The rabbit stores are sprouting up everywhere

There’s a new store in town, and it is taking over the countryside by storm.

It’s characterized by this bright, well lit store, in red and white colors. And it has a huge picture of a smiling rabbit on the signage.

It’s called hao xiang lai.

And is right outside my daughters kindergarten. And down the street from my complex, and across from my hospital, and next to my car garage, oh and next tot he central community center, and…

Well it is sprouting up everywhere like mushrooms.

It features cheap, cheap, cheap candy and snacks, soft-drinks and beers (and spirits).

ksnip 20250118 112921
ksnip 20250118 112921
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ksnip 20250118 112840
12 18 93 75 yuan in snacks in china at haoxianglai v0 rni9ulo7bq3d1
12 18 93 75 yuan in snacks in china at haoxianglai v0 rni9ulo7bq3d1

Really affordable.

It is a treasure pleasure palace for kids…

Give them a couple of bucks and let them “go to town”.

The West is unaware of this phenomenon (January 2025) you’ll all probably hear about it in the Western media around May, June or July. Ah. But you are hearing about it today.

Brought to you by MM.

God bless these stores.

Today…

Chinese TikTokers SCHOOL Trump Supporters About Their OWN Country: “You Guys are Really Dumb”

You all GOTTA watch this.

Why do 135 crores of Chinese people tolerate the brutally autocratic rule of Xi Jinping? How does this autocratic ruler manage to rule such a huge number of people spread over such a large area?

This is such a stupid question

  • The Indian PM can be selected by a mere 272 people
  • The Two Candidates for the US Presidency from both parties are chosen on the basis of 600 to 2500 delegates who gather around in a primary contest of unequal delegate votes in different states
  • Xi Jinping is chosen by 4,300 Party members who were in turn selected from among 47,000 members who in turn were selected from among 330,000 members who were all voted by the PEOPLE OF CHINA

I see absolutely ZERO DIFFERENCE in any of these procedures

In 2022, these 330,000 members were chosen from the votes of 536 Million people

That’s 42.25% of the People in China

If India and US are democracies then so is China

And if you say China has no other political parties

Singapore has had one party rule for 60 years now

The strongest opposition they had was in 2020 and even then they hold 79% of the Seats (83 out of 105)

By contrast in the Chinese Government , the eight opposition parties hold 1/3 of the seats or 33% meaning the CPC has 67% seats

The Chinese rose from an Agrarian Pauper in 1968 to the world’s largest economy by purchasing parity in 2024

They are the first Asian power to hold technological monopolies independently without a Western Shadow

Their cities are among the best in the world

Their Universities now hold 17 positions in the Top 100, next only to the US which holds 31 positions

They have things for which people are bending mountains over

Why would the people not want the One Party meritocracy when it has worked so well for the Chinese?

Mr Hunzi should soon do a video on the One Party Democracy i guess

Singapore and Malaysia, the two countries are like siblings guy, they have a long history before you and I came to know about it. Several priorities we don’t know, like frequent traveler programs, work pass priority, and other immigration deals like cross-border transport, etc. Why should there be any issues with Malaysians?

Hello, without Indians and Pinoys Singapore will be a toothless Merlion, this isn’t a secret, guys.

No indians? Singapore will look like the movie “I Am Legend.” and you will be taking the role of Will Smith. Why?

No workers in Sembawang shipyard where Indians are 80- 90% of 10,000 workers, neither would there be anyone working at the Port of Singapore Authority where Indians are the majority of 170,000 people… A lifeline of Singapore’s economy.

Singapore will be made to look like a real Amazon rain forest, as Indian workers to prune 2 million trees are no more.

HDB flats all over the island will look more like slums in the air, worse, though, less hard-working garbage collectors and cleaners.

All roads. and sidewalks will be lot of potholes, dusty, and full of litters, worse looking than in Bangkok where I live… Not enough manpower guys!

No pinoys? Who will look after the kids and raise them from “boys to men”? Who will monitor the health and be with Grandpa and Grandma 24/7 also, carrying baskets or pushing a trolley from the market?

Who would wash 3-4 cars daily as fast as Filipinas? And who will walk the dogs- Indonesians won’t do that.

Worse of all, who will teach the boys English or doing homework from infancy when mothers is either out to work or Hi-tea sessions.

Hospitals will be full of sick Patients with not enough nurses… The scenes will be like ‘ The Walking Dead season one” Besides, Singaporean nurses will only pull a long face to you while China nurses will scold you.

Are Singaporeans suffocating with too many Indians and Pinoys?… I don’t think so.

I have absolutely no concerns as long as i know what I am ordering

This is crucial

The Chinese make so many products that if I don’t know what I am ordering, I could end up with something radically different

Take Fabric Laser Machines

You can buy one for 6,500 Yuan

You can buy one for 65,000 Yuan

One is used for Cheap Fabrics

One is used for the Finest Materials

You have machines from 6,500 Yuan to 80,000 Yuan ($ 852 to $ 10,665)

You have to know what Machine you are ordering and at what discount

Sometimes you confirm an order of 30 Machines at 7,200 Yuan , then you demand a discount citing problems and ask for 6,200 Yuan each

The Chinese will replace your order with a lower end model

So basically no Indian tactics

We are famous at this

First we order, place a deposit and then we make excuses and say “Demand is low” and force a discount

If you do that the Chinese will screw you without a seconds hesitation


FOB vs CIF

This is a common mistake

FOB means the Chinese loads your goods and it’s your baby from the minute the goods are in the cargo area of the ship

CIF means the Goods are the Exporters Baby until they are stored in a Warehouse in Mumbai

Cost is different

A Machine with 7,200 FOB would be 8,100 CIF

We Indians don’t look at FOB and we immediately start crying when the Chinese demand 900 Yuan extra for the machines for Insurance and Freight


That’s it

Nothing else

Best to visit your Exporter the first time you place an order

All the Time in the World

Submitted into Contest #283 in response to: Write a story that ends with a huge twist. view prompt

Patti Pierucci

By Patti A. Pierucci

 

(Author’s Note: The protagonist of this story, Dr. Anton Mellick,

also appears in the author’s full-length book The Hand of Maud.)

 

“There are really four dimensions, three which we call the three planes of Space,

and a fourth, Time.”

 

H.G. Wells, The Time Machine Mrs. Russell gave three quick taps on the door, then opened it and stuck her head in. “I’m leaving now, doctor. I left a pot of soup on the stove for you,” she said with a slight wave of her hand. “Good night; see you on Monday.”

“Alright, then. See you in the morning.” Anton Mellick—Ph.D., chairman of the Physics Department at Silverleaf Institute of Science, professor emeritus of physics at Mount Sterling University, and author of The Clockwork Chronicles: Black Holes, Wormholes, & The Space-Time Continuum—was standing in his office, a small room attached to the front of his expansive laboratory building, when Mrs. Russell, his housekeeper, poked her head in to say good night. He heard her footsteps clack-clacking outside on the pavement, then the car door opening and shutting, then the engine starting, then her car driving away.

 

Mellick had an ideal laboratory for his experiments. He had constructed a large, industrial-sized building behind his home. It took several months and contentious meetings with town officials to get a zoning variance and building permits to erect a structure this large, sixty feet square made of high-tensile steel and a flat, metal roof twenty feet high. There were no windows—to obstruct prying eyes.

 

It will be an eyesore, the neighbors had objected. A monstrosity, they told the town officials. So, in the interest of preserving neighborhood harmony—as well as his privacy—he agreed to construct a fence to shield the neighbors’ easily offended eyes from his lab. He had refused to back down on using steel in its construction, though. He needed the entire facility to be fireproof, just in case.

 

As soon as Mellick heard Mrs. Russell’s car driving away, he walked toward the door at the rear of his office, unlocked it—he always kept it locked—opened it, and stepped into his laboratory. In the center stood his Chrono Navigator. He had refused to call it a time machine; that was a name coined by H.G. Wells and used ad nauseum in movies and books ever since Wells’s book, The Time Machine, was first published in 1895. Mellick had almost called his time machine the Flux Capacitor as a wink-wink homage to the Back to the Future films but thought that would be too playful for so serious a machine.

 

The doctor considered The Time Machine to be a brilliant tale of time travel, an exciting story filled with action, romance, weighty significance, and a hopeful ending. But Wells’ description of how his time machine worked was utterly ridiculous—not that he blamed H.G. Wells, not in the least. Wells had conjured up a vivid description of his time machine. “I gave it a last tap, tried all the screws again, put one more drop of oil on the quartz rod, and sat myself in the saddle,” Wells wrote. “I took the starting lever in one hand …” Yes, Wells’s account of time travel was a spellbinding tale when it first landed in readers’ hands, yet no one actually believed in time travel. They didn’t know that time travel, at least in theory, was real. Wells, a scientist and visionary, didn’t know it, either. He had imagined the entire thing. It was science fiction back then, nothing more. Then, a mere decade later, comes Albert Einstein and his Theory of Relativity.

 

Mellick had devised a simplified, almost childlike, presentation to describe time travel to those who expressed interest. Few expressed interest, though. Most laughed at him, and he was the target of ridicule among the community of physicists he chaired at the university. Yes, he was the department head, and they answered to him, but they mocked him endlessly. “Glad to see you this morning,” commented one of the professors, Dr. Rudolph Whitaker, just the other day. “I expect one day you’ll just disappear into the future, and we’ll never see you again. Say, Anton, if you could somehow get a message to me about what stocks to pick, I’d be so grateful.” And then he had laughed, and his colleagues had laughed, and Mellick joined in, too—just to show he had a good sense of humor.

 

But it wasn’t funny. It was his life’s work. And it was real, he knew it.

Come to think of it, only children found his explanation believable. They had a fascination with what others called fantasy. So, on those occasions when Mellick was asked to speak to school children, he would explain it this way: As a person move faster through space, time slows down compared to a person who is not moving. If you could travel at speeds close to the speed of light, time would pass so much slower for you than for people on Earth, and you could travel into the future. Theoretically, of course. Then he would add a fact or two about wormholes. A wormhole, he would tell them, is a shortcut through space-time. Traveling through a wormhole could allow you to move even more quickly between two different times.

Of course, there’s a lot more to it than that, but why confuse their little brains? They only want to hear how exciting it could be to travel through time. “Could you go back to the year Hitler was born and kill him as a baby?” All the children ask this question. The moral dilemma of killing babies pre-emptively to prevent them from growing up to be killers never enters their ghoulish minds. But, he reminded himself, at least they listen to him and want to believe.

Now he stood before the Chrono Navigator. He didn’t want to waste time. With Mrs. Russell gone, he was on his own for the weekend and had the rare opportunity to experiment on himself as often as possible. He had failed dozens of times to move objects, including himself, even a few seconds back or forth in time. At first he had tried putting common things—first a stapler, then a toaster, then dozens of other insignificant objects, then finally himself—inside the chamber, setting the timer for minutes into the future. Then he tried to reverse it and go back in time by a few minutes.

 

All of them failed.

 

But for the past three years he had worked on refining the two laser lights on either side of the chamber. Previously, Mellick had constructed the lights to move in a straight line toward each other, filling the chamber with light. But when that didn’t work, he realized he needed the light to be moving, so he created circulating beams of laser light. The rotation of the light should twist space-time to make a loop of time. Theoretically.

 

Mellick looked at his machine and smiled. He was exhilarated. His heart beat faster, and his hands trembled as he placed protective glasses over his eyes. This would be the first time trying the Chrono Navigator since he had refined the laser lights. He would not put another household object into the machine; he was going in himself.

He stepped inside the chamber and flipped the switch to turn on the laser lights. They began to spin in a circular motion, creating loops that whirled around and around. The motion was smooth, almost hypnotic.

 

Next, he set the timer to go back in time three minutes. Three minutes ago, Mrs. Russell was driving away. The time on his clock, erected on the wall of the lab outside the Chrono Navigator’s chamber, read 5:07. Post meridiem.

 

Mellick then looked carefully at the three start buttons positioned in a triangular formation around the inside of the chamber, about waist high. All three had to be pushed within five seconds of each other for the Chrono Navigator to work, a failsafe against someone finding his machine and trying to travel through time. A failsafe in the event he, Mellick, changed his mind and wanted to abort the travel.

 

He took a deep breath and pushed the first button. More lights began to spin within the chamber. He turned to the next one and pushed it. Another beam of circulating light began to spin. He was getting dizzy.

 

Wait … he was getting dizzy! That had not happened before. It must be working!

 

Quickly, he hit the last button, and the chamber filled with spinning light. He felt another wave of dizziness, and his stomach lurched. His vision blurred, his balance faltered, and the queasiness intensified. He reached out his arms to brace himself, and finally, mercifully, the spinning stopped. He collapsed on the floor of the chamber, crouching like a dog, as he tried to gain control over the waves of nausea roiling through his gut.

 

Panting and sweating, Mellick noted that all the lights had stopped spinning. Slowly the sickness passed. Still on his knees, he opened the chamber door and looked up at the clock.

 

No! No! Not again! He had failed.

 

The clock appeared to have the same time as when he left, 5:07, though his vision was blurred, and his head was still spinning. The minute hand seemed to have a life of its own, swaying up and down until Mellick had to close his eyes.

 

Failed again. Failed.

 

A wave of frustration crashed over Mellick, as if the ground beneath him shifted. Disappointment, exhaustion, and self-doubt washed over him, drowning him in a wave of self-pity and confusion. What went wrong? What could possibly have gone wrong this time? Was it the circulating laser lights? He had worked for months to perfect them. Was it—

 

There was a knock on the door to his office. Three soft raps. Unsteadily, he stood up and walked to the door to his lab. He walked into the office, closing the lab door behind him and locking it. Then he glanced outside the office window and saw Mrs. Russell’s car parked in the driveway. She must have returned! Why? What brought her back? Had she seen something?

 

The door opened a crack and Mrs. Russell said, “I’m leaving now, doctor. I left a pot of soup on the stove for you. Good night; see you on Monday.” She gave a little wave of her hand and closed the door.

Yes, friends of mine, a married couple with two kids, won over $1 million in the lottery when they were in their early 40s. They took the annuity payments, if I’m remembering right, $30,000 a year for 30 years.

It didn’t change them at all. It helped them pay the mortgage on their nice, but not opulent, home, remodel their kitchen, and put their kids through college, but they both kept working, and remained the kind, wonderful people they had always been. E, the wife, died suddenly several years ago in her early 50s, and she was the primary breadwinner, so the extra money has helped her husband out since. Both kids are now grown and on their own.

I think taking the annual payments was wise. You don’t get enough money at once for you to go crazy spending, although these were both sensible people anyway, and not the sort to go for extravagance, but you get enough every year to still be very helpful, and you ensure that you will continue to have that extra income for decades. You can’t blow through a million dollars when you only get it in increments.

I was born in South Korea and have lived here for 19 years. As a high school student, I deeply felt the dark side of my country.

The education system here is killing students.

If you ask students in South Korea: “How long do you study?”

High school students: at least 12 hours (regular classes) to more than 20 hours

Junior high school students: at least 8 hours (regular classes) to more than 14 hours

Elementary school students: at least 6 hours (regular classes) to more than 14 hours

I think it’s quite normal for junior high and high school students, but for elementary school students? I mean, I think they should just study for 6 hours (regular classes) and they have the right to play with friends in the rest of their free time.

However, after school is over, the majority of students (say 8 out of 10) go for courses and go home at night (8–10 pm {elementary school students}, 10–12 pm {junior high school students}, 11–1 pm {high school students}). Some courses even end at 2–3 am (usually for high school students). Do you know the real reason they study like this?

Nowadays, there are so many unemployed people, and that is true. So, only selected students, who have good careers can survive in this competitive world. There are 3 famous universities, Seoul National University, Yonsei University and Korea University. All students aspire to enter at least one of them. They study hard because it is a matter of deciding their future and life. So, they risk their lives by studying. I am sure some of you have seen the news about suicide in South Korea. Yes, South Korea is ranked first in suicide cases and last in happiness. But this is obvious because who will feel happy and joyful when they study every day by sharing machines? Every day, we students go to school and every day we study, study and study until all the lights in the building are turned off. We cried and there were times when we didn’t want to study but after that we were worried about the future that we had to face. We thought about committing suicide because of the very heavy burden and worried that we wouldn’t be happy even though we had successfully entered the university. Students study without emotion for almost 12 years (until the age of 19 or so) and enter the university. So in the 12th year (when we are 19 years old) is a very important phase where we have to face the university entrance exam, usually called 고 3 = Go 3 (In Korea, high school students are called “GoDeungHakSaeng” which is an abbreviation of high school students). You can search for “고 3” on Youtube

and there are some videos where they are tired and afraid of their future.

I hope that the education system in my country will change from ” compulsory education ” to ” voluntary education” where students can learn what they want and have fun while they learn.

Misc Fun

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Inspiration in the Park

Submitted into Contest #283 in response to: Write a story with the line “I wasn’t expecting that.” view prompt

John Steckley

The wooded area in the local park was my favourite place to go to when I was but a lad, living a short walk away. I spent many hours on my own there, but I did not for a second feel that I was alone. I felt welcomed there every time. The trees were my best friends, particularly the cluster of cedars.In fact it was a place that gave me confidence in myself. 
When I was ten years old, I felt the attraction of becoming a writer. 
No one knew that I had that feeling, certainly not any family members or friends. And when I went to the park, ideas for stories appeared to me beginning with blue waves of beginning words appearing in my head.   They initiated tales about aliens in my head.
I received no support from my English teachers.  Several of them demonstrated with their commentary that they did not even like what I had written. They said that my stories were way too unreal, too far-fetched to have anyone accept the basic premises they were based on. Fortunately, although that shocked me at first, I learned to ignore their commentary. I am so glad I did.
I would have never been published if I had taken their negativism for truth. I submitted my first story to a local newspaper in my small town.   It was for the Christmas issue. I came up with an idea for a kind of supernatural story after taking a walk in what would become my inspiration place. I did not tell my English teacher of the time, even though he encouraged his students to enter the contest, offering to make suggestions before they submitted their piece. I was not going to let him insist that I make changes in it, and generally put my work down. He did not like that I only wrote stories about aliens.I liked the story just as it was. And I was not the only person to do so. The editor of the paper loved it, and published it the week after the contest had ended.   I even received some money for the piece, and I was termed the ‘winner’ of the contest, even though several of the other stories were published as well – none of them written by my fellow high school students.My English teacher of the time did not comment in class when school opened up again in January. Later I heard two teachers talking about the fact that he had submitted his own short story, but had not been published. When they thought that I wasn’t looking and listening (I have very good hearing), they pointed at me and one of them said, “That boy over there was the winner.”After I graduated from high school, I applied for the English Literature program. They accepted me, certainly not because of my marks from my always always critical teachers, but because I had won the contest, and had since published several short stories in several literary magazines, all of them about aliens, and all inspired by trips to the park.I would have no idea what I was going to write about until I was in my special part of the park. Once there, voices inside me started my stories. Nowhere else did that for me.My First BookIn the summer after my initial year of university, I wrote my first book. To no surprise to me, my family and my friends, it carried a story of the presence of aliens on earth. It was easier to write such a long work than I ever thought it would be. My summer job was in a factory not far away from the park of my inspirations. I could and did walk to it in my lunch break, always carrying a pen and paper to copy down the ideas about the story that would come to me as I sat on a stump and ate the lunch my mother had prepared for me.Pretty much every day I had to finish eating my mom’s sandwiches while walking back to work. And her sandwiches are great! The ideas that flowed into my head took precedence.That book became a series about a particular group of aliens. By the time that I graduated with my English Literature degree, there were four books in the series. The last one was the longest, and was very much the hardest one to stop writing. I stayed in the park overnight, because I could not walk away from my source of inspiration.Another series began and ended in graduate school, this time with four books. More nights were spent in the park. I brought a tent, which when not used I hid in the underbrush.When I graduated I soon applied to and received a teaching position at a high school in town, but not the one with the English teachers that undervalued my work. I did not want to have anything to do with them.

I soon became known as the ‘Find a Place’ professor, as I told my students about how the place I had found had been such an influence on all of my writing. A good number of my students tried to find their own place for writing inspiration. It helped some of them, one of whom said to me with some excitement as he walked, almost skipping, into the classroom ‘it worked, it worked’. Not one have published as yet, but I think that it is just a matter of time before a few of them do.

Seeking a Vision

It has been a while now since I have done any writing. But that should not be a surprise to me, as I haven’t been able to get to the park in over a month. I have had to spend a lot of time marking, and being with my newly-married wife. She knows about my link with the park, and has suggested a few times that I should go there, but I thought that I should dedicate my ‘spare time’ with her in the early days of our being married.

Then she insisted. The timing was right. I had sat at my desk at work, and my desk at home with no results in writing: sentences written were soon crossed out. I had a strong desire to go to the park and be inspired.

I walked into the park, the cedars blowing in a slight wind as if they were waving me hello. I looked up at their uppermost branches, which had earlier been a guaranteed inspiration. Words appeared in my mind, and I had an inspiration to write another alien story, maybe even a book. I began writing. Then I felt compelled to look up once more. I could not believe my eyes. There were shadowy blue creatures near the top of the trees, aliens obviously. I was not expecting that.

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Yes. I was at a neighborhood convenience store, to get a soda, and an elderly lady was sitting in her 15 year old station wagon, with the hood up. I asked her what was wrong, and she told me it had leaked water from a hose. I looked, and a hose had developed a leak, right next to the hose clamp. There was enough slack that I was easily able to remove the clamp, cut off the damaged part of the hose, put the hose back on, and tighten the clamp. There was a faucet, so I filled the radiator. She asked what she owed me, and I told her she owed me nothing; I’d hope that someone would help my mother if she was stranded. We almost had an arguement about it, and I finally let her give me $10 for gas money. When I went in the store, the loafers asked me how much I got from her, and I said that I didn’t want anything but she made me accept $10. They told me who she was; one of the most wealthy people in the county. She would have paid $50, or 100. I said that made no difference. I just had seen a lady a little older than my mom, who needed a little help. I’d have done it for nothing, since I had no idea who she was.

Having read my answer, again, due to another upvote, I was compelled to add that even had I known who she was, it wouldn’t have changed my actions. It may have taken me 10 or 15 minutes, at the absolute most, to help her, and took very little effort. I still wouldn’t have said she owed me anything.

You NEVER ever, EVER do this to a man… let alone your husband.

Of course… he would leave.

BBQ Quesadillas

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Yield: 16 servings

Ingredients

  • 8 (6 to 7 inch) flour tortillas
  • 3 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves (about 12 ounces), cooked and thinly sliced
  • 1/2 cup BBQ sauce
  • 1/2 cup green bell pepper, chopped
  • 1/4 cup onion, chopped
  • 4 ounces (1 cup) Cheddar and Monterey Jack cheese blend, shredded
  • Vegetable oil

Instructions

  1. Heat oven to 425 degrees F.
  2. Place chicken in a bowl and add BBQ sauce. Toss to coat.
  3. Place 4 tortillas on a cookie sheet lined with foil, or for best results, a Pampered Chef 15-inch baking stone. Spread the chicken mixture evenly over tortillas; top each with with an equal amount of bell pepper and onion. Evenly sprinkle cheese over top. Top each with a second tortilla. Lightly brush oil over tops.
  4. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes or until tops are lightly browned. Cool 5 minutes.
  5. Cut into wedges with a knife or PC Pizza Cutter.

Attribution

Pampered Chef

Sent to me…

Good read, and watch the video. From a follower in South Korea.

...here's some detailed background concerning what happened in SKorea, and is still ongoing. 

I've heard from my own source that if this had worked, it'd likely have been used as a template to militarily take over other US muppet states (and thus repress democratic processes from removing US stooges in government-

- for example, they're getting concerned about Germany voting to restore relationships with Russia-

- quaxx casualties are also getting harder to conceal and desperate measures are being discussed, particularly in Australia...) 

as preparations are made for total war with Russia China. (Good luck with that!) 

Fyi, anyway. Interesting details. 

This website posts good stuff about SKorea more generally that you also may find useful on occasion-- rather than the US propaganda that's usually available in English, and which most Koreans lap up for breakfast. 

They've had information about SKorea available to international audiences pinned down for decades-- but now the bullshit facade is crumbling and the masks are off, as they are in the other *liberal democracies*. 

Best, xx

https://www.kpolicy.org/post/how-yoon-planned-to-set-south-korea-on-the-path-to-military-dictatorship