Sunday, January 4, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, January 05 2026

  

“Modern collapse will not arrive with explosions, but with silence: no signal, no power, no instructions—and a population trained to wait for a screen to tell them what to do.”

-adaptationguide.com





THE WAR WILL NOT ANNOUNCE ITSELF

Part One: How to Use a Compass When Your Phone Is Dead

It doesn’t start with sirens.
It doesn’t start with tanks.
It starts with nothing happening on your screen.

No signal.
No GPS.
No updates.
Just silence—and confusion.

That’s why the first lesson is not heroism.
It’s orientation.

A group of civilians kneels in wet forest mud, rain soaking through gloves, breath fogging the air. They are given maps and compasses. No phones allowed. No digital shortcuts. No satellite gods to save them.

Most people can align a compass with north.
Almost nobody can locate themselves.

That’s the first crack in the illusion.

Because modern citizens don’t know where they are unless a device tells them.

They don’t know distance.
They don’t know direction.
They don’t know how far 100 meters actually is when there’s no blue dot blinking reassurance.

The exercise is simple:
Find a fixed symbol in the landscape.
Determine its coordinates.
No apps. No signal. No help.

This isn’t nostalgia.
It’s triage for a digital civilization that forgot how to exist without electricity.

Someone mutters that this feels like old civil defense lessons from school.
Back when survival wasn’t outsourced to algorithms.

That’s the point.

Because we built societies that assume:

  • power will always flow

  • data will always be available

  • systems will always hold

They won’t.



THE “BAD” WILL NOT KNOCK WITH BOMBS — IT KNOCKS WITH CODE

You are waiting for the wrong enemy.

The first attack does not come with explosions.
It comes with malfunctions.

Your payment doesn’t process.
Your heating shuts off.
Your traffic lights stop responding.
Your water pressure drops.
Your internet flickers—then disappears.

This is not chaos.
This is design.

The participants are told bluntly:
Do not expect tanks.
Expect cyberwar.

Expect attacks on:

  • power grids

  • heating plants

  • communications

  • logistics systems

  • emergency coordination

Expect drones before soldiers.
Expect infrastructure sabotage before uniforms.

One woman photographing emergency backpacks says it plainly:
“We won’t see armies first. We’ll see outages.”

She’s right.

The war arrives as inconvenience.
Then discomfort.
Then fear.

That’s how modern collapse works.


Follow Part Two.......

Saturday, January 3, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, January 04 2026

 

“A welfare state that refuses to calculate its future is not compassionate—it is borrowing justice from generations that cannot vote.”

-adaptationguide.com



Friday, January 2, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, January 03 2026


“Civilization is only three meals away from barbarism.” 


Do We Have to Become Self-Sufficient?

Back to the Future!

Harvest workers in the mid-20th century, long before supply chains were “optimized,” just-in-time, and one container ship away from collapse.

For reasons of basic mental hygiene, one shouldn’t constantly imagine worst-case scenarios. And yet the past few years have shown us how often we skate right up to the edge of catastrophe.

The Russian invasion stalled—for now. The repeatedly threatened nuclear strike has not yet materialized. The pandemic, all things considered, passed relatively gently. One shudders to think what would have happened if it had been a disease that primarily killed toddlers—or young adults, like the Spanish flu of 1918 to 1920.

Even so, society split almost instantly into two hostile camps. One demanded total lockdown. The other insisted the virus was just a bad flu and a cover story for implanting microchips courtesy of shadowy billionaires. If an asteroid actually hit the planet, how long would it take before the survivors turned on one another? Days. At most.

Man Is a Wolf to Man

Zombie screenwriters didn’t invent this idea—real disasters did. After Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005 and the levees failed, looting and violent crime erupted almost immediately. Curfews were imposed to prevent total collapse.

These episodes teach a simple lesson: when things get serious, you’re on your own. Man becomes a wolf to man.

Government agencies recommend emergency supplies: food for a week, some cash, flashlights, maybe matches.

A week? How quaint.

If war, collapse, or systemic failure hits your city, it won’t politely resolve itself after seven days. You won’t be hiding in your basement until next Monday. You’ll be holed up for months—maybe longer. And in that situation, a firearm is more useful than candles and canned soup.

True preppers know Armageddon requires planning. But even among them, there are levels. The entry-level prepper hoards supplies. The professional prepper—motto: “You’re on your own”—takes the logical next step: only self-sufficiency offers a sustainable solution for the end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it scenario.

If you’re going to prep, do it properly.

That means growing food now, in peacetime. Keeping small livestock. Capturing rainwater. Producing your own energy. Off-grid solar with batteries? Of course. A wood stove for cooking? Obviously.

The gold standard is a stream running through your apocalypse-proof property—drinking water and micro-hydropower in one neat package.

But be warned: a backyard garden in a city suburb won’t cut it. You’re far too easy to find. Desperate bands in improvised vehicles—call them what you like—will find you.

When the blackout hits, or thawing permafrost releases some ancient pathogen, survival favors those far from highways, rail lines, and urban centers.

The Geography Problem

Unfortunately, in most countries, buying agricultural land is restricted, expensive, or both. Remote cabins look tempting—until you realize you can’t grow much at altitude or in marginal soil. And affordable houses with several acres of land? Increasingly rare.

Where do you go, then?

You’ll have the best luck in places people normally dismiss: economically neglected regions, sparsely populated areas, zones written off as “backward” or “undesirable.” When the apocalypse arrives, tax authorities and bureaucrats will have bigger problems than checking where you officially reside.

Find a modest house with land. Retrofit it so you can survive for years without outside supply. It won’t be cheap. But how much is survival worth to you?

When Armageddon Comes

Collapse rarely announces itself in advance. It comes like a thief in the night. Which means you must be able to reach your refuge immediately—under difficult conditions.

A full fuel tank. A vehicle capable of handling bad roads. And yes, something in the trunk that makes you less defenseless than a well-organized grocery shopper.

Luckily, many urban professionals already own absurdly large vehicles designed for adventures they never take. On Day X, you may finally drive off-road—for real this time.

Happy prepping.


Bottom line:
Anyone who thinks a one-week emergency kit is enough has learned nothing from history. Preparing for catastrophe requires more than canned food and optimism—it requires accepting an uncomfortable truth:

When systems fail, you are the system.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide





Thursday, January 1, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, January 02 2026


“Every meal denied today reappears tomorrow as a medical bill, a lost workday, or a preventable death — hunger is just health-care costs in disguise.” 

-adaptationguide.com




Canada Is Hungry — And This Is a Policy Choice

Let’s drop the euphemisms.

Canada is not “facing challenges.”
Canada is not experiencing a “temporary affordability squeeze.”
Canada is failing to feed its people, and it is doing so knowingly.

Across the country, families are stretching paycheques to the breaking point — juggling rent, transportation, utilities and grocery bills like a high-stakes casino game. These pressures are no longer confined to people living in deep poverty. This crisis has gone mainstream.

Full-time workers.
Students.
Seniors.
Parents with jobs, education, and “good behaviour.”

People are making impossible trade-offs that quietly destroy their health long before they ever show up in a hospital bed.

And no — this is not because people “don’t budget well.” It is because the social contract has collapsed.



Food Insecurity Is No Longer the Canary — It’s the Mine Collapse

Those of us working on the front lines of food insecurity see it every day. Not in abstract charts, but in human bodies: fatigue, stress, malnutrition, skipped meals, parents not eating so their kids can.

Food insecurity is no longer a marginal issue. It is one of the clearest indicators that Canada’s economic and social systems are structurally broken.

The numbers are damning:

  • In 2024, 25.5% of Canadians — roughly 10 million people, including 2.5 million children — lived in food-insecure households.

  • In 2018, that number was 11.5%.

This is not a slow drift.
This is a policy-driven freefall.

And without aggressive intervention, it will get worse.



The Budget Talks “Long Term” While People Starve in the Short Term

The 2025 federal budget arrived at a pivotal moment — amid global economic shifts, geopolitical instability, and climate disruption. The government speaks of “reorienting the economy,” but millions of Canadians feel abandoned by it.

The proof is visible in the explosive demand for emergency food services.

Yes, there are steps in the right direction:

  • Automatic tax filing for low-income people with simple returns is overdue and necessary. People should not have to navigate bureaucratic obstacle courses to receive benefits they are legally entitled to.

  • Ensuring access to the Canada Child Benefit and GST/HST credits puts real money back into households — where it immediately goes toward food, rent, and transportation.

  • The National School Food Program, now permanent, is a moral good. Feeding children should never have been controversial. It may not solve food insecurity, but it strengthens public infrastructure and opens doors for culturally appropriate, local food procurement.

  • Investments in housing matter. Stable housing allows families to stop choosing between rent and groceries.

But let’s be brutally honest:

These measures do not meet the scale of the crisis.



Working People Are Hungry — That Should Terrify Us

Food insecurity among people who work is a flashing red warning light.

It means wages, benefits, and income supports are structurally disconnected from reality.

It means Employment Insurance no longer reflects how people actually work.
It means child benefits are insufficient in an era of record food inflation.
It means entire regions — especially the North — are being sacrificed to logistical neglect and political inertia.

Modernizing EI, introducing a groceries and essentials benefit, implementing rental assistance, increasing the Canada Child Benefit, and adding a Northern food-security supplement are not radical ideas.

They are damage control.



Charity Cannot Replace Policy — And Never Should Have

Food banks are not a solution.
They are a symptom of state failure.

Charitable food assistance can help in moments of crisis, but it cannot — and must not — replace robust public policy. No country should normalize a system where survival depends on donated excess while corporations post record profits.

Food insecurity is not about food.
It is about income inequality.

When incomes fall behind costs, food is the first thing people cut — not because it is optional, but because rent and utilities are non-negotiable.



Here’s the Part Politicians Keep Avoiding: Food Waste Is a Public-Health Scandal

Canada wastes millions of tonnes of edible food every year — while millions go hungry.

This is not inefficiency.
It is institutional negligence.

We urgently need:

1. National Food Recycling & Redistribution Infrastructure

  • Mandatory diversion of edible surplus from retailers, wholesalers, and institutional kitchens

  • Government-funded logistics to move food quickly and safely

  • Legal protections for donors — and penalties for waste

This is cheaper than emergency health care.
Cheaper than treating diabetes, heart disease, and malnutrition later.


2. Massive Investment in Food Preservation

  • Community-scale freezing, canning, dehydration, and fermentation facilities

  • Support for Indigenous, rural, and northern preservation knowledge

  • Grants for local food hubs to extend shelf life and stabilize supply

Preserved food is climate-resilient food.
It is also health-care prevention disguised as agriculture.


3. Subsidize Healthy Food Like We Mean It

If we can subsidize fossil fuels, we can subsidize vegetables.

  • Direct price supports for nutrient-dense foods

  • Subsidies tied to health outcomes, not corporate margins

  • Universal access programs that remove stigma and bureaucracy

Every dollar spent preventing malnutrition saves multiple dollars in the health-care system. This is not ideology — it is math.



Food Security Is Health Care, Climate Policy, and Economic Stability Rolled Into One

A hungry population is a sicker population.
A sicker population overwhelms the health-care system.
An overwhelmed system costs more — and fails more people.

Food security is not a “social issue.”
It is foundational infrastructure.

Canada has the tools to change course. What it lacks is the political courage to act at the scale required.

Reducing food insecurity by 50% by 2030 is achievable — but only if governments stop treating hunger as a background issue and start treating it as the national emergency it is.



Final Word: Hunger Is a Policy Outcome — So Is Its End

Canadians deserve a future where putting food on the table is not a daily act of stress, shame, or sacrifice.

That future will not be delivered by platitudes, pilot programs, or charity alone.

It will be delivered by decisive leadership, aggressive income supports, food-waste reform, preservation infrastructure, and subsidies that keep people healthy — and out of hospital beds.

The crisis is here.
The evidence is overwhelming.
The solutions are known.

What remains is a choice.

And history will remember who made it — and who didn’t.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, January 01 2026


 


The Big Winners of 2025 — And Why None of Them Deserve to Be Celebrated

$500 Billion Richer, Zero Lives Improved

No bread. Just games.


In 2025, the world was told to applaud.

Applaud the “Tech-Bros.”
Applaud the CEOs, founders, and billionaire kings of artificial intelligence.
Applaud as their net worth exploded by over $550 billion in a single year, pushing the combined wealth of the ten richest tech executives to nearly $2.5 trillion, according to Bloomberg.

Some of them even made the cover of Time magazine as “Persons of the Year.”

But strip away the glossy covers, the hype language, and the breathless AI evangelism, and a brutal question remains:


👉 What did they actually produce for humanity?

Not better healthcare.
Not cheaper medicine.
Not cleaner air.
Not safer water.
Not resilient food systems.
Not reduced suffering.

What they produced instead was infrastructure for speculation, machines for extraction, and digital distractions scaled to planetary level.

Bread? None.
Games? Infinite.


2025: The Year of the AI Gold Rush

Data centers sprang up like oil rigs.
Chips were manufactured by the ton.
Billions were shuffled between the same elite pockets—sometimes literally from one subsidiary to another—just to inflate market capitalizations.

This wasn’t innovation.
This was financial theater.

The AI boom functioned exactly like previous bubbles:

  • Overcapacity disguised as “vision”

  • Energy consumption framed as “progress”

  • Monopoly power marketed as “efficiency”

And while workers struggled with rent, healthcare access, and climate disasters, the tech elite congratulated themselves for building systems that mostly automate advertising, surveillance, financial trading, and content generation.


Mark Zuckerberg: Gambling on ‘Superintelligence’ While Society Gets Nothing

Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook and CEO of Meta, embodies the problem perfectly.

Meta has poured tens of billions into AI:

  • $14+ billion for Scale AI

  • The aggressive poaching of AI talent with multi-million-dollar bonuses

  • The acquisition of Manus, a startup developing autonomous AI agents

All of this after the metaverse debacle, which burned cash to build a digital ghost town no one asked for.

Meanwhile:

  • No breakthroughs in mental health treatment

  • No public-interest AI for education or medicine

  • No reduction in the documented harm Meta’s platforms cause to children, democracy, or social cohesion

Even Meta’s own investors are uneasy. When Zuckerberg announced even higher AI spending in October, Meta’s stock dropped 14% overnight, wiping billions off his own fortune.

Zuckerberg currently sits at $234 billion in personal wealth.

For what?

👉 Faster ad targeting
👉 More immersive dopamine loops
👉 More data extraction from human behavior

Not healing.
Not care.
Not repair.


Elon Musk: Spectacle as a Business Model

If success were measured in headlines—especially disastrous ones—Elon Musk would be untouchable.

In 2025 alone:

  • He tangled publicly with Donald Trump after flirting with U.S. politics

  • Tesla shareholders approved a $1 trillion performance bonus

  • SpaceX launched (and partially failed) over 150 rockets

  • He remained the world’s richest man

His net worth nearly doubled to $638 billion.

But Musk’s empire produces:

  • Luxury electric vehicles, not mass transit

  • Satellites that clutter Earth’s orbit

  • Rockets for prestige, not planetary survival

SpaceX may go public in 2026, potentially adding another $50 billion to Musk’s fortune.

None of this:

  • Improves healthcare access

  • Reduces global hunger

  • Addresses water scarcity

  • Lowers climate vulnerability for the poor

Musk doesn’t sell solutions.
He sells spectacle.

Bread? Still none.
Games? Everywhere.


Larry Ellison: Riding the AI Debt Wave

Oracle founder Larry Ellison, now 81, saw his wealth surge as Oracle leaned hard into the AI infrastructure boom.

The result?

  • Oracle’s valuation soared

  • Ellison briefly overtook Musk as the world’s richest person

  • His personal wealth climbed to $252 billion

But cracks appeared fast:

  • Massive debt to finance data centers

  • Investors questioning whether Oracle bet too heavily on AI hype

  • A 40% stock collapse from its peak

Meanwhile, Ellison personally backs his son’s Hollywood acquisition ambitions with $40 billion of private guarantees.

That’s right:
AI profits → speculative media consolidation
Not hospitals
Not climate adaptation
Not food systems

Just more concentration of power.


Google’s Founders: Winning the AI Arms Race, Losing the Plot

Sergey Brin and Larry Page are among the biggest winners of 2025:

  • Brin: $251 billion

  • Page: $270 billion

Google’s Gemini 3 model reportedly outperforms ChatGPT.
Alphabet stock hit record highs.
Google now trains its AI on its own chips, in its own data centers, reducing reliance on Nvidia.

Technologically impressive? Yes.
Socially transformative? No.

Google’s AI primarily:

  • Enhances search monetization

  • Optimizes ad delivery

  • Locks users deeper into proprietary ecosystems

Health research? Marginal.
Environmental remediation? Minimal.
Public-good AI? Secondary at best.


Jensen Huang: Selling Shovels in the Digital Gold Rush

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang may be the purest symbol of the era.

He doesn’t promise utopia.
He sells chips.

Everyone building AI needs Nvidia hardware—at least for now. That monopoly has made Huang one of the biggest personal winners of the AI boom.

But even here, the limits are obvious:

  • Chinese AI models are training on weaker, cheaper chips

  • Google’s in-house hardware is more energy efficient

  • Amazon and OpenAI want to break Nvidia’s grip

The “inevitability” narrative is already cracking.


The Elephant in the Room: What None of This Does

Let’s be brutally clear.

In 2025:

  • No tech billionaire made clean water universal

  • No AI empire fixed healthcare access

  • No trillion-dollar company reduced toxic air exposure

  • No breakthrough cut food prices by improving nutrition and farming

  • No platform meaningfully reduced pain, trauma, or inequality

Instead, we got:

  • AI chatbots

  • Stock buybacks

  • Data centers that drain water and electricity

  • Digital hallucinations marketed as intelligence

This is not progress.
This is bread-and-circuses capitalism without the bread.


No Bread, Just Games

The Roman Empire understood this tactic well.

Distract the population.
Entertain them.
Keep them fed with spectacle instead of substance.

The tech elite of 2025 have perfected the model:

  • Infinite content

  • Infinite hype

  • Infinite valuation growth

But when it comes to human survival, health, and dignity, they deliver almost nothing.

The real innovation of Big Tech isn’t AI.

It’s convincing the world that enrichment without improvement is something worth celebrating.

And that may be the most dangerous product they’ve ever sold.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Famous Last Words...December 2025

 

🧠 QUICK REALITY CHECK

Which of the following actions is inviting disaster?

Choose ONE answer:

A) Vote for climate change non-believers
B) Pay no heed to common sense and scientific principles
C) Pretend you are still living in the Middle Ages
D) Believe vaccines and modern medicine are fake and do not work
E) All of the above


Correct Answer: E) All of the above


2026: A PLAN TO DEFEND TRUTH, FACTS, AND HUMAN SANITY

We are living through a rupture, not a phase.

Funding for knowledge is being cut. Universities are pressured. International cooperation is shrinking. Young researchers face closed doors and broken futures. At the same time, societies demand instant answers to problems that are complex, slow, and deeply entangled.

Science will not collapse easily — it is more resilient than it looks.
But science alone will not save us.


1. Accept the Hard Truth First

There are no simple answers.
There are no fast fixes.
There is no algorithm that can predict or optimize our way out of uncertainty.

The greatest danger is not ignorance — it is the refusal to imagine a future that is not dystopian.

Losing the capacity to imagine is the real collapse.


2. Stop Worshipping Technology

Artificial intelligence and social media are not neutral tools anymore.
They shape our sense of time.
They invade intimacy.
They flood attention with noise, distraction, and low-value content optimized for clicks, not thought.

This is not a religious war against technology.
It is a cognitive emergency.

We are overwhelmed — emotionally, informationally, neurologically.

The result is paralysis, helplessness, and orientation loss.


3. Reclaim Skepticism as a Survival Skill

Skepticism is not cynicism.
It is discipline.

In research, skepticism means constant verification, questioning results, testing assumptions — including those produced by machines.

AI must be treated as a tool, not a replacement for human judgment.
Used wisely, it accelerates pattern recognition and routine processes.
Used blindly, it erodes responsibility.

Universities, publishing systems, and peer review are already near collapse.
AI will either force reinvention — or finish the job.

There is no neutral outcome.


4. Redefine “Rebellion”

We do not need moral panic or performative activism.

What we need is competent rebellion:

  • Question everything — but with evidence.

  • Challenge consensus — but with arguments.

  • Resist authority — but with precision.

Real change comes from persistence, not purity.
From negotiation, not absolutism.
From understanding that values often conflict — and progress requires trade-offs.

History rewards stubborn competence, not loud righteousness.


5. Prepare for Change — Internally

Transformation is not optional anymore.

Letting go is painful.
It always has been.

Fear is the worst response.
Fear freezes action and kills agency.

This era feels uniquely unstable because many old assumptions no longer hold:

  • Political alliances are fracturing

  • Wars are reshaping norms

  • Climate disruptions are cascading across borders

But fear is not insight.

This moment is survivable — more survivable than we think — if we act instead of panic.


6. Stop Lying About “The Knowledge Society”

The idea that everyone would happily embrace disruption was an illusion.

What science actually teaches us is something harder and more valuable:

  • How to live with uncertainty

  • How to revise beliefs

  • How to open new possibility spaces

We must stop offering false certainty and nostalgic fantasies.
Complexity does not mean chaos.
It means alternatives exist.


7. Break the Illusion of Predictive Control

Prediction systems do not know the future.
They extrapolate the past.

Tech corporations increasingly engineer social conditions so that algorithmic predictions come true by design:

  • By narrowing choices

  • By shaping behavior

  • By replacing judgment with trust in “objective” math

This is not intelligence.
It is behavioral enclosure.

Science must expose this clearly and relentlessly.


8. Make Truth a Public Infrastructure

Disinformation is not accidental.
It is engineered.

Fighting it requires:

  • Explaining how falsehoods are produced

  • Strengthening judgment, not obedience

  • Regulating tech power instead of worshipping it

Today, nearly 90% of AI investment is private.
Public interest is an afterthought.

This is unacceptable.

AI, knowledge systems, and digital infrastructures must become public goods, governed for collective benefit — not shareholder control.



THE CORE MESSAGE FOR 2026

  • Science is necessary — but insufficient

  • Technology is powerful — but dangerous without wisdom

  • Certainty is comforting — but often false

  • Fear is natural — but lethal to action

What we need now is not more speed.
Not more data.
Not louder opinions.

What we need is wisdom under pressure:

  • Courage to doubt

  • Discipline to verify

  • Imagination without illusion

  • Resistance without hysteria

Truth will not defend itself.

We have to do it — together, deliberately, and without fear.


Famous Last Words — December 31

So, you were ready for today’s climate disasters.
Congratulations. You packed sandbags. You bought bottled water. You learned a new word—resilience—and felt briefly reassured.

But how about tomorrow’s?

Because decade-to-decade warming in the near term is already baked in. This isn’t a “new normal.” It’s the opening credits.

We are not prepared for the world of fire we are creating.
We are not prepared for regional heat waves that will kill a million people in a few days—quietly, indoors, off camera.
We are not prepared for multi-year droughts that erase harvests across continents, again and again, until “bad year” becomes a meaningless phrase.
We are not prepared for accelerating sea-level rise that will politely, steadily, drown most of our great coastal cities—financial districts first, memories later.
We are not prepared for the mass migration and conflict that will follow, when borders discover they are theoretical and solidarity turns out to be optional.

We are not prepared for any of it.

Not because we lack data.
Not because we lack technology.
Not because we lack warnings.

But because preparation would require changing power, comfort, consumption, and the stories we tell ourselves about endless growth on a finite planet.

And that, apparently, is asking too much.

So instead, we rehearse emergencies that no longer resemble the future, rebuild the same things in the same places, insure the uninsurable, and call it optimism. We treat adaptation like a lifestyle accessory and mitigation like a political inconvenience.

This is not ignorance.
This is choice.

We are choosing to fail—slowly enough to feel normal, fast enough to be irreversible.

These are not predictions.
They are invoices.

And they are coming due.

So let this stand as our famous last words for the year:
We knew. We delayed. We normalized the unacceptable. We confused hope with denial. We mistook luck for stability.

From all of us at adaptationguide.com,
have a Happy 2026 🎉

May it be survivable.
May it be uncomfortable enough to force change.
And if not—well—at least we documented the moment when the future was still optional.

Black humor aside: adapt fast, organize locally, share knowledge, and stop waiting for permission.

See you on the other side of the calendar.

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, January 05 2026

    “Modern collapse will not arrive with explosions, but with silence: no signal, no power, no instructions—and a population trained to wai...