π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, March 05, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing a massive geopolitical shock today as the national average diesel price violently surges to $4.166/gallon, driven by escalating Middle East conflicts and threats to the Strait of Hormuz. This fuel crisis is colliding with a sharply contracted spot market, where total available loads have dropped 31.9% day-over-day to 167,676, yet the national average rate remains highly resilient at $2.25/mile. Flatbed freight continues to overwhelmingly dominate the board with nearly 75,858 active loads as spring construction staging accelerates. For freight brokers, the immediate operational imperative is managing carrier fuel surcharge demands while navigating structural capacity tightening caused by the FMCSA's ongoing crackdown on 557 CDL training schools and severe, widespread flooding across the Midwest.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Widespread River Flooding (Indiana (IN, Jackson, Bartholomew, Greene, Knox counties)): Extensive moderate-to-major flooding across the East Fork White and lower White River basins is submerging state roads and highways. Carriers are actively avoiding the region, severely tightening Midwest capacity and disrupting I-65 and I-70 freight corridors.
- High Wind Warning (Southern California (CA, Santa Barbara, Ventura counties)): North winds 30 to 45 mph with gusts up to 65 mph are creating severe blow-over risks along the critical I-5 Corridor. High-profile van and reefer traffic will face mandatory slowdowns and temporary route closures through Thursday morning.
βοΈ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Indiana flooding remains the primary operational weather disruption today, Thursday March 5. Forecast data shows continued rain through today with approximately 0.2 inches of precipitation and temperatures around 61Β°F. I-65 and I-70 routing around Jackson, Lawrence, and Washington counties remains actively disrupted. California's Santa Barbara and Ventura county high wind warning β with gusts up to 65 mph β is expected to cause mandatory slowdowns and potential temporary closures on the I-5 corridor through Thursday morning, adding operational complexity for West Coast van and reefer moves.
- Secondary Market Effects: Carriers avoiding Indiana are likely routing freight through alternative Midwest corridors, adding miles and cost to lanes that would normally pass through the I-65 and I-70 axes. This is creating upward rate pressure on alternative Midwest routing options and pulling capacity that would normally serve the Ohio Valley into detour patterns. The California wind event, while expected to ease by Thursday afternoon based on forecast conditions, may have caused appointment delays at distribution centers that will ripple into Friday scheduling.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: Indiana flooding capacity avoidance is tightening the broader Midwest market beyond just the affected counties. Automotive supply chain shippers in Indiana are particularly exposed, as noted in the first-layer analysis, and their urgent freight needs may be pulling spot capacity that would otherwise serve adjacent markets like Illinois and Ohio. If these detour patterns persist, rates on Chicago-to-Southeast and Cincinnati-to-Southeast lanes may see modest upward pressure as available trucks are diverted or delayed.
- Recovery Timeline: Based on available forecast data, Indiana precipitation appears likely to ease Friday March 6 β forecast shows cloudy conditions with near-zero precipitation and higher temperatures around 71Β°F. Saturday shows a return of light rain at approximately 0.2 inches. Sunday and Monday forecast data indicates partly sunny to sunny conditions. This suggests flooding in already-saturated river basins may not materially improve until at least Sunday or Monday, even if rain stops Friday, due to the time required for river levels to recede. Brokers should plan for Indiana corridor disruptions to persist through the weekend with potential gradual improvement early next week. California wind conditions appear to be clearing based on Thursday through Sunday forecast data showing sunny to partly sunny conditions.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD) futures have surged more than 82 cents in a month, settling at $3.1869/gallon. This 10% daily jump guarantees retail diesel will likely breach the $4.25 mark nationally by next week.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small to mid-sized carriers are facing an immediate cash flow crisis. The lag between surging pump prices ($4.166/gal) and delayed fuel surcharge reimbursements will likely force marginal carriers out of the market, tightening capacity further.
- Economic Indicators: The Middle East energy shock is creating sudden inflationary pressure across the supply chain. Shippers are bracing for higher transportation costs, which will likely be passed down to consumer goods in Q2.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Diesel Prices Surge as Middle East Conflict Shakes Energy Markets π:
With retail diesel hitting $4.166/gal and futures jumping 10% daily, brokers must immediately recalibrate pricing models. Carriers will refuse loads with outdated fuel surcharges. Brokers should proactively approach customers to adjust contracted rates or spot quotes to reflect this geopolitical energy shock before capacity is lost.
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Federal Crackdown Targets 557 CDL Training Schools π:
The FMCSA's aggressive enforcement against non-compliant CDL schools, including 9 in the Arkansas region, is structurally shrinking the pipeline of new drivers. For brokers, this validates the long-term capacity tightening trend and underscores the critical need for strict carrier vetting, as negligent selection liability remains a major legal risk.
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Ocean Carriers Implement Emergency Fuel Surcharges π:
Major ocean carriers like MSC are imposing emergency fuel surcharges ($60-$90 per TEU) effective mid-March. This will drastically increase import costs, likely pushing shippers to rely more heavily on spot drayage and transloading at ports to expedite freight and avoid further terminal storage penalties.
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FMCSA Warns of Carrier Phishing Scams π:
Cybercriminals are actively impersonating the FMCSA to target motor carriers. Brokers must heighten their fraud detection protocols, as compromised carrier credentials can lead to double-brokering schemes and stolen freight during this chaotic, high-rate environment.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The diesel price spike to $4.166/gal is affecting carrier decisions right now, today. Carriers are already rejecting routing guide loads that do not reflect updated fuel surcharges. Brokers posting loads at pre-spike rates should expect rejection rates to climb through the day. The FMCSA phishing scam warning is an active threat β carrier vetting protocols should be heightened immediately on any new carrier relationships established today.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within 72 hours, the market is likely to see a clearer bifurcation between shippers who have adjusted to the new fuel cost reality and those who have not. Shippers who have not repriced will face increasing load rejection rates and may turn to spot brokers as a last resort β at higher rates. The Indiana flooding situation will be clearer by Saturday, providing better visibility into when Midwest capacity returns to normal routing. Ocean carrier emergency surcharge awareness will grow among import shippers, likely accelerating port transload demand through the weekend.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By next week, retail diesel prices may approach or breach the $4.25 level nationally if futures trajectory continues β this is a meaningful threshold that may trigger additional carrier capacity exits among marginal small fleets. The mid-March ocean surcharge implementation will likely drive a final surge in port transload demand in the days immediately preceding the effective date. Brokers who have pre-built relationships with Carolinas and Southeast carriers for Savannah outbound freight will be positioned to capture premium rates during that final surge.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The FMCSA CDL school crackdown on 557 schools, including 9 in Arkansas, requires brokers to review carrier vetting criteria. Carriers whose drivers trained at non-compliant schools may face credential questions. Brokers should confirm that their carrier qualification checklists include CDL school compliance verification. This is also a negligent selection liability issue β documenting carrier vetting is more important than ever in this enforcement environment.
π Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: The 31.9% drop in total available loads (down to 167,676) masks the true market tightness. The gap between posted rates and paid rates is narrowing rapidly as carriers hold firm on pricing due to the diesel spike, forcing brokers to pay up to get freight moved.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is severely constrained in the Midwest due to widespread Indiana flooding, and in the Southeast as early produce staging absorbs reefer equipment. Conversely, outbound capacity from the Northeast remains relatively loose.
- Technology Disruptions: The sudden revocation of multiple ELD platforms continues to disrupt carrier operations. Fleets scrambling to replace non-compliant devices are experiencing unexpected downtime, temporarily removing trucks from the active routing pool.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Southeast is likely to see continued demand acceleration through at least mid-March, driven by the dual forces of produce season ramp-up and port transload urgency ahead of ocean carrier surcharge dates. Flatbed demand nationally is expected to remain elevated as spring construction staging is in its early acceleration phase β historically, March through May represents peak flatbed demand, and current load volumes of 75,858 suggest this season is starting ahead of typical pace. Reefer demand concentration in the Southeast may begin to expand northward as produce volumes grow, potentially drawing capacity away from the region and toward mid-Atlantic distribution corridors.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: Current flatbed dominance is consistent with early spring construction staging, but the volume this early in March suggests demand is running ahead of seasonal norms. The diesel price shock is unusual for this time of year β historically, spring fuel price increases are gradual. The current overnight surge driven by geopolitical factors represents an atypical shock event layered on top of normal seasonal patterns, compressing what would typically be a gradual rate increase into a very short window. This makes carrier behavior harder to predict using historical seasonal models alone.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The Middle East energy shock is creating inflationary pressure that is likely to ripple into Q2 consumer goods pricing. Retailers who moved spring inventory early to beat port surcharges will likely have lighter import volumes in late March, potentially creating a brief demand lull at Southeast ports after the current surge. The CDL school crackdown is a medium-term structural supply reducer β its full impact on available drivers will likely not be felt for 60 to 90 days as existing trainees complete programs, but the pipeline thinning is already a directional signal.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment is expected to continue flowing away from the flooded Indiana I-65 and I-70 corridors toward Southeast and Northeast markets in the near term. As Indiana flooding conditions potentially begin easing later this week based on available forecast data, some capacity may reposition back into the Midwest, which could modestly relieve Southeast tightness but will not materially change the produce and port-driven demand dynamics. Northeast outbound capacity, currently described as relatively loose, may tighten modestly if Midwest-diverted equipment repositions there rather than returning south.
π₯ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are rushing to move spring inventory inland from East Coast ports before ocean carrier emergency fuel surcharges take full effect in mid-March.
- Manufacturing: Industrial and energy sector staging is completely dominating the flatbed market, absorbing over 75,000 loads and leaving standard manufacturing shippers struggling to find open-deck capacity.
- Agriculture: Early produce season in the Southeast is creating localized reefer shortages. The $4.166/gal diesel price is heavily impacting temperature-controlled margins, forcing agricultural shippers to pay significant premiums.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers in the Midwest are facing severe routing disruptions due to the extensive flooding across Indiana, forcing costly detours and expedited freight spend to keep assembly lines running.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most dynamic and profitable region for freight brokers. Early produce season staging is severely tightening reefer capacity, while East Coast ports (particularly Savannah and Jacksonville) are seeing a surge in drayage and transload demand as shippers rush to beat impending ocean carrier fuel surcharges. The massive spike in diesel to $4.166/gal is causing carriers to demand heavy premiums to enter consumption-heavy states like Florida, where outbound rates remain depressed. This volatility creates massive arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can effectively manage round-trip pricing.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA β Orlando, FL:
This consumer-heavy lane is experiencing significant upward rate pressure. With diesel at $4.166/gal, carriers are outright refusing to take standard rates into Florida, knowing they face a cheap, high-fuel deadhead or low-paying outbound load to get back out.
Savannah, GA β Charlotte, NC:
Port-driven freight is surging on this corridor. Shippers are aggressively transloading ocean freight to 53-foot vans to avoid terminal storage fees and impending ocean carrier emergency fuel surcharges, creating a localized capacity vacuum in Savannah.
π¨ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- All inbound Florida lanes (carriers demanding fuel/deadhead premiums)
- Outbound Savannah, GA and Jacksonville, FL (port transload urgency)
- Midwest detours around flooded Indiana I-65/I-70 corridors
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe flatbed shortages nationwide (75,858 loads pending); Reefer capacity critically tight in the Southeast; Van capacity shrinking in the Midwest due to flood avoidance.
Opportunity Zones:
- Outbound Northeast (loose capacity allows for cheap carrier sourcing)
- Short-haul Southeast port-to-inland warehouse lanes (high shipper willingness to pay)
π― Strategic Recommendations for Today
πΌ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Lead all conversations with the geopolitical energy crisis. Explain that diesel has surged to $4.166/gal and futures are up 10% daily. Frame ETA as their strategic partner to secure capacity before carriers start rejecting routing guides en masse.
Action: Immediately audit all active quotes and contracted lanes. Implement emergency fuel surcharges or re-price spot quotes to protect broker margins from the overnight fuel spike.
π For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Target carriers for Southeast port freight and flatbed construction lanes. Prioritize fleets with strong fuel efficiency or those desperate to escape the flooded Midwest markets.
Negotiation Leverage: Use dedicated round-trips as your primary leverage. Carriers are terrified of deadheading with $4.166/gal diesel; offering them a pre-planned backhaul is more valuable than a top-market outbound rate.
π Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification β Diesel And Fuel Surcharge Crisis
Opening Script: "Good morning β I want to get ahead of something with you before it affects your shipments today. Diesel just hit $4.166 a gallon nationally, and futures markets are up nearly 10% in a single day. That is being driven by the Middle East conflict and disruptions near the Strait of Hormuz. What that means practically is that carriers are already rejecting loads that don't reflect the new fuel reality, and we are seeing that play out on the board right now. I want to make sure your freight doesn't get left behind."
Value Proposition: By adjusting your quote today, you lock in a carrier commitment before the next wave of rejections hits. Carriers who are holding loads right now will reprice or walk by end of day. Getting coverage confirmed now protects your delivery window.
Urgency Creator: ULSD futures data indicates another retail diesel price hike is likely within the next 5 to 7 days. Every day of delay on repricing creates greater exposure to a second surcharge conversation at a worse rate.
Objection Handler: If the customer says rates were lower last month: 'You are absolutely right, and that was a different market. Diesel averaged meaningfully lower just 30 days ago. The 12-cent overnight spike we saw last night is not a seasonal adjustment β it is a geopolitical shock. The carriers we work with are not going to move freight at pre-crisis rates. The choice is paying a reasonable surcharge now or facing a rejection with no coverage when your freight needs to move.'
Capacity Shortage Communication β Reefer And Flatbed Tightness
Opening Script: "I am reaching out because available capacity in your freight category has dropped sharply β we are looking at over 40% fewer reefer loads on the board today compared to yesterday, and flatbed is being absorbed faster than we have seen this early in a construction season. If you have shipments moving in the next 5 to 10 days, I want to get in front of securing your trucks now before the window closes."
Value Proposition: Customers who commit to capacity today get carrier priority over shippers who wait and end up competing for whatever is left on Friday or Monday. In a market this tight, being second in line is expensive.
Urgency Creator: Early produce season staging in the Southeast is pulling reefer equipment out of the market right now. Combined with carriers avoiding the flooded Indiana corridors, available trucks in the Midwest are disappearing fast. This is not a temporary blip β the seasonal and weather drivers are converging.
Objection Handler: If the customer says they will wait and see: 'I completely understand the instinct to wait, but here is the risk. Flatbed has 75,858 loads active right now and the pool of willing carriers is contracting daily due to the diesel spike. Waiting even 48 hours in this environment often means paying a higher spot rate and accepting a longer pickup window. I would rather lock something in for you today than call you Monday with bad news.'
Port Transload Urgency β Savannah And Southeast Import Customers
Opening Script: "If you have ocean freight moving through Savannah or Jacksonville right now, you need to know that major ocean carriers are implementing emergency fuel surcharges in mid-March β we are talking $60 to $90 per TEU on top of existing rates. Shippers who move freight to inland distribution now, before those surcharges kick in, will save significantly. I can help you get those loads covered and moving this week."
Value Proposition: Moving freight inland via transload this week avoids both terminal storage fees that are accumulating and the mid-March ocean surcharge implementation. The inland truck rate, even at today's elevated diesel-driven pricing, is likely lower than the combined cost of waiting.
Urgency Creator: The MSC surcharge implementation date is mid-March. That is approximately 10 days away. Savannah drayage and regional van capacity is already stretched thin as other shippers make the same calculation. The window to act at current rates is narrow.
Objection Handler: If the customer questions the truck rate premium: 'The truck rate is higher than it was 60 days ago, yes. But compare it to $60 to $90 per TEU in ocean surcharges plus any terminal storage fees accumulating while you wait. For most loads, the inland move pays for itself in avoided fees alone, and you get your freight to the distribution center faster.'
π¨ The Veteran's Thursday Playbook: Navigating the Geopolitical Diesel Shock
Welcome to Thursday. If you are staring at the board wondering why total volume plummeted 31.9% overnight to 167,676 available loads while the national average rate held dead-steady at $2.25/mile, let me translate the market for you: Panic.
We are experiencing a violent geopolitical energy shock. Diesel just surged over 12 cents overnight to $4.166/gallon, and ULSD (Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel) futures are up 10%. Carriers are aggressively rejecting cheap freight and outdated routing guides, pulling capacity off the board until shippers agree to new fuel surcharges (FSC). Add in the FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) shutting down 557 CDL training schools and severe flooding paralyzing the Midwest, and we have a structural capacity squeeze.
Amateurs will lose their margins today eating fuel costs. Professionals will use this volatility to reprice their freight, capture massive spreads on specialized lanes, and sell compliance as a premium. Here is your 24-72 hour tactical execution plan.
π The Spread: Margin Capture Matrix
Margin is found in the delta between shipper panic (posted rates) and carrier reality (paid rates). Here is exactly how to trade today's spreads based on this morning's real-time data.
- Specialized (Massive Broker Leverage): 18,091 loads | Posted $2.42 > Paid $2.31
- The Play: A massive +$0.11/mile spread. Shippers are terrified of the specialized equipment shortage and are over-posting rates to guarantee coverage.
- Execution: Capture this double-digit margin by absorbing the logistical friction. Buy access to reliable carriers at the $2.31 average by handling the permit legwork, providing clear securement plans, and ensuring strict FMCSA compliance.
- Heavy Haul (Strong Broker Leverage): 33,571 loads | Posted $2.57 > Paid $2.52
- The Play: A healthy +$0.05/mile spread.
- Execution: Quote shippers at the $2.57 posted average, but buy at the $2.52 paid average. Focus your sourcing on the lower 48 energy and construction sectors, avoiding the paralyzed Midwest flood zones.
- Van (Standard Broker Leverage): 21,892 loads | Posted $2.13 > Paid $2.09
- The Play: A +$0.04/mile spread. Volume is cooling (down 31.6%), but capacity is shrinking due to aggressive CDL enforcement and the overnight fuel spike.
- Execution: Quote shippers at the $2.13 posted average. Target regional distribution hubs where retail front-loading (hedging against mid-March ocean surcharges) is creating consistent outbound volume.
- Reefer (Fading Broker Leverage): 8,085 loads | Posted $2.47 > Paid $2.43
- The Play: A +$0.04/mile spread, but capacity is dangerously scarce (down 41.1% to just 8k loads nationally).
- Execution: Pre-book all Friday and weekend freight today. As Southeast produce staging accelerates and carriers actively avoid the flooded Midwest, this spread will flip to carrier leverage by tomorrow afternoon. Do not float reefer freight this week.
- Flatbed (Carrier Leverage): 75,858 loads | Paid $2.49 > Posted $2.48
- The Play: Carriers are entirely dictating terms. With nearly 76,000 loads sitting on open decks, you are in a knife fight for trucks.
- Execution: You must pay for securement and tarping time upfront. Win trucks by offering guaranteed reloads. Do not haggle over a penny per mile if you have a verified, compliant driver ready to roll.
β½ Macro Threats & Regulatory Arbitrage
These three macro-factors will dictate your margin and your legal exposure this week. Adjust your strategy immediately.
- The $4.166 Geopolitical Fuel Shock
- The Threat: Escalating Middle East conflicts and Strait of Hormuz disruptions have violently pushed retail diesel to $4.166/gal. Carriers will outright refuse long-haul freight or deadheads that don't compensate for this overnight spike.
- The Action: Shorten your quote validity windows to 24 hours maximum. Proactively approach customers today to adjust contracted rates or spot quotes. If you wait for the carrier to reject the load this afternoon, you will pay a massive premium to recover it.
- The Mid-March Ocean Carrier Surcharge ($60-$90/TEU)
- The Threat: Major ocean carriers (like MSC) are implementing emergency fuel surcharges effective mid-March.
- The Action: Pitch port transloading immediately. Call your import clients moving boxes out of Savannah and Jacksonville. Offer to transload their ocean freight into 53-foot vans to avoid the impending $60-$90/TEU ocean surcharges and accumulating terminal storage fees.
- The FMCSA 557 CDL School Purge & Phishing Scams
- The Threat: The FMCSA just cracked down on 557 non-compliant CDL training schools (including 9 in Arkansas), structurally shrinking the driver pool. Simultaneously, scammers are impersonating the FMCSA to steal carrier credentials.
- The Action: Double down on strict carrier vetting. Verify CDL history and mandate callback verification for any bank/factoring changes. Sell this rigorous vetting process to shippers as a premium "liability shield" against negligent selection lawsuits.
πΊοΈ Weather Routing & Regional Arbitrage
Weather and regional imbalances are creating distinct arbitrage opportunities today.
- Indiana/Ohio Valley Flooding (Expedited Auto/Ag Demand)
- The Situation: Extensive moderate-to-major flooding across the East Fork White and lower White River basins (Jackson, Bartholomew, Greene, Knox counties) is submerging state roads and disrupting the I-65 and I-70 corridors.
- The Tactic: Automotive JIT (Just-In-Time) supply chains are breaking down. Pitch expedited van and team transit to auto suppliers in the Midwest who are facing line-down situations. Expect carriers to demand heavy premiums to enter or detour around central/southern Indiana.
- Southern California High Winds (I-5 Blow-Over Risk)
- The Situation: North winds 30 to 45 mph with gusts up to 65 mph along the I-5 corridor (Ventura/Santa Barbara) are creating severe blow-over risks for high-profile trailers (vans/reefers).
- The Tactic: Expect outbound LA capacity to tighten as drivers park to wait out the wind or face mandatory slowdowns. Sell outbound capacity out of AZ and NV, where rerouted or delayed trucks will be looking for their next load.
π Thursday Execution Scripts
Equip your floor with these exact narratives to control the conversation today.
The "Fuel Reality Check" Script (For Customer Sales)
"Good morning [Name]. I'm calling proactively because the market shifted violently overnight. Diesel just hit $4.166 a gallon nationally due to the Middle East escalation, and futures are up 10%. Carriers are already rejecting routing guides that don't reflect this new fuel reality. I want to adjust our spot quote today to lock in a committed carrier before the broader market panics this afternoon. The choice right now is paying a reasonable fuel surcharge today, or facing a rejection with no coverage when your freight absolutely has to move."
The "Port Transload Arbitrage" Script (For Customer Sales)
"John, if you have ocean freight moving through Savannah or Jacksonville right now, we need to move it inland immediately. Major ocean carriers are implementing emergency fuel surcharges of $60 to $90 per TEU in mid-March. If we transload your freight into 53-foot vans this week, we avoid those impending surcharges and stop the terminal storage fees from bleeding your margin. I have vetted capacity ready to pull those boxes today."
The "Midwest Detour Premium" Script (For Carrier Reps)
"Hey driver, I know the White River flooding is making routing a nightmare around Indiana and I-65 right now. If you are willing to navigate the detours, I have urgent, premium-paying automotive freight that needs to move to keep assembly lines running. Let me lock you in on this dedicated outbound run with a heavy detour premium built-in, so you aren't burning $4.16 diesel for free."
π
This Day in History
1850: The Britannia Bridge across the Menai Strait between the island of Anglesey and the mainland of Wales is opened.
1906: Moro Rebellion: United States Army troops bring overwhelming force against the native Moros in the First Battle of Bud Dajo, leaving only six survivors.
1978: The Landsat 3 is launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.
π Quote of the Day
"We lie the loudest when we lie to ourselves."
β Eric Hoffer