Greed and extortion have no place in a community

Ryukyu, or Okinawa as it’s called in Japan.

It was an independent island nation invaded by Japan and was supposed to gain its freedom after WWII, but the US killed its bid for independence during the Cold War, giving the island to Japan in exchange for an American base there to “contain” communism in Asia.

When the Japanese invaded, the Ryukyu ambassador kneeled for 3 whole days in front of the house of the Chinese foreign minister, pleading for Chinese intervention to save his people. He was ignored as China was too weak to wage a naval war. So the ambassador committed suicide and cut his own throat in the street of Beijing. His bones are still here and we still honor our debt to him, as people of Ryukyu are still protesting against American and Japanese occupation to this day.

Sir Whiskerton and the Case of the Egg-stortion Ring

Ah, dear reader, prepare yourself for another egg-citing adventure in the life of Sir Whiskerton, the farm’s most brilliant (and modest) detective. Today’s tale involves a dastardly scheme by Catnip’s associates—a rat and a mouse—who decide to run an extortion ring targeting the hens and their precious eggs. What follows is a story filled with laughs, clucks, and a moral that will leave you grinning like a chicken who just outsmarted a fox. So grab your sense of humor and let’s scratch into The Case of the Egg-stortion Ring.


The Egg-stortion Begins

It all began on a quiet morning when Sir Whiskerton was enjoying his usual sunbeam on the barn roof. The peace was shattered by the sound of Doris the hen squawking at the top of her lungs.

“Oh, Sir Whiskerton!” Doris cried, flapping her wings. “We’re being extorted!”

“Extorted?” Sir Whiskerton said, flicking his tail. “By whom? The farmer? He’s already got all the eggs he needs.”

“No, no!” Doris said, her feathers ruffled. “By them!

She pointed a trembling wing toward the feed bin, where a rat named Ratticus and a mouse named Squeakers were lounging like tiny mob bosses. They had set up a makeshift toll booth made of twigs and an old sardine can, and they were demanding an egg from each hen in exchange for access to the feed.

“One egg per hen,” Ratticus said, twirling his whiskers. “That’s the deal. No egg, no feed.”

“No feed?!” Harriet clucked. “But also so unfair!”

“Unfair! Oh, I can’t bear it!” Lillian screeched, fainting dramatically into a pile of hay.


The Farm Reacts

The hens were in a tizzy. Without access to the feed, they couldn’t lay eggs, and without eggs, they couldn’t… well, they couldn’t do much of anything.

“This is an outrage!” Doris squawked. “We’re being held hostage by a rat and a mouse!”

“Hostage! But also so dramatic!” Harriet added.

“Dramatic! Oh, I can’t bear it!” Lillian screeched, fainting again for good measure.

The geese, never ones to miss an opportunity to honk their opinions, waddled over to investigate.

“What’s all this squawking about?” Gertrude the goose honked, her beady eyes narrowing.

“We’re being extorted!” Doris said, flapping her wings. “Ratticus and Squeakers are demanding eggs in exchange for feed!”

“Eggs for feed?” Gertrude said, puffing out her chest. “This is an outrage! We geese will handle this.”


The Geese’s Failed Intervention

The geese, confident in their ability to solve any problem, marched over to Ratticus and Squeakers.

“Listen here, you furry fiends,” Gertrude honked. “This extortion ends now!”

“Yeah!” the other geese added, flapping their wings. “Ends now! But also so honk-worthy!”

Ratticus and Squeakers exchanged a glance, then burst out laughing.

“You think you can stop us?” Ratticus said, twirling his whiskers. “We’ve got the feed, and you’ve got nothing but hot air.”

“Hot air! But also so insulting!” one of the geese honked.

“Insulting! Oh, I can’t bear it!” another screeched, collapsing into a dramatic heap.

The geese tried to intimidate Ratticus and Squeakers by honking loudly and flapping their wings, but the tiny mob bosses were unfazed. In fact, they seemed to find the whole thing hilarious.


Sir Whiskerton Steps In

Realizing the geese’s intervention had failed, Sir Whiskerton decided to take matters into his own paws. He approached Ratticus and Squeakers, his tail flicking with determination.

“Alright, you two,” Sir Whiskerton said, narrowing his eyes. “What’s this about an egg-stortion ring?”

“Egg-stortion?” Ratticus said, grinning. “We prefer to call it a… feed-for-egg exchange program.

“Yeah,” Squeakers added, twitching his nose. “It’s a win-win. The hens get feed, and we get eggs. Everybody’s happy.”

“Except the hens,” Sir Whiskerton said, his tone sharp. “They’re not happy. And neither am I.”

“What are you gonna do about it?” Ratticus said, puffing out his chest. “You’re just a cat. We’ve got the feed, and we’ve got the power.”

Sir Whiskerton smirked. “Oh, I’m not just a cat. I’m the cat. And I’ve got a plan.”


The Confrontation with Catnip

Sir Whiskerton knew that Ratticus and Squeakers were just pawns in Catnip’s game. So he decided to go straight to the source.

“Catnip,” Sir Whiskerton said, cornering the sly stray near the barn. “Your little associates are running an egg-stortion ring. Care to explain?”

“Egg-stortion?” Catnip said, feigning innocence. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

“Cut the act,” Sir Whiskerton said, narrowing his eyes. “Ratticus and Squeakers are demanding eggs from the hens in exchange for feed. And we both know they wouldn’t do something like that without your approval.”

Catnip sighed dramatically. “Alright, you caught me. But can you blame me? Eggs are delicious, and the hens have plenty to spare.”

“They’re not your eggs,” Sir Whiskerton said, his tail lashing. “And extorting the hens is not how we do things on this farm.”

“Fine,” Catnip said, flicking his tail. “I’ll call off the egg-stortion ring. But only because you asked so nicely.”


A Happy Ending

With Catnip’s intervention, Ratticus and Squeakers disbanded their egg-stortion ring and returned the stolen eggs to the hens. The farm returned to its usual peaceful rhythm, though Doris couldn’t resist gloating.

“Oh, Sir Whiskerton!” Doris squawked. “You’ve saved us! You’re our hero!”

“Hero! But also so brave!” Harriet clucked.

“Brave! Oh, I can’t bear it!” Lillian screeched, fainting one last time.

The moral of the story, dear reader, is this: Greed and extortion have no place in a community. And while it’s tempting to take advantage of others, it’s always better to work together and share resources—especially when it comes to eggs.

As for Catnip? He slinked off to plot his next scheme, though Sir Whiskerton made sure to remind him that he’d be watching. And Sir Whiskerton? He returned to his sunbeam, content in the knowledge that he had once again saved the day.

Until next time, my friends.

The End.

Not a home owners association, but worse: a British parish council.

I used to work for British Telecom.

At one point BT had 92,000 phone boxes but as growing numbers of people got mobile phones increasing numbers of these phone boxes became uneconomic year by year – the costs of maintaining the boxes stayed the same but usage and revenues fell steadily. There was a strong business case for closing and removing many boxes and that’s what any ordinary business would do.

But BT is a regulated business and the regulator (Ofcom) said that BT had to consult with the local authorities before removing a phone box and could not do so if the local authority objected. The local authorities had absolutely no incentive to agree to a phone box being removed and so frequently objected on spurious grounds.

More than one objection claimed that the phone box had to stay because it was used by people to shelter from the rain while waiting for a bus (you might think that the council should have tried to provide a bus shelter).

But the all-time winner was one parish council that objected on the grounds that the light from the phone box helped people to read announcements on the parish notice board that was next to the phone box. And that phone box had to be kept in service.

PS: BT could appeal against an objection but the appeal process was very slow, clunky and administratively expensive.

Story Time

Jeremiah had no intention of turning his dog into Napoleon.

 

He woke up one day and when Scotch Tape came to greet him in bed with a lick of the feet and a wag of the tail, Jeremiah gave him a pat on the head as he had always done, and the next thing he knew, there was a tiny tyrant standing before him.

 

“Well, now you’ve done it,” said Napoleon, “Look at me. Just look at me. I’ve been dead for almost two hundred years, and you brought me back just to fetch a frisbee.”

 

Jeremiah assured Napoleon that he didn’t mean to resurrect him. He had no idea why patting Scotch Tape on the head had resulted in such a transmogrification. The ten-year-old was not a magician or even interested in magic. He also loved his dog very much, and he had very little interest in dead military commanders.

 

Not knowing much about Napoleon, but recognizing him from a children’s book his grandfather had given him that centered around famous angry Frenchmen, Jeremiah brought Napoleon downstairs so that he could show his parents what had happened. His mother was making Belgian waffles, and from behind him, Jeremiah could hear Napoleon making a comment about those lousy Belgians and their lackluster waffles, but not wanting to absorb any discrimination, he simply focused on the task at hand.

 

The trouble was, as soon as he tugged on his mother’s sleeve, she turned into Napoleon as well. Turning around, she scowled at the boy.

 

“Look what you’ve done,” said this other Napoleon, “I don’t even like waffles–let alone Belgian ones. Sit down and I’ll make you a French omelet. It’s time we had some real food in this house before I go off to war.”

 

The Napoleon that had once been Scotch Tape shook his head, but he sat down at the table, and put a napkin under his chin. Jeremiah didn’t understand. Did touching people now meant he was reviving Napoleon’s? Or were these beings still the beings they were before but trapped in some sort of Napoleon shell?

 

While Jeremiah contemplated what to do about his two Napoleons, his father entered the house with some kind of stain on his tie.

 

“Spilled coffee all over my–”

 

Before he could finish his complaint, he noticed the two historical icons standing in the kitchen. Jeremiah’s father slowly began to back away.

 

“Jeremiah,” his father said, “Would you meet me out in the driveway, please?”

 

The boy went running towards his father hoping for a comforting embrace, but his father side-stepped him. He looked pained at having to dodge his son, but he motioned to the front door as though some kind of answer would be waiting on the other side.

 

Out on the driveway, the April air seemed to want to heat up, but couldn’t quite get there. Across the street, the Muscatellos were packing up a moving van. Jeremiah realized that it was a good thing he hadn’t hugged his father, because then he might have turned him into–

 

“Napoleon. You would have turned me into Napoleon.”

 

When the boy asked his father how this had happened, his father leaned against the driver’s side door of his Nissan Rogue. There was a small dent where Jeremiah had banged into the car with his bike. His father had not been cross when that happened, chalking it up to the kinds of things that occur when you have a son, and how lucky he was to have such a good son, who never did anything wrong aside from riding his bike a little too fast and not eating all his peas when they were served each Tuesday and Thursday.

 

“Jeremiah,” his father said, “I was worried this might happen.”

 

“Worried what might happen?”

 

“When you were born, the doctor did some tests on you, because you had this strange birthmark on your back that looked like Napoleon. We asked what it meant, but the doctor–I think his name was Roberto–he was being very cagey. Anyway, you seemed fine, so we took you home. A few days later we got a call from someone who sounded like Dr. Roberto, but identified himself as D.R.R. He told us that one day our child would wake up, and everyone he touched would turn into Napoleon. Not knowing much about history, we didn’t see the problem. Your mother always confused Napoleon with Charlie Chaplin, which doesn’t make much sense, but she always did associate disparate things. I knew who Napoleon was but he always seemed kind of cute to me. Your grandfather was familiar, and very concerned, which is why he bought you that book as a child and had you read it. He wanted you to be prepared for what might happen if and when the day arrived when your Napoleon syndrome would kick in.”

 

As his father was telling him this story, the mailman was walking down the street. A bee flew near his face, and he began to run to avoid the bee, because he always suspected he was allergic, even though he had no evidence to back that up. While running, he slammed right into young Jeremiah, and the moment he did, he turned into Napoleon.

 

“Sacre bleu!” the mailman shouted, “Now I am Napoleon? And I still have so many letters to deliver. What a garçon irréfléchi! Wait, is Napoleon allergic to bees?”

 

Jeremiah and his father looked at each other, and then the mailman.

 

“I don’t know,” said Jeremiah, “I think he might have suspected he was, but I doubt he had any evidence to back that up.”

 

Napoleon the mailman walked away muttering to himself, and this is how Jeremiah learned that Napoleon was a mutterer, which is something they don’t usually teach you in history books. Jeremiah’s father ushered him into the house where Napoleon the Former Dog and Napoleon the Former Jeremiah’s Mom had found the board game Risk in the closet and were engaged in a heated game. Napoleon the Former Dog looked as though he might prevail, but Napoleon the Former Jeremiah’s Mom was giving him a run for his money.

 

Jeremiah’s father led the boy upstairs and had him get into bed. The boy had never changed out of his pajamas, so for a moment, he wondered if he could close his eyes, open them, and find out the entire thing was a dream. Only the dirt from the lawn at the bottom of his feet would prove otherwise. He couldn’t fathom living with Napoleon for a dog let alone Napoleon for a mother, and certainly not Napoleon as a mailman.

 

And could he really go the rest of his life without touching another human being for fear that they might try invading Russia in the dead of winter?

 

“Now listen,” said his father, “I know this morning was confusing. You’re going to have a lot of confusing mornings in your life. Some more than others. This will, hopefully, be the most confusing, but I can’t guarantee that. The good news is, you’re a kid, so you can just get back in bed and sleep until whatever this is wears off. It might take all day, but I’m sure it’ll go away with time. Just to test it out, I’ll have a few historians stop by this evening to see how you’re doing. One of them might even allow you to try turning them into Napoleon, and if you can’t, we know the worst is over.”

 

Jeremiah’s father patted a spot on the pillow near Jeremiah’s head, but was careful not to touch any part of his son since the worst was clearly not over.

 

“Some days you wake up and nothing makes sense, Jeremiah,” he said, “And when you get older, you can’t go back to bed. You have to just press on and try to avoid connecting with anyone. Keep your head down. Power forward until things feel all right again. One morning I woke up, and every time I went to have a sip of coffee, it was Greek yogurt. I don’t know why. It only lasted one day, but I couldn’t go back to bed. I had to keep working, and I was so grumpy, because I couldn’t have any coffee, and I don’t like Greek yogurt all that much. This will pass though. This will all pass.”

 

With that, he patted the spot near Jeremiah’s head one more time, left his son’s bedroom, and closed the door behind him.

 

Not sure what to make of anything his father had just said, Jeremiah tried to sleep, but when he began to dream, he could only have Napoleon dreams. It seemed that even touching an image in his mind was enough to transform it. A dream of him taking a test in school became a dream of him writing a letter to Josephine. A dream of him riding his bike became a dream of him riding a horse into battle. A dream of him playing soccer became a dream of Napoleon playing soccer and losing the game, because Napoleon had no idea how to play soccer.

 

When the dreams became too much, Jeremiah opened his eyes and saw that moonlight was streaming through his windows. His father had forgotten to close the curtains before leaving him. He went to the window, and saw that the moon was hovering right above the house where the Muscatellos live. Without thinking, Jeremiah touched the glass that separated him from the moon, and, to his surprise, the moon became Napoleon.

 

“C’est bon, Jeremiah,” said the Napoleon Moon, one of the kinder Napoleons, “Go back to bed. Le meilleur remède pour le corps est un esprit calme.”

 

The best cure for the body is a quiet mind.

 

Jeremiah got back into bed, and Napoleon dimmed his moonlight a little, but just a little. He wanted the boy to know he was here, but that he would be gone in the morning.

AMERICAN WOMEN IN TEARS AFT COMPARING THE COST OF LIVING IN AMERICA& CHINA| AMERICANS ON REDNOTE App

Barbecued Brisket with Noodles

22 brisket pasta
22 brisket pasta

Ingredients

  • 1 (2 1/2 pound) beef brisket
  • 1 cup bottled hickory smoke barbecue sauce
  • 1 tablespoon prepared horseradish
  • 1 teaspoon prepared mustard
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 12 ounces wide noodles

Instructions

  1. Place brisket in slow cooker.
  2. In a small bowl, combine barbecue sauce, horseradish, mustard, salt and pepper. Pour over brisket.
  3. Cover and cook on LOW for 7 to 8 hours or until brisket is tender.
  4. Cook noodles according to package directions; drain.
  5. Slice meat. Arrange sliced meat on noodles and top with sauce.

To be honest, apart from selling resources and the amorous feelings industry, does Mongolia have one or two competitive industries in the world?

As a country, its economy is not even as good as China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (Mongolia’s GDP in 2024 is about 15 billion US dollars, while China’s Inner Mongolia’s GDP is as high as 340 billion US dollars. The gap between the two is obvious).

Inner Mongolia is part of Mongolia in a broad sense and belongs to China, but its development is much better than Mongolia, which is right to the north.

Looking at Xinjiang and Tibet, are there slums in the two capitals of Urumqi and Lhasa? No, but there are in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia, and there are many.

Mongolia has a lot of poverty and wealth gap problems, but what about Xinjiang and Tibet in China? It has completed poverty alleviation a few years ago, and the residents’ income is much higher than that of Mongolia.

As for medical care, employment, housing, education and other issues, Mongolia is far behind Xinjiang and Tibet.

So, how did you come to the conclusion that living in Xinjiang and Tibet is miserable?

I’m surprised that many people still think that a Tsunami looks like this:

In fact, what happened was like this:

Tsunamis are not waves like you or I are used to seeing. They are caused by wind.

Tsunami is not just “moving water” but “ energy moving through water ”.

Tsunamis are harmless 95% of the time. The rest of the time they travel through the ocean, and are not even visible to the human eye.

In fact, tsunami is a Japanese word, meaning “harbor wave.” It was used by sailors who went fishing far from shore, spent time in calm seas, and returned to find their harbors wiped out by waves they had never seen before.

The “waves” or surges do not appear once, but are a series of waves.

As a tsunami approaches the shore, it grows taller, and its speed decreases. Don’t be fooled into thinking that a wave that is “slowing down” means “slow.” Water moves tens to hundreds of kilometers per hour, even at the shore.

When a Tsunami hits, the crest (top) or trough (bottom) will hit first.

In the 2004 Tsunami, the valley hit various places on the coast of Indonesia. The sea suddenly receded about one kilometer.

This is a warning sign that people should follow, because you have up to five minutes to find high ground if you want to stay alive. A woman on vacation was smart enough to recognize this phenomenon, and saved many people.

Some others who saw this strange sign ran to the beach and looked for coral, or picked up fish. When they saw the water crashing back, they died on the spot.

Watch this YouTube video of the 2004 Tsunami. Water was crashing onto the shore at a height of up to 8 meters. It was moving faster than a car, and could easily destroy man-made structures.

They say in an earthquake, the hospitals are full of injured people. But in a Tsunami, few people are injured. If you get hit by the water, you die.

If you are not in a place where the tsunami is approaching, but see the waves receding, grab your family and get to high ground as soon as possible.

Do not try to outrun a tsunami on flat ground.

The tsunami in Indonesia came about 2 kilometers inland. Let me reiterate: You cannot outrun a tsunami.

Don’t get in the car.

People drown in their cars when they are stuck in traffic jams on the highway.

Buildings aren’t always safe, either. Sometimes water can fill the second floor in less than 15 seconds , and in Japan in 2011, people on the roof of a three-story building were swept away when the water reached that height. Watch the video if you’re strong.

In most places (including Indonesia), NOAA or whatever the authorized agency will broadcast via TV and radio channels containing warnings, or early warning systems.

Indonesia does not have such a system, meaning people only know a tsunami is coming by looking up from the shore and seeing the torrent of death bearing down on them at 80 kilometers per hour.

If for whatever reason, you do not know a Tsunami is coming, and the sea recedes, thank God, look for the nearest rock or hill, and run for safety.

“‘Tomorrow is another day’ is a dangerous philosophy in our line of work.”

I left BigLaw when I had kids, and eventually found my way into a much smaller firm with much more reasonable fee targets. I was able to mostly ignore work on the weekends, and my boss (the owner of the firm) trusted me and gave me space if I needed it. Things went so well in that department that I was told I was being moved into a different department that was having trouble hiring externally. I wasn’t thrilled, but I was willing to give it a shot.

I quickly discovered the reason the new department was having trouble hiring was because the director had no sense of boundaries, and would make unreasonable requests and give conflicting instructions. I typically handle unreasonable deadlines by showing what’s on my plate and how long each will take, and asking what can be shifted later to prioritise this new thing. A decent boss will either tell me what to deprioritise, or will say actually I should carry on and pick up the new task when I’m finished. This new director couldn’t do that. He kept asking me to do all of it simultaneously, for the original deadline. If this was genuinely urgent work I would have been willing to make a plan, but it really wasn’t; I think he was just an anxious person and coped with that by micromanaging.

The final straw came when I had told him my husband was hospitalised and that I would be completely unavailable after hours due to having to manage children alone. We had another of those conversations where I told him my plan for the day, he asked me to add something, and I said “no problem; which of my original tasks can I push to tomorrow?” Again he said “none of them.” Then he added, “‘Tomorrow is another day’” is a very dangerous philosophy in our line of work.” That saying sums up my whole approach to my work (pace yourself, plan properly, work carefully with deep focus, then go home and don’t take the work with you), and that’s the point I realised we would never work well together. He then asked the whole team to work over the weekend to tackle something that had become urgent because he hadn’t got to it in good time (while the rest of the team had been chasing him daily for instructions). Yes, while knowing my husband was hospitalised.

I think he should have smelled a mutiny when not one team member actually did the work that weekend. Within the week I was putting out CVs, within 2 weeks I had an interview, and before the month was up I had a job offer for a lower-pressure, higher-paid role somewhere else.

Crazy things are happening on Red Note, Tiktok refugees are changing the game / 中国小红书正在发生疯狂的事情