Saturday, December 20, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 21 2025


 “Civilization is a thin layer of ice on a deep ocean of chaos. Most people pray it never cracks. The wise learn to swim.”




POLAND IS TRAINING FOR WAR WHILE THE WEST SCROLLS

Inside the new reality of civilian survival training—and what it means for the rest of us.



THE WORLD OUTSIDE PRZEMYÚL

A group of ordinary civilians steps into a cold, wind-lashed field near the Ukrainian border—camouflage jackets pulled tight, boots sinking in wet grass, breath turning to mist in the winter air.

No drama.
No military pride.
No adrenaline fantasy.

Just one unspoken truth shared between all of them:

War is no longer an idea. It is geography.



THE PROGRAM BUILT FOR COLLAPSE

Poland launched a national pilot project offering free civilian training in:

  • basic security

  • cybersecurity

  • first aid

  • survival skills

  • shelter and bunker use

  • navigation without technology

No Hollywood heroism.
No Call of Duty energy.
No fearmongering.

Just competence.

People use compasses and maps—because in war, the phone in your pocket becomes dead plastic. They learn how to pack emergency kits, cure meat, build shelter, treat trauma wounds, and find their way across land without signals or satellites.

This is not a joke.
This is not a hobby.
This is not a fringe movement.

This is ordinary citizens adapting to a world that changed while the West was still asleep.


LEARNING TO SURVIVE, NOT TO PANIC

In one station, civilians bind simulated gunshot wounds using tourniquets designed for battlefield trauma.

In another, they learn to build fire from birch bark, line the ground with branches to stay warm at night, and create makeshift shelter from rope and tarp.

They test bunkers—what few still exist.
They learn how to respond to air-raid sirens.
They eat from ration bags instead of cafeterias.

They practice staying calm.
They practice staying focused.
They practice staying alive.


THE NEW REALITY OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE

Poland isn’t waiting for the world to stabilize.
Because it won’t.

The country is doubling its army size, stockpiling tanks and missiles, and—most importantly—training ordinary people.

Voluntarily.
Quietly.
Seriously.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., fear is currency.

Post-9/11 culture turned citizens into customers—buying fear, consuming panic, worshipping threat levels and airport checkpoints, believing the government had the answers.

Poland teaches: “Prepare yourself.”
America teaches: “Be afraid.”


WHAT RUSSIA PROVES

Russia shows another extreme—
a population raised on propaganda, never trained to think, never encouraged to question, ready to die either on the battlefield or in a bottle.

That is not strength.
That is not bravery.
That is abandonment.

The future of survival lies somewhere else entirely:
awareness + autonomy + adaptation.


THE REST OF US NEED TO PAY ATTENTION

The world is shifting under our feet.

War isn’t distant.
Democracy isn’t guaranteed.
Stability isn’t real.
Comfort isn’t permanent.

And the people on that Polish hillside understand something the rest of us don’t:

Preparedness is not paranoia.
Preparedness is intelligence.

The skills learned there—mapping terrain, treating wounds, building fire, rationing food, staying calm, thinking clearly—are not military skills.

They are human survival skills.


STOP PANICKING. START THINKING. ADAPT.

Fear is useless.
Hysteria is useless.
Denial is deadly.

The smartest path forward is brutally simple:

  • Learn real skills.

  • Strengthen your community.

  • Train your body.

  • Sharpen your thinking.

  • Accept the truth: the old world is gone.

Do not be afraid.
Be ready.

Stay calm, use your head, carry on, and adapt.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Friday, December 19, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 20 2025

 

Alabuga: How a Mini-Silicon-Valley Became the World’s Largest Drone Mill — and Why the West Is Still Sleeping

By Adaptation-Guide


They sold it as hope and jobs — a tax-friendly tech zone to lift a regional economy. Instead, the Alabuga Special Economic Zone in Tatarstan has been converted into a factory churn: cheap, industrialized death-dealing in the form of Geran/Shahed loitering munitions. Teenagers in vocational schools and vulnerable women recruited from overseas are being repurposed into an arms workforce. What was marketed as a talent incubator is now one of the most consequential single nodes in the global supply chain for battlefield drones. FAZ.NET+1

Let’s be brutally clear: Alabuga is not just a Russian problem. It’s an international failure of commerce, oversight, and moral imagination. A Western semiconductor sold as a consumer product ends up inside a weapon that levels the homes of civilians. A logistics link across Eurasia morphs into a loophole for components that sanctions intend to block. And a pragmatic business decision to pay for “localization” has birthed a vertically integrated plant with the capacity to deliver tens of thousands of cheap loitering munitions a year. Experts now estimate production rates that would have been unthinkable in 2022. ISIS+1

This is where the argument must stop being sentimental and start being strategic. We can condemn the factory — and we should — but condemnation without policy and pressure is theatrical. So here is a brutally practical playbook to turn exposure into disruption without firing a shot.


What the revelations about Alabuga reveal (and what they mean)

  1. Modern warfare is modular and globalized. The Shahed/Geran is not a magic Iranian artifact or purely a Russian invention; it is an assembly of global supply chains — Western microelectronics, Chinese substitutes, Iranian design, Russian assembly. Block one link and the system falters. ISIS+1

  2. Labor abuses are being weaponized. Recruiting minors and economically desperate women to staff hazardous assembly lines masks the industrial scale of modern munition production and creates a human costline that’s easily ignored. Sanctions have named these abuses. FAZ.NET

  3. Propaganda and plausible deniability hide origins. State TV will rewrite origin stories. Corporate PR will claim “localization.” Leaked documents and satellite imagery tell the real tale. Intelligence, journalism, and civil society must keep shining a light. ISIS+1


Do not do (what I will not ask you to do)

I will not urge citizens to join or help arm any side. I will not provide instructions to make or modify weapons. Those are illegal, dangerous, and morally bankrupt. If you want to be useful, do not become an auxiliary to violence.

Do this instead — nonviolent, effective actions citizens and societies can take now

  1. Target the supply chain. Advocate for and pressure democratic governments to expand enforceable export controls on dual-use chips and components, and to cooperate with allies and partners (including in Asia) to seal the routes that currently ferry electronics into sites like Alabuga. This is not fantasy — it’s precisely the choke point experts say matters. Push your representatives to fund customs enforcement and forensic export investigations. ISIS+1

  2. Support independent investigative journalism. Leaked internal documents, satellite imagery, and reporting from investigative outlets and think tanks have been the key to exposing the plant. Subscribe, donate, and amplify that work. Protect journalists and researchers who document abuses. (They’re on the front lines.) ISIS+1

  3. Back sanctions that follow the money — not theater. Broad sanctions are useful; surgical, enforceable measures against logistics hubs, specific corporate actors, and known procurement chains are more effective. Demand transparency about what sanctions target and how enforcement is measured. If sanctions are symbolic, they’re useless. If they disrupt key inputs, they work.

  4. Aid the victims and whistleblowers. Pressure your government and NGOs to increase humanitarian and legal aid to those harmed by drone attacks and to offer secure channels for insiders to report abuses in industrial zones. Legal pathways for asylum and support for forced-labor survivors must be priorities.

  5. Force corporate accountability. Companies that do business in SEZs or with firms supplying such operations must be publicly accountable. Campaigns that expose suppliers of components (chipmakers, logistics firms) drive reputational and financial cost. Use shareholder activism and consumer pressure.

  6. Build defense and deterrence the right way. The West’s air-defense shortfalls are real: more investment in effective counter-drone systems, interoperability with partners, and training with Ukraine will reduce impact on civilians. Support democratic governments when they request training and materiel transparency. IISS


For journalists and researchers: keep digging

  • Satellite imagery analysis, procurement trail tracing, and open-source research have produced breakthroughs. Support groups doing this work and insist regulators use their findings to inform policy. ISIS+1


A final word — the moral ledger

There are two crimes at play: the physical crime of building weapons that slaughter civilians, and the moral crime of turning an entire region’s techno-development dream into an arms factory that uses minors and exploited migrants. Those guilty of either should face investigation, accountability, and judicial scrutiny.

If you want a movement, make it one that prosecutes truth, not one that manufactures violence. Organize, lobby, donate, document. Stamp out the supply chains, fund the defenses, and stand with the victims. That is how you show who’s boss — by denying bad actors the tools they need, by exposing abuses, and by upholding rule of law.


Sources (key references)

  • Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) reporting and satellite imagery updates on Alabuga and Shahed/Geran production. ISIS+1

  • Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung coverage summarizing investigative reporting on Alabuga. FAZ.NET

  • ISIS production-rate updates and analysis of supply-chain dependencies. ISIS

  • Background reporting and open-source assessments on Alabuga and drone production. Iran Watch+1


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 19 2025


“It shouldn’t take the financial sector to explain to elected governments that without a living planet, their economies are just spreadsheets describing a corpse.”
-adaptationguide.com



Nature is Now “Everybody’s Business” – Except for the Governments Still Pretending It Isn’t

This year, the Taskforce on Nature-Related Financial Disclosure (TNFD) released its first-ever Status Report—and it reads like a cold slap in the face to every climate-change-denying government still living in the fossil-fueled fantasy of the 20th century.

The numbers are staggering: 1,800 companies, representing a combined $7 trillion in market capitalization, have joined this voluntary coalition. Their message is blunt: the resilience of nature is now a business issue. Not just an ethical matter, not just a scientific one, but a balance-sheet reality.

And yet—let’s pause here—while industries across the globe scramble to assess how dependent their very survival is on ecosystems, forests, rivers, and biodiversity, entire governments (you know who you are—the U.S. Republican Party under Trump, Brazil under Bolsonaro, Poland’s coal lobbies, Russia’s eco-terrorist regime) have spent decades scoffing at climate science and muzzling environmental policy.

How is it possible that Wall Street is ahead of Washington when it comes to admitting that destroying nature has economic costs?



The Rise of “Natural Capital Accounting”

According to the TNFD survey, two-thirds of member companies consider the risks posed by biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse as important to their financial futures as climate change itself. Nearly 80% are already trying to merge reporting on both. That’s corporate-speak for: climate risk and nature risk are two sides of the same existential coin.

Let’s remember the baseline: back in 2015, there were barely 5,000 companies worldwide reporting on environmental data—most of it narrowly focused on carbon emissions. By 2023, that number exploded past 20,000, and by last year it was nearly 25,000. Reporting on biodiversity has doubled in just a year, now crossing into five-digit territory.

The leaders in disclosure? China (9.2%) tops the list, followed by the United States (6.2%), with Germany trailing in ninth place at just 1.4%. And yet, insiders say these numbers undercount: many firms, especially in Germany and China, are quietly preparing extensive data sets without yet publishing them. Translation: the iceberg is bigger under the waterline.



Why Are Companies Suddenly Paying Attention?

The TNFD identifies two main drivers:

  1. Regulation is shifting. International frameworks increasingly highlight “nature” as a regulatory priority, and voluntary standards are filling the gaps where governments drag their feet.

  2. Investors are demanding answers. Asset managers don’t want to wake up to find their billion-dollar portfolio has turned into stranded assets because the rainforest it depended on for raw materials has been logged to death.

For finance, the big three issues are clear: deforestation, biodiversity loss, and access to clean water. Notice what’s not at the top: air pollution, ocean contamination, and soil depletion. That silence speaks volumes about whose risks are deemed economically urgent versus whose are conveniently ignored.



The Problem No One Wants to Admit

Here’s the kicker: 94% of surveyed companies struggle to integrate nature-related data into their reporting. They’re stuck on questions like:

  • How do you measure the “double materiality” of both your impact on ecosystems and ecosystems’ impact on your business?

  • How do you quantify whether your operations are aiding invasive species?

Most companies can tally their waste, water consumption, and wastewater discharge—because those are easily trackable. But invasive species? Soil microbiome collapse? The death of pollinators? These are ecological time bombs that don’t fit neatly into a corporate spreadsheet.



The Brutal Irony

Let’s not miss the bitter irony here:

  • For decades, climate activists and scientists were mocked as tree-huggers and alarmists for saying exactly this.

  • Governments like the U.S. under Trump, or Russia under Putin, have actively gutted environmental oversight.

  • And now? CEOs are forced to do what presidents refuse to: admit that without nature, the economy dies.

This is the obscene theater of our times: capitalism recognizing ecological limits faster than elected governments.

The TNFD report is careful, cautious, dressed in corporate jargon about “frameworks” and “integration challenges.” But between the lines, it screams a truth politicians still deny: nature is not a backdrop to the economy—it is the economy.



Where This Leaves Us

If even the most cynical sectors—banks, insurers, steel manufacturers—are panicking about biodiversity, then let’s stop pretending this is optional policy. It is survival economics.

The report ends on an optimistic note: TNFD’s co-chairs David Craig and Razan al Mubarak call the findings “an encouraging starting point.” But their caveat is telling: this is new and complex for most market participants. Translation: we are years, maybe decades, behind where we should be.

Governments may continue their denial games. They may dismiss climate and nature as “woke” distractions. But the market—yes, the same market that fueled the destruction—is now whispering a heresy politicians can’t afford to hear:

Without forests, there is no finance. Without water, there is no trade. Without biodiversity, there is no growth. Nature is the ultimate bottom line.

So, ask yourself: when the CEOs are screaming louder than the presidents, who’s really running the survival show?


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide



Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 18 2025

 

“If the scientists sound terrified, believe them — they’ve seen the future, and they’re trying to stop us from dying in it.”

-adaptationguide.com



Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 17 2025


“Europe is not at peace. It is simply unarmed in a war it pretends not to be fighting.”
-adaptationguide.com




Who Speaks for Europe?

No Number. No Shield. No Peace.


No time for talk. We are already at war.
Not only in Ukraine. But in words, tariffs, supply chains, algorithms, disinformation, energy, migration – and in the fight for political agency.

Henry Kissinger is often credited with asking: “Who do I call if I want to speak to Europe?”
Whether he said it exactly like that is irrelevant. The question itself is an indictment. And today it is more relevant than ever.

Europe has no phone number. No single voice. No enforceable leadership. In a world where power politics has returned, this is not idealistic – it is negligent.



Europe: A Continent Without a Command Center

The European Union was built for trade, not for toughness. For the internal market, not for existential threat. For regulation, not for rockets.

Foreign policy was an optional extra. Security was outsourced. Responsibility delegated – to the United States, to NATO, to the illusion that history was over.

That illusion died no later than February 2022.

Russia invaded. Not only Ukraine, but Europe’s sense of reality. Power politics returned. Naked. Brutal. Without footnotes.

China followed a different script, but with the same objective: dominance instead of partnership. Change through trade? A Western projection.

And America? Under Trump, no longer a protective power but a transactional actor: compliance for attention, loyalty for deals. If you are not useful, you are irrelevant.



Three Presidents, Zero Leadership

Europe has:

  • a President of the European Commission,

  • a President of the European Council,

  • a High Representative for Foreign Affairs.

And no foreign policy authority.

The High Representative may comment, but cannot decide. She is often not even at the table at G7 or G20 summits. A diplomatic fig leaf without a power base.

The presidents can set impulses – the capitals ignore them.

In the end, Berlin, Paris, and London decide. Period.

Foreign policy remains the domain of heads of government. And they do not wait for 26 others when Washington, Moscow, or Beijing calls.



Informal Power Instead of Honest Structure

So what happens? Europe improvises.

An inner circle has emerged:

  • Germany

  • France

  • the United Kingdom

Expanded by Italy, Finland, occasionally Poland, plus the NATO Secretary General, EU leadership, and selected Nordic states.

This is better than nothing. But it is democratically distorted, institutionally dirty, and strategically fragile.

Poland – a key military state – is often absent due to internal political trench warfare.
Spain – the fifth-largest economy – is effectively sidelined because it keeps its distance on security policy.

And smaller states? They get to watch – or to block.



The Veto: Europe’s Greatest Act of Self-Sabotage

Unanimity in foreign and security policy is no longer a safeguard of sovereignty.
It is an invitation to blackmail.

One or two governments – openly or covertly dependent on Moscow – can paralyze 500 million people.

That is not democracy protection. It is geopolitical suicide.

In times of war, the veto is not a right – it is a weapon. And it is being used.


Europe Is Already at War

Ukraine is not the only battlefield.

Europe is living in a permanent state of conflict:

  • trade wars

  • tariff regimes

  • information warfare

  • cyberattacks

  • energy coercion

  • migration used as a geopolitical tool

Anyone who thinks peace is merely the absence of tanks has not understood the 21st century.

Security is psychological.
500 million people need certainty that someone will decide when things burn.


The Uncomfortable Truth: Power Must Be Institutionalized

If Europe wants to be more than a market with a flag, it needs:

A Real European Security Council

Not symbolic. Not advisory. But:

  • decision-capable

  • operational

  • crisis-proof

Yes: with power asymmetry.

The largest and most militarily capable states must lead.
Medium and smaller states must co-shape – but not block.

Equality of states is a noble ideal.
Equality of responsibility is a fantasy.



Switzerland as a Model – Not an Excuse

Europe needs more direct democracy, not less.

Referendums on:

  • security architecture

  • defense spending

  • solidarity mechanisms

Not to delay, but to legitimize.

A European Security Council with clear democratic anchoring – national and European – would be stronger than any backroom format.



No More Time for Consensus Romanticism

We have no time:

  • for unanimity

  • for blockers

  • for states whose elites are courted in Moscow

Europe must be able to act – with or without them.

Those who sabotage permanently must not decide.

That is harsh. But being defenseless is harsher.



Europe’s Phone Number

Henry Kissinger was looking for a number.

Today, Europe needs more than that:

  • a voice

  • a decision structure

  • a security guarantee of its own

Not against America. Not against China. Not against Russia.

For itself.

Because a continent without a command center is no longer a peace project –
but a risk.

No time for talk.
Europe must decide.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Monday, December 15, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 16 2025

 “The green transition failed not because it went too far — but because it refused to tell the truth.”

- adaptationguide.com



Coal, Lies, and the Green Theater

Europe Wakes Up to China’s Energy Reality


This is not a pro‑coal essay. It is not an anti‑renewables essay. It is an anti‑lie essay.

For years, Canada and Europe wrapped themselves in the language of climate virtue while quietly assuming someone else would do the dirty work of powering the global economy. That illusion is now collapsing.

Canada is back in the carbon business. New oil pipelines are almost certainly coming. The Alberta tar sands will expand to feed them.

Across the Atlantic, the European Union is building new natural‑gas plants, postponing net‑zero projects, and — in some countries — keeping coal alive on life support.

This is bad news for the planet. But it is not irrational.

What has finally shattered the green fantasy is not climate denial. It is arithmetic.



The Unspoken Truth No Leader Will Admit

No Canadian or European leader will say this out loud, but the calculation is obvious:

Any carbon savings achieved in Europe or Canada are being overwhelmed — many times over — by rising emissions elsewhere.

Chief among them: China.

Donald Trump understood this dynamic early, albeit crudely and self‑servingly. Europe refused to confront it at all — until electricity bills exploded, factories shut down, and voters revolted.

The result? A slow, embarrassed retreat from absolutist climate policy.



Europe’s Industrial Self‑Sabotage

Europe’s corporate leaders are furious — and they are not wrong.

Electricity prices in Germany, Britain, and Italy are among the highest in the developed world — roughly double those in the United States and dramatically higher than in China. The outcome is predictable:

  • Steel plants close

  • Chemical companies leave

  • Manufacturing migrates

  • Workers lose jobs

This is not a “green transition.” It is deindustrialization by policy design.

While Europe lectures itself into economic paralysis, China expands — powered by the very fuels Europe pretends it has morally transcended.



China’s Brilliant, Brutal Energy Strategy

China plays the cleanest dirty PR game on Earth.

On one side of the ledger:

  • Exploding renewable capacity

  • Electric vehicles dominating headlines

  • Solar panels flooding global markets

  • Wind turbines as far as the eye can see

On the other:

  • Coal plants running the system

  • Coal plants powering factories

  • Coal plants charging EVs

  • Coal plants manufacturing solar panels and batteries

China is a green‑energy champion and the world’s largest coal consumer — simultaneously.

That contradiction is not hypocrisy. It is strategy.

More than half of China’s electricity still comes from coal. Construction of new coal plants never meaningfully stopped. In one recent year alone, China accounted for the overwhelming majority of new coal‑plant construction worldwide — adding capacity on a scale Europe hasn’t matched in decades.

Why?

Because coal works.



The Ugly Advantages of Coal (That Europe Refused to Admit)

Coal has properties policymakers hate to discuss:

  • Speed: Coal plants can be built quickly.

  • Cost: Fuel supplies are vast and prices are volatile but manageable.

  • Flexibility: Output can be ramped up or down far faster than nuclear.

  • Security: Coal is domestic, storable, and geopolitically boring.

China learned the lesson Europe refused to learn:

Energy security beats energy purity every time.



Europe’s Belated Awakening

After decades of winding down coal, Europe now faces a hard limit.

Renewables alone cannot:

  • Keep heavy industry alive

  • Stabilize power grids

  • Prevent price shocks

  • Win elections

So the EU improvises.

Germany is building gas‑fired plants — with the comforting fiction that they will someday run on hydrogen. Italy and Greece are doing the same. Elsewhere, net‑zero projects are quietly delayed or canceled.

This is not climate leadership.

It is damage control.



The Pandemic Test: Where Europe Was Actually More Humane

Here is where the moral conversation becomes uncomfortable.

When it came to public health — actual life and death — the so‑called “European way” proved far more humane than China’s model of control.

We still do not know how many people truly died during the pandemic in China. Data opacity, censorship, and political fear ensured that.

Europe made catastrophic mistakes — including its addiction to Russian oil and gas — but it did not weld people into apartments or erase entire cities from the data record.

Europe failed to tell its public the truth about energy dependence. Failed to slow it down for health and security reasons. Failed to prepare.

But Europe did not lie about bodies.

That matters.



The Lie at the Heart of the Green Debate

The central lie was never that renewables are bad.

The lie was this:

That Europe could decarbonize faster than the rest of the world — and somehow not pay the price.

China knew better.

China built renewables on top of coal, not instead of it.

Europe tried to replace hydrocarbons outright — without storage, without redundancy, without public consent, and without industrial protection.

The result is not climate justice.

It is strategic self‑harm.



What This Moment Demands

Not denial. Not surrender. Not green theater.

It demands:

  • Brutal honesty about trade‑offs

  • Energy policy rooted in physics, not slogans

  • Public consent based on truth, not guilt

  • Climate action that does not sacrifice workers as collateral damage

The planet is overheating.

But pretending China doesn’t exist won’t cool it.

And destroying Europe’s industrial base won’t save it.



Final Word

Coal is killing the climate.

But lies are killing democracy.

And Europe is finally learning the difference — far later than it should have, and at enormous cost.

The green transition will either be grounded in reality — or it will fail.

There is no third option.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide



Sunday, December 14, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 15 2025


Dear Daily Disaster Diary, December 21 2025

 “Civilization is a thin layer of ice on a deep ocean of chaos. Most people pray it never cracks. The wise learn to swim.” POLAND IS TRAININ...