Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Being more Self Aware allows you and the people around you to survive better

So, being someone like a Fireman or policeman is useful in life because we always need some of these people willing so sacrifice themselves for others to protect others. However, for long term survival often a choice not to be a policeman, Fireman, or soldier might be the best choice if you actually want to live to be 100 years old in the first place. Why?

Because PTSD from what you are going to see (which might be interesting) tends to shorten people's lives in these trades because of the harshness of what they often have to deal with. They have to watch people die and kill themselves and die through accidents almost every day of their working lives which is hard to deal with. This is why all Police and firement and likely Soldiers have counselors now when PTSD triggering events occur when people die especially around them.

I know someone whose police partner in New York City was killed and he has obvious PTSD still from this even though this is likely now 50 years ago or more. His solution was to move way out in the country and buy land and build a house but it is still obvious how harmed he was by his police partner dying in the line of duty.

So, being self aware enough to know what you can survive long term is important to long term human survival always. Though these professions might be interesting they are all "Soul Killing" for most people in how it affects their wives and children and relatives and friends.

To not understand this is to be ignorant as to what seeing all this kind of stuff is going to do to you.

However, I also understand because I didn't believe I would live to be 25 either (even though I didn't choose any of these professions. However, since my father and grandfather and one of my uncles were Electrical contractors dealing with dangerous things they were doing every day is in some ways the same thing as being a policeman or fireman or soldier in some ways too. So, almost anything you are going to do that is physical in your job or profession is going to harm you in various ways too or. potentially could harm you.

For example, I watched my father break his wrist from falling off a 30 foot tall extension ladder as an electrician and have to spend 6 weeks not working until his broken wrist healed enough to work as an Electrician again.

And working with my father I fell about 15 feet off a ladder while working as an electrician into a pile of lumber and couldn't breathe right for about 5 minutes or more because the fall knocked the wind out of me. Also, I have to wear hearing AIDs partly from shooting 22 shells into Cement Walls as a 12 to 15 year old summers with my Dad strapping electrical pipe to cement walls in Warehouses too. The Device was a gun like thing that literally shot bolts into walls to mount the straps that held the electrical conduit to the walls.

So, living a long time is mentally being aware more of your needs and the needs of those around you because if you aren't functioning right often you die or are maimed AND if you are not caring about those around you often they are going to die or be maimed too.

So, in some ways life is a battlefield and without a good strategy NONE of us survive very long. 

Though IRan appears to have a limited amount of Ballistic Missiles the Shahed drones are doing a lot of damage everywhere they are sent

 This technology was stolen about 10 years ago now or more by tricking an American Predator drone into thinking it was somewhere else than it actually was by altering it's gps awareness. Then the Iranians reverse engineered the Predator drone and created things like the Shahed Drone which is now causing a lot of havoc throughout the middle east. Why?

Something like the Shahed Drone can fly beneath radar and fly at altitudes of 10 to 100 feet narrowly avoiding buildings and power lines and trees to hit a target. They are even using wooden propellers to save money when they build these things which makes them cheaper to build also. So, they must have set up a mass producing area for the building of these Shahed Drones. Also, they are battle proven in Ukraine as Russia has been buying these from Iran a lot and blowing up stuff and people in Ukraine for a long time now. The hope is that all manufacturing of these drones in Iran can be stopped because these drones (at least for right now) are really problematic for all middle eastern Countries and areas including Turkey where they are sending ballistic missiles into as well. However, all missiles sent into Turkey have been shot down for now.

Iran seems to be striking ALL countries in the middle east in a fit of suicidal rage because this will only cause all these countries to attack Iran possibly in the future in addition to Israel and the U.S. and some NATO countries like France. France has send the following military ships into closer proximity to Iran now:

begin quotes:

 
As of early March 2026, French President Emmanuel Macron has ordered the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier
Charles de Gaulle and its strike group, including escorting frigates, to the Mediterranean Sea to protect regional allies and secure maritime traffic amid the expanding Iran-related conflict in the Middle East. Additionally, the frigate Languedoc has been deployed to the coast of Cyprus.
  • Charles de Gaulle: As the flagship of the French Navy, this carrier provides air defense capabilities with Rafale M fighter jets. It is designed for force projection and protection of regional assets.
  • Mission Goals: The deployment aims to protect European interests, provide security in the Mediterranean following threats to the Red Sea and Suez Canal, and show solidarity with Gulf allies such as Qatar, Kuwait, and the UAE.
  • Strategic Context: The move comes as part of a wider response to the conflict involving Iran, which has threatened international shipping lanes and attacked regional bases.

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  •  

    NATO shoots down Iran’s missile heading toward Turkey; U.S. submarine sinks Iranian ship

     

    Live updates
    NATO shoots down Iran’s missile heading toward Turkey; U.S. submarine sinks Iranian ship

    Debris of a NATO air defense system that intercepted a missile launched from Iran is seen in Dortyol, Turkey, in this screengrab from video. (Ihlas News Agency/Reuters)
    1 min
    NATO air defenses shot down an Iranian ballistic missile heading toward Turkish airspace, Turkey’s Defense Ministry said Wednesday. It was unclear whether the missile was targeting Turkey, a NATO member state bordering Iran. If Turkey was targeted, that would mark a major escalation in a war that has spread across the Middle East and to the Indian Ocean, where a U.S. submarine sank an Iranian warship, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in a news briefing. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz threatened “elimination” to anyone selected as Iran’s next supreme leader, as Tehran moved closer to appointing a successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed Saturday in U.S. and Israeli strikes.  

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    What to know

    • Shifting tactics: After a blistering campaign that has hit more than 2,000 Iranian targets and sunk 20 Iranian warships, the U.S. military campaign will shift inland, the Joint Chiefs chairman, Gen. Dan Caine, told reporters Wednesday. At the same briefing, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said U.S. and Israeli forces will obtain “complete control of Iranian skies” within days, and they will soon begin a second massive air assault dropping 500- and 2,000-pound bombs on targets.
    • Israeli strikes pound Iran: The Israeli military announced fresh strikes against Iran on Wednesday, including on missile facilities; dozens of targets belonging to the Basij, a volunteer paramilitary branch of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps; and internal security force commands.
    • Israel and Hezbollah escalate attacks: Israel issued an extensive evacuation order for a huge swath of southern Lebanon as troops push in further and strikes continue to rock the country. Israel Defense Forces spokesman Nadav Shoshani said Israel was facing simultaneous barrages of missiles from Iran and Hezbollah.
    • Khamenei funeral delayed: The funeral for Iran’s assassinated leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been postponed “until further notice,” Iranian state media reported, saying the delay was to allow mourners time to reach Tehran.
    • A scramble to evacuate Americans from the Middle East: Iran’s retaliatory strikes on American interests and allies across the region continued as the U.S. warned Americans to leave the region immediately. The evacuation of U.S. citizens has been complicated by embassy and airspace closures.
  • 56 min ago

    Thousands of Americans have returned from the Middle East since the start of the conflict with Iran, State Department officials said Wednesday.

    Dylan Johnson, assistant secretary of state for global public affairs, wrote on X that 17,500 American citizens have returned to the U.S. from the Middle East since Saturday. A State Department task force has “assisted nearly 6,500 Americans abroad, including offering security guidance and travel assistance.”

    A senior State Department official declined to say whether any U.S. government-chartered flights with American citizens have left the Middle East, citing security concerns. The official said some flights would be “in progress very soon.”

  • 1 hour ago

    Trump concedes Iran war may push up oil prices for Americans

    President Donald Trump and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Tuesday at the White House. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

    President Donald Trump acknowledged for the first time on Tuesday the economic toll for Americans of his assault on Iran, saying that oil prices were likely to spike as a result of the fighting in the Persian Gulf but insisting they would eventually dip.

    This is an excerpt from a full story.

  • 1 hour ago

    Senate will vote on forcing Trump to end Iran strikes

    Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Virginia) speaks to reporters following the weekly Senate Democrat policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol on March 3. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

    The Senate is scheduled to take an initial vote Wednesday around 4 p.m. Eastern time on blocking President Donald Trump from ordering further strikes on Iran, offering the first test of Congress’s support for a campaign that Trump launched without its consent.

  • 1 hour ago
    Reporting from London

    Iran can continue firing missiles at its present pace for “several more days” before its capacity to hit targets in the Middle East diminishes, Western officials said. U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iranian launch sites and missile depots have already caused a drop in the rate of Iranian fire, officials said. “If the current rates continue, we assess that Iran has several more days of capability,” one official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivity of the subject. The official stressed that Iran could decide to curtail the pace of strikes to extend its campaign, which has been aimed at spreading the cost of the conflict to Middle East neighbors and U.S. allies. The combined use of high-arcing missiles and low-flying drones has posed a test to air defense systems across the Middle East, officials said, prompting the British government, along with others, to consult experts from the war in Ukraine.

  • 1 hour ago

    The Omani navy said Wednesday that it had rescued the 24-person crew of a Malta-flagged cargo ship hit by two missiles near the Strait of Hormuz, off Iran. The U.K. Maritime Trade Operations Center reported earlier that a fire had broken out in the ship’s engine room after it was hit by an unknown projectile. Ships have largely stopped moving through the key shipping corridor amid attacks by Iran, pushing up prices, including for oil.

  • 2 hours ago

    Anthropic’s AI tool Claude central to U.S. campaign in Iran, amid a bitter feud

    In order to strike a blistering 1,000 targets in the first 24 hours of its attack on Iran, the U.S. military leveraged the most advanced artificial intelligence it’s ever used in warfare, a tool that could be difficult for the Pentagon to give up even as it severs ties with the company that created it. The military’s Maven Smart System, which is built by data mining company Palantir, is generating insights from an astonishing amount of classified data from satellites, surveillance and other intelligence, helping provide real-time targeting and target prioritization to military operations in Iran, according to three people familiar with the system.

    This is an excerpt from a full story.

  • 59 degrees and partly sunny today here on the SF Bay Area Coast

    I miss the 80 degrees and 75 degree days in Santa Barbara as the highs hover here around 55 to 60 degrees mostly now. I also hope we don't start getting foggy or cloudy weather within a month or so like often happens now a lot from April to September or October here in Global Climate changes. However, many people prefer this high and low fog that keeps the forests alive summers here like Redwoods and Monterey pines and even oak trees too to 100 degree plus temperatures with full sun and fires within 20 miles inland from the coast. The last few years we have had almost no fires at all or ones that could be quickly controlled along the northern Coasts of California. 

    Passenger speaks out after United Airlines flight evacuated at LAX for reported fire

     

    begin quote from ABC NEWS:

    Passenger speaks out after United Airlines flight evacuated at LAX for reported fire

    The incident prompted a temporary ground stop at the airport.

    March 3, 2026, 7:27 AM


    Hundreds of passengers aboard a United Airlines flight bound for New Jersey are safe after the plane made an emergency landing back at Los Angeles International Airport due to an apparent engine fire on Monday.

    Videos obtained by ABC News showed smoke billowing from the engine after the plane landed. The incident prompted a temporary ground stop at the airport. 

    Flight 2127 departed for Newark Liberty International Airport on Monday morning just before noon local time and "safely returned to Los Angeles to address a possible engine fire," United Airlines told ABC News in a statement.

    Passengers were safely evacuated from a United Airlines plane at Los Angeles International Airport.
    @thehashtribe/X

    The carrier confirmed that no one was seriously injured, aside from a couple of minor cuts that required only bandages. 

    "Customers deplaned via slides and airstairs and were bused to the terminal," the carrier stated. "We are grateful to our pilots and flight attendants for their quick actions to keep our customers safe."

    The Boeing 787 Dreamliner had taken off from LAX when passengers felt a sudden bumpy vibration, followed by visible flames from the left engine, according to passenger Harry Gestetner.

    "A few minutes after takeoff there was sort of this -- very bumpy feeling," Gestetner described in an interview. "One of the engines was on fire on the left-hand side."

    Gestetner, who said he was in the emergency exit row, recalled the panic inside the cabin and said he heard a flight attendant repeat, "Oh my God, oh my God, I've never seen this before. This is really bad."

    An airplane is towed after passengers were safely evacuated from a United Airlines plane at Los Angeles International Airport.
    KABC

    According to air traffic control audio, the flight crew told controllers they had "one engine shutdown" before requesting an evacuation after continued fire warnings. 

    Flight attendants instructed the 256 passengers to leave all bags behind as they exited onto the taxiway using the emergency slides and airstairs.

    United arranged for a different aircraft to take the passengers to Newark.

    The Federal Aviation Administration will investigate the incident.