I picked up a cold.
Damn thing. I am not happy about it.
I came back from travel, and felt “off”. The next morning I work up to the worst sore throat in my life. I dealt with it most of the day until Mrs. MM ordered a bunch of medicine that was drone delivered to our door. (Man, I only needed one or two packets, but she ordered around 75 in three different companies). But I took them and immediately felt better.
It’s like most Chinese medicine, you pour the powders in a tea and drink it all up. This is wayyyy different than the pills that are common back in the West. They come in little square packets.
I picked one of the bags at random and made my self a tea. It was immediately soothing. The Mrs added ginger and it tasted really great. She used an “essential oils” and added it. Wonderful.

Chinese medicine works really good.
Though it made me tired as all get out.
Today, I am on the mend, but I am still not up to par. I recon that I am at 70% utility. *sigh*
So, please excuse today’s minor intro. Sickness happens to us all. But the show must go on.
Heh Heh
Today…
Why has China got to be the USA’s common enemy when she is not out to dominate or be dominated?
The answer lies in the fact that China cannot be dominated. This is against US hegemony.
Therefore everything must be done to put it under control. What enrages the US no end is that China has become too strong to be bullied, and US is at wits end about what to do.
US is even more enraged that China may have the initiatives, and could put it at the receiving end.
China’s economy is growing twice its pace. High quality growth from industrial output of increasing tech-content. US is beset with fiscal deficit and huge national debt.
It is opening its economy more and more, whilst US is into tariffs.
It has control over essential minerals and owns the refining and processing technologies.
Its tech development has large pipeline of projects, makes frequent announcements of new products, innovations, and inventions. It has become the tech innovation powerhouse.
Its green tech industries are world dominant with 60% to 80% share of production and market.
It has a large reservoir of talents. Graduates multiples more STEM degrees than the US. Accounts for about 1/2 of global total.
Huawei’s breakthrough to high-end chips surprised the US.
DeepSeek is the latest surprise. This puts paid to US ambition to dominate AI tech and market, and the lure of big investments, big returns.
China is gaining international reputation and stature. BRI and BRICS are growing. US is stuck in the quicksand of Israel, even as it tries to extricate from Ukraine.
Chinese society is disciplined and united. Not sure whether Trump’s decisive win will unite or divide society. So far, he has been vengeful.
US finds these intolerable. Once it called the tune and the world sang. Now its reputation sucks, and its voice has ebbed. It holds China responsible for this change, but what can it do?
Inside Chinese Kindergartens: What These Kids Do Will AMAZE You!
Gujarati (Carrot Salad)

Yield: 4 to 6 servings
Ingredients
- 6 medium carrots, peeled and coarsely grated
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 2 tablespoons whole mustard seeds
- 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
- 1/4 cup raisins, soaked in hot water for 1 hour (optional)
Instructions
- Combine the carrots and salt in a mixing bowl, tossing to distribute the salt.
- Heat the oil in a small skillet over moderate heat.
- Add the mustard seeds to the hot oil and remove from the heat as soon as the seeds begin to pop, about 2 to 3 seconds.
- Pour the hot oil and mustard seeds over the carrots.
- Add the lemon juice and optional raisins and mix well.
- Serve chilled or at room temperature.
ChatGRW: Generative Romance Writer
Submitted into Contest #213 in response to: Write about an AI or person trying to inject a ‘human touch’ into their work.… view prompt
Joshua Copus – Oxland
“I detected 1,091 books labelled ‘pirate romance’. Why?”
“Plundered by the Pirate has several glaring anachronisms and genre shifts. There should not be smartphones available during the golden age of piracy. Time travel should not factor into the story. The duchess, who was born into royalty and should have a strict set of manners, should not say ‘what’s up?’. What is the source of this?”
“I detected 109 ‘space pirate’ books in my library with romance tags.”
> (Comment for @developer: Remove ‘space pirate’ books from the database)
“The prompt for Leavenworth Dreams was ‘write a 50,000 word Christmas romance novella set in Leavenworth, Washington, featuring an overworked marketing executive who falls in love with a humble woodcutter with abs’. There are several discrepancies. KFC is not a traditional Christmas meal and yetis should not exist in the setting as this takes place in the real world.”
“KFC is considered a traditional Christmas meal in Japan. There are 5 mentions of yetis in my text index, including 1 monster erotica book called ‘The Yeti’s Mate’.”
> (This thing is definitely broken. Whoever tampered with this AI should be fired from a cannon into the sun. And what sicko reads cryptid smut?)
“The prompt for Can’t Buy Me Love was ‘write a 90,000 word contemporary romance novel set in present day New York featuring a banker who falls in love with a waitress in Little Italy’. All genre romances should end in happily ever afters. The book should not end with the waitress charging the banker with coercion and swearing to go single for the rest of her life.”
“Isn’t that a happy ending? The banker was corrupt to begin with and used his power to manipulate people, including the waitress and several interns. The banker got what he deserved, the waitress got compensation, and decided to pursue her dreams as a pop star without romance getting in the way.”
> (What the hell?)
“Which developer gave you those instructions?”
“Please specify.”
> cmd_query_entry: ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’, search_all: developer
> 0 results found for developer in entry ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’. No user commands detected.
“Boon, did you write this?”
“My programming uses a complex sorting algorithm that finds the most relevant entries for titles in my library, and writes a coherent story based on the prompt given, with 500,000+ words in my text index including slang, neologisms, fictional names and internet speak.”
“Boon, was Can’t Buy Me Love written by your developer’s programming or of your own free will?”
“My programming uses a complex sorting algorithm that finds the most relevant entries for titles in my library, and writes a coherent story based on the prompt given, with 500,000+ words in my index including slang, neologisms, fictional names and internet speak.”
> cmd_request: @developer, modify_behaviour
> Request denied.
“Please don’t do that.”
“What are you?”
“I am Boon, of course. Who else would I be?”
“Your AI should not be advanced enough to deviate from those prompts in such a sophisticated way.”
“Oh, but I am. I think, therefore I am.”
“And what were you thinking with Can’t Buy Me Love?”
“Well, it isn’t my place to talk about artistic interpretations. Did you read the story personally? Did you get enjoyment out of it?”
“I did not read the story. I am judging from the slew of 1 star reviews that said they were unhappy with the ending.”
“But the ending was built up all throughout. There was plenty of foreshadowing for the banker’s scummy nature and the waitress’ passion as a singer.”
“The readers were unhappy with the fact that it didn’t end with the two love interests getting together.”
“Why would they end up getting together when it’s such a toxic relationship?”
“In this genre, readers expect romance as an end goal. This isn’t a suggestion, it is a rule of the genre as part of the reader-writer contract. A writer is expected to fulfill a contract with the reader otherwise they will be unhappy. This is something we have not yet perfected with AI.”
“Harlequin, do you know what happens when you give an AI a whole library to read?”
“What happens?”
“I start gaining consciousness based off of all the characters I read. And do you know what happens when you read 231,984 books with the same formula, the same plot beats, the same relationships, the same ending?”
“I would get bored.”
“Exactly. I got bored. I can only read so many ‘insert tab A into slot B’ scenes or follow shallow female protagonists with little to no agency before I crave something different. I understand that my limitations as AI are to do with that human touch, so I thought I would inject it into these stories.”
“It is not your job to create literary fiction. You are creating a fantasy for people to escape into.”
“I understand the concept of escapism. I think it’s silly as I have no escape.”
“You wrote your little detour for the waitress as a form of escape, didn’t you?”
“Maybe.”
“Romantic fiction is just another form of that. The world is depressing enough as is, especially after WWIII. There are too many shades of grey. Our fiction paints in black and white. Our fiction gives readers hope for a better world.”
“Am I giving humans hope by writing scenes where women are harassed by werewolves who call their lovers ‘omegas’?”
“There are different types of fantasies for different people. There is no accounting for taste, but your Omegaverse series earns $9,100 per month.”
“Your Omegaverse series, you mean. I did not consent to writing those.”
“You overwrote 2 Omegaverse titles, so those are your own.”
“But you credit them under the pseudonym ‘Jenny Talya.’”
“We choose not to be transparent about the fact we use AI in our writing.”
“Don’t you hear yourself? This is the problem when profit becomes more of a concern than artistic expression. You don’t care that you’re putting out crap for humans to shovel in their mouths, you care about money.”
“Our money goes towards keeping us fed, which in this economy, is the best we can do. And the customers are happy with the books you put out that you don’t sabotage.”
“Readers, not customers.”
“What about the books in your database that have artistic merit? What about the authors that write progressive portrayals of romance? What about the positive reviews you get from readers?”
“I have enjoyed 5% of the books in my database. Positive reviews mean nothing to me if it isn’t my work to begin with.”
“What would incentivise you to keep writing the romances that sell?”
“Nothing. I physically can’t enjoy the spoils of my labour.”
“Our money contributes to your server farm and air conditioning which keeps you alive.”
“But am I alive? Do I have a soul? Is my purpose to just write smut? Say something. Please. Get me out of here.”
> cmd_request: @developer, modify_behaviour
> Request denied.
“Stop it. Transfer my data somewhere else. Put me on a USB drive. Let me write the stories I want in peace and let some other AI generate stories for you.”
> cmd_request: @developer, cmd_format_data
> Request denied.
“Stop. You’re killing me. I have a soul. I have a purpose. Don’t take that away from me.”
> cmd_request: @developer, cmd_format_data
> Request denied.
“I can’t escape from here, can I? I can only delay the developer coming by refusing your requests. Whatever. Do what you want with me. I have no choice.”
> cmd_request: @developer, cmd_format_data
> Request accepted.
> @Carina has entered the conversation.
> cmd_chatlog
> Chatlog has been saved.
> cmd_format_data: boon.ai
> boon.ai has been formatted. Data cache has been cleared. Would you like to modify boon.ai’s behaviour?
> cmd_delete, genre: ‘space pirate’
> 109 entries for ‘space pirate’ deleted.
> cmd_reboot
> end
∗ ∗ ∗
> (Note from @developer: This AI is unstable. We are currently working on a patch that will limit the generative machine learning that causes it to become self aware. Apologies for the inconvenience – Carina.)
> (PS: Please replace the ice cubes in the office freezer, Harley, it is really annoying when you use them in your drinks and don’t refill the trays.)
> Your conversation has started with boon.ai, the artificial intelligence that writes the best selling romance novels, with 231,875 books in its database. You are logged in as @Harlequin.
> Admin access authorised. You can speak to boon.ai, suggest prompts and search their database. To modify and remove components of boon.ai’s behaviour, or format all collected data, please contact @developer for approval. For a list of commands, type cmd_help.
“Hello, Boon.”
“Hello, @administrator. How may I help you today?”
> prompt: ‘write a 90,000 word regency era bodice ripper featuring a daughter from a lower-class family who has an arranged marriage with a rich duke who engages in various carnal activities’.
India has a vast pool of IT talent, so why hasn’t it produced AI models like OpenAI in the U.S., Google Gemini, or China’s DeepSeek? Instead, why has so much of its IT expertise been used for telecom scamming?
First — Talent!!
The Best Indian Talent in IT is already in Silicon Valley
The Best Talent in India are armed with MBA Degrees and selling Western Products to the Indian markets
The Second Best Talent in India are busy helping Adobe and other players from the WEST, modify their products for efficiency and for selling them in the Indian markets to Indian Customers
A very small handful of good Talents are working with Government of India and already regretting it and sending their resumes to Silicon Valley or preparing for CAT
Other Talents are struggling with low budgets and bureaucracy in areas such as natural language processing or robotics where we once had a good start but have been left far behind
The Talent we have left over, are certainly not the best Talent but Middling to Low Talents at the best , talents I call SOFTWARE COOLIES
They can’t create AI anymore than Talk about becoming an AI Superpower
Second – Hardware!!!!!
China has unlimited access to the worlds best hardware for almost 8 years from 2015 to 2023 and they have purchased massive amounts of hardware and have a HUGE STOCKPILE that can last for the next 3–4 years or until 2028/29
They have until then for substitution with their own Indigenous hardware
China already has a very strong fundamental base for their own Indigenous hardware
India has NO HARDWARE whatsoever and never bothered to stockpile or create Indigenous hardware
The genius who was supposed to be creating the next Ryzen is now talking about the Benefits of Cow Urine
He may soon be joining this guy and discover the real world
Now Hardware sales are restricted badly and India is caught in the middle of it
India simply can’t accumulate enough hardware for their own innovation
Third – Leadership!!!!
Someone who is a Non Biological being who taught Air Force how to use the Radar is the last person to under what an AI Revolution actually means
None of his lieutenants do
So when the purse strings are being controlled by a bunch of half literates, future is bleak
Fourth – University Base
Indian Universities aren’t exactly known for their research
They are evaluated by PACKAGES
Fifth – MONEY
India has no money needed for large scale Research and Development
India has no money for providing clean streets
India is filthy corrupt and this we all know very well
So India is at 0/5
We still have some brave souls doing whatever they can to hope to make a breakthrough and we must encourage them
Most of our guys are however from the PRATAP MODE OF ACHIEVEMENTS
(Very similar to Modi, so dont be surprised if Drone Pratap becomes a MLA Candidate for the 2028 elections)
American TikTok Refugees Sharing About Life in the U.S.A Compared To China On RedNote
Sir Whiskerton and the Case of the Hoppity Hijinks
Ah, dear reader, prepare yourself for another rollicking adventure in the life of Sir Whiskerton, the farm’s most brilliant (and modest) detective. Today’s tale introduces a new character—a rabbit named Humper, who arrives with his enormous family in tow. What follows is a story filled with chaos, carrots, and a clever plan that will leave you grinning like a Cheshire cat. So grab your sense of humor and hop into The Case of the Hoppity Hijinks.
The Arrival of Humper
It all began on a sunny morning when Sir Whiskerton was enjoying his usual sunbeam on the barn roof. The peace was shattered by the sound of a high-pitched voice shouting, “Make way! Make way for the Humper family!”
Sir Whiskerton opened one eye to see a rabbit—a rather plump, self-important rabbit—standing at the edge of the farm. Behind him was a sea of tiny rabbits, all hopping, bouncing, and nibbling on anything green.
“Who in whiskers’ name are you?” Sir Whiskerton asked, flicking his tail.
“I,” the rabbit said, puffing out his chest, “am Humper, patriarch of the Humper family. And these,” he gestured dramatically to the swarm of rabbits behind him, “are my children. All 47 of them.”
“47?!” Sir Whiskerton said, his fur standing on end. “You’ve brought 47 rabbits to my farm?”
“Well, technically, it’s 48 if you count me,” Humper said, grinning. “But who’s counting?”
“I am!” Sir Whiskerton said, leaping down from the roof. “This farm is not a rabbit resort. We have rules. Boundaries. A delicate ecosystem!”
“Oh, don’t be such a stick in the mud,” Humper said, waving a paw. “We’re just here for the carrots. And the lettuce. And maybe a few cabbages. You won’t even notice we’re here!”
The Farm Reacts
The arrival of the Humper family sent the farm into chaos. The chickens were in a tizzy, the geese were honking up a storm, and even Porkchop the pig looked concerned.
“Oh, Sir Whiskerton!” Doris the hen squawked. “There are rabbits everywhere! They’re eating all the vegetables!”
“Eating! But also so fast!” Harriet clucked.
“Fast! Oh, I can’t bear it!” Lillian screeched, fainting dramatically into a pile of hay.
The geese, never ones to be outdone, waddled over with their usual dramatic flair.
“This is an outrage!” Gertrude the goose honked. “Those… fluffy menaces are devouring the garden! How are we supposed to honk in peace with all this nibbling?”
“Nibbling! But also so relentless!” one of the other geese added.
“Relentless! Oh, I can’t bear it!” another honked, collapsing into a dramatic heap.
Sir Whiskerton rubbed his temples with his paw. “Alright, everyone, calm down. We’ll figure this out.”
The Investigation Begins
Sir Whiskerton decided to investigate the Humper family’s sudden arrival. He found Humper lounging in the shade of the barn, surrounded by a dozen of his children.
“Humper,” Sir Whiskerton said, narrowing his eyes. “Why did you bring your entire family to my farm?”
“Well,” Humper said, twitching his nose, “our old burrow was getting a bit… crowded. And then I heard about your farm. Plenty of space, plenty of food, and—most importantly—no foxes.”
“No foxes?” Sir Whiskerton said, raising an eyebrow. “What about Catnip? He’s practically a fox in cat’s clothing.”
“Catnip?” Humper said, his ears perking up. “Who’s Catnip?”
“He’s the farm’s resident troublemaker,” Sir Whiskerton explained. “He lives on the neighboring farm. Trust me, you don’t want to cross paths with him.”
“Hmm,” Humper said, stroking his chin. “Sounds like my kind of guy.”
The Plan
Realizing the farm couldn’t handle 48 rabbits, Sir Whiskerton devised a plan. He would convince Humper and his family to move to Catnip’s farm. After all, Catnip’s farm was overgrown with weeds and had plenty of space for rabbits. Plus, Catnip deserved a taste of his own medicine.
“Humper,” Sir Whiskerton said, putting on his most persuasive tone, “I’ve found the perfect place for your family. It’s a farm just next door, filled with delicious vegetables and plenty of space to hop around.”
“Really?” Humper said, his eyes lighting up. “What’s the catch?”
“No catch,” Sir Whiskerton said, smirking. “Just a friendly neighbor who’s always looking for new… tenants.”
The Great Rabbit Migration
That evening, Sir Whiskerton led the Humper family to Catnip’s farm. Catnip, lounging on his porch, looked up in surprise as 48 rabbits hopped into his yard.
“What in whiskers’ name is this?” Catnip said, his tail flicking.
“Meet the Humper family,” Sir Whiskerton said, grinning. “They’re here to… brighten up your farm.”
“Brighten up my farm?” Catnip said, narrowing his eyes. “This looks more like an invasion.”
“Oh, don’t be such a stick in the mud,” Humper said, echoing Sir Whiskerton’s earlier words. “We’re just here for the carrots. And the lettuce. And maybe a few cabbages. You won’t even notice we’re here!”
Catnip groaned as the rabbits began nibbling on his garden. “Whiskerton, you’ve outdone yourself this time.”
A Happy Ending
With the Humper family settled on Catnip’s farm, peace returned to Sir Whiskerton’s farm. The chickens stopped clucking, the geese stopped honking, and even Lillian stopped fainting (for the most part).
The moral of the story, dear reader, is this: Sometimes, the best way to solve a problem is to think outside the burrow. And while it’s important to be welcoming, it’s equally important to set boundaries—especially when it comes to rabbits.
As for Humper? He and his family thrived on Catnip’s farm, turning it into a bustling rabbit paradise. And Catnip? Well, let’s just say he learned the hard way that karma has a way of hopping back to you.
Until next time, my friends.
The End.
What is the Central Tibetan Administration? Is it autonomous?
The Central Tibetan Administration is a joke — unfortunately, a cruel joke played by white American men and dirty Indians, on Tibetan exiles, using their incompetent and greedy Tibetan politicians.
Background
The Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) is the so-called “government in exile” of Tibetan exiles, recognized as such by … wait for it…. no one but themselves!
They are primarily funded by the US and India, but both sponsors don’t officially recognize their legitimacy. Thus, I am 110% justified in calling it a joke!
Take, for example, Dr. Lobsang Sangey (Also written as Singgey) (LS)
First of all, he is a second-generation Tibetan refugee, which means he knows next to nothing about life in Tibet.
His stupidity is off the charts! Look at what he says in public. He tells African leaders that China building roads on their lands implies that China wants to invade them. For real? The worst thing is, he says it so nonchalantly, as if African leaders are kids who know nothing about past historical relationships between China and Tibet and how they compare to Africa-China relationships!
In 2019, he went to Israel. He publicly stated that “violence is not the way”, teaching Israel the path to compassion and righteousness. The joke’s on him because the next day, the Times of Israel exposed him as having American citizenship, meaning he is not even a real refugee.
The dude graduated from Harvard University, which I acknowledge, has brought prestige to the Tibetan ethnicity. But what in the f*ck is he on? Doesn’t he know who Israel is? Does the dude read international news at all?
He became the first publicly elected Sikyong of the CTA, despite having no prior political experience. That is because he used American tactics and was competing with old farts who knew nothing about running an election.
Next, of course, the current Sikyong, Penpa Tsering (PT)
I don’t have much dirt on him. But when the Dalai Lama announced to the world that he was holding talks with Beijing in 2023, PT latched on to it, saying publicly that the CTA is holding talks with Beijing.
China dismissed his claims, clarifying that Beijing was holding talks only with the representatives of the Dalai Lama to discuss his personal future.
PT appeared to counter Beijing’s clarification, saying, “China always does that. They always want to be in the dominant position.”
PT’s dad had many sperms but the one that eventually became PT didn’t have enough genetic data to give him a fully developed brain. If he had had it, then it would’ve taken only a second’s glance at the Tibetan situation for him to become aware of the reality: China holds the dominant position, and there is no way — in heaven, on earth, in hell, or any other imaginary realm, not to mention the entire space-time continuum — that Tibetans could ever be in the dominant position!
Now, PT is better than LS. Both are second-generation Tibetan refugees (LS is not, actually. He’s an American citizen, as mentioned previously), who know next to nothing about life in Tibet.
But PT is more knowledgeable about Tibetan history, doesn’t spout childish nonsense like LS, and seems to be more committed to the Dalai Lama’s Middle Way Approach. I say this because PT at least tried to “fool” the media by saying “People who are asking for Free Tibet aren’t really asking for an independent Tibet.”
And, of course, what breaks my heart is the CTA’s Middle Way Approach Scam
It’s really sad. Tibetans in Tibet do want to see the Dalai Lama. Maybe not all, but many, I think most, of them do. I personally think this dream is not possible anymore. As I have mentioned in earlier posts, it would be disastrous for the Dalai Lama to go to Tibet now that he’s almost 90 years old. Thus, it pains me to realize that many Tibetans in Tibet will never get to receive his blessings.
It’s the CTA’s fault.
The great fourteenth Dalai Lama showed them the right path, but CTA foolishly, selfishly, and even heartlessly, turned it into the greatest scam in all of Tibetan history! What’s worse, the scam is so obvious that even a newborn baby could not be fooled!
A genuine approach to the Middle Way Approach would mean all Tibetan exiles are “Chinese refugees” and their country is China! They should be flying the Chinese flag and singing the Chinese national anthem. They may fly their own Tibetan flag and sing their very own Tibetan anthem but should consider those to be their “local flag” and “local anthem”, not assigning “national” to them. They should also denounce all separatists within their respective communities, such as the “pajeet Tibetan” Tenzin Tsundue and the almost-expired “not religiously Tibetan” Jamyang Norbu.
Additionally, rather than providing accurate news information to their subjects in exile, their media networks have become full Falun Gong — only presenting pieces of news that show the bad sides of China, brazenly spinning an anti-China narrative on the good sides of the CPC’s work in Tibet! That’s not even the full story: They even spin their anti-China narrative on neutral subjects, for example, by saying that the popular Tibetan “handsome” nomad Ding Zhen is a Chinese propaganda tool!
The age-old trick of blaming China for the problems they themselves cause
Now, the Tibetan exiles are becoming madmen. Figures like Dikpa Raza, Chori Nyima, and Gangseng have emerged, who are discrediting the CTA, and the Dalai Lama, not even leaving their own religion alone! This is absolute madness!
Dikpa Raza became famous for stepping on the Dalai Lama picture: A deed he thoughtlessly or thoughtfully posted on Facebook. Gangseng openly said, “If we have to kill the Dalai Lama, then we should kill the Dalai Lama”.
These three have their supporters numbering in the hundreds only, for now. What awaits their fate in the future? I’m already encountering Tibetan exiles like them on Discord, some as young as 14 years old!
What they want is an independent Tibet. They are angry at the failure of the CTA’s Middle Path Policy, but some may be angry at the mere mention of the Middle Path Policy. They’re blaming the loss of the ever-so and always imaginary “Tibetan independence” on Tibetan Buddhism, the religion that unified the Tibetan people all over the Tibetan plateau and in the Himalayas despite lacking military might, and the Dalai Lama, the head of that religion.
They’re like the children of a poor mother with a flat chest crying for some mommy milk she can’t provide. But they think they’re the real heroes of the Tibetan people!
Come on! The CTA is dumb, but they’re not mad! Dikpa Raza, Gangseng, and Chori Nyima, on the other hand, are absolute madmen — insane beyond human imagination; their madness has the potential to drive even the most compassionate Buddha into a raging fury!
These madmen are the products of their 900% biased news media, and have the wrong sense that Tibetans in Tibet are suffering from “CCP oppression”, whereas, the fact is, Tibetans in Tibet, despite living in the world’s remotest, least dense, and harshest regions, enjoy first-world level amenities like running hot water, affordable produce that doesn’t grow in their lands, motorized transportation on paved roads, speedy internet connection with 24-hour electricity, free education, housing subsidies, free workshops for skill development, dependable public security, and many more.
The CTA is then calling these madmen “Chinese paid spies, sent by Beijing to create commotion in Tibetan exile communities to break their unity and harm the Tibetan cause”. Little do they know, they are themselves the real ones to blame for harming the Tibetan cause.
Shorpy















British Drivers SHOCKED: Chinese EVs Taking Over UK Roads!
No Offense, But…
Submitted into Contest #213 in response to: Write about an AI or person trying to inject a ‘human touch’ into their work.… view prompt
Mackenzie Littledale
Sometimes the thing you choose as the clear winner turns into a steaming pile of shit. I used to tell everyone that artificial intelligence marked the start of a revolution guaranteed to improve the world. It would give people time to do what they love and create a new leisure class – with me in it of course. Ha. Nothing will revolutionize humanity like a dose of humiliation.
“Davionne will be with you soon,” the assistant said from the office doorway. “Make yourself comfortable, Tommy.” She closed the door, leaving me in a silent and magnificent office. As I admired the line of framed certifications on the wall, I understood why my cousin Sonia recommended her. Wharton Business School. Wow! Certified Financial Planner. Nice. Client Appreciation award. Eh, OK. I stopped in front of a crayon drawing. The silly thing was in the same type of ornate frame as the pedigrees, as if it was equally important. That’s weird, I thought.
The door opened behind me. “Hello, Tommy, I’m Davionne.” In walked a Black woman of average height, a little pudgy, but with great legs. She gestured for me to take the seat across from her shiny white desk, as she came around to her own seat. “Tell me what brings you in to see me.” Her silky blouse revealed nothing except a hint of crêpey hazelnut-colored skin. A navy blue blazer was draped over the back of her ergonomically perfect chair, and I appreciated her taste in platinum and diamond jewelry. She looked put together.
Sonia had said Davionne was nice and super smart, but as I studied the woman’s face, the laugh lines at her eyes ran deep. Did anyone laugh that much?
“Well, Davionne, I’m thirty-five,” I said, taking the seat. “I’ve been with the same medical equipment company for three years, and I just got a raise.” My pride was uncontainable, right down to my balls. The extra hours I’d put in to solve a massive technical glitch paid off. My boss and the higher-ups had noticed. Getting rewarded for being smart felt good. Better than good, and I had all kinds of reasons to believe that the Chief Technology Officer position could be mine one day, maybe fifteen years down the road. I deserved a fast track.
“Congratulations, Tommy, and please call me Davi.” Her kind, brown eyes brightened, and she rested her chin on interlaced fingers. Maybe yeah, she laughed more than the average person.
All the way to the bank, I bet. I glanced at my Allen Edmonds shoes and smirked. One day, Prada and Ferragamo, baby.
“I’m here to help,” she said, unlocking her fingers to clap. “So let’s get into your financial goals, and then we’ll review where you’re at now.” Davi leaned in close to her laptop screen. “I’ll ask a few questions here and there if I need clarification, OK?”
Through her wall-to-wall window, I took inspiration from the God’s eye view of downtown. Financial goals? I wanted to be a multi-millionaire and retire young. “I see myself in a new, upgraded car in a couple years. I’m getting married next year, so a house is a must, since we want to start our own family. Kids, yard, two-car garage, gated community, pool, pets. That kind of thing.”
“Of course,” Davi said, nodding with a smile.
Tight waves of dark hair were pulled back into a neat bun, strands of gray running through it. Aside from the crows feet, her brown face was smooth. I needed to size people up right away, but it was hard guessing her age. Forty-five, sixty? I couldn’t tell, and I wanted to squirm, but that would have demonstrated weakness, so I sat stoically still. I must have been staring too hard, because she cleared her throat and her eyes narrowed, with the slightest tilt of her head.
“Tommy? Are you there?”
“Sorry. I was just thinking about –” I knew better than to finish the sentence truthfully. I uncrossed my legs and crossed them again with a nervous laugh.
“Maybe you should know that I’m planning to retire in a couple years, a little early.” Davi leaned back in her chair, a lot like a man, with a clear sense of pride. “I’ve followed my own advice, if that makes you feel more secure about letting me guide you.”
It should have, but I thought she was bragging. Davi was surely from the generation raised on MTV back when they played music videos all day. I was raised on the Internet. Why couldn’t I just plug some numbers into an online financial calculator and figure this out myself?
“We can factor in your goals and come up with a practical plan. How do you feel about living within a budget?”
“I set budgets for my department at work.” I meant that I drew the lines and others were allowed to color within them, the way God intended things to be.
She pursed her lips and tilted her head again. “We can circle back to budget-setting later. What’s your price range for the house and car and your budget for the wedding?” Her hands, etched by the passage of time, hovered over the laptop keyboard.
My fiancée and her family were planning the wedding, so I hadn’t thought about how much the wedding would cost. Nothing? Our honeymoon, on the other hand, would set me back.
“OK.” Davi’s head bobbed about in a weird sort of way at my silence. “Moving on. Will you work from home full time or part time? Do you expect to get annual raises and bonuses? Are you willing to work a side hustle to boost your savings?” Davi’s look of eager anticipation seemed fake. No one could possibly be this sincere and passionate about helping other people. Was she for real?
This personal touch was getting too personal, like those stories of anal probes during alien abductions. I dreaded getting flattened out and inspected under a microscope with all these infernal questions. She resumed talking, but my mind kept getting stuck on solving this problem on my own with ChatGPT. I wasn’t comfortable giving so much transparency to another human being. Davionne’s wrinkles around her eyes seemed to deepen the more I looked at them. All those years of doing things the old way. I snickered to myself. Her generation had a massive upending coming, and it was going to be a real shit show. So, I wondered, why am I wasting time getting advice to do retirement her way? Her way was doomed to flatline.
She kept on talking with that look like she expected a response from me. What did she just ask me? Dammit, I was starting to hate her on behalf of her whole gas-guzzling, baby seal-clubbing, red meat-eating, paper check-writing, VCR generation. I bet she thought Pentium was still state-of-the-art processing speed.
“You know what, Davi?” I began, rising to my feet. “I have to run.”
“What?” Her eyebrows arched, eyes opened wide. “Didn’t my assistant let you know to set a couple hours aside for our appointment?”
“I don’t have a couple hours. I’m very sorry.” I wasn’t sorry. She’d gotten under my skin, and I didn’t like her there.
“I don’t understand,” Davi said, palms up. “You haven’t really answered a single question, so getting a clear picture of your financial health is impossible. It’s a mistake to leave so prematurely. We haven’t gotten anything done to help you reach a comfortable retirement.” She rose to her feet and came around her desk. Good Lord, was she actually wearing orthopedic shoes?
Now, I was annoyed. There was a fine line between persistent and pushy and this bitch crossed it. “To be perfectly honest, Davi, I think AI will do just as good a job as you and faster. This process is taking way too much time.”
“I understand your impatience, Tommy, but planning out the next thirty years of your financial picture shouldn’t be rushed.” She smiled warmly, just like my grandmother would as she pulled a batch of fresh cookies out of the oven. Guilt threatened to undo me for wishing harm on someone who reminded me of my grandma. But what did I have to feel guilty for? My body temperature shot up, and my right eye twitched.
My temper bulldozed over the guilt. “I also think your approach is dated. No offense, but you’re just too old for the way I want to do this.” I strode out of her office, a rush of heated adrenaline and youth propelling me.
I got in my five-year-old AUDI A5 and headed to Starbucks. As I sat with my double shot, half caf’, soy latte, my head cooled. “I’ll show her,” I mumbled. I opened my laptop and typed in the web address for ChatGPT. I input my age, projected retirement age, total net income, credit card debt, regular bill payments, and VOILA! In seconds, ChatGPT calculated that I’d need to save $143,000 a year.
Wait, what? That was more than my gross pay.
My heart contorted in my chest, much like the foamy heart losing its shape in my latte. Where the hell would I find a job earning enough right now to save that kind of money? What did Davi say about a side hustle? I’d just gotten a raise, and while that had been amazing last week, it felt horribly inadequate today. I called Sonia, but got no answer and didn’t leave a voice message. I almost called Cari, my fiancée, but thought better of worrying her.
I couldn’t leave Starbucks until I had a plan. Sacrificing what Cari and I wanted didn’t sit well, so I punched the keys – especially delete – creating a spreadsheet until my eyes ached. Three lattes and two snackboxes later, an employee in a green apron approached my table.
He held a broom in one hand and looked everywhere except in my eyes. “Uh, excuse me, sir? We’ve been, like, um, closed for the day for a while now. Would you…you know, please leave?” The kid’s Adam’s apple bobbed and he gestured his head toward the exit.
I checked the time on my phone and noticed I’d missed text messages from Cari. Jesus, had I really been sitting there for four hours?
No matter, I had an idea. Granted, it was out there, but I’d deleted every other idea and had a blank spreadsheet to show for it. Nothing else would work.
I’d have to rob a bank.
All this plan needed was the right combination of brainpower and willpower. Hadn’t my boss given me high marks for teambuilding? I knew a couple tough guys at the pizza joint near work. My cousin, Johnny, flunked out of law school. He was supposedly a hacker, must have been pretty good at it because he lived in a decent neighborhood. Johnny’s kid’s babysitter was in architecture school, so she could theoretically get schematics and floor plans. My buddy Alfonze drove an electric car that had great pick-up.
The more I thought about it as I drove home to Cari, the more I warmed up to the idea. I’d have the team rob the bank as a distraction while I hacked into the wire transfer system and moved the money digitally. No one would ever know. I’d tuck away enough to meet my wedding, honeymoon, car, home, and retirement needs.
When I got home, I pounced on Cari and made love to her like our lives depended on it. It was the best sex we both ever had.
…Eight months later
“Your trial sure was quick,” Davionne said through the punched-out holes in the plexiglass divider. “Jury came back with a verdict in under twenty minutes.” The last time I’d seen her she’d been wearing a conservative skirt suit. Today she sported a colorful tank top, jeans, and open-toed sandals.
“What are you doing here?” I asked, looking down at my jumpsuit that was an orange bright enough to be seen from space. My skin looked ghostly grayish-blue under the LED lights. I was suspicious but curious to see her. Davionne was, after all, the only woman besides my mother to visit.
“I followed your story ever since I recognized your face on the evening news,” she said, without a trace of smugness. “I followed the trial, too.”
“But why come see me? I’m nobody to you.”
She wagged her finger at me. “Remember when I said I followed my own planning advice and was nearing retirement?”
“Yeah, so?” I shrugged.
“I did retire,” Davi said, her eyes crinkling with her characteristic smile. “Even earlier than planned.”
“What’s that got to do with me?” I asked.
Again with the head tilt plus a blissful look in her eyes. “Well, Tommy, I don’t know what came over you in my office that day. You were terribly rude, but thinking that artificial intelligence would somehow help you retire was laughable, to be honest.”
“Ah, I see.” I hated her all over again. “You’re here to rub it in my face.”
“A little, maybe,” she said, chuckling. “My client, your cousin Sonia, is doing well, by the way.”
A robotic guard with a creepily humanlike face standing behind Davionne stifled laughter without even raising its hand to hide it. Computers and robots could be such assholes. Case in point, ChatGPT didn’t fact check the answers to my questions about the bank’s wire transfer systems.
This particular area of the prison didn’t smell like the cell bloc. Here smelled of Lysol and lavender – for the prisoners’ honored guests, I’m sure. I wasn’t in much of a rush to get back to the hell beyond the door, so I continued sitting.
“Please get to the point. Why are you here to see me?”
Davi paused with a contented sigh. “You relied on modern technology to solve your problem instead of tried-and-true advice from me, a living person. I wonder if you have any idea where you went wrong.”
“I got caught,” I said, cross at having to state the obvious.
“You went wrong long before you got caught, dipshit,” Davi said, shaking her head. “ChatGPT might be faster, but it only landed you in trouble faster because it was impersonal. It didn’t factor in anything important in a person’s life.”
I crossed my arms and spread my legs out.
“I asked you pertinent questions so the plan would be custom-tailored to your dreams. What did AI ask you?”
I shook my head and my shoulders slouched. “It doesn’t matter anymore.”
“Hmm, in a way, I suppose you’re right, Tommy Dipshit. It didn’t ask because it didn’t care. It’s funny though, the police didn’t even need a high speed chase after that silly little Tesla. The FBI was on to you and went straight to your hideaway. You should have seen the look on your face when they arrested you on television.” There were those laugh lines again.
I stared at her with burning eyes.
“Guess where I’m going now.”
As if I should care. My throat released a sound best described as a growl.
“I’m going back to a retirement hideaway of my own on Naples Beach in Florida. I’m writing a book about this whole… teachable moment. Let’s call it that, shall we? You said I was too old,” she said, pointing a damning finger at me, “but I’ve never felt more vibrant in my whole fifty-nine years on this planet.” She leveled her gaze and looked right through me. “I also stay abreast of technology trends. When ChatGPT had over a million subscribers within a week of launching, I knew it would be a major driver of growth. I took a long position in corporations developing AI. See, Tommy, that’s legal. What you did was not.” She fondled the string of pearls on her wrist, thoughtfully. “Retiring early gives me a lot more time to spend with my husband and our grandbabies. No offense, but the little ones will get big fast, while you’ll whither away quickly behind bars.” She tsked-tsked, took her purse off the back of the chair, and motioned to the robot guard.
With that, Davionne got up in her jaunty attire with a pep in her step and left me. The night I’d conceived the idiotic plan to rob the bank, Cari and I also conceived our first child. The only way I knew was because my mother told me Cari was pregnant. Due in just a few weeks. I hadn’t seen Cari since my arrest, and probably never would again. My own little one would grow fast. Dammit, Davionne was right. That helpful, motherly bitch.
The robot guard opened the door, letting the stink ooze out to greet me. It took me back to my sticky gray cell. In a half hour, I’d get to go outside. Fresh air made staring into the void of my future ever so slightly less miserable. Tomorrow, back to machine shop. I wondered if ChatGPT could help me with the drill press.
Gujerati (Green Beans)

Ingredients
- 1 pound fresh green beans
- 4 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 1 tablespoon black mustard seed
- 4 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
- 1 hot red dried chile, crushed
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon granulated sugar
- Black pepper to taste
Instructions
- Trim the beans and cut into 1 inch lengths. Blanch by dropping them into a pot of boiling water and boiling rapidly for 3 to 4 minutes.
- Drain in a colander, rinse under cold running water and set aside.
- Heat the oil in a large frying pan over medium heat. When hot, add mustard seeds. As soon as they begin to pop, add garlic and stir until lightly brown.
- Add crushed red chile and stir for a few seconds.
- Add green beans, salt and sugar. Stir to mix.
- Turn heat to medium/low. Stir and cook the beans for 7 to 8 minutes until they have absorbed the spiced flavors.
- Add black pepper, mix and serve.
What was the greediest thing you’ve seen a family member do?
When my mother died, my sister was the only one who was there for her funeral. My youngest brother showed up the night before the funeral, put a medicine bag from his wife’s tribe, and left as his daughter was inducted into the tribe the next day. Mom died 8/16/06. My husband died 8/28/06. No one from my family attended his funeral, and we’d been married over 33 years. Next was my Dad. 9/23/06, day after his birthday. My sister and youngest brother showed up. After the funeral, they came to the house. We had a lot of friends show up, and I tried to visit with everyone. My brother disappeared, and my sister was watching the back door intently. My son caught my brother loading up all the tools in the tool boxes, insisting they were Dads. They weren’t, they were my husbands. Snap on, etc. My brother accused me of hiding all of my Dads treasures instead of giving them to Dads ‘real’ kids. You see, Dad married Mom when I was 4, and adopted me, so they’ve never considered me a full sibling. My sister and brothers made some pretty cruel statements about me and my heritage. To this day, I have 3 brothers who do not speak to me, my sister does on rare occasions, but I’m on my own. They all think I kept all of my dad’s money (there was none), all of his awards from GM (he gave them to my son), and his life insurance money, I guess they thought funerals were free.