemed impossible for something that size. The rotors folded. The wings retracted. What remained was a katamaran hull, low and sleek, sitting on the grass like a shark that had beached itself deliberately.

Jake walked down. He didn't run. If this was trouble, running wouldn't help, and if it wasn't, there was no hurry.

The hatch opened. A man stepped out.

He was young. No—he wasn't young. His eyes were old, older than Jake's, older than they had any right to be. But his face was smooth, unlined, the face of a man who'd stopped aging somewhere around thirty and just... stayed. He moved with the loose economy of someone who'd never known pain in his joints, never felt the slow grind of years.

He was also carrying a wheel of cheese wrapped in cloth, a bottle of Scotch, and a string of sausages that smelled aggressively of garlic and smoke.

"You're Jake," he said. "I'm Pieter. I brought lunch."

---

They ate on the porch, Marta having taken one look at the visitor and decided to visit a neighbor. Jake didn't blame her. Pieter was polite, almost courtly, but there was something behind his eyes that made the jungle feel very far away.

The generators, it turned out, were real. Three tons of them, hybrid units built from salvaged electric vehicle drives and custom windings, designed to run for years with minimal maintenance. Pieter's network of workshops—spread across a Europe that Jake had only seen in fragmented news reports—had been producing them for years, shipping them to places where the grid had died and never come back.

"The world out there," Pieter said, gesturing vaguely east, "it's not what you remember. The virus changed things. Changed people. Most of them, anyway." He looked at his hands, turning them over as if checking they were still there. "I got lucky. Or unlucky. Depends on your perspective. I stopped aging. Stopped getting sick. The things that should have killed me—" He shrugged. "They didn't."

"The virus?"

"A mutation. There were a few of us. Most didn't make it. The ones who did..." He trailed off, looking out at the jungle. "We're still figuring out what we are."

Jake considered this. Ten years ago, he would have had questions. Twenty years ago, he would have had suspicions. Now he just had the awareness that the world was stranger than any of them had ever imagined, and that sitting on a porch with an immortal Dutchman eating Polish sausage was simply one more data point.

"The generators," Jake said. "Where are they going?"

"Villages. Up the Putumayo, mostly, and into the reserve. Places the river used to reach, back when the river was predictable. Now the dry seasons are longer, the wet seasons are worse, and the people who live there are running out of options. They need power for water pumps. For refrigeration. For the tools that keep them alive."

"And you can't fly them in yourself?"

Pieter smiled. It was a strange expression, not quite reaching his eyes. "My boat—" he gestured toward the black shape on the strip "—is conspicuous. It attracts attention. Attention I don't need. I move things across oceans, across borders, across the lines that people draw on maps. But the last mile, the quiet mile, the mile where no one notices? That's not my gift."

Jake looked at his own plane, parked in its usual spot. Blue. Unremarkable. The kind of plane that blended in.

"That's my gift," he said.

"It is."

---

They worked out the details as the sun dropped. Pieter would bring the generators to Iquitos, a few at a time, staged in a warehouse that belonged to a shell company that belonged to another shell company that led nowhere in particular. Jake would fly them in, one or two per trip, to villages that had strips he knew or sandbars he could read. Payment would be in cheese and sausage and whatever else Pieter's network could scrounge, plus the quiet satisfaction of keeping people alive.

"You could make money at this," Pieter observed. "Real money. The kind that buys things."

"I have things."

"Then why?"

Jake thought about it. The researchers on the Pupuña. The villages up the Putumayo. The faces he saw from the cockpit, looking up as he passed, knowing that the blue plane meant someone remembered they existed.

"Because I can," he said finally. "Because I'm here, and they're there, and the river won't do what it used to."

Pieter nodded slowly. "That's what I thought." He stood, stretched in a way that was almost inhumanly fluid. "I should go. The night's good for moving, and I have a schedule to keep."

At the hatch of his absurd black vessel, he paused. "You know, I've met a lot of people in this work. Smugglers, soldiers, saints, sinners. Most of them are trying to get something. You're just... here."

"Best place to be."

Pieter laughed—a real laugh this time, surprising them both. "Maybe it is. Maybe that's what I forgot."

The hatch closed. The rotors unfolded. The thing rose on columns of displaced air, tilted, and skimmed away into the gathering dark, leaving only silence and the fading thrum of impossible engines.

---

Marta came back after the sound died. She sat in her chair, picked up her book, and said nothing.

"He brought cheese," Jake offered.

"I saw."

"It's good cheese."

She turned a page. "I'll make dinner."

The forest hummed. The river flowed. Somewhere out there, a man who'd stopped aging was moving through the dark, carrying generators to places that needed them, building something that looked like hope out of salvage and stubbornness.

Jake finished his Scotch, set the glass down, and watched the stars come out.

It wasn't a mission. It wasn't a war.

But it was something.

--- 

"What you think about Pieter?"

"Ace Company. Still operating. The just did not go dark." hehe. "They went super dark".

"I make a few calls. The Tillerman came - with victory."

...in a close potential future...

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

The Amazon sprawled beneath him like a green ocean frozen mid-swell, and for the thousandth Sunday in a row, Jake was watching the game from the most remote living room on Earth.

The satellite feed flickered once—someone in Leticia probably kicked a generator—before the 49ers' offense solidified on the screen. His wife Marta set down a bottle of Club Colombia and two glasses on the weathered table between their chairs. She didn't say anything. She never did on game days. She just sat, and watched him watch, and sometimes read, and that was enough.

It was enough. That was the problem.

His phone buzzed. A picture from his daughter—the grandkids at a pumpkin patch in Oregon. He smiled, sent a heart, and set the phone down.

The 49ers ran for six yards. First down.

Behind him, through the open back wall of the house—because "wall" was too strong a word for the screens that kept the bugs out—the Bearhawk Companion sat on the short grass strip he'd carved himself ten years ago. Its ramp door hung open, waiting for the ATV that was currently parked under the house, connected to nothing, doing nothing.

He'd flown it yesterday. Circled for an hour. Landed. That was the whole mission.

The 49ers kicked a field goal.

"You're sighing again," Marta said, not looking up from her book.

"I'm not sighing."

"You're sighing with your shoulders."

Jake rolled his shoulders deliberately, which proved her point. She turned a page.

Down in the valley, where the Amazon proper began its slow crawl toward Leticia, a thin column of smoke rose from one of the processing huts. AI-supported bioreactors, running on algorithms written in labs ten thousand miles away, turning local plants into compounds that would end up in pharmacies in Berlin and Tokyo and São Paulo. Clean. Quiet. Sustainable.

The world had gotten clean and quiet while he wasn't looking.

Thirty years ago, he'd first come to this region with a different purpose entirely. Night insertions, black helicopters, faces he couldn't remember if he tried. The war on drugs had been hot then, and the Amazon had been a battleground. Now the cartels were gone—not defeated, exactly, just obsolete. Synthetic drugs cooked in European labs for pennies a dose had undercut the whole business model. The profit had drained out of the jungle like water through sand.

What remained was the jungle itself, and the people who'd always lived here, and a new generation of scientists and farmers who'd figured out that you could make more money growing things *with* the forest than burning it down.

And one bored old ghost who didn't know how to stop haunting a war that had already ended.

---

The ethanol refinery was three klicks upriver, a low-slung operation that processed sugarcane from a cooperative of small farms. Jake had helped negotiate the land rights five years ago, using skills that felt absurdly overqualified for the task. But the refinery meant fuel for the planes, and fuel meant he could keep flying, and flying meant—

Meant what, exactly?

He banked the Companion over the refinery, watching the morning shift trickle in on motorbikes. His ATV was strapped down in the cargo bay, ready to deploy if he saw anything interesting. He never did.

South of the refinery, the new airstrip was coming along nicely. The third one he'd helped coordinate, working with a consortium of villages that wanted better access to markets. The logic was simple: if farmers could fly their goods out, they didn't need roads. No roads meant no loggers. No loggers meant the forest stayed standing. The carbon credits alone would pay for the strip in five years.

It was good work. Important work. The kind of work his younger self would have called "nation building" with a sneer, before realizing that building things was harder and more valuable than breaking them.

But it wasn't *his* work. Not really. He just showed up, made calls, leaned on contacts who still owed him favors, and watched other people build things.

The Companion hummed along at 140 knots, ethanol burning clean in the 315 horses under the cowl. Marta had picked the engine option—"If we're going to be environmental hypocrites, let's at least be interesting hypocrites"—and the conversion had cost more than the plane itself. But the math worked: fuel from the river, power from the sun, carbon neutral enough for the scientists to stop giving him side-eye at village meetings.

Below, the canopy broke for a moment, revealing the braided channels of a tributary. In the old days, those channels had been smuggling routes. Now they were tourism corridors, with the occasional eco-lodge tucked into the trees.

He circled once, low enough to see a family of capybaras scatter from a sandbar, then climbed back to altitude and turned for home.

---

The compound was quiet when he landed. Marta had left a note on the table: *Gone to Leticia for supplies. Don't burn the house down.*

He didn't burn the house down. He sat in his chair, watched the shadows lengthen across the strip, and tried to remember when he'd stopped feeling like he was supposed to be somewhere else.

His phone buzzed. Not a text—a call. The number was unfamiliar, but the country code was local.

"Jake." Not a question. A woman's voice, mid-thirties, professional.

"That's me."

"My name is Dr. Elena Santos. I'm with the biopharma cooperative in Puerto Nariño. We have a situation."

He sat up slightly. "What kind of situation?"

"One of our collection teams is stranded at a research site up the Pupuña. Flooding took out the trail, and they're running low on supplies. We've tried contacting the usual air services, but everyone's booked solid for the next three days. Someone said you might be willing to help."

The Pupuña. Three hundred klicks southwest, deep in the reserve. He'd never landed there, but the satellite imagery showed a decent sandbar during dry season. Wet season, like now?

"How many people?"

"Four. Two researchers, two local guides. They have three days of rations left, maybe four if they stretch it."

He was already standing, already moving toward the Companion. "Send me the coordinates. I'll need to check the strip length and surface. Tell them to clear any debris they can reach."

"There's... one more thing." She hesitated. "They have samples. Perishable biological material. If they can't get them out in the next 48 hours, two years of work is lost."

Jake stopped with his hand on the Companion's wing strut. Two years of work. People who'd spent two years in the jungle, collecting God knows what, hoping to find something that might become medicine. And now a river they couldn't control was about to take it all.

"I'll be there before dark," he said. "Tell them to look for a blue plane."

He hung up before she could thank him.

---

Marta called when he was an hour out, the coordinates locked in the panel and the ATV still sitting under the house because he hadn't had time to load it.

"You're flying."

"Just a supply run. Quick turnaround."

"Jake." Her voice was gentle. "You're humming."

He hadn't noticed. He stopped.

"I'll be home for dinner," he said.

"I know you will. Fly safe."

The Pupuña materialized out of the green as the sun started its final slide toward the horizon. The sandbar was there, smaller than the satellite image suggested, but long enough if he put it down right. Three figures stood at the near end, waving. A fourth was visible near a cluster of tents, organizing something—probably the samples.

He did a low pass first, checking for soft spots, then pulled up and circled back. The Companion settled onto the sand like it had been doing this its whole life, which it had, just not here.

The researchers were young, exhausted, and desperately grateful. The samples—sealed in portable coolers that hummed with battery-powered refrigeration—fit easily in the cargo bay. The guides helped load while Jake kept an eye on the river, which was definitely higher than it should be.

"We heard about you," one of the researchers said, a kid with a beard that couldn't quite hide his youth. "They said there was an American out here who used to be—"

"I used to be retired," Jake said. "Now I'm just a guy with a plane. Get in."

The takeoff was tight—the sandbar felt softer on the second pass—but the Companion clawed into the air with 200 feet to spare. Below, the river had already swallowed another meter of beach.

---

He landed at Puerto Nariño as the last light bled out of the sky. Dr. Santos was waiting on the strip, a compact woman with sharp eyes and a tablet full of data she didn't look at once while they unloaded.

The samples went into a waiting truck, which disappeared into the village. The researchers shook his hand with an intensity that suggested they'd remember this for the rest of their lives.

Dr. Santos walked him back to the Companion.

"That was fast," she said. "The charter services quoted me three days."

"They were honest. I was available."

She studied him for a moment. "You know, we have a problem here. It's not just the floods. It's the whole system. The river is changing. The weather is changing. The old infrastructure wasn't built for this, and the new infrastructure doesn't exist yet."

Jake leaned against the Companion's wing, feeling the warmth still radiating from the engine. "I've heard this speech before. Usually from people who want something."

"I want you to consider a contract." She held up a hand before he could object. "Not full-time. Not even regular. Just... on-call. When our teams need to reach remote sites fast, when the rivers are too high or too low, when the commercial operators can't or won't go. You know this region better than anyone. You have the skills. You have the plane."

"I have a wife who likes having me home for dinner."

"Then bring her. We have guest quarters. Good food. Better conversation than you'll get staring at the river."

He almost smiled. "I'll think about it."

"Think fast. The rainy season's just starting."

She walked away without looking back, which he respected.

---

The flight home was dark and quiet. The stars came out in layers, first the bright ones, then the millions behind them, until the sky was so full of light it looked like someone had spilled salt across black velvet.

Marta was on the porch when he landed, a single lamp burning behind her.

"You missed dinner."

"I brought dessert." He pulled a wrapped package from the cargo bay—one of the researchers had pressed it on him, some local pastry that probably wouldn't survive the night. "How was Leticia?"

"Hot. Crowded. Full of people who don't know how to drive." She took the package, peered inside. "This looks edible. I'll make coffee."

They sat on the porch, drinking coffee and eating pastries that were better than they had any right to be. The forest hummed and clicked around them, a million conversations he'd never understand.

"Dr. Santos called," Marta said.

"She called you?"

"She called to check your references. Wanted to know if you were reliable." A small smile. "I told her you were the most reliable man I'd ever met, but that you had a bad habit of pretending you weren't."

Jake stared into his coffee. "She offered me a contract."

"I know. She told me."

"What did you say?"

"I said it was up to you. Then I told her you'd say no at first, think about it for a few days, and eventually say yes because you'd go crazy if you didn't have something to do."

He looked at her. In the lamplight, she was exactly the same as she'd been thirty years ago, when he'd met her in a Bogotá café and realized that some wars were worth fighting.

"You have too much confidence in me."

"No," she said. "I have exactly the right amount."

---

The 49ers game was a recording, but he watched it anyway the next Sunday. Marta sat beside him, reading. The forest hummed.

His phone buzzed. Dr. Santos.

*Tentative schedule for next month attached. First run is the 15th, weather permitting. Let me know if any dates conflict.*

He looked at the calendar. The 15th was wide open.

*No conflicts,* he typed. *See you then.*

Marta turned a page. "You're not sighing."

He realized she was right.

"Must be the coffee."

"Mmm."

The 49ers scored. The forest hummed. Somewhere out there, in the darkness between the stars, a river was rising and a village was waiting and a plane was ready.

It wasn't much. It wasn't a war. It wasn't even a mission, really.

But it was something.

And for now, that was enough.