Persistence isn’t annoying—it’s strategic harassment.

Question: What do you think will be the repercussions if the Belt and Road initiative by China fails?

Answer:

Belt and Road initiative is the collective name of hundreds to thousands of projects along the three (yes,there are three) routes of what was the ancient silk road.

As the result, there isn’t a binary success or fail for such as project.

A relatively brief summary can be seen here:

https://www.yidaiyilu.gov.cn/list/w/dsjjdydyl

China-Africa projects:

China-European projects (sample with Serbia)

China-Latin America projects:

https://www.yidaiyilu.gov.cn/p/076O6555.html


I saw posts down below, there are some rather sour Indian posters (likely due to the recent loss in the Pakistan-India air battle), desperately hanging onto some Italian project that doesn’t work out.

You are way late to the party:

The news about Italy quitting belt and road was back in 2023 and the sole purpose of the move was for Italian domestic consumption and right now (as of May 2024), they are talking about returning to belt and road again.

If you don’t understand why European nations have mood swings. I suggest go learn basic politics.


India itself is actually an interesting case, as an ancient destination for the silk road, it should be a good partner on the matter.

Unfortunately, that’s also what India thinks and in India national policy, if you consider India a friend, then it means India must be able to take advantage of you.

I don’t think the idea is quite sane, but hey, you respect each country of their own unique culture and if that’s the Indian practice, then the Chinese will just skip over India.

Man DESTROYS Room Full Of Delusional Women

In summary,

  • The People’s Liberation Army Ground Force and the People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force are undoubtedly much more powerful than the United States. In particular, the People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force will be a nightmare to the United States Navy. The U.S. Secretary of Defense stated that China’s hypersonic missiles could destroy all U.S. aircraft carriers in 20 minutes.
  • The People’s Liberation Army Air Force is comparable in strength to the United States Air Force;
  • The People’s Liberation Army Navy is slightly weaker than the United States Navy, but I personally estimate that the situation will be reversed within five years.

Sun Tzu, an ancient Chinese military strategist, said:

If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.

There are still small-scale military exchanges between China and the United States, and military experts on both sides still have a general understanding of each other’s situation.

What the United States fears most is that the military dialogue between China and the United States will be interrupted, so that they will completely lose the way to understand China’s military strength.

‘It’s dangerous’: Top general alarmed China won’t take US commanders’ calls
One of America’s top military officials says he believes China’s military is becoming dangerously arrogant and is risking a conflict through miscalculation.

Argentinian Beef Melts

Spiced up beef and provolone cheese are the basis for these delicious Argentinian Beef Melts.

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Argentinian Beef Melt

Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients

  • 12 ounces cooked beef pot roast or brisket, shredded
  • 1 medium red bell pepper, cut into 1/4 inch thick strips
  • 4 slices reduced-fat or regular provolone cheese
  • 4 slices crusty bread (about 6 x 3 x 1/2 inch)
  • 3/4 cup packed fresh parsley, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 tablespoon fresh lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt

Instructions

  1. Heat oven to 350 degrees F.
  2. Place bread slices in single layer on baking sheet.
  3. Place bell pepper strips on foil-line baking sheet coated with nonstick cooking spray.
  4. Bake bread for 10 to 13 minutes, turning once.
  5. Roast peppers for 10 to 15 minutes or until lightly browned. Set aside.
  6. Meanwhile, place parsley and garlic in food processor or blender container. Cover; process until finely chopped.
  7. Add lime juice, oil, and salt; process just until blended.
  8. Spread Chimichurri Sauce evenly on one side of each bread slice; top evenly with pot roast and red pepper strips.
  9. Top each bread slice with cheese.
  10. Place on baking sheet.
  11. Bake at 350 degrees F for 7 to 10 minutes or until beef is heated through and cheese is melted.

“What was the worst way you or someone you know found out they were being fired?”

Not “fired” but had lost their position due to restructuring/redundancy/reduction in work force/whatever you want to call it

The company I worked for at the time had to make cuts – and, due to UK employment law due to the size of the company and the percentage of head counts being removed – entered into a consultancy period during which the staff was frequently updated on where the upper management were in the process and anything that may happen to alter the number of redundancies and then finally the information about how people were going to find out if they still had a job or not.

The company came up with this “brilliant” scheme that we would all go home one evening and everyone being cut would get a phone call. If you didn’t get the call, then you still had a job.

One guy didn’t get the call, came in the next morning to find his login didn’t work and called the sysadmin for help.

I was the sysadmin. Cue a very delicate phone call where by I promised to look into the matter and go down and see the guy as soon as I had found out what was wrong when in fact I immediately went straight to my departmental director and told them what had happened just in case there had been an error on the list. Director stood up and immediately stormed out f the office to see HR director and I presume let the poor guy know to go home.

I’d been told a few days before everyone else that my job was safe and asked to do overtime on the evening of the “cull” to disable accounts. But I had no forewarning of anyone else on the list of accounts to disable until a few minutes before the time the calls were starting to be made.

Probably not the absolute worst way to find out but still someone had badly screwed up and had by forgetting to call him led the guy to believe his job was safe and then presumably ending with the guy being escorted out of the office shortly after arriving – which can only be extremely embarrassing to the guy who had just lost his job.

“The Future Of Warfare” – China’s TERRIFYING Drone Plane THREATENS U.S. Military Dominance

China unveils a game-changing high-altitude drone, the SS UAV, sparking global concern. Capable of launching 100+ drones or missiles, it’s a direct challenge to U.S. air dominance. Is America ready for next-gen warfare—or are we falling behind?

China isn’t Anti India

There is no Ideological difference between the two countries

There is no Brutal History

It’s entirely territorial

Primary Objective of China:-

China won’t allow India to expand its influence anywhere in South Asia

Nepal, Bangladesh, Maldives, Myanmar, Bhutan or Sri Lanka

China needs maximum influence in these countries to keep trade routes alive and open

(Note :- Expand its influence doesn’t mean by Investment or Business or Trade. It means BY TWEAKING AND INTERFERENCE IN POLITICAL AFFAIRS)

China wont allow India to take PoK under any circumstances

China needs it’s Trade Routes and Silk Road and PoK forms a key part of it.

So China won’t allow India to take PoK

Otherwise China doesn’t care about India and it’s relationship with Israel or Arab Nations or African Nations or Australia or Canada or Latin America or Russia or EU or US

Secondary Objective

China won’t allow India to change Status Quo on any boundary scenario:-

Aksai Chin is Chinese

No Mans Land is No Mans Land

Any major change in these situations will lead to Chinese intervention


Thats it!!!

Chinas entire priority with India is just these two objectives

  • Indias influence with South Asia must be smashed at all costs
  • India can’t change the boundary scenario with China under any circumstances
  • India cannot take any more territory from Pakistan at any cost

China needs trade routes and India cannot be allowed to grow in any area where they can affect Chinas Trade Routes


Myths :-

  • China will go to war against India over Arunanchal Pradesh & Ladakh – This is fully wrong. Chinas Foreign Policy allows full war only over Taiwan or Incursion into Chinese Territory. China will salami slice in these areas but never go to war.
  • China wants terrorism in India – China loves stability and trade. They hate terrorism. They never want India to be economically unstable or dangerous. They will NEVER sponsor terrorism in India.
  • China is jealous of India – China is so ahead of India, it is like a PhD versus a Class VIII Student at the moment. China doesn’t care about ISRO or anything else India does because China knows India is generations behind
  • China is worried about India becoming factory of the world- China doesn’t want to assemble stuff any more. It’s glad to farm out the business to India and move on to full scale high grade manufacturing. Besides it sells 70% of all Machinery and Components to India for assembly. That’s a lot of exports.

Options of India

Absolutely nothing

Don’t Bully Nepal or Bangladesh or Myanmar or Sri Lanka or Maldives

Don’t attempt to touch PoK

Don’t intentionally incite a war against Pakistan

Don’t unilaterally try to change status quo in any of the boundary regions

That’s all

As long as India avoids this, China has absolutely nothing to do with India in any way

Alannah

Written in response to: Write an open-ended story in which your character’s fate is uncertain.

Melissa Johnson

Prompt: Write An Open-Ended Story In Which Your Character’s Fate Is Uncertain.AlannahAlannah stood in her enclosure, folding a white robe loosely around her body which fell to the sandals on her feet. The matching wool belt fastened to buttons on opposing sides. She drew the hood up and it dangled over her forehead. She could not be categorized. No one could look at her and decide what she was or could do. She just was an apprentice to the Director.Alannah turned towards the faint seam that marked a doorway from this stark enclosure. It slid open to a hall. Across the hall was another seam. This opened into a stainless steel room that shined and smelled of antiseptic sterilization. To the right side of her, as she entered, centered, was an upright console attended by the Director, also clad in a robe, but of a beige color. The Director motioned her to come over to the console.The console was imbedded with intercoms, buttons, levers, symbols and a keyboard. Near the opposing wall, across from the console were three upright cylindrical tubes. Their clear glass sides partially overlapping so that one could slide over the other to let an occupant in or out. The occupant did not control this. The Director of the console did.There was an occupant in each of the tubes. They wore gray robes. Hoods draped over foreheads, shadowing their faces.The Director pulled a lever. Momentarily, the Director’s sleeve fluttered. Alannah noticed a small red scar on the wrist. The Director typed a command on the console keyboard. The second and third tubes misted over the glass from within. The occupant of the first tube stepped out as the overlapping glass slid one piece around the other.This was the first day of Alannah’s apprenticeship. She recalled her preparatory audio and text instruction to guide her on what to do next. She walked behind the former occupant of the tube and gently pulled the hood back grasping its pointed tip. The head and face of this figure was revealed.The Director addressed Alannah in a neutral voice and tone, “What do your lessons tell you about this person?”Alannah recited her observations and conclusions, “This is obviously a male because of the square jawline and thin lips. Long silver hair flows over his shoulders. There is a beard growing from his cheeks and chin pointing down the chest. This is a wizard.”“Very good,” commended the Director. “What, then, will he be expected to wear?”“A long, dark robe decorated with stars and crescent moons. A matching cap with a point at the top and an encircling brim at the bottom. Soft, dark boots. A staff will be needed. A black cloak for cold times. A dragon pendant for his neck.” Alannah paused.“Do not forget the multiple facetted ruby ring of power for the index finger of his left hand.”

Alannah repeated this, “A multiple facetted ruby ring of power for the left index finger.”

“Good. And anyone seeing what they must obviously assume to be a wizard, will then be able to determine what he is like on a personable level. What can you now assuredly know of his character and behavior?”

Alannah again mentally reviewed her learnings. “He will be knowledgeable of mystical beliefs and animal and plant healing and uses. His hubris will be sometimes off-setting. He will be distant and hard to approach.   He could be dangerous as wizards cannot be trusted, and change according to their own plans.”

“Why would anyone dare to speak to or consult a wizard?” the Director prompted.

“To offer them a partnership in something the wizard could profit from or perhaps in desperation stemming from a life crisis. Wizards will pity the needy.”

“Good.” Then the Director turned toward the designated wizard, “Step back into the tube. You will be a wizard, clothed and instructed in all aspects of what you are expected to be, and what everyone will know you to be.” The wizard did as instructed. The tube closed and the glass became frosted matching the other two tubes.

The Director signaled for Alannah to return. When she did, the Director stepped to the side, hands held palms up to the console. Alannah knew this next task in her apprenticeship was her manipulation of the console. She stepped closer to it remembering what she studied and had watched the Director do. Her typing was not as agile, but to Alannah’s relief the proper commands were executed. The second tube was clear; The doors slid open. The occupant stepped into the room.

Alannah looked toward the Director,   and then stepped from behind the console and pulled the hood down. Startled, she immediately jumped back! This face was hideous!

“An ogre!” Alannah spit out.

“Stay in form!” the Director commanded, the voice less neutral, hinting of scorn.

Alannah gathered herself and began the descriptions expected:

The bulging face of warts and pockets of hair tufts, large nose, tubular ears, unkept mullet. She could barely recite the clothing expectations. When she got to the mandatory personality assumptions, she was again surprised. As she listed the stupidity, gluttony, and meanness, the individual interrupted her with a pitiful plea.

“Please. If I am to be so hard to look at, at least allow me a positive trait. Perhaps I could be caring of others?”

Alannah was stunned.

“That is a nurse!” interjected the Director.

“Someone who can bring out good in others?”

“That is a nun!” the Director boomed. “Stop this nonsense. Those designations are also female. You will be an ogre clothed and instructed in all aspects of what you are expected to be, and what everyone will know you to be. Step back into the tube.”

The ogre did as told. Alannah thought she saw a tear drip from the ogre’s eye. Still she was too stunned to move. This was not supposed to happen. Each being became their assigned role. There were no thoughts to be anything else. This just was and everyone knew it.

“Return,” ordered the Director, holding a hand out to the console.

Alannah walked back to the console, standing again beside the Director.

“You will continue your text and audio studies for another week. Return now to your enclosure.”

Alannah walked to the seam. It opened and she walked across the hall and entered her enclosure.

****

Alannah studied diligently in the time that passed in her enclosure, but a thought periodically traipsed through her brain: Was there more to the ogre than what appeared? She chastised herself and refocused on her studies.

It was a week and a half before Alannah saw the white wool robe in her enclosure again. She put it on and walked to the seam in the wall. When she entered the room across the hall, the Director stood in the back of the console. There was no invitation to come over. Alannah just felt it was implied. After all, it was surely known she’d been here before.

The day’s assignments were standard and completed efficiently. However, there was something else that Alannah felt was different. This was not the director she had apprenticed with over a week ago. She tried several times to see if the beige sleeve might again reveal a red scar on the director’s wrist. The sleeve never budged so she had no way of knowing.

In time, Alannah graduated from being an apprentice. Now a beige belt wove around the robe she wore, buttoned on each side. She placed her hood over her head and left her enclosure, entering the shiny room with a familiar console. Soon she was joined by another wearing a white robe standing beside her. Alannah pulled a lever and typed the commands.

The day proceeded as expected. The last set of beings was now down to the third tube. The apprentice was in command of the console. Alannah knew this one’s apprenticeship would soon be complete.

The third tube became clear. The glass panel slid open and the occupant stepped out. In this case, the occupant seemed to be dancing by the movement of the robe. The designation to be given would be one of much agility.

“Jester,” determined the apprentice. “Limber and effusive. Although soft-cheeked, there is a strong chin. There are no male jesters, so this is a female. She is playful and irreverent. A fool to caution. She will have a multi-colored diamond patterned jumpsuit. Her cap will match her shoes, each having floppy tassels ending in small bells . . . “

As the apprentice continued as to how people would perceive the jester, Alannah noticed a sudden flick of red. She blinked and looked again. In the movements the jester made as part of his determination, Alannah caught sight of the red scar on the wrist.

This was the director of so much authority so long ago. Now the robe cavorted about what would be a female jester. An unbidden thought came to Alannah’s mind: Would the stern mentor of her past be happy with this life assignment? Immediately, she checked herself. Of course she would – as much as allowed assigned to in this role. Then Alannah thought of something else she had not remembered in a long time: A tear-eyed ogre.

The apprentice’s voice had stopped. The apprentice was waiting patiently.

“Good.” Alannah retrieved herself. “You will be a jester, clothed and instructed in all aspects of what you are expected to be, and what everyone will know you to be.”

 

The day’s work done and the apprentice dismissed, Alannah typed the commands that would cause the console to sleep, Alannah turned towards another seam in the room. As a Director, she would eat in the refectory and meet with her supervisor at a reserved cubicle.

The supervisor wore a red robe which signified not only the role in the review process, but also their responsibility for observations of the results of the assigned persons in the outer world. The Red Robes were a prominent presence to the established population within a community.

“You have trained this apprentice well, Alannah. The individuals placed within their community have been steadfast with almost no lapses – and those only minor. I surmise it will not be long before you can be succeeded and will be assigned to a community yourself.”

These last words struck Alannah. It never occurred to her that she would be anything other than a Director. Then she remembered the jester. And the ogre. A parade of others passed through her mind.

Later, Alannah sat at the empty seat where the Red Robe had sat. She poked at her meal that was the same as every meal for this time of nourishment. If not a Director, then what? What would she be? Impulsively, a notion niggled its way forward from the back of her brain: What if she didn’t want to be assigned?

Nonsense! She would be clothed and instructed in all aspects of what she would be. There would be no want. Everyone would automatically know what and who she was.

Alannah finished her food and left the refectory. She walked down a long corridor towards her enclosure. There were many seamed entrances. She hadn’t noticed this before, or that some had titles above them. Now Alannah was noticing as she walked by. She paused to look back from where she’d started and the seam in front of her opened. It was titled: Laundry. Startled, Alannah looked in. These tasks would be complete by this time of the day and continued the next. She had no business being here, but she stepped inside. The room contained a laundromat of washers and dryers, baskets of clothing piles and tables of folded robes. Then it occurred to Alannah that if she were seen here she would surely be reprimanded. She began to feel anxious.

A stack of folded red robes invited Alannah’s attention. The Red Robes would not be questioned in the corridors and perhaps not in the titled enclosures. The Red Robes, as far as she knew, could be found in any area. Alannah was not comfortable with the plan she now decided upon, but thought it might be the safest way to get to her enclosure. She removed her beige robe. She took a red robe from the stack and put it on. She had only one more stop to complete her plan. She walked to the seam and looked side to side as it opened. No one was there. She went back, toward the refectory, to the seam labeled: Shoes. The seam opened and she ducked inside.  She found a pair of red sandals and kicked off her beige set.

Alannah again looked both ways when she caused this seam to reopen. She was feeling less anxious – just a little nervous. She was almost sure she could get back to her enclosure without anyone stopping her.

Alannah made herself walk steadily back in the right direction, passed the laundry title and on. She would be okay, she told herself.

As she walked, Alannah’s thoughts began to stray. What were the Red Robes, anyway? They oversaw the trainings of the apprentices. They collaborated with the Directors. They watched populations and intervened when needed. Was this their designation? Did they have a designation? What would it be like to be without a designation? What if no one had a designation?

.  Alannah arrived at her enclosure, but did not step toward it. She turned and stepped toward the room with the console. The seam opened. She entered. She was alone. There was no reason for anyone to be here.

The console showed a diagram posted on a button with a square within a square. This symbol represented a floor plan. Alannah felt conflicted as she hovered over this button. What was she doing here? Yet, if she pushed this button the layout of the structure she had always inhabited would be revealed. She could see how the Red Robes left to patrol the communities. She could learn what a Red Robe knew.

Alannah revived the console. The button glowed yellow when Alannah pushed it. A labeled diagram appeared on the console screen. She could see where the refectory was, the location of the other consoles, the enclosures, and areas designated for various assigned purposes. There were places where the seams did not have anything drawn behind them. These must open to outside. What would she see on the other side of one of these?

Alannah knew she was delving into where she had no authority, but she had come this far. She was wearing a red robe. She could take a look outside and then sneak back in. She would go back to her enclosure, put on the beige robe that would be there, hide this red one beneath it until she figured how to get rid of it. The temptation for knowledge outweighed her trepidation of being caught.

Alannah again shut down the console and left. She headed towards the nearest lone seam she had seen.

When the seam opened, Alannah stepped into an open area filled with a brighter light than she’d ever seen before. She was standing on the side of a dirt road. She looked up expecting a roof. The light was coming from an orb in the sky that she immediately turned away from as it hurt her eyes. She felt a little dizzy not having seen anything solid above. Just blueness with an occasional white wisp. There was a refreshing cleanliness that was not antiseptic. Unrecognizable fragrances drifted by and surrounded her. There were store fronts, horses, carriages, stables, and eateries; People walking about, some stopping to chat with others. Alannah recognized most by designation and could predict what they would be talking about. There were a few Red Robes milling about, but they did not interact. None approached her.

Alannah walked down this dirt thoroughfare until it dwindled to a narrowed section lined with grasses, shrubs, and trees. There were no buildings passed this point. She took a few steps forward and then turned to look behind from where she’d come. As she did so, a knight on his steed passed her by and continued down the narrowed path. Alannah recognized the designation and knew what could be assumed about this armored and helmeted form. She realized she knew what could be assumed about anyone living here and beyond. She knew what they would do, how they would act, how their given characteristics determined the type of person they were.

A new thought came to Alannah. Everyone knew the judgements of each other. Everyone abided by the expectations of the others.

Except Alannah.

Who was Alannah?

Alannah could be whatever she chose. No one could look upon her and judge her thoughts or actions. She had no restrictions placed upon her unless she imposed them.

And so Alannah turned back to the narrow pathway and began to walk.

No country has a higher manufacturing output than China.

At Xiaomi Group’s production line, 1 smartphone is produced in 1 second, and at BYD’s production line, a small car comes off the production line in 76 seconds.

The smart factory of the Xiaomi Group can operate without any human intervention and it can produce smartphones at a rate of one smartphone per second, roughly 86,400 smartphones per day. It operates in the dark, and because it requires no human intervention, it doesn’t need lighting.

This 18,600 square metre factory looks mediocre at first glance, and if you push the door in for a tour, it’s like the scene of a sci-fi movie, with constant temperature and humidity, only a few very small coloured lights flickering, and the whole factory operating in darkness, with the smartphone production line acting like a bubble machine, and smartphones spitting out of it one by one.

There is no way to build such ‘factories in the dark’ in the United States, and the American labour unions would protest if the workers were not hired.

Germany, Japan and South Korea are ‘export-led economies’ because their domestic markets are so small that if they do not export, their economies are finished.

Platoon (1986) *First Time Watching* Movie Reaction

If you’re just looking at the air-to-air statistics, it’s certainly not in Russia’s favor.

A bunch of MiGs and Sukhois + 1 French-designed Iraqi nuclear reactor. This is the highest of all F-16 for individual airplanes and possibly the highest out of all 4th generation (individual) jets. Besides this, the F-15 also has an unbeatable 100+ to 0 air-to-air record (a few F-16s had been shot down in air-to-air). F-18 (both legacy and Super Hornet) had a few in total (all with the US Navy I believe) with just 1 loss during Desert Storm to a MiG-25.

The ratio for Russian airplanes is unclear but it is quite possibly near 1:1 if you discount UAV/drone shootings in Ukraine and Russia (the numbers for F-16 might be higher if you count drones as well). The Eurofighter and Gripen haven’t been involved in air-to-air combat while there are contradictory claims by Pakistan and India about the Rafale (and J-10) right now. If I remember correctly, Pakistan also lost at least 1 F-16 to the USSR during Afghanistan.

It is a pretty crude way to measure it, but it is “real” data—as real as it can get.

The main issue with Soviet and Russian airplanes is that their electronics are well behind what’s available in NATO countries. Some customers opted to install Israeli avionics to their MiGs and Sukhois rather than rely on the Russian stuff.

This wasn’t an issue back in the day, but it is a serious one now considering that missiles and radar are so dominant today. Whoever can spot the enemy first can dictate the fight, either to engage (from an advantageous position) or to run away. For that, you need good radar and sensors. Long-range missile also helps.

Shorpy

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There was an individual in my year who was seen as a bit of a geek. His dad was a teacher at the school, he was studious, played chess and largely kept himself to himself. When a rowing club started, he signed up. Some rather foolish people saw this as another tick mark for abuse, rowing wasn’t as cool as some of the other team sports people played. However this individual took his rowing seriously and trained and trained and trained.

It was a slow change, slow enough that people didn’t realise. He was already quite tall, but he added to that frame a physique that was functional and powerful rather than for show.

We were waiting for class one day. My school was 200 years old and the design wasn’t optimal. Corridors were like gauntlets. This corridor was probably less than 1.5m wide, 20m long, enclosed by each end with fire doors and a locked classroom on each side. In that corridor there were about 30 pupils waiting, lined up against each wall.

(Not this, but similar, with student lined up each side and people having to walk to the middle to find a space.)

The school jock was in the same class. He played rugby (badly). He wasn’t particularly strong, or hard, but acted aggressive and had a big mouth, and hung around with some people who were hard. He therefore liked to try and bully and push people around.

As the rower was walking down this gauntlet minding his own business the jock pushed or tripped him, and came out with some insult. The rower swung round, grabbed the jock and physically lifted him off the ground and threw him into the wall. He held him there and told him to STFU and leave him alone. He then threw him back down to the ground and walked off.

The jock stood up, looking completely shocked and a bit of a mess. His tie was up around the back of his neck, and nearly every single shirt button had been ripped off. The rower, stood waiting, looking utterly unfazed as he waited for the class to start.

Sir Whiskerton and the Great Barn Door Standoff
(Or: How to Annoy a Farmer Into Submission)


Chapter 1: A Lesson in Tenacity

Sir Whiskerton stood before the mysteriously locked barn door, monocle glinting. Beside him, Ditto the Echoing Kitten pawed at the wood.

  • “Observe, apprentice,” Whiskerton declared. “When life gives you a closed door, scratch at it until it opens.”

  • Ditto immediately began shredding the paint: “Open! Open! Open!”

  • Inside, the Farmer groaned: “I just painted that…”

(Visual gag: Ditto’s tiny claws create a perfect “WELCOME” mat design on the door—by accident.)


Chapter 2: The Farmer’s Breaking Point

After 45 minutes of relentless scratching:

  • The Farmer flung the door open: “STOP. THAT.”

  • Sir Whiskerton yawned: “Then open it. It’s not rocket science.”

  • Ditto cheerfully echoed: “Science! Science!” (Then bolted inside to knock over a rake.)

(Running joke: The door immediately swings shut again, trapping the Farmer outside this time.)


Chapter 3: Advanced Persistence Tactics

Undeterred, Whiskerton demonstrated next-level door harassment:

  1. The Paws-on-Hips Stare (“I’ll wait.”)

  2. The Dramatic Sigh (Every 12 seconds)

  3. The Accidental Yowl (“Oh no, I’m suddenly dying of hunger…”)

  • Farmer (to the sky): “Why me?”

  • Ditto (copying the pose): “Why me! Why me!”


Chapter 4: Victory (And a Broken Latch)

Finally, the Farmer surrendered, permanently disabling the lock with a wrench.

  • Sir Whiskerton bowed: “And that is how democracy works.”

  • Ditto celebrated by scratching the now-useless door anyway.

  • The Farmer posted a sign: “CATS: PLEASE JUST KNOCK.” (It was ignored.)


Moral of the Story

Persistence isn’t annoying—it’s strategic harassment.


Post-Credit Scene

Zephyr the Genie sells the Farmer a “scratch-proof door”… made of catnip.


Best Lines

  • “This isn’t nagging—it’s assertive lobbying.” —Sir Whiskerton

  • “I’ve seen less stubborn mules.” —Farmer, on the verge of tears

  • “Lobbying! Lobbying!” —Ditto, destroying a flowerpot


Starring

  • Sir Whiskerton (Professor of Door Terrorism)

  • Ditto (Enthusiastic War Criminal)

  • The Farmer (Defeated by a Kitten)

(*P.S. The barn door now has a paw-shaped doorbell. It plays “Who Let the Dogs Out.”)


Cultural Easter Eggs

  1. “Assertive lobbying” = satire of corporate lobbying tactics.

  2. Catnip door mocks “As Seen on TV” scams.

  3. Ditto’s accidental art = cats actually being weirdly precise sometimes.

  4. Paw doorbell = revenge of the delivery drivers.

(Curtain falls. Scratching intensifies.)

Little will happen to China, because China is prepared for a prolong tariff war with USA. How long? Until Trump stops lying to Americans.

I am not saying China will not suffer. There is no winner in this trade war. But China will endure the loss better than USA. At least China’s GDP growth is 5.4% in the 1st quarter of 2025 while USA is -0.3% (negative), IMF data.

USA has a “unique” problem.

USA has $6 tn (some said $3 tn) US bond maturing in 2025. With the latest market crash of stock, bond & currency, USA will have a harder time to find foreign nations to buy US bonds. Sure, FED will end up buying all at the end.

USA has $1.9 tn of US budget deficit in 2024. … US debts will hit a whooping $37 tn by Fall 2025.

Just the interest payment already cost USA $882 bn in 2024. Accounting for 19% of US budget.

In short, USA will be in deeper debt until its economy collapses one day. As of May9, the world is joining hands to fight the US tariff war: China+Japan+S Korea. plus ASEAN, plus EU. On May8, EU countered US tariff by announcing tariff on goods worth 95 bn euro.

If US continues to import goods from China, US inflation will skyrocket. If US stops import from China, US will suffer goods shortage. … Either way, there will be UNREST in USA in the coming months. That will force Trump to speak some truth with less lies.

Platoon (1986) *First Time Watching* Movie Reaction

Short story: I enlisted in the RI ARNG as an MP. I really wanted to be in the same unit my father served in, but they did not have an MP slot open. They did, however, have an opening for a food service specialist (92G). My options were to take an MP slot in a different unit, or take the 92G slot in the unit I wanted.

I took the 92G slot and went to AIT at Ft. Lee, Virginia. Once I got home from AIT my unit was deployed in OIF.

Long story short, I never changed my MOS because I discovered I loved cooking and the camaraderie of the Quartermaster Corp.

I finished a 6-yr enlistment as a cook, and was able to get a good-paying job running a kitchen at a nursing home. I also got a $15,000 sign-on bonus, as was available for some MOS.

It’s also important to mention that it’s much easier to make rank in that MOS. Also, cooks go to the field and perform their MOS like any other soldier.

The moral of the story is everything happens for a reason.

You should give this a chance. It just might be a great career move for you. Give it 110% and be highly motivated while working, and you will do great.

Oh, and BTW, NOBODY messes with the cooks unless they want to spend all morning on the toilet (just kidding, but nobody bothers the cooks).

Another bonus: Cooks don’t have to burn shit in the field!

One last piece of advice: The Army notices highly motivated, squared-away troopers regardless of MOS. I once had a Brig General approach me while working and hand me a challenge coin and a literal pat on the back. I was on cloud 9 that day! Noticed by a GENERAL! No matter what you do, do it the best of your ability and you will be successful in the military.

Whatever you choose, best wishes.

Away

Written in response to: Start your story with the lines: “The room is unfamiliar. I don’t know how I got here.”

Ron Wilson

“The room is unfamiliar. I don’t know how I got here.”“Let’s try again Ryan. Tell us where you are, and how you got there.”I take a deep breath, hold it for a beat, then let it out through my nose. The voice in my head is asking the impossible.“I’m in a room,” I tell the voice again. I think I would’ve lost count of how many times we’ve gone back and forth with this if numbers existed here, but I have this sick feeling in my gut that they don’t. I just know the voice keeps asking and I keep trying to answer. “It’s got walls…sort of, and something not totally unlike a ceiling, and a floor-ish abstract kind of thing that I’m standing on.”I’m not exactly standing. More like an equivalent of standing, but I don’t even go there.“Describe the room.”“I can’t.”The voice doesn’t say anything back for what seems like a long time and the first tendril of fear wraps around my heart. The voice is a pain in the ass with its incessant questions, but it’s all I have. Without the voice, I’m alone…and a very long way from home. Things are coming back now. At least I know who I am and if not where, I know I’m farther away than any living being has a right to be.“We don’t understand what you mean when you tell us you can’t describe the room, Ryan.”“Dammit, I keep telling you, it’s unfamiliar.”“Of course it’s unfamiliar. You’ve never been there, and neither have we. That’s why we need you to describe it for us.”And that’s when I loose it. I yell at the voice in my head as I flail around, spinning, with my eyes so wide they feel like they might fall out. Like…if I could open them just a little more, maybe they’d work like they are supposed to and recognize whatever they are seeing. I grasp with my hands in my tantrum, trying to express the inexpressible, to describe the indescribable. Somewhere in my fevered thoughts I picture myself as a young Captain Kirk in an ancient Star Trek episode trying to wrap his head around some new shit storm he’s in the middle of. But I don’t have a team of creatives making props and costumes so the viewers at home can be amazed at the strange new world he’s discovered.“It’s alien damn it! Un-freaking familiar. As in not familiar. I can’t use a simile, I can’t tell a story or an analogy so you can relate. I can’t describe the room, but I know I’m in a room.”

“Would you like us to pull you out Lieutenant Ryan? Bring you home?”

“NO!”

“Copy that. Just know we’re monitoring you closely. We can snatch you back in a heartbeat.”

It’s my turn to be quiet. And maybe the voice can feel a little of my fear because it seems less demanding when it asks if maybe I just want to rest for a minute.

But I have a better idea.

“Ask me specific questions about the room,” I say.

I can almost hear the conference as whoever comprises the voice confers with each other. They must like my proposal.

“Okay Ryan, can you see the door?”

“Negative. No door.”

“Well how did you get into the room?”

I grit my teeth. “I told you…I don’t know how I got here. Try to keep up. Ask me another.”

“How many walls comprise the room?”

“I don’t know.”

“Is it a cube?”

“I don’t think a cube would fit in this room.”

A pause. Then, “Ryan, that doesn’t make sense.”

“Thank you, I concur. Ask me why I don’t think a cube would fit in this room.”

“Why wouldn’t a cube fit in the room Ryan?”

“Because I don’t think cubes can even exist in whatever place or dimension you sent me.”

A short pause. Then, “you’re saying you believe you are in an extra-dimensional space. Do we have that right Lieutenant?”

“I think that’s about as close as we’re going to get. And for your next question, I have no idea how I got in here.”

“Why don’t you go over the events leading up to this point in time?”

That was an interesting choice of words. I’m pretty sure time is like its brother the cube and just isn’t allowed here, but I play along. I think back to where I was and what I was doing before I ended up wherever I am now and…poof. I’m out of the room and back on the plain. The sky impossibly black. There is no atmosphere, and in place of the billions of stars one would expect to see, just one speck of light almost too dim to perceive.

Well shit…that was weird. 

I speak to the voice, “can you hear me?”

“Loud and clear sir, we got you. The biocore appears to be working as advertised.”

“Good, because I just re-appeared on the plain.”

Another pause. “Re? Appeared? You just arrived.”

“No, you just asked me to retrace the steps that led me to the room, and as soon as I thought about it, I just reappeared where I was before I was in the room.”

“Lieutenant Ryan, what room are we talking about here? Have you observed a structure of some kind?” Excitement filled the voice. “Because that would be a first.”

I say nothing.

The voice says, “Maybe the comms aren’t working as well as we thought.”

I could hear a bit of nervous humor in the voice, but they stopped short of laughing. I feel like laughing, but am afraid it wouldn’t be the happy kind. Thinking about that makes me realize I didn’t know who I was hearing. I knew the voice was some kind of command, and I was on some kind of…mission? Or trip? But things are getting a bit fuzzy in the understanding department.

“Who is this anyhow?”

“Sir?”

“Who am I talking to, and how’d you get in my head? And while we’re at it, just where the hell am I?”

Another voice spoke up. “This is Major Hans Schroder of the US Space Force…and your best friend by the way. Ryan, are we okay?”

Both names are completely unfamiliar to me. This has got to be some kind of…something.

“Okay…and now my other question? Mind enlightening me…friend? Just exactly where am I supposed to be?”

“Relax buddy, we discussed this during your training.” The voice was exaggerating his calmness. It was infuriating. “We all knew you might experience some slight amnesia being this close to the edge of observable spacetime, but the docs here are certain it won’t last long so just hang in there.

“The protocol is to explain to you the who’s what’s and where’s. It’s supposed to help you get back on track. I have a narrative I’ll read, so hang with me, and you’ll begin to regain your memory.

I listen as I stare at the tiny dim speck. It’s the only thing to look at. To observe. I wonder what it is, but I know what it is. I just do not accept it. I cannot accept it.

“You are Lieutenant Ryan of the USSF Quantum Displacement Unit. In a nutshell, our unit produces a wormhole, or gate of sorts here at our base adjacent to CERN in Geneva.

“You are a member of an elite team of travelers who are trained to observe and report. Due to the nature of quantum displacement, video, audio, or any kind of data-recording instrumentation is useless. Only biological entities are able to observe. We are communicating through a cortical node implant.

“This is what you do, Ryan. And in my opinion, you are the best rift rat we’ve ever had. That’s why we sent you on this mission.

“We’ve been all over the Milky Way, knocked on the door of Andromeda, and visited hundreds of neighboring galaxies as well. You are the first in the unit, out of thousands of successful missions to be transported to a point we believed would be right on the edge our current observable universe. You’re way out there kid. That’s why it’d be real helpful if you’d describe what you see. We’re going to pull you back in just under five minutes.”

That actually makes sense and while I still don’t recognize or remember the name, the voice does sound a bit familiar now. I guess that’s a good sign.

“I see a tiny dim speck.”

“Okay, that’s good Ryan. I’m assuming the speck is in the sky?”

“Sky? There is no sky. Just the speck.”

When Hans or whoever doesn’t say anything, I go ahead state the obvious. “I think we overshot a bit.”

“Explain.”

“You’re going to make me say it? Fine. I’m pretty sure that tiny dim speck is the observable universe. I think you sent me a bit farther than you intended.”

“Stand by Ryan.”

I stand by. Then, “Ryan, we’re going to stick with the program for now. We are resuming the observation protocol. You said you were on a plain. Can you describe the plain?”

“No. I can’t see anything but the speck. The only reason I know I’m on the plain is because I have to be standing on…something.”

“Can you walk around?”

“Yes, I can walk. I can’t see shit, but I can walk.”

“Very good Lieutenant Ryan, just walk around and observe. We’ll be bringing you back home in about 10 minutes. Just as soon as we get powered up for the pull.”

“You said 5 minutes. Now it’s 10?”

“That’s correct Ryan. 8 minutes. Time is of the essence. Please follow the plan and report your observations.”

I decide to ignore the time variations. I try to ignore the nagging memory way at the back of my mind that screams, they don’t have to power up for a pull, they can snatch you back at a moment’s notice, but can’t quell it.

With my arms stretched in front of me like walking in a dark house and not wanting to run face first into a wall, I touch something. It feels solid, but fluid. I don’t have words to describe its feeling. I push a little and pop. I’m in a room.

“Lieutenant Ryan, is everything okay?”

“Yes, I’m fine.”

“Please report.”

“I’m in a room. And there’s light…or at least some kind of radiance. More like a glow, but not really.”

“Can you give us a little more? Describe the room please.”

“The room is unfamiliar. I don’t know how I got here.”

“Let’s try again Ryan. Tell us where you are, and how you got there.”

I take a deep breath, hold it for a beat, then let it out through my nose. The voice in my head is asking the impossible.

I’m in Malaysia and that spells trouble. The country has got a lot of “favourite breakfast” to last a lifetime. Morning food that I revisit time and again, I guess these are some that made the favourite list.

^^It may be hearty, not the healthiest but ‘bak-kut-teh’ (literally ‘meat bone tea’) is exceptionally good in the morning. It is a herbal stew consisting of different cuts of pork, tofu puff, shiitake mushroom accompanied by white rice, Chinese crullers, red chili, and Chinese tea.

^^Dim sum is breakfast food. Steamed or deep fried, the “little eats” are hot favourites and dishes such as Siew Mai, Har Gao, Char Siu Bao and Creamy Custard Bun – are the ones that make me return for more.

^^I don’t do ‘laksa’ often but it is a favourite breakfast nonetheless. And when it comes to a bowl of spicy noodle soup, ‘Sarawak Laksa’ is tops for taste, flavour and sheer satisfaction.

^^Kaya-butter toast and soft-boiled eggs w/ soy sauce and white pepper has become an addiction – the ‘breakfast of choice’ when you need something down to earth. Yes, I do dunk the coconut jam toast into the eggs too – perfect!

^^The breakfast to try in Malaysia: Indian origin flatbread (roti canai/paratha) with kari ikan (fish curry) or kari kambing (mutton curry) – been on the favourite list for sometime now.


Adding to the original question –

Youtiao – deep-fried dough sticks to go with plain rice porridge or soy bean milk – where else for this tasty breakfast but Hong Kong and south China.

There’s no more satisfying breakfast in England than this totally sumptuous repast. First thing to look forward to when you wake up.

The Swiss invented muesli. Dried fruits in regular oat flakes, soaked in some water or milk or fruits juice and left for the night before consumption. You wake up to a real fresh start of the day.

Mozzarella Basil Melt

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e7183852e27ca39c72bad412ad777d29

Yield: 3 servings

Ingredients

  • 6 slices sourdough sandwich bread
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 15 fresh basil leaves
  • 2 firm-ripe tomatoes, sliced 1/4 inch thick
  • 4 ounces fresh mozzarella cheese, sliced 1/4 inch thick
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

Instructions

  1. Brush one side of each bread slice with olive oil.
  2. Place three slices, oil side down, on a 10 x 15 inch baking sheet and layer evenly with basil leaves, tomato slices and mozzarella slices.
  3. Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
  4. Top with remaining bread slices, oil side up.
  5. Broil sandwiches 6 inches from heat, turning once, until bread is golden brown and cheese is melted, 2 to 3 minutes total.
  6. Serve immediately.

Even a humble keyboard is now political in Taiwan

Chinese manufacturers are advertising how they dodge tariffs, and tech leaders know they’re in a new world

Sun 25 May 2025 // 16:27 UTC

Every time I attend Taiwan’s Computex exhibition, I’m bewildered by the dozens of vendors selling unremarkable keyboards and mice.

This year, a Chinese vendor stood out from the rest because its stand included not only some lovely input devices but a large sign that reads “FACTORY IN VIETNAM.”

I asked why that mattered enough to point out and was told: “To avoid tariffs.” And to ensure that Computex visitors would understand that while this vendor is Chinese, its wares would not be made unduly expensive by import duties.

Intrigued, I started trying to identify more Chinese vendors to ask how the US’s new trade policy has impacted their operations. A couple told me they have operated outside China for a while, and swung production and export operations to whichever jurisdiction emerged with the lowest tariffs after Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” announcements.

One shifted production to Vietnam and then shifted it back to China after Beijing and Washington agreed a mutual 90-day tariff easing pact earlier this month. The company rep I spoke to then shrugged in exasperation at the prospect of having to move production again if tariffs rebound to higher levels.

A manufacturer of mini-PCs offered a different take: Smugness at having long ago chosen to target Asian and European markets rather than customers in the US, thereby avoiding the trade war.

Another Chinese company I looked into for The Reg’s traditional “weird stuff from Computex” roundup also has a tariff story: Its website includes a notice that states it is able to satisfy about half of US demand from a warehouse in California, and therefore without tariffs. The site has also been tweaked so that quoted prices include tariffs.

Developers are now factory workers

Tariffs aren’t the only geopolitical concern at Computex.

Speaking on a panel ahead of Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote address, Trend Micro CEO Eva Chen noted that as the industry currently refers to GPU-dominated datacenters as “AI factories,” perhaps software developers can be considered manufacturing workers.

“If Jensen can convince Trump,” she said, “then Trump’s dream of moving manufacturing back to the US is already done.”

Chen is clearly aware of the current political climate.

So is Foxconn chair Young Lui, who used his Computex keynote to warn world leaders that AI is going to shrink the manufacturing workforce and they should revisit policy accordingly.

Jensen Huang also waded into political waters by offering both criticsm and praise for evolving US trade policy.

The politics of tech even reached street level at Computex, in the form of the sticker depicted below that I spotted on a lamppost near the exhibition halls that house the event.

Sticker protesting Nvidia’s sales to China spotted at Computex 2025 – click to enlarge

Whoever created and posted that sticker is clearly aware that Nvidia wins a curiously large percentage of its revenue in Singapore and that US lawmakers worry GPUs sold there could make their way to China.

The sticker’s creator also knows that Chinese president Xi Jinping has an ambition to re-unify with Taiwan – perhaps by force.

And that ambition means Computex, whose purpose is to promote the Taiwanese tech industry upon which the world has become utterly reliant, will remain an event at which politics and tech must mix. Even on a humble keyboard. ®