A reminder that as the US continues to threaten countries around the world, fedposting is to be very much avoided (even with qualifiers like “in Minecraft”) and comments containing it will be removed.

Image is of a Colombian campaign rally in support of Iván Cepeda of the left-wing Historic Pact.


As always, my weekly preamble is in spoiler tags below.

preamble

The unstable stare-down in the Middle East continues. Yet again, there’s been little region-level change, but there have been some big escalations. Namely, the entity has decided to go further into Lebanon, with all the casualties and destruction that will bring them, while simultaneously abandoning bases elsewhere in the theater due to constant pressure by Hezbollah. Seeking to pressure Hezbollah away from their successful strategy of attrition on IOF forces that attempt to advance only to receive rapid onset symptoms of FPVdroneitis, they have also decided to resume airstrikes on Beirut, which is an obvious violation of the region-wide ceasefire that Iran may or may not militarily respond to, but they do seem very diplomatically displeased as of me writing this sentence. Meanwhile, Iran has responded to US drone incursions with strikes on Kuwait military bases. Trump has escalated his demands lately, so a return to war seems more likely than ever.

In Bolivia, Paz appears to be escalating in response to undiminished general strikes, with Congress allowing him to declare states of emergency at will, and therefore get the military more easily involved. In Colombia’s runoff elections, far-right candidate Espriella won the first round of the runoff election with 43.7% of the vote ahead of left-winger Cepeda’s 40.9%. Every poll had Cepeda beating Espriella by varying margins, so this appears to be a fairly standard case of the US putting their thumb on the scale; as the saying goes, they do not trust the population of Colombia to do democracy correctly and they couldn’t risk them accidentally electing the wrong person.

Over in Sudan, the conflict appears like it is moving in a pro-SAF direction, with some significant military gains against the UAE-backed RSF, although the military situation is still fairly complicated. A potentially notable news item that I missed a couple weeks ago is that the US seems to have ended their strategic ambiguity over who they consider the true government in Sudan, as they now firmly recognize the SAF over the RSF. Why exactly this has occurred is a little beyond me. Could be because they see how the winds are blowing militarily; could be because they want to fuck over the UAE for some perceived slight (to be America’s ally is fatal etc etc). The humanitarian situation appears no better though, with millions of people remaining in incredible hardship and near-starvation, and RSF-backed genocidal atrocities of the kind that Zionists would nod approvingly at.

Thankfully, China is looking at all these manifold crises and has dramatically escalated the speed at which they are writing strongly worded letters and are calling for a revitalized UN.


Last week’s thread is here.
The Imperialism Reading Group is here.

Please check out the RedAtlas!

The bulletins site is here. Currently not used.
The RSS feed is here. Also currently not used.

The Zionist Entity's Genocide of Palestine

If you have evidence of Zionist crimes and atrocities that you wish to preserve, there is a thread here in which to do so.

Sources on the fighting in Palestine against the temporary Zionist entity. In general, CW for footage of battles, explosions, dead people, and so on:

UNRWA reports on the Zionists’ destruction and siege of Gaza and the West Bank.

English-language Palestinian Marxist-Leninist twitter account. Alt here.
English-language twitter account that collates news.
Arab-language twitter account with videos and images of fighting.
English-language (with some Arab retweets) Twitter account based in Lebanon. - Telegram is @IbnRiad.
English-language Palestinian Twitter account which reports on news from the Resistance Axis. - Telegram is @EyesOnSouth.
English-language Twitter account in the same group as the previous two. - Telegram here.

Mirrors of Telegram channels that have been erased by Zionist censorship.

Russia-Ukraine Conflict

Examples of Ukrainian Nazis and fascists
Examples of racism/euro-centrism during the Russia-Ukraine conflict

Sources:

Defense Politics Asia’s youtube channel and their map. Their youtube channel has substantially diminished in quality but the map is still useful.
Moon of Alabama, which tends to have interesting analysis. Avoid the comment section.
Understanding War and the Saker: reactionary sources that have occasional insights on the war.
Alexander Mercouris, who does daily videos on the conflict. While he is a reactionary and surrounds himself with likeminded people, his daily update videos are relatively brainworm-free and good if you don’t want to follow Russian telegram channels to get news. He also co-hosts The Duran, which is more explicitly conservative, racist, sexist, transphobic, anti-communist, etc when guests are invited on, but is just about tolerable when it’s just the two of them if you want a little more analysis.
Simplicius, who publishes on Substack. Like others, his political analysis should be soundly ignored, but his knowledge of weaponry and military strategy is generally quite good.
On the ground: Patrick Lancaster, an independent and very good journalist reporting in the warzone on the separatists’ side.

Unedited videos of Russian/Ukrainian press conferences and speeches.

Pro-Russian Telegram Channels:

Again, CW for anti-LGBT and racist, sexist, etc speech, as well as combat footage.

https://t.me/aleksandr_skif ~ DPR’s former Defense Minister and Colonel in the DPR’s forces. Russian language.
https://t.me/Slavyangrad ~ A few different pro-Russian people gather frequent content for this channel (~100 posts per day), some socialist, but all socially reactionary. If you can only tolerate using one Russian telegram channel, I would recommend this one.
https://t.me/s/levigodman ~ Does daily update posts.
https://t.me/patricklancasternewstoday ~ Patrick Lancaster’s telegram channel.
https://t.me/gonzowarr ~ A big Russian commentator.
https://t.me/rybar ~ One of, if not the, biggest Russian telegram channels focussing on the war out there. Actually quite balanced, maybe even pessimistic about Russia. Produces interesting and useful maps.
https://t.me/epoddubny ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/boris_rozhin ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/mod_russia_en ~ Russian Ministry of Defense. Does daily, if rather bland updates on the number of Ukrainians killed, etc. The figures appear to be approximately accurate; if you want, reduce all numbers by 25% as a ‘propaganda tax’, if you don’t believe them. Does not cover everything, for obvious reasons, and virtually never details Russian losses.
https://t.me/UkraineHumanRightsAbuses ~ Pro-Russian, documents abuses that Ukraine commits.

Pro-Ukraine Telegram Channels:

Almost every Western media outlet.
https://discord.gg/projectowl ~ Pro-Ukrainian OSINT Discord.
https://t.me/ice_inii ~ Alleged Ukrainian account with a rather cynical take on the entire thing.


  • AlHouthi4President@lemmy.ml
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    A new phase of the regional war is approaching. May Allah (swt) hasten the alleviation of the people of Gaza and South Lebanon.

    Al Mayadeen reporting on Iranian state media.

    Tasnim News Agency reported that Iran has paused the exchange of messages with the US via mediators in protest against the Israeli crimes in Lebanon.

    Tasnim added that “Iranian officials and negotiators emphasized the immediate cessation of the aggressive and brutal operations by the occupation army in Gaza and Lebanon," as well as "the necessity of ‘Israel’s’ complete withdrawal from the occupied territories in Lebanon.”

    “There will be no talks unless Iran’s and the Resistance’s stances regarding a ceasefire on all fronts are met,” the agency added.

    In response, “the Resistance Front and Iran have enlisted in their agenda the complete closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the activation of other fronts, including the Bab al-Mandeb Strait,” Tasnim further reported.

  • InevitableSwing [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    Trump 22m ago. Hightlight: Trump urged Israel and Hezbollah to stop fighting and hopefully it will last “for ETERNITY!”

    I had a conversation with Bibi Netanyahu today, asking him not to go into a major raid of Beirut, Lebanon. He turned his Troops around. Thank you Bibi! I also had a conversation with Representatives of the Leaders of Hezbollah, and they agreed to stop shooting at Israel, and its soldiers. Likewise, Israel agreed to stop shooting at them. Let’s see how long that lasts — Hopefully it will be for ETERNITY! President DONALD J. TRUMP

    • red_giant [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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      I saw al-Jazeera report the cease-fire included “and Gaza” but all the statements I can find seem restricted to actually bombing Beirut.

      Except the US embassy in Lebanon saying the cease-fire applies to all Lebanon.

      Bibi seems to be saying he won’t attack Beirut but that’s his only concession.

      Iran seem to not be at the table right now until they see results. Results including Beirut? all Lebanon? “and Gaza”?

      I get a strong feeling that Iran is taking a hardline probably just for Lebanon, and everyone else is talking out of two sides of their faces to different audiences.

  • red_giant [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    OilPrice - Rystad: U.S.-Iran Re-Escalation Could Drive Oil To $180 By August

    Given the absolute confusion of a cease-fire right now and the fact that Bibi appears to be in the drivers seat, I think we can lock this in.

    León estimates that it would take six to eight weeks for transit insurance markets to reprice, vessel operators to secure access and physical oil flows to normalize after a diplomatic resolution is reached, implying that any meaningful supply recoveries from any current structured pauses will not fully materialize at processing ports until late summer.

    Rystad is not alone. Back in March, Saudi Arabia warned that the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz could drive oil prices up to $180 per barrel while several Wall Street analysts, including BNP Paribas, have projected oil prices in the $170-200/bbl range.

    In contrast, Goldman Sachs commodity analysts on Monday projected that rapid demand destruction caused by high crude prices is heavily countering the risk of severe Middle East supply shocks. Goldman says that while geopolitical tensions and the prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz have triggered massive physical supply deficits, actual consumption has dropped much faster than anticipated, capping the potential upside for global oil prices.

    If we’re going to have an oil-shock, I want it to hit before the Anthropic IPO. Inshallah give us at least that.

    • s0ykaf [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      actual consumption has dropped much faster than anticipated, capping the potential upside for global oil prices

      i do believe that tbh. oil futures are prone to ideological crap, but spot prices have been dropping a lot too afaik, and that one leaves no room for propaganda bullshit

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        spot price and futures are related though. If you’re convicted that oil will be worth about 2x as much in the future then it’s sensible to buy a tanker and not offload it yet. And the converse is true, if you think the future price will drop then you offload it asap potentially even rerouting. Physically holding the asset is also a bet on futures.

        The laws of thermodynamics and economics intersect.

    • Frogmanfromlake [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      Almost as funny as the Germans who larp as Native Americans and have their own pow wows. It was a bigger thing around 20-30 years ago and they were known to go to native reservations and lecture them on how they weren’t honoring their culture by living in the present.

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        My favorite Hitler fact is that he was a huge fan of westerns and even sent the troops in stalingrad westerns to boost their spirits.

        He had a mixed view of specifically the Apache, or at least the way Apache were portrayed in cheesy 1930s German cinema. Mostly he enjoyed the stories of cowboys surviving in a land open for conquest but also the parallel in the way a “lesser” people could be overcome by a “better” people. There are hints he sympathized with the Apache to some extent, or at least viewed them as a warning for what could happen to the Germans.

        Germans aged above 35 were raised on a diet of these westerns and even after the nazis fell, the nazi message and the race ideology of the era is carried forward in these german westerns. If you talk to a german lib about it they’ll say “nooo dont ruin my childhood” (and I quote) but damn I think there’s something to that.

        There’s also the fascinating case of Italian fascism and its obsession with westerns. After the laws changed to stop the lionizing of Americans and instead coerce lionizing Italians, they kept making “cowboys vs indians” except now the cowboys were Italians in Italy. Umberto Eco wrote a book called “The mysterious flame of queen loana” which is a very interesting collection of his recollections of this weird moment in Italian comics and cinema.

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          Everyone loves westerns, there is something very primal about them. The Chinese literature classic Water margin is sort of a western when you think about it. As it says in the introduction, its a book about flabby scholars discussing their fantasies on rainy days. They dream of esentialy, a bunch of bandits, who go on adventures, make their own justice, stick it to the man etc. Amir Timur left his life as the heir of an insanely wealthy merchant, to become an outlaw, due to similar desires… The most read literature in my country, is a western, called " libro vaquero" or “cowboy book.” Deep down, we all want to be Jhon Wayne, regardless of culture, gender, etc.

          That being said, the Hitler part is a bit more sinister. when you think about it, the northern crusades happened at about the same time as American colonialism, and Prusuia, Pomerania, Pomeralia, etc. Ended up in similar plantation economies, where the local Balt and Slavic peoples took the place of native Americans. So in that case is the mirror historical parallelism as depicting the german barbarians wearing nazi helmets in the Alexander Nevsky movie.

  • red_giant [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    CNN live updates on Iran:

    • Trump insists Iran talks continue at ‘rapid pace’ after Iranian state media said they were suspended
    • Netanyahu says Israel will keep striking southern Lebanon “as planned”
    • Lebanon says Hezbollah has agreed to US ceasefire proposal with Israel

    No one knows wtf is happening

  • InevitableSwing [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    At a rapid pace. Heh.

    NYT - In a post on social media, President Trump seemed to reject suggestions from a semiofficial Iranian news agency that Iran was moving suspend its involvement in peace talks with the United States. Without mentioning the Iranian report, Trump wrote that the talks were continuing “at a rapid pace.”

  • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    Solidarity from Mexico and Uruguay Spreads Across Cuba

    Uruguay gets little discussion here, but they too have been providing aid to Cuba. Does anyone have good thoughts on Uruguay? Is there a good left movement on the ground? How’s Orsi? He seems like a pretty typical pink tider in both good and bad ways. Broad Front was good under Mujica, right? They’re the biggest party in the country right now by a lot.

    • Redcuban1959 [any]@hexbear.netM
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      Does anyone have good thoughts on Uruguay?

      It’s a good country with a history of progressive laws. Though they have also a history of racism towards native americans and afro-latinos, most of these peoples contributions to the country got erased or get barely talked about.

      Is there a good left movement on the ground?

      AFAIK, the entire left is part of the Frente Amplio (Broad Front) governing coalition.

      How’s Orsi? He seems like a pretty typical pink tider in both good and bad ways.

      He’s ok. He’s basically a less popular version of Lula da Silva. Both tabaré vazquez and mujica were more left-wing than him, and he didn’t break relations with Israel or supported the lawsuit against israel. Unlike Brazil, Orsi didn’t recognize the Gaza Genocide.

      Broad Front was good under Mujica, right? They’re the biggest party in the country right now by a lot.

      Broad Front in general is good, and better than the National or Colorados, the other parties are either irrelevant trots, or weird conspiracy theory parties, theres also the Far-Right but they have like 1 seat in the congress right now. Uruguay might be the only country in the Americas where the Far-Right flopped hard (they went from 11% in 2019 to just 2% in 2024), and the Right seems to move away from far-right talking points.

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    https://phenomenalworld.org/issue/issue-1-american-power/

    lots of banger articles here, conrades theory-gary

    i will say mosaic of deterrence and bolivarian twilight are good summation of iran/venezuela;

    monroe doctrines of latam existence in historic trajectory

    dollar dominance of financial market for hudson heads realists

    empire suicide watch and histories of decline as dialectical pieces about american empire

    • jmo [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      Can you share any more context about what that is and how they source the articles? It looks really interesting but I’m relatively new to this space and would appreciate more background.

      • plinky [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        phenomenal world is kinda left to lib economically and historically tilted journal, but very structural-ly vibed (thus not unfriendly to marxism). i would say it’s like cerebral jacobin, without any electoral stuff, and without pondering the dialectic too much (so not trots or leftcoms with their weird lingo you have to retranslate in your head)?

        read second and third article to get an idea what they are about

        i would say kinda through line here through 5 articles i read already that decline of usa is overstated, especially on the dollar side, military defeat in iran can be papered over somewhat, if china doesn’t do anything (they won’t), and that production vs ip is not solved question, until china does something (they won’t)

        like mronline will be china defensist, counterpunch is idiosyncratic radlib (good and bad), wsws (aside from sexpest issues) is trot on the ground union reporting, jacobin is simpling dems/random worthwhile thoughts, nlr is pondering history dialectic. might notice that aside from random articles, nobody ponders bls data on the constant, but oh well.

  • Tervell [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    heartwarming - American rearmament continues to just be blatant corruption https://xcancel.com/MikeLevin/status/2060875703373967576

    Follow the money on this one. It is rotten to the core. The Pentagon just lent $620,000,000 to a tiny North Carolina startup called Vulcan Elements. The company is two years old. It had fewer than 50 employees. And three months before the deal was announced, Donald Trump Jr.’s venture firm quietly took a stake in it. Here is the part the administration tried to bury. Of the dozens of companies the Pentagon was weighing, Vulcan was the only deal initiated by a top White House aide. That aide was Peter Navarro, a close friend of Trump Jr. The order came down to move fast. One official put it plainly: The call came from the White House. We have to get this done. Staff worked late nights to push it through in weeks. Deals like this normally take many months of vetting. And when it closed, Vulcan’s valuation jumped from about 200 million dollars to roughly 2 billion. A windfall for the investors, including the president’s son.

    This is public money. Your money. Routed through the Pentagon to enrich the president’s family and their friends. The Bush administration’s own chief ethics lawyer called it corruption we pay for. And there is more coming. A drone parts company Trump Jr. holds a stake in is also under Pentagon review. This is not a one-off. It is a pattern. The president’s family is treating the federal Treasury like a private bank, and the bill lands on every taxpayer.

    https://ghostarchive.org/archive/cOgfg

    The White House Intervened to Get a $620 Million Deal for a Company Tied to Donald Trump Jr.

    About three months before the Pentagon announced plans to lend money to Vulcan Elements, Trump Jr.’s venture capital firm took an undisclosed stake in the company.

    also, btw, this Vulcan Elements company is a “startup manufacturer of rare earth magnets” - so if you were worried the US was going to fix its supply bottleneck of rare earths (necessary for a ton of its fancy equipment, like the radars destroyed by Iran, and a lot of the munitions the US expended in the war), you can rest easy, not only are they trying to solve the problem with fucking startups (classic), they’re not even real startups but open insider trading schemes (but I repeat myself)! matt-joker

  • thethirdgracchi [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    I had a very productive call with Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, of Israel, and there will be no Troops going to Beirut, and any Troops that are on their way, have already been turned back. Likewise, through highly placed Representatives, I had a very good call with Hezbollah, and they agreed that all shooting will stop — That Israel will not attack them, and they will not attack Israel. President DONALD J. TRUMP

    Thank you Mr. Hezbollah sir. Love the idea of Trump on the phone with “Hezbollah.”

    Per: https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/116676034049614301

      • MemesAreTheory [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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        I can assure you, as the CEO of Antifa themself, I had no call with the president this morning. This is another case of market manipulation! My publicly traded company cannot stand the uncertainty, and I call on the president of the United States to recognize the wisdom of Allah and submit to the righteous cause of the resistance forces!

    • Seasonal_Peace [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      Good, the people of Lebanon should know that it is neither the French nor the despicable Saudis who are preventing them from becoming a colony of Israel. No one can deny that Iran and Hezbollah are the ones preventing this.

  • Tervell [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    https://xcancel.com/MenchOsint/status/2061497768909095065

    Israel planned a major strike in Beirut’s southern suburbs but postponed it at the last minute after U.S. intervention. Source: Kan News

    https://ghostarchive.org/archive/DEThO

    • Israel: threatens to target Beirut
    • Iran: cut off talks with US, threatens to retaliate if it happens
    • Trump: claims he doesn’t care if negotiations are over
    • Also Trump: immediately calls Netanyahu to tell him not to strike Beirut

    do the Israelis even have any cards to play other than “genocidal bombing of city” anymore?

    • Sleve_McDichael [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      Angeles police detective and former Army reservist, said he paid $25,000 for the 99-year lease on his windowless bunker six or seven years ago. He lives in Las Vegas now and uses it as a vacation spot and potential emergency shelter. “You can do fishing over there, you can do hunting, you can do hiking,” he said. “And if I need to, yeah, I could use it as a bug out—if I can get there.”

      Incredible thought process here. If the “apocalypse” happens, how do you survive it in Vegas then make it thousands of miles away to your bunker, which is now owned by raiders/your unhinged neighbors because the piece of paper that says you own it is now worthless?

    • mkultrawide [any]@hexbear.net
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      World’s most anti-social and duplicitous assholes incapable of building functioning community of like-minded individuals.

    • InevitableSwing [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      If an apocalypse does happen - they’ll start killing each other off within days.

      Disputes are piling up, per the newspaper, from lawsuits over filled septic systems to complaints over off-leash dogs biting residents. During one particularly hairy incident, a man who moved into one of the units with his wife, his daughter, and her four children, pulled a gun on a Vivos contractor who had pulled up with a front-end loader to his bunker.

      The resident eventually shot the contractor, injuring him. However, South Dakota’s stand-your-ground law led to a grand jury declining to indict him.

      • FALGSConaut [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        For all its other faults (mainly Zionism and racism) the World War Z book was right about wealthy “survivalist” types. Iirc they had a luxury compound that went to shit almost immediately since they couldn’t not broadcast their survival bunker & their armed guards left the second they faced a bunch of desperate people trying to get to safety.

      • Rojo27 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        The resident eventually shot the contractor, injuring him. However, South Dakota’s stand-your-ground law led to a grand jury declining to indict him.

        How’s that boot tasting?bootlicker

    • facow [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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      Recommend Bypass Paywalls Clean to all the gumshoes out there

      WSJ Article spoiler

      A Luxury Survivalist Community Is Tearing Itself Apart They went to South Dakota to ride out the apocalypse at a ‘5-star’ bunker compound. They’re already at each other’s throats with HOA-style grievances. Cattle graze in a field near Vivos xPoint bunkers. Bunkers at Vivos xPoint, a survivalist community in South Dakota.

      By Joe Barrett

      | Photography by Tara Rose Weston for WSJ

      May 26, 2026 7:00 pm ET

      IGLOO, S.D.—Row upon row of concrete bunkers with steel blast doors peek up from the rolling grasslands—like hobbit holes for the apocalypse.

      There are 575 of them, clustered on a former munitions depot near South Dakota’s Black Hills and billed as “The Largest Survival Community on Earth.” The pitch: Ride out nuclear war, the next pandemic or societal collapse in relative comfort.

      Yet for many residents, the dream has soured. The threat hasn’t come from Armageddon, but from friction that resembles a suburban homeowners’ association battle.

      Lawsuits, countersuits and disputes are piling up over septic systems, property taxes, off-leash dogs and a growing list of community rules. The legal skirmishing has reached the state supreme court—twice. Promised amenities, including a restaurant bunker, a pool bunker and a horse-stable bunker, have yet to materialize. Guns have been drawn, and there have been offers to settle things with fists. The developer denies wrongdoing and says complaints come from a few malcontents. © OpenStreetMap contributors S.D. S.D.

      “You get that many people with the same mentality in a small place like that, eventually they’re going to cross over each others’ lines and you’re going to have a conflict,” said Larry Harter, a retired locomotive engineer in nearby Edgemont, population 725. He was nursing a beer recently at the Victory Steakhouse & Lounge, where preppers from the compound sometimes turn up for dinner or a drink.

      Edgemont Mayor Rheta Reagan said she was unsure whether being on the road to the complex was a boon for her city. “There’s a few that come into town, but for the most part they don’t,” she said. “They’re just doing their own thing, whatever their own thing is. Like I said, I would want no part of it.” ‘5-star survival luxury’ Gate in front of Vivos xPoint. Six miles of gravel roads wind past the ruins of a former military base to Vivos’s front gate, which requires a code to enter.

      The doomsday enclave, known as Vivos xPoint, is the brainchild of Robert Vicino, a Los Angeles-based entrepreneur who had a vision in 1980: He needed to build a large underground structure to protect 1,000 people from a coming “life-extinction event,” according to the company’s website. He since has developed a global network of such communities.

      In 2016, Vicino began working with local ranchers to convert the long-abandoned South Dakota property—far from “known nuclear targets” and “high-crime anarchy zones” (read: cities)—into a compound for “like-minded survivalists to ride out ‘the event,’” as Vivos puts it. Vicino later bought the property outright, according to his son, Dante, Vivos xPoint’s director of operations.

      Vivos offers 99-year leases on the shelters, roomy at nearly 2,200 square feet. Occupants pay up to $55,000 upfront, plus annual ground rent and service fees. They can build out the raw space themselves or hire Vivos’s contractors. The company touts “5-Star Survival Luxury and Comfort” and residents live on roads with names like Bunker Way. Interior view of an empty, arched shelter. The igloo-shaped bunkers were once used by the Army to store World War II-era munitions. The Vivos Group Vivos xPoint showroom bunker interior. A Vivos xPoint showroom bunker. The Vivos Group

      “My vision is to see xPoint become a thriving community of people who want safety in this increasingly crazy world we live in,” Dante Vicino said. He noted that about a third of the units were leased and a few dozen occupied full-time. “The lawsuits have been a real pain, but we’re not set back at all,” he said. Philippe Briggs. Philippe Briggs Philippe Briggs

      Philippe Briggs, a recently retired Los Angeles police detective and former Army reservist, said he paid $25,000 for the 99-year lease on his windowless bunker six or seven years ago. He lives in Las Vegas now and uses it as a vacation spot and potential emergency shelter. “You can do fishing over there, you can do hunting, you can do hiking,” he said. “And if I need to, yeah, I could use it as a bug out—if I can get there.”

      He keeps a year’s supply of provisions inside. “Just like rice—basic foodstuff that you would fix at the end of the world,” he said, adding that he hasn’t had issues with management. “If I had an issue, I would just sell my place and be gone.”

      Not everyone shares Briggs’s experience. ‘You ain’t never killed nobody, have you?’

      David Streeter paid $55,000 for his unit in July 2023 and moved to the windswept prairie. His wife, daughter and her four children eventually all joined him.

      He soon discovered his septic system didn’t work. When he inquired about filing a complaint, a Vivos employee warned him off, Streeter testified in court. The company would likely try to evict him—as it had done to others, he said the employee told him. Upon eviction, he would lose his lease payment and potentially the value of any improvements he had made, according to the terms of the lease.

      Vivos has said that no such tactic exists.

      Then came roughly five months of what Streeter described in court as harassment by Vivos contractors. It ended when one of them drove a front-end loader up to Streeter’s bunker and challenged him to a fistfight. Streeter drew his gun and told the man to leave.

      “You ain’t never killed nobody, have you?” the man said, according to a video shot by Streeter’s daughter and entered into the court record.

      “Oh, yeah,” replied Streeter, a former prison guard, EMT and Army veteran who served in Bosnia.

      “I have, with these hands,” the man responded.

      A few moments later, the camera goes out of frame. A shot can be heard.

      Streeter testified that the man charged him and he fired once, striking him. Streeter rendered aid afterward and, with a friend, drove the man to meet an ambulance. The man survived. A grand jury declined to indict Streeter, and a judge later granted him immunity under South Dakota’s stand-your-ground law. The state supreme court later affirmed the decision.

      Vivos moved to evict Streeter for the shooting and for an incident earlier in the day in which he shoved another contractor. Streeter is fighting the proceeding in court. Bunker mentality

      Residents who move in find that preparing for the end times is just one challenge. They receive a long list of rules—including a ban on talking about the compound or its owner to the media, with penalties that can include eviction—and Vivos can change the rules mid-lease. “Vivos has prided itself on the ability of members to coexist with each other and within the confines of the Rules and Regulations,” it said in an email to lessees.

      It isn’t quite a zombie apocalypse, but life in litigation is its own kind of dystopia. Bunkers at Vivos xPoint Vivos says its security team ‘can spot anyone approaching the property from three miles away.’

      Daniel Sindorf, who worked for the government and has an M.B.A., paid $35,000 for his 99-year lease in July 2020 and put another $100,000 into improvements, according to legal filings. Two main things soured him: Vivos moved to raise monthly fees to cover property taxes, and a contractor’s dogs kept running loose, the filings show. He complained in a resident text group called xPoint Pioneers.

      In July 2023, it came to a head. Sindorf—who had reported three days earlier that a dog charged his wife—said he drew a firearm to protect himself from the animals while riding on his motorcycle. The contractor’s girlfriend alleged he pointed the gun at her.

      About six months later, Vivos sought to evict him, citing a rule against brandishing firearms—a rule added after he signed his lease. Sindorf acknowledged he had received notice of the change.

      Sindorf left in May 2024 but padlocked the unit behind him, preventing Vivos from taking possession. He countersued and initially won: A lower court held the lease invalid because its terms could be changed after the fact. Last month, however, the South Dakota Supreme Court reversed the ruling and sent the case back to the lower court.

      A broader fight is building. A September lawsuit, which aims for class-action status, seeks refunds for what could be more than 100 tenants and alleges the Vivos lease violates a state law that requires landlords to provide and maintain livable dwellings.

      The suit, filed by attorney Matthew Hays McCoy, alleges Vivos misrepresented the amenities. A video on the company’s website shows schematics of bunkers fitted out as a gym, a restaurant, a general store, a community center and a medical clinic. None have been completed.

      Dante Vicino, the operations director, said Vivos still planned to deliver the amenities but is focused on building out individual units first in a remote location where labor is hard to find.

      Chris Yellow Thunder, who lived just outside the compound for several years and is a close friend of Streeter, said the controversies have ruined what could have been an ideal place to retire or ride out a disaster. “Once you walk in, you have no outside noise, no anything, you know, so, I mean, it’s incredibly peaceful,” he said of the igloos. “It really could have been this terrific little oasis out there.”

  • plinky [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    7 hours ago

    as i’ve posted some incorrect info, little bit of correction:

    https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/us-crude-oil-output-peak-by-2027-eia-projects-2025-04-15/

    NEW YORK, April 15 (Reuters) - U.S. oil production will peak at 14 million barrels per day in 2027 and maintain that level through the end of the decade, before rapidly declining, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said on Tuesday. Oil output from the world’s largest producer will fall to about 11.3 million bpd in 2050, from around 13.7 million bpd this year, the statistical arm of the U.S. Department of Energy said in its Annual Energy Outlook.

    so the peak info was correct, but the decrease will be very gradual according to iae