

Alzhacker
45.8K posts

@Alzhacker
学術論文、外国書籍、海外記事の紹介・解説(LLMとの協働)。 草の根コミュニティと病気の人に力を与え、ボトムアップ(並行社会)で日本の起死回生を狙う。 主な分野:健康医学、脳神経科学、C19関連、社会運動、時事問題、他; 詳細・考察はNote並行図書館にて https://t.co/BolS54ilPJ



JUST IN: Iran is charging $2 million per tanker to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. The Financial Times reported the payment. The IRGC confirms it by radio. And the world’s most important chokepoint has been converted from a military blockade into a toll road. The mechanism is precise. A tanker operator contacts intermediaries. The intermediaries negotiate with the IRGC. A fee is agreed, reportedly up to $2 million per voyage. Payment is made in cash, cryptocurrency, or barter. The vessel receives clearance. The IRGC hails the tanker on VHF radio, verifies its AIS transponder data, and grants passage. The tanker transits. It arrives. Roughly 89 to 90 vessels, including 16 oil tankers, successfully transited between March 1 and March 15 under some form of IRGC clearance according to Lloyd’s List Intelligence. Not all of them paid. Some were Iranian or allied ships. Some were Indian tankers that received diplomatic safe passage after government-to-government negotiations. Some were shadow fleet operators running dark with transponders off. But the Financial Times report confirms that at least one tanker operator paid the toll explicitly. The commercial precedent now exists. The $2 million sits on top of war-risk insurance that has surged to 3 to 5 percent of hull value where coverage exists at all. A VLCC valued at $120 million pays $3.6 to $6 million in war-risk premium for a seven-day single-voyage policy. Add the $2 million toll. Add the quadrupled charter rate of up to $800,000 per day. The total cost of moving a single cargo of crude through Hormuz now exceeds what it cost to move an entire fleet through the strait six months ago. Every dollar of that cost arrives at the consumer. The toll does not stay on the water. It enters the price of every barrel, every LNG cargo, every tonne of urea, every container of pharmaceuticals that the tanker carries. The $2 million is not a bribe. It is a tax levied by the IRGC on global commerce, collected at the narrowest point of the world’s most concentrated energy transit route, and passed through to four billion people downstream. The strategic innovation is that Iran has found a way to fund its war effort through the war itself. The IRGC closed the strait. The closure created scarcity. The scarcity created desperation. The desperation created willingness to pay. The $2 million per voyage funds the same provincial commands whose sealed packets created the closure. The feedback loop is self-financing: the blockade generates the revenue that sustains the blockade. The United States will frame this as state-sponsored extortion funding terrorism. The sanctions response is predictable: penalties on operators who pay, expanded designations on intermediaries, accelerated naval escorts under the six-allies pledge. But the enforcement faces a paradox. If the US sanctions every operator who pays the toll, it removes the only vessels currently moving oil through Hormuz. The molecules that are getting through, even at $2 million per transit, would stop entirely. The toll is extortion. The extortion is also the only functioning supply mechanism. The IRGC did not just close the strait. It reopened it selectively, on its terms, at its price. The blockade was the leverage. The toll is the monetisation. And the distinction between a military operation and a protection racket has collapsed into a radio frequency and a bank transfer. Full analysis: open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…


Absolute bombshell. Mearsheimer reveals Trump secretly allowed Iran to sell its oil to keep global prices under 100 dollars. But Israel intentionally bombed Iranian gas fields to ruin the plan, sending prices skyrocketing and destroying the US economy.

【速報】中国が肥料の輸出を停止し、懸念されていた事態がついに始まった。今回は窒素とカリウムを主成分とする複合肥料が対象だ。しかし、日本はリン酸アンモニウム需要の約75%、尿素需要の25%を中国からの輸入に依存している。 この供給源が断たれれば、日本の農業は深刻な打撃を受け、国民は生活必需品の確保に苦労する恐れがある。



🚨🇷🇺🇨🇺 URGENT: Russian fuel ships heading to Cuba. First shipment in three months. Two tankers. Gas and oil. Arriving March 23 and April 4. Cuba has faced widespread blackouts. Havana gets electricity once every 5–6 hours. Other cities? Up to 20 hours without power. The US blockaded. Russia delivers. China sends solar panels. The empire starves. The axis saves. This is not aid. This is survival. And the world is watching who helps and who hurts. Russian fuel. Chinese solar. Cuban resilience. American shame. The ships are coming. The lights might stay on. The empire's grip is slipping.

JUST IN: China has stopped exporting fertilizers, and concerning developments have finally begun. This time it involves compound fertilizers made of nitrogen and potassium. However, Japan relies on imports from China to secure about 75% of its ammonium phosphate needs and 25% of its urea needs. If this source is cut off, Japanese agriculture will suffer a severe blow, and the population may find it difficult to meet its basic needs.


Who gives the order to stop? Ali Khamenei is dead. Killed in the opening strike on February 28. Ali Larijani, the diplomatic negotiator, is dead. Killed March 17. Esmaeil Khatib, the intelligence minister, is dead. Confirmed March 19. Gholamreza Soleimani, the Basij commander, is dead. Killed March 17. Roughly 40 senior officials have been eliminated in nineteen days according to aggregated Israeli and Iranian reports. Mojtaba Khamenei was named Supreme Leader successor. Reports indicate he was airlifted to Moscow in the opening days of the war. No confirmed public appearance from Iranian soil since. The supreme leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran may not be in Iran. The question is not whether Iran is governed. It is whether anyone currently in Iran has the authority to order the Mosaic Doctrine’s 31 provincial commands to stand down. The IRGC was designed for this scenario. Total decapitation. Conventional forces shattered. Central command eliminated. The Mosaic Doctrine distributes authority to provincial commanders who operate on sealed pre-war instructions. The packets contain operational orders: which vessels to permit, which to deny, which infrastructure to target, which forces to deploy. The orders execute when central command goes silent. Silence is the activation condition, not the failure condition. Every leader killed removes one more person who could have countermanded the orders. Khamenei could have commanded a ceasefire. He is dead. Larijani could have negotiated terms. He is dead. Khatib could have redirected intelligence toward de-escalation channels. He is dead. Mojtaba, who inherited the authority, may be in Moscow. The regime now operates on three autopilots simultaneously. Doctrinal autopilot: the sealed packets in 31 provincial command rooms execute without central direction. The Hormuz permissioned gate, the retaliatory strikes on Gulf infrastructure, and the targeting of allied energy facilities all continue on pre-written instructions that do not require a living superior to authorise each action. Military autopilot: the IRGC’s remaining missile and drone inventory is being expended according to targeting packages that were prepared before the war. Shekarchi’s “burn to ashes” warning was not an improvisation. It was the public announcement of a pre-existing operational schedule. The satellite images published with coordinates of Gulf facilities were not threat assessments. They were targeting data released for psychological effect. Political autopilot: the government continues to function through institutional inertia. State media broadcasts funerals. Diplomatic statements are issued. But the decision-making authority that could alter the course of the war, negotiate a ceasefire, or order a stand-down is either dead, in Moscow, or distributed across 31 provincial offices where the local commander’s sealed envelope supersedes any verbal order from a capital in disarray. Israel’s AI-powered targeting apparatus can find any face in Tehran through hacked traffic cameras. It can eliminate any senior official within minutes of identification. It has degraded 90 to 95 percent of Iran’s missile production. It has killed the intelligence minister, the negotiator, the Basij commander, and dozens of others. What it cannot do is reach the paper in the filing cabinets of Bandar Abbas, Bushehr, and Hormozgan. The question the world should be asking is not who runs Iran. It is whether anyone left alive has the authority to stop what Iran’s dead leaders set in motion. The answer may be that the system was designed so that nobody can. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

Westerners are about to start paying a lot more attention to the war in Iran as massive US-Israeli escalations point to a coming energy crisis set to impact the whole world. Israel has bombed the world’s largest natural gas field in southwestern Iran, reportedly in coordination with the United States. Now that a major red line for Tehran has been crossed, retaliatory strikes have already begun pummeling the energy infrastructure of US allies in the region, with Qatar reporting that its primary gas facility has sustained “significant damage” from an attack after Iran issued evacuation warnings for energy facilities in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Fuel prices are already surging. If middle eastern energy infrastructure starts taking extensive damage on top of the already hugely significant Iranian blockade on the Strait of Hormuz, this war could end up affecting virtually every corner of human civilization in one way or another. Westerners are largely apathetic about US military explosives landing on populations on other continents. But once it starts having a direct impact on their personal bank accounts, you can expect them to get a lot more interested in US foreign policy. This war has been a bit odd for me because as an anti-imperialist peacemonger I’m not yet entirely sure what my role is in my commentary here. Normally I’d be begging westerners to care about another horrific act by the US war machine, but as things stand it looks like westerners are going to be forced to care about this one whether they want to or not. Normally I’d be writing furiously about how people should not support this war, but the war has exceptionally low public support already. Normally I’d be trying to help everyone open their eyes and recognize the US warmongers for the psychopaths that they are, but the Trumpanyahu administration is openly waging an unprovoked war of aggression while constantly thumping its chest and boasting about how it’s showing the Iranians “no quarter, no mercy” and saying it can kill whoever it wants with impunity. Normally I’d be writing about how the mass media are churning out war propaganda to manufacture consent for more US military butchery, but the mass media keep putting out stories about how the US government is lying about a war that should never have happened while Trump administration figures have public tantrums about how the media isn’t churning out war propaganda for them. President Trump is on social media babbling about how news outlets “should be brought up on Charges for TREASON” for not reporting on an embarrassing story about a US aircraft carrier fire the way he wants, while Secretary of War Pete Hegseth gave one of his fire-and-brimstone podium sermons bitching about how “an actual patriotic press” would be framing this war in a more positive light. Do you see what I mean? What am I supposed to do with this? Where does that leave dissident fringesters like myself? All I can do is clear my throat and sheepishly go “Uh, yeah, I uh… agree with CNN.” With Ukraine the mass media fell all over themselves to hide the west’s role in provoking the conflict, framing Putin as an evil maniacal Hitler figure who just spontaneously flipped out and invaded a country on Russia’s border because he hates freedom. With Gaza the western press gave nonstop narrative cover to Israel’s genocidal atrocities, constantly dragging public attention into an endless conversation about antisemitism and Jewish feelings whenever opposition to the slaughter got too hot. That’s just not happening with Iran. It’s the first US war I’ve ever seen where a big chunk of the empire just refused to get on board. The media’s not playing along, US allies are telling Trump to get stuffed when he asks for military assistance with the Strait of Hormuz, and the public’s not buying the lies. This is a frightening time to be alive — but you can’t say we’re in a period of stasis. Things are moving faster and faster. They might get a whole lot worse. They might get a whole lot better. They might get a whole lot worse and then get a whole lot better. But it seems a safe bet that the situation won’t remain the same.

Macron has not uttered one word of condemnation of the Israel-US war on Iran. He did not condemn Israel when it blew up fuel storage in Tehran, exposing millions to toxins. His current "concern" didn't follow Israel's attack on our gas facilities. It follows our retaliation. Sad!












Wow. Joe Kent just revealed the last thing Charlie Kirk said to him: “The last time I saw Charlie Kirk on this Earth was in June, in the West Wing.” “He looked me in the eye and he said … Joe, stop us from getting into a war with Iran.” “One of President Trump’s closest advisors was vocally advocating for us to not go to war with Iran and for us to rethink, at least, our relationship with the Israelis.” “And then he’s suddenly publicly assassinated and we’re not allowed to ask any questions about that?” “The investigation that I was a part of [with] the National Counterterrorism Center, we were stopped from continuing to investigate.” “But there was still a lot for us to look into that I can’t really get into.” “There’s unanswered questions.” “We know, because of the text messages that have been made public, that Charlie was under a lot of pressure from a lot of pro-Israel donors.” @joekent16jan19 @TuckerCarlson

