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Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Music Playlists

Whenever I post a music video I add it to an annual playlist. Here is a list of such lists:

I don't know why there are two for 2012. Gimme a break, it was 14 years ago. I tried checking to see if all the songs in the lists are also in the blog, but that exhausted my patience very quickly. Might be able to get AI to do it for me, but I'm not sure I want to get that involved.

I probably should put this list in the sidebar, but I haven't made any edits to this blog's layout in a coons age and I don't see me changing my ways any time soon.

Make Work

One of my pet theories on how to improve society is to start up a big stonework project. Something that would involve digging many big blocks of rock out the ground, cutting them into useful shapes, hauling them to a building site then stacking them up make something enduring, like the pyramids. Or an aqueduct, like the Romans did:

Massive Roman aqueduct built in Segovia, Spain by emperor Trajan (r. 98-117 AD).

Egyptian civilization under the pharaohs lasted for thousands or years. Let me just emphasize that: Thousands of Years. Our country is looking at a measly 250 years. Think maybe we could learn something from the Egyptians or the Romans? Nah, that ain't gonna happen, we are better and smarter and know more than those guys ever thought of knowing.

Anyway, I'm thinking if the apparent problem in America today is the lack of jobs, maybe the real problem is we don't have enough people starting businesses that need people. If they need people for their business, they are going to hire people and that would be great.

Meanwhile, rumor has it that George Soros is hiring protesters to show up the No Kings protests.

I just realized that maybe George is following my advice and putting people to work. Okay, they are temporary jobs, but it is something. I'm not quite sure what the point of these protests is. Is this just an old man making himself feel better by doling out nickels to the starving? Or is he just amusing himself by staging these protests to see how irate people get? Or is he building a religion? If it's the later, I'm wondering what he is going to ask of his army of believers.



The War On Drugs - Syrian Version

Stolen entire from Unherd.

Syria's anti-drug officers behave more like militiamen than drug-busting law enforcers, their Kalashnikovs hanging by their sides. (Bakr Alkasem/AFP/Getty)

The Syrian super-drug coming for Britain Captagon is too lucrative to stop

by 

I was meant to be shadowing the anti-drug squad. But when I call my contact in the Syrian government, as I huddle by the stove in my Damascus flat, there’s only bad news. “We’re overwhelmed,” he says apologetically, explaining that the unit I was meant to follow is busy fighting Kurds in the north. Before that, they were busy again, working to ensure that the revolution’s anniversary wasn’t disrupted by ISIS. Syria’s drug squads, in many ways, aren’t trained counter-narcotics officers at all. They’d started out as soldiers and rebels — and only later were drawn into anti-drug work. Even now, they behave more like militiamen than drug-busting law enforcers, their Kalashnikovs hanging loosely by their sides.

Almost 18 months after Bashar al-Assad fled into exile, such frantic improvisation is unsurprising. It’s also necessary. For if, by its end, his Baathist regime had transformed the country into a virtual narco-state, whose products surfaced in ports from Rotterdam and Genoa, the Syrian drug trade is alive and kicking. Indeed, one of the civil war’s most enduring legacies is that Assad’s former country has now become a major transit and drug hub, not just in Europe but across Asia and Africa too, encompassing narcotics as varied as crystal meth and liquid cocaine.

Yet it’s Captagon that truly keeps Syria’s drug empire afloat. Offering a blend of euphoria and detachment, the stimulant is popular among young Gulf club-goers and overstretched medical students seeking an edge in their exams. Over time, it’s become one of the country’s most lucrative exports. As he visits London for the first time today, President Ahmed al-Sharaa will doubtless parade a new Syria, one primed for investment and revived Western contact. The truth, though, is that Syria has become a legal black hole, a place where drugs can disappear, before reappearing elsewhere with little law enforcement scrutiny. That matters: not only for Syria and its own fragile future, but also for the region, Europe and the wider world.

Before the revolution, drugs weren’t really part of Syria’s story. There was cannabis, of course, grown in pockets around Baalbek, Homs and Latakia, and peddled by small-time gangsters and Hezbollah. But overall, Syria wasn’t known as a drug-exporting state, while dealers themselves were dealt with harshly. I remember living in a Damascus suburb and seeing funerals for local dealers who’d been killed in shootouts with police. Then, young men would smoke cigarettes like chimneys (they still do), and might have the odd drink, but it was rare to hear of drug-taking. There was a special stigma attached to its use. Captagon, for its part, was virtually unheard of. Syria did not present itself, to its neighbours, to Europe, or to its own citizens, as a country whose most lucrative export was narcotics.

Then came the war, and it turned Bashar al-Assad into a narco boss with a country attached. Captagon’s appeal isn’t hard to grasp. Over the past decade, parts of the Middle East — particularly the Gulf — have experienced a gradual loosening of social and religious restrictions. Among a young, affluent population with disposable income, ample free time, and a growing appetite for entertainment, the inexpensive stimulant has found a ready market. Easy to manufacture, easy to package, easy to move, it requires no fields, seasons or harvests.

All a would-be kingpin needs are chemical precursors —  usually a mixture of amphetamines, caffeine and various fillers — alongside machinery and protection. As Assad was crushed by sanctions and the demands of an insatiable war machine, Captagon production proved to be an invaluable financial lifeline. By this stage, the regime boasted a growing ecosystem of militias and businessmen who propped up what remained of the hollowed-out state. Only trouble was, they all needed paying, and Captagon was the answer. And since the regime was now involved, they could manufacture most of those chemicals themselves, or else import them under official cover, attracting little scrutiny about their intended use. Importers like Eyad Lahham and former MPs like Amer Tayseer Kheiti were in on the racket, as was Assad’s brother Maher, who added drug running to his list of dubious accolades. Reports suggest that the Assads legally imported chemicals from India before producing Captagon from a disused potato-chip factory in the Damascus suburb of Douma.

At first, the Assad regime denied any connection to the drug. Its appearance was instead blamed on ISIS, with the “jihadi drug” supposedly used by fighters to remain calm in battle. On 1 July 2020, Italian police seized 14 tons of Captagon in Salerno, a port south of Naples, and initially seemed inclined to believe the shipment was indeed intended to fund ISIS. The Italians also explored links between the Islamists and the Neapolitan Camorra. No Camorra-ISIS connection was ever substantiated. What is known, though, is that one of Europe’s biggest drug traffickers, with Camorra ties, was arrested by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham — al-Sharaa’s former outfit — while attempting to cross into regime-held territory in 2022.

Assad-linked networks were, by then, the drug’s main manufacturers and exporters. Maher al-Assad is again a case in point: his notorious Fourth Armored Division got so rich of Captagon that it reportedly maintained an $80 million cash reserve at a time when the average Syrian was surviving on just $2 a day. Maher and his associates meanwhile flaunted their wealth — supercars, watches, funds parked safely abroad — embodying the stark inequality that Assad’s narco-economy had created. All the while, this bonanza offered opportunities for ordinary Syrians. A young soldier might supplement his poor salary; a Bedouin school kid, instead of going to school, could smuggle Captagon and earn $1,000 a day.

The profits, then, were simply too hard to ignore. But so too is the social impact it’s wrought. Some weeks ago, while visiting friends in the war-scarred city of Raqqa — the former de facto capital of ISIS — my host warned me not to leave belongings in the car. Anything left behind, he said, would likely be stolen and sold to finance an addict’s drug habit. A UN employee from the city, speaking on condition of anonymity, describes the situation as an epidemic. Things are exacerbated, he adds, by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a group of mostly Kurdish fighters, whose personnel turn a blind eye to trafficking — and allegedly take a cut of the action.

In this, al-Sharaa is surely an improvement. His new government celebrated the end of the trade, partly for propaganda reasons but also sincerely. For Muslims in general, and Islamists in particular, drugs aren’t just criminal but impious. Mere weeks after his victory, in the grand setting of the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus no less, al-Sharaa announced the end of “the largest Captagon factory in the world” to a rapt audience.

All that was ultimately dismantled, however, was the regime-era infrastructure; a decentralized “cottage” industry of smaller players remain. Logistics is on their side. From there, consignments are moved towards Jordan using smuggling tactics that sound like folklore until you meet the men tasked with stopping them, with everything from livestock to drones used to hide the drugs. The real key, though, is to secure the networks through which you can move your goods — and those criminal networks didn’t go away when Assad fell.

The point, here, is that Syria’s narco-state didn’t disappear. Rather, it decentralized, its remnants scattering and grouping in enclaves where government control was weakest. Many former regime producers, as analyst Charles Lister has noted, fled to join the area controlled by Sheikh Hikmat al-Hijri, the de facto ruler and spiritual head of the Druze community in Suwayda. From 2018, the Assad regime allowed the province, not far from the Jordanian border, a degree of self-rule and a free hand in Captagon. For Hijri, handing over power to Damascus would effectively cut off the trade that funded both his militias and the autonomy they implied. Following his split from Damascus last year, and the creation of an independent enclave closely aligned to Israel, Hijri has emerged leader of what one expert calls a “narco-statelet” — one far closer to cartel-run corners of Mexico than any imagined Druze utopia.

Captagon? Google explains:

Captagon is a brand name for fenethylline, a synthetic stimulant drug combining amphetamine and theophylline, originally used to treat ADHD and narcolepsy. It is now primarily an illicit, highly addictive drug produced in Syria and widely trafficked in the Middle East, with a market estimated in the billions.
Key Aspects of Captagon:
  • Composition: A codrug of amphetamine (a central nervous system stimulant) and theophylline (a bronchodilator).
  • Effects: Acts as a powerful stimulant, enhancing focus, suppressing appetite, and providing immense energy, often leading to abuse.
  • Illicit Status:
     Due to its abuse potential, it is banned in many countries (Schedule I in the US).
  • "Jihad Drug" Context: It has been linked to misuse by fighters in conflict zones, such as Syria.
  • Production: Primarily manufactured in Syria and Lebanon, serving as a massive illicit economy for the region.
Captagon tablets often feature a distinctive logo of two interlocking "C"s or crescents.

Funnies





10 Short Videos #6088

10 Short Videos #6088

Square Engine layout

Palfinger radiostyrd truck - Remote control forklift folds up and stores under semi-trailer floor

Millwright VS Millwrong

Plowing field with Russian miniature bulldozer

Poor Man’s Process Shot. This is a work of art.

arguing against smart vs stupid people

Rain can’t stop the show…can it ?

Mantis shrimp executing a high-velocity club strike generating a localized cavitation bubble.

If you can’t handle me at the back you don’t deserve me at the front

HAYVANLARI SEVİN - Cats being cats

Monday, March 30, 2026

Koen Dickmans

Koen Dickmans

This is such an absurd image I fully expected the artist to be some famous advant garde jerk, but the most Google could find was that he has a bunch of pictures on Jigsaw Planet. So I guess he's just a regular grade goofball.

Funnies