For Those Who Might Be Wondering Why We Might Be In Ukraine

Russia’s Next Threshold: A Hunger Crisis + Blackouts Spread

Russia’s problems are no longer staying on paper. When blackouts spread, heating and electricity fail, and people don’t get paid on time, the real tipping point begins: everyday life starts breaking down.

In this episode, I explain why the current wave of power cuts, utility failures, and rising food stress matters more than any headline. This is what a system looks like when money gets tight, services degrade, and the pressure shifts onto ordinary people.

 
MURMANSK FOOD SHORTAGE, ALTAI KRAI WITHOUT HEATING

2.1 million people in the Far North of russia need 30 billion rubles of federal loans for food, while in Altai thousands are freezing again because of the non-working main heating pipeline. The kremlin choses to burn billions to destroy homes in Ukraine, instead of saving their own people.

 
Putin Cornered: Russia Bleeding on All Fronts

Putin is already having a terrible year, and in this video I explain why 2026 is shaping up to be Putin’s worst year yet. This isn’t just Ukraine. It’s Venezuela, oil, the Russian economy, Iran, and Europe security guarantees all tightening at the same time.

I walk through how Russia lost a strategic foothold in the Western Hemisphere, why Ukraine’s pressure on Russian energy infrastructure is now systemic instead of symbolic, and how inflation, labor shortages, and war spending are hollowing out Moscow’s economic resilience. I also break down why instability in Iran and renewed European security-guarantee talks are problems Putin cannot spin away.

The core takeaway is simple: Putin built his war plan on time, momentum, and fear. In early 2026, he’s running out of all three.

 
Xi BACKSTABS Putin… China PLANS To do Something SINISTER to Russia

For years, the world has focused on Taiwan as China’s inevitable target. But leaked intelligence and growing cracks in the Beijing–Moscow partnership suggest a far more dangerous possibility. As Russia weakens under war and sanctions, China may see an unprecedented opportunity in Siberia. Resources, territory, timing — everything is shifting. If this move happens, it won’t just reshape borders. It could rewrite the global order entirely.



 
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Ukraine’s 3 Perfect Storms Are Colliding

I’m connecting three pressure points that are colliding into one “perfect storm” moment:

First: the attacks on energy infrastructure. This isn’t just about lights going out—it’s about forcing hard choices: air defense allocation, repairs under fire, and keeping industry and morale functioning through winter strain.

Second: the ground game—and the Federoff reform push. When you reform how the force fights, you’re not tweaking tactics—you’re trying to change outcomes. This is where doctrine, training cycles, command culture, and battlefield learning meet reality. The timing matters, because reforms only work if they land before the next major operational test.

Third: the attacks on oil tankers. This is the money-and-logistics layer: insurance risk, shipping routes, ports, premiums, and political pressure. When tankers become targets—or even just feel targetable—the ripple effects hit revenue, resupply, and escalation dynamics.

Here’s the link: energy strain + ground adaptation + maritime pressure all compress decision time. When these three hit together, leaders lose slack. And when slack disappears, the war’s tempo—and the mistakes—go up.

 
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