(Repost) Be the Rufus; more videos of personal heroism in China. September 2021 edition (duplicate)

More videos of personal heroism in China. This is the September 2021 edition. These videos all take place in China, with a few notable exceptions, and show examples of how average, normal, everyday people (or dogs and cats) can make a difference. When the calling strikes and an emergency occurs, will you be the one who turns their back, or will you run and offer help? Will you be the one who stays playing on the cell-phone, or will you lend a helping hand? Will you be the person who will make a difference in the lives of those around you, or are you just going to fade into the background.

Make a difference. Be like Rufus!

Please kindly note that this post has multiple embedded videos. It is important to view them. If they fail to load, all you need to do is to reload your browser.

These are all micro-videos of very short duration. From ten seconds to three minutes. I would suggest that you, the reader, allow them to load to get the full experience.

Video – Rescue of people trapped in a flipped over car

A Rufus springs into action and helps those in need. Are you that kind of person. If you saw this car upside down in the water would you drive on by because you were afraid of being late for work? Or, would you stop and help? VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Rufus Taxi Driver

A middle school girl has been waiting for a taxi. It pulls up and a bunch of strangers run over to it and barge their way inside. She remains outside politely. What does the Rufus taxi driver do? He kicks those people out and gets out of the taxi and helps the student in. Be the Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Woman gives birth on a flight of stairs!

And everyone in the hallway helps. One woman covers her with her coat, another man calls the hospital. Another one gets her family. One raises her legs and another one gets water. Rufus’s work alone or part of a team, but they always work! VIDEO.

Video.

Meanwhile in Hong Kong

No video.

“Back to work today, forgot my pass so locked bike outside Cannon Street station. Left work at 6pm to find just the cut lock and no bike, resigned to never seeing my trusty stead again asked the station if they have cameras.

A guy appeared waving at me, asked me to put the code into my cut lock.

He replied ‘I have your bike’ with a smile I will never forget!!

His name is Abdul Muneeb and he works for South Eastern Railways, he was on a break and saw a guy bolt cut the lock and challenged him to give it back, he then took it inside and waited 4 hours after his shift finished to personally make sure I got my bike back.

The world needs more Abdul’s, he is a legend of a man and a credit to his employer.”

Cut lock.

Video – Collapse on the walkway

You don’t pretend that it isn’t happening. You do whatever it takes. You help others and you be the Rufus. Do what it takes. Be kind. Be considerate. Be helpful. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Three month old baby tries to save his mother!

Sure the mother is just getting a back-rub, but the kid doesn’t know that. So what does he do? He crawls out of his crib, and crawls on the floor to the other room to “help” his father “save” his mother! Charming, and yet so very Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Motorcycle cop drives an old woman home on her tricycle

Rufus’s NEVER say “that’s not my job”. They do what ever it takes and helps those in need. Here we have an older woman. In her 90’s and she no longer can petal her tricycle home. But the motorcycle cop sees this and takes her home on his own. Be the Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Collapsing fence traps scores of people

So you are on a busy road in the middle of rush hour, and then a major road fence collapses on cars, bikes, people, everything. What’s a Rufus to do? I’ll tell you what. A Rufus goes out and helps everyone. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Racing to save a boy’s life

You are minding your own business and a toddler comes racing down the highway heading straight towards on-going traffic. What are you going to do? Wait and watch the carnage? Film it? Be the Rufus. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Skyscraper rescue

China is skyscraper after skyscraper, and many kids and children like to get on the porch and crawl over outside. Many die. And it is heart rendering. Here we have a man climb down from the sixteenth floor to rescue a child on the fifteenth floor. Just an average guy. Just an extraordinary time. Be the Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Helping a homeless woman

Sometimes, all we need is an excuse to brighten up someone’s gloomy day.  We just make an excuse and find a way. That’s all it takes to make someone’s day.

VIDEO.

Video.

Be the Rufus

“OKAY, I just saw the most amazing thing today. I was waiting for my prescription at Walgreen, and I noticed this man is picking up his medicines.. He is asking how much they are, and starting to get nervous about the price. The total was $170 and the pharmacist asked if he would rather only get one month of his medicines instead of 3.

“THIS lady next to me, walks up to them and says: NO, he is getting all three months and pays for his bill. I was walking out of there with tears in my eyes, what an amazing woman…”

Be the Rufus.

Video – Distraught mother

It’s a risky time. Life happens and the stress and the emotions become unbearable. Don’t let it get to you. Be the Rufus. Help others. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – A woman provides CPR

Maybe it’s her husband. Maybe it’s a stranger. But a Rufus doesn’t just stand around. He / She mans the phones. Calls the ambulance. Helps the woman. Gets information to tell the parametric. A Rufus participates. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Fire in the neighborhood

You see a house on fire in your own neighborhood. What are you going to do? Wait for the fire department to come. Well this video tells you everything you want to know. VIDEO 70MB

Video.

Please compare the difference from the slovenly American firefighters taking their time walking to the burn-site, to the Chinese firefighters running for their lives to help put out fires. It’s like night and day.

Video – Barrier down, no problem!

A real community works together for the common good. People don’t sit things out because it’s their “freedom”. They participate. They help. They make their community better. They work together. Be the Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Have some compassion

No one notices that the boy is standing out int he cold without a coat or even a light jacket. What is going on? Well, a Rufus notices everything. Something doesn’t “feel” right and so the Rufus takes action. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Old man rescues a child in the freezing March Winter.

There’s a young girl flailing in the icy water. What are you going to do. I mean you’re in your 80’s after all. Well, you shed you clothes and your rescue her. That’s what you do. Be the Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Public Servants

This is how the police behave when you have a society of Rufus’s. Everyone works to make the place a better one. We all need to do our part. We all need to participate. We all need to be helpful, kind and understanding. Be the Rufus. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Saving a dog tied to the tracks

I do not know why this dog was tied to the train tracks. Maybe an accident, maybe on purpose by a busy owner. Maybe by some evil assholes. Whatever the reason, this guy goes forth to rescue it.

VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Rufus compilation

Good deeds, consideration towards others, rescues, and being helpful. All are traits of a Rufus. Here is a compilation of just a few of the many Rufus activities that occur every day but that are never reported. Be the Rufus. It’s our highest calling. VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Child goes over the side

Again, it’s a cold winter day. The child falls one story into the cold water below. What are you to do? Are you going to wait and call the police, or are you going to do something. A real Rufus takes action! Be that Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – Infant rescue to the hospital

Your baby is in distress. No time to get a taxi. No time to stop and think. So what do you do? You go to the traffic policeman and enlist his help. Be the Rufus! VIDEO.

Video.

Video – American Rufus’s in Jacksonville, Florida

It’s scenes like this that give me so much hope for America. Look at how everyone comes to help this poor guy. It doesn’t matter. Old or young, tall or short, big and fat or frail and skinny,  Black or White. Everyone comes to help. Rufus. You are either one or you are not. VIDEO

Video.

Thank you for reading this.

God bless.

Conclusion

We do not know when the calling will come.

However, when it calls, you must take action. It will not make you wealthy, rich, famous, or attractive. But, it will make a difference when you are judged upon death. Be the Rufus. Make a difference. Help others. It’s our highest calling.

Do you want more?

I have more articles like this in my Rufus Index here…

Hero Stories

.

Articles & Links

You’ll not find any big banners or popups here talking about cookies and privacy notices. There are no ads on this site (aside from the hosting ads – a necessary evil). Functionally and fundamentally, I just don’t make money off of this blog. It is NOT monetized. Finally, I don’t track you because I just don’t care to.

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Divine Llama mouthed the haiku silently, looking heartbroken

Huawei has already its own advanced chips and supply chain in China. It is independent of the US.

The assumption that China depends on the US for advanced chips may be misplaced.

Look at its recent actions.

Nvidia is under investigations on national security grounds and confirmed to have acted against its anti-monopolist laws. Nvidia is not any company. It is the bellwether of US AI companies, the world’s acknowledged leader, and was once treated as the prima donna in China, with 90% share of the market.

China can now dispense with it. The government instructs companies not to buy its chips, including the latest one, Pro 6000D, an upgraded chip based on Blackwell, specially designed for China.

Nvidia is not alone. China has launched an investigations of (1) US past actions of dumping analog chips, and (2) US measures that discriminate against its chip sector that constitute suppression of its development of high-tech industries, such as advanced computing chips and AI. It covers a wide field in all links of the IC sector, including design, manufacturing, packaging, testing, equipment, components, materials, and tools. It would take corresponding measures against the discriminations.

China is now able and willing to enter the tech contest in earnest.

US sanctions have created a fog of information about what are cooking in China, and what are in its pipeline, save for what it chooses to announce, which are fast and furious.

An Empty World, A Time Traveler, Another Dimension | Liminal Spaces: The Reality In-between

ksnip 20250918 204041
ksnip 20250918 204041

Chicken Tagine

Chicken Tangine

Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 6 or 7 boneless/skinless chicken thighs, cut into 2 inch chunks
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 1 medium onion, coarsely chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tablespoons ginger, minced
  • 1 teaspoon ground coriander
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 2 cups chicken broth
  • 1 cup dried apricots
  • 1 cup whole blanched almonds*
  • 1 cup pitted green olives

Instructions

  1. Heat olive oil in a large soup pot over high heat.
  2. In a small glass bowl, place chicken chunks and add flour. Toss chicken to coat.
  3. Place chicken in olive oil; brown on all sides.
  4. Reduce heat to medium-low; add onion, garlic and ginger. Sauté for about 5 minutes.
  5. Stir in coriander and cumin; sauté until aromatic, about 30 seconds.
  6. Add wine. Increase heat to high. Boil until wine has reduced by half.
  7. Stir in chicken broth, apricots, almonds and olives. Bring to a simmer; reduce heat to low, cover pot and simmer for 45 minutes.
  8. Serve.

Notes

* You can buy almonds already blanched, or simply drop in boiling water for about a minute.

Recipe and photo used with permission from: National Chicken Council

I can only answer for myself, I’m 84, and on a pension, the wife and I both are, so we are not well off financially, but also not destitute, we do own our own house with no debts, so I assume we qualify to answer the question. Originally when I retired, I followed my lifelong hobby of lapidary, collecting and cutting and polishing semiprecious stones, which evolved to just sapphires I dug myself at the central Queensland gem fields, unfortunately I had to go into surgery for a triple bypass during which I had a massive stroke, which paralysed the whole left side of my body, and being left handed made it worse still, so these days I spend my time between bed and my lounge chair doing this, answering questions on Quora, so yes that’s my day after day after day,

still, I’ve had a full and exciting life, so certainly no complaints,

here are some stones I found and cut

Michelle Oliver

“For God’s sake Mosley!”Jock Pendleton from Pendleton and Mosley ripped his spectacles from the bridge of his nose and mopped at his brow in frustration. Little Tim Mosley Junior stood before him with two halves of the whole apparatus resting in his open palms, his face a study of blank confusion.“If yer name wasn’t on the door, Son, I’d have given yer the boot long ago!”Tim’s munchkin face screwed up in dismay. His father had been a refugee from Oz in the early days of the Witch’s reign, and munchkin offspring stayed true to their bloodline, no matter how diluted it became.“I didn’t mean to!”“And that there is the problem. You never mean to. Yet every time, every… single… bloody time, you manage to mess it up!”“I was just…”“You was just doin’ perzactly what I specifically told you not to.”Tim’s eyes welled. It was a thing of beauty when a munchkin’s eyes welled. The moisture glistened like crystal drops, hovering just on the edge of his lashes, collecting rainbows and wavering with tremulous hesitation on the verge of spilling.Jock was having none of it.

Munchkin tears were as bad as dragon tears. Full of remorse yet never learning from their mistakes, the same offense committed again and again, until one was heartily sick of the sight of them.

“No use turning those tears on for me, Son, I’m perfectly immuned to them by now.” Jock slammed his eye-glasses back onto the bridge of his nose and held his hand out for the apparatus, both halves of it. Tim gingerly placed the delicate pieces into Jock’s hand, pressing his lips together in a vain attempt to force the tears back.

Heedless of his wishes, they broke free from his lashes and spilled down his cheek. “I’m sorry, Jock. I won’t touch it again, I promise.”

Jock sighed. “Now, don’t you be promising something you can’t deliver. Everyone knows a munchkin in a laboratory is a mistake.” He waddled back to the bench and placed the apparatus on the wooden surface, carefully inspecting the two halves with a critical eye. “Now, what am I going to do?” He fumbled about on his bench for the correct tool, while holding the apparatus steady.

“I could…” Tim began, but Jock stopped him with a glare.

“You. There. Sit. Stay. Touch nothing!” Tim trudged dejectedly to the corner where a small wooden chair rested, its surface smooth and shining, well polished by the seat of his pants.

“Right, let’s see what can be fixed…” Jock bent his head over the workbench, adjusting the mechanism on his eye-glasses to increase the magnification.

The daylight dwindled into evening shadows. Tim sat as still as he could on the wooden chair, his britches further polishing it with each barely contained fidget and wiggle.

“Where is the light?” Jock grumbled from the worktable, his nose pressed deeply into the apparatus as he attempted to realign the mechanisms inside.

Tim, freed from the constraints of sitting still, bounded into action. With youthful energy and zeal, he flitted about with flint and lantern, lighting each lamp in the laboratory. Cautiously, he set the last lamp carefully on the workbench, ensuring that he placed it a suitable distance from Jock’s elbow, and angled in just the right way, so as to shine its light upon his work.

Jock barely grunted an acknowledgment as the light fell on the mechanics, glinting off cogs and wheels, springs and coils. With his probe in one hand and long-necked pliers in the other, he was totally transfixed by his work. His wrinkled brow was furrowed with lines of concentration, and he tutted and hummed to himself as he worked.

Tim shifted his weight from foot to foot, barely even able to see over the table, but he devoured each movement with wide-eyed fascination. Each gentle twist and tweak made by the master was one twist closer to seeing the apparatus restored. And it was such an apparatus. Tim had no idea what it did, or why it existed, only that it moved with meticulous precision, each gear and lever fitting into the next like magic. It was that movement that had caught his eye, ignited his fascination and tempted him beyond his capacity for self control. Mind you, even for a Munchkin, his capacity for self control was notoriously limited.

From behind the curtain in the corner of the room, a snuffling sound broke the silence. Tim jumped. His focus had been so intent upon the workbench and the intricacies of the master craftsman at work on the apparatus that he’d forgotten about their other big discovery. A giant.

It had landed in the small courtyard behind their shop this morning with an earthshaking thud and a smoking crackle of energy that scorched all the cobblestone pavement black. Miraculously, although it was covered in a fine layer of soot, the giant appeared unharmed. It swayed alarmingly on its two tree trunk legs, then collapsed in a crumpled heap. Tim had witnessed the entire spectacle as he was returning from the outhouse on the other side of the courtyard. He had run into the laboratory, screaming and babbling incoherent sentences, and forcefully dragged Jock outside.

Jock was pragmatic. He studied the prone form, its enormous limbs akimbo, and declared they had better drag it inside the laboratory for further study and to prevent mass hysteria when the rest of the village awoke.

So, with much effort (and a pinch of the very expensive and powerful levitation powder that Jock had constructed for the prince and his men) they heaved and huffed and manhandled the giant into the laboratory, where it lay the length of the entire rear wall, head against one side, feet touching the other. Jock had the foresight to enclose this space with a hastily erected curtain made from a bedsheet thrown over a rope that he nailed to each wall. No need to frighten any visitors today with the unexpected and unexplainable presence of an enormous giant in their midst.

The giant didn’t stir at all, and Tim continued to take fascinated peeks behind the curtain to study the creature with morbid curiosity. It was on one of these furtive, self appointed missions that he noticed the apparatus. It had been loosely clasped about the giant’s wrist, and it took very little of his munchkin skill to liberate the item. The whirling cogs and gears produced a soft, mesmerising ticking that enchanted him. His little fingers probed and poked and prodded in an attempt to understand the purpose of the apparatus. A munchkin’s sense of curiosity is a bottomless well, never ending, never satisfied, and potentially dangerous.

“Here, leave that be! Ya don’t know what yer messin’ with!” Jock had growled furiously as he swiped the apparatus from the munchkin’s hand and placed it high above the workstation, well out of temptation’s reach.

But the faint ticking could still be heard, each tick a question. What am I? Why am I? How do I? Tim couldn’t leave it alone and without conscious thought, plan or consideration, he scampered up a stool when Jock had left to use the outhouse and the apparatus was once again in his hands. His nimble, yet clumsy hands. That was how Jock had found him when he returned, the apparatus in two parts and a guilty, contrite expression on his little munchkin face.

After being motionless all day, the giant groaned and sat up, pulling the hastily erected curtain down in a tangle of fabric, long limbs thrashing alarmingly. Tim and Jock scampered out of harm’s way, eyes fixed upon the raging creature. It occurred to Tim that bringing the giant indoors may have been a mistake. It was very large and appeared as if it could destroy the laboratory and all the delicate implements with one mistimed sweep of its arm. When it sat up, it stilled, the stillness almost as terrifying as the previous moments of uncontrolled pandemonium. Seated, the giant’s eyes were on a level with Tim’s own and the two stared in horrified fascination at each other for long, still moments, each barely breathing or blinking.

Jock, braver than he appeared, stepped between the giant and the munchkin, drawing both of their attention to him.

“Good evening, giant. We do not mean to harm you,” Jock began, his hands outstretched in a calming manner. “You mysteriously appeared here, and we was wondering what you want?”

The giant spoke, a rumble of sound that had no intelligible meaning. Even Tim couldn’t understand. The ability to converse with all creatures and convey their wishes and desires to Jock, the inventor, was an invaluable munchkin skill, that offset the damages caused by his curiosity and clumsiness. Jock turned to him for the translation. It was the reason his name was on the door, after all, but this time his second sense for strange languages didn’t help.

The giant rumbled again, a louder rumble with a upwards inflection. A question? A plea? Tim wasn’t sure, and it was unusual for him to feel so at a loss.

“I don’t know what you’re saying, giant,” he cried, panic making his usual treble voice an even higher squeak of sound.

Rumble, rumble… the giant waved its arms about alarmingly, and both Jock and Tim ducked beneath the flailing limbs. The distress was written loud on the giant’s face and it finally buried its head in its hands, as if the weight of its thoughts and emotions was just too heavy. It took several long slow breaths, muttering up under its breath some kind of incantation. The repeated sounds convinced Tim that the creature was casting a spell, so he braced himself for some kind of calamitous catastrophe.

Nothing happened. Quite anti-climatic, really.

The giant peered through its fingers in cautious glances, as if it too expected something to have happened. For the space of seven breaths, no one in the room dared to move. They barely breathed. The only sound was the soft, barely perceptible tick of the newly repaired apparatus laying on the workbench.

Suddenly, the giant grasped its forearm, eyes wide with horrified panic, searching for the item missing from its wrist.

Rumble, rumble?

Tim interpreted that sound, and the urgency with which it was enunciated, as ‘Where is my apparatus?’ or even, ‘Who the devil has stolen my apparatus?’ or perhaps, ‘Oh god where is it?’ He exploded into action, reacting before Jock could stop him, and swept the apparatus from the workbench to offer it to the giant, hoping to appease it. The giant reached out one hand and took the apparatus with careful fingers. The look on its face spoke of despair as it examined the damage and the unfinished repair.

Rumble, rumble.

It looked up hopefully at Tim, then at Jock. When they shook their heads in mute incomprehension, the giant mimed poking the apparatus with tools. Tim understood this to be a request for the appropriate tools for repair, and he bounced back to the table. The giant stood slowly, careful not to hit its head on the ceiling and with bowed back made its way to the table to study the tools.

“Now just you wait here a minute…” Jock grumbled as the giant pawed through the implements on the table. “Them’s expensive delicate tools and I don’t appreciate you just rummaging through them like as they were spoons in a drawer.”

As expected, the giant ignored him as it picked up the probe and pliers. In the huge hand, the tools looked like toys, but the giant wielded them with dexterity and precision. Tim was entranced by the delicate motions and he clambered up a stool to watch as the giant worked.

“Tim, get down from there before you break something!” Jock growled, but for the first time in his life, Tim ignored him. The giant was fascinating, its movements precise and controlled as it manipulated the apparatus and its moving parts with confident ease and skill.

Rumble, rumble.

The giant paused and looked at Tim, who stared back blankly. He still couldn’t understand a single word, but from the tone, the giant was requesting he do something. Carefully, the giant took Tim’s hand and guided it into position to hold one of the tools while he manipulated the other. With a final deft twist and click, the mechanism locked into place and the giant smiled.

Rumble, rumble.

Perhaps that was an expression of praise, or maybe gratitude, Tim wasn’t sure, but he liked the sound of it. As it spoke, the giant clapped the apparatus about his wrist and twisted the dials and manipulated all the interesting mechanics with swift, sure movements.

“Thank you for letting me help,” Tim said as he reached out his hand to clasp the giant’s arm with a friendly, grateful clasp.

In a flash of ash and dust, the giant vanished as suddenly as it had arrived.

***

Amid an earthshaking cacophony of sound, Brenton emerged into the lab with a shudder and his head spun alarmingly. He knew he was about to pass out once again and groped unsteadily for help. It was forthcoming and urgent hands pressed an oxygen mask to his face. He breathed deeply as his legs gave way beneath him. More hands guided him down to sit with his head between his knees until the world stopped spinning. He could hear the urgency in their voices, but with the ringing in his ears, he was unable to make out words.

“Brent…Brent… you ok?” Finally the words coalesced into some kind of sense in his brain and he shook off the concerned hands.

“I’m fine, a bit lightheaded, but fine.” He opened his eyes, relieved to see the interior of the laboratory, its sterile stainless steel surfaces, with orderly storage for equipment, familiar and comforting.

“It seems as if your mission was successful. You brought back a souvenir.” James, a fellow scientist and good friend, spoke in a tone that was not necessarily approving.

Brenton frowned in confusion. He’d not brought anything with him. He knew the rules, looking only: leave nothing, take nothing. Until they had more data, the balance must remain neutral. He turned to see what had caused James’s disapproval. There, pale and limp, was the little creature who had helped him repair the convergence capacitor. The little elf-like creature must have hung on to him as he activated the jump link. Shit.

“Yeah, the mission was successful. You can tell Elon Musk that inter-dimensional travel is possible.”

Brenton studied the little creature, its pointed ears and fancy, bright clothing, and wondered just what kind of can of worms he and his colleagues had opened.

THIS CRASH WILL BE WORSE THAN 1929 – RAY DALIO ON THE END OF FIAT MONEY AND WHAT COMES NEXT

I’m writing this in 2025, having purchased a model Y (Juniper).

I’ve had a couple of BMWs. They were pretty cars and the driving experience was great for the time. The interior was luxurious, at least on the five series, and the ride was great. Was this a high-quality car?

I ask, because literally as soon as the warranty ended, I was paying a grand each time I came in for service, which was a lot. Ironically, I was reliving my father’s experience some twenty years earlier when he had a 733.

In another answer I wrote years ago, I explain the technical definition of quality, which is suitability for intended purpose. I expected fahrvergnuegen from BMW and I got it, so it was in fact a quality car. The extraordinary maintenance frequency and costs were just a byproduct for delivering on the intended purpose.

I redefined intended purpose for subsequent cars as reliability and low maintenance, buying a couple of Hondas and a Ford F-150 (which I still have). The ride was not as good, the noise more prevalent, acceleration disappointing; all byproducts of the intended purpose.

With the Juniper (Model Y 2026), the car defined quality for me. What I knew was that Teslas were EVs, meaning there were greatly reduced emissions over ICE vehicles and that they were well suited for the Wasatch Front, which has a significant pollution problem due to the emissions being trapped in the atmosphere because of the mountains to the east.

Driving the car was a revelation. Way faster than any car I had ever driven, including an M series BMW 5 that I rented in Europe. Just astonishing acceleration and this more than twice as slow as a Plaid version of the car. It’s ride was equivalent to that of a BMW, centered, solid, smooth but still having excellent road feel. The thing turns like it’s on rails.

It’s super comfortable, which I can attest to after two extended road trips. My body creaked badly every time I stopped in my Bimmers, but no issues with the Tesla. I really like the air conditoned seats, which has been an option for some time now among various brands, but I never had a car with it.

I’m not going to go into every detail, but the software is bananas. Better than anything I’ve ever experienced and highly customizable. The EV experience of charging the car rather than filling up is no problem and not really better or worse than getting gas, except that I can charge at home and never visit a supercharger unless I’m road tripping.

The car looks great, at least to my taste. I like the Bauhaus interior, clean lines, uncluttered, functional. Some people may prefer a busier interior. All the materials are high quality.

I’ve heard that the paint isn’t at the same level as that of German cars, but I’ve treated the paint with a titanium oxide binder to harden it up and applied paint protection film to the front parts. I did this with my BMWs as well, so the paint issue isn’t really relevant. I’ve found no flaws in the paint application, so I’m good with it.

The quality, or suitable-for-intended-purpose aspect of the car, is the much reduced maintence, the extremely low cost of running the car (60 bucks to run up to the Canadian border from Utah…), the driving experience and…

…the pièce de résistence, the full self-driving (FSD).

OMG! I rarely drive the car manually anymore. It’s so relaxing, so smooth and comfortable.

Like most people, I was a little tentative at first, but as I’ve consciously allowed the vehicle to do more without my intervention, my trust for it has grown. When the regulatory regime allows for unsupervised FSD, I’ll be perfectly comfortable reading a book while it takes me to my destination.

I can find fault with any car, and there are issues with the user interface that I think need improvement, but I’ve never enjoyed a car this much and truth be told, I’m really not much of a car guy. My wife has one too, and she loves it as much as I do, albeit for different reasons.

Interestingly, I had to drive the truck recently, and wondered what was wrong with it. It seemed to be lagging, but then I realized, the Model Y had spoiled me for ICE cars.

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Giant Alien Blob Swallows A Whole Town | The Blob | Free Monster Movie

ksnip 20250918 203820
ksnip 20250918 203820

A Doorway on Lenox

Written in response to: Center your story around someone who has (or is given) the ability to time travel.

🏆 Contest #317 Winner!

Ovett Chapman

Theo had been staring at the same sentence so long the letters bled together. Lineage in Postmodern Black Poetics. He mouthed the words once more, flat and sour on his tongue. His coffee from the bodega on 121st sat cold beside him, the surface gone slick and oily, but he drank anyway.The radiator groaned in protest, the pipes rattling like brass warming up before a set.Theo pressed a palm against the open book, willing the words to stay still. For a moment they held. Then the page trembled beneath his hand.He told himself it was fatigue.The air sharpened with coal smoke. Somewhere beyond the walls, a horn broke loose in the night.The lights went dark.And when he opened his eyes again, Harlem was different.The words swam, and the sidewalk cracked into cobblestones.Horse hooves clopped. Trumpets rang from a window above. A boy in suspenders sprinted past with a sack of newspapers.Theo looked down. His phone was gone.

He closed his eyes again, slowly, and he was back in Harlem 2025. The coffee had spilled all over his notes.

He told himself it was a stress-induced hallucination.

Two weeks later, when he touched the yellowed cover of Torchlight Verse, it happened again.

This time, the streetlamps and car horns didn’t dissolve into fluorescent light and radiator hiss.

***

Theo Marshall had never planned to write about his great-granduncle. Elias Marshall was barely a footnote in most Harlem Renaissance anthologies. His one slim volume of poems, printed in 1925. Then nothing else. It had taken Theo three semesters and an irritable dissertation advisor to even find the book.

But here he was, dozing over its fragile binding in Columbia’s archive reading room, the heater rattling like a dying trombone, when the world folded neatly into itself.

The cold vanished.

Ink and coal hung heavy in the room, a bitter perfume. From outside drifted Harlem’s chorus: boots striking pavement in syncopation, a horn laughing wild from a tenement window, a dice game punctuated by cheers, and far off, the steel tempo of the train threading it all together.

Theo stood. The desk under him was now a dark walnut, carved with initials.

Outside the tall window, dusk spread over Harlem, streetlamps flickering on as voices rose from the sidewalks.

His hand dug into his sternum, waiting for the sharp bite of something fatal. The pulse was strong, stubbornly alive.

But if he was right, and Theo Marshall put more faith in science than faith, he had time-traveled by accident. Again.

Footsteps pounded the stairs, each one strong enough to rattle the doorframe.

The door flew open hard, slamming against the wall.

In the doorway stood Elias Marshall.

***

Elias’s suit sagged at the shoulders, the fabric gone shiny with wear. Ink clung to the creases of his fingers, and one sock had slouched low inside a scuffed shoe. The socks didn’t match. His steps struck the floor with a restless energy that filled the room.

“Jervis lied,” Elias muttered, slamming a folder onto the desk. “He said he’d get it to Locke. Said he’d help. All they want is another Langston, another Claude. I ain’t the right color for them.”

 

Theo blinked.

Elias spun on him. “Who the hell are you?”

 

“Me?”

 

“Yeah, boy. I don’t see no one else here.”

 

“I… uhm.. friend of Jervis.”

 

“Make sense. You got that damn Jervis look.” He poured himself a half-glass of amber liquid. “You here to laugh too? Read my poems, say they ain’t finished, ain’t worth a damn?”

 

“No. I…” Theo stared. “You’re Elias Marshall.”

 

The man narrowed his eyes. “Boy, how do you know my name?”

Theo’s throat tightened. ‘You… wrote Torchlight Verse. Published next year.’”

 

“Next year?” Elias squinted. “You drunk already?”

Theo let out a single bark of laughter that cracked the silence. “Maybe.”

 

Elias stared a beat longer, then dropped into a chair. “Well, mystery man, since you’ve materialized into my misery, might as well read them. Maybe you’ll say something new.”

Theo picked up the folder. Inside: ink-scrawled lines, thick with metaphor, grief knotted into cadence. They weren’t finished, but they carried a heat that felt alive.

He cleared his throat. “This one here, Stove Smoke. It’s got the bones of something incredible. But here.” He pointed. “Don’t finish this metaphor. Let it hang. Let it ache.”

Elias frowned. “The line about Mama’s laugh?”

“Yes. Let her live in the smoke. Don’t tie a bow on it.”

Elias leaned forward. “What did you say your name was again, boy?”

Theo paused. “Doesn’t matter.”

“You some kind of spirit or figment of my ‘magination.”

“Maybe.”

 

They traded short, uneven chuckled bursts, the kind that tested the air, before the sound grew freer, tumbling between them.

Elias poured him a drink. Theo accepted.

***

They worked through the night.

“Your verbs are good,” Theo said. “But you over-explain the emotion.”

Elias bristled. “People don’t read between the lines.”

“They do if the line hits right.”

At one point, Elias demanded, “You sure you’re not Alain Locke in disguise?”

Theo snorted. “Please. Locke doesn’t quote Kendrick.”

 

Elias blinked. “Who on earth is Kendrick.”

 

“Never mind.”

 

Later, as they restructured a poem called Inheritance, Elias leaned back. “When I was eight, I wrote about a dead bird. Mama said, ‘you got heavy hands for a child.’ Been dragging that weight since.”

Theo nodded. “Heavy hands leave marks.”

“You talk like a professor.”

“Guess I do.”

Elias laughed.“ You’ve got the look of a man stuck between places.”

Theo’s eyes dropped to the ink stains on Elias’s hands. His own fingers flat against the desk, unsure what to hold on to. “I… I shouldn’t be here,” he said, then after a breath, “though I’ve never felt more at home.”

He leaned in slightly, his next words quiet, as if asking permission. “Can I give you one line?”

 

“Only one, huh.”

 

Theo wrote: You cannot name the stars unless you’ve walked beneath their heat.

His gaze lingered on the words. His lips parted, and released a breath so slow it seemed to carry something out of him.

“Damn. That kind of line could make a man immortal.”

Theo shrugged. “It’s yours.”

 

“Hell it is,” Elias said. “A line like that don’t belong to one man. But I’ll keep it.”

 

He turned back to the page.

Theo felt the jolt before it happened.

The room shimmered. Elias’s voice echoed. And the desk beneath his fingers transformed.

 

***

He woke in the library. A radiator hissed.

The poem lay open on the desk. The final one. The one that had always ended mid-line.

Except now it didn’t.

You cannot name the stars

unless you’ve walked beneath their heat –

so I walk. Still walking.

Theo’s throat caught.

He flipped to the acknowledgements. There, in ink faded by time:

To the man whose name I never caught, who found me in the hour I was ready to quit.

Theo sat back.

He checked the archive database. Elias Marshall: still one book, still no further publications, still nearly forgotten.

But that line, the one about stars, had become part of the canon. Quoted in anthologies. Tattooed on artists. It had survived.

Theo had given it. And history had kept it.

Without him.

***

He didn’t tell anyone.

Not his advisor. Not his friends. Not even his mother.

He redrafted his proposal:

Inherited Voice: Ghosts, Lineage, and the Unwritten Contributors to the Harlem Renaissance.

He quoted Elias liberally.

And when he defended it months later, voice steady, heart full, he wore a pin in his lapel: a star, tiny and unremarkable to anyone else.

***

One rainy afternoon, Theo found himself outside the old brownstone on Lenox, the one he’d first “arrived” in. It was a crumbling walk-up now, paint peeling, windows cracked.

He stood for a moment in the doorway and listened.

He didn’t hear any music, nor keyboard clacking, only the rain working its way through the cracks where sound used to be.

A boy passed on a scooter, blasting trap music.

Theo smiled.

 

He decided not to go inside.

Instead, he walked down Lenox, coat collar up, heels tapping to the music in his head. He wasn’t chasing after doorways or strange coincidences anymore.

For now, he held on to what he’d found.

He carried a past close enough to touch and a future opening ahead, his shoes striking wet pavement as he walked clear between the two.

Quantum Consciousness and the Origin of Life

Consciousness: it’s a mystery that has confounded philosophers, psychologists, and scientists throughout human history. Where does our first person sense of experience come from? One of the leading theories today comes from Stuart Hameroff, an anesthesiologist at the University of Arizona. Back in the 1990’s, he had a clandestine meeting with Nobel Prize-winning physicist Sir Roger Penrose, and together they came up with a profound – and controversial – new hypothesis that our brains construct conscious experience from quantum mechanical processes laced into the very fabric of the universe. Now 30 years later, evidence in favor of their theory is mounting thanks to incredible new findings by Director of the Arizona Astrobiology Center, Dante Lauretta, who also recently captained NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission. That mission collected pristine samples from an asteroid that dates to the dawn of the solar system, and inside they’ve found clues that the quantum nature of consciousness might have preceded the formation of life on Earth. Lauretta thinks that further study could solve another great scientific mystery: the origin of life.

China’s current rhetoric is hardly opportunistic, but a response to the continued diplomatic incompetence of particularly the EU. For example, Vice-President of the European Commission Kaja Kallas made the idiotic claim that China’s regular celebration for the end of WW2 was a challenge the rules based world order. By that she meant that Western diplomacy is based on institutions, alliances, transparency, and adherence to international norms.

China’s foreign ministry through spokesperson Guo Jiakun responded to this statement, saying her statement was “full of ideological bias without basic historical common sense… a disrespect to the history of World War II… very wrongful and irresponsible… harming the EU’s own interests.”

Personally, I agree. Kaja and EU officials were blaming China for celebrating history. China had an open invitation to the event, it was attended by many leaders who are adversaries of the EU. However, they could have easily showed up and demonstrated that the EU, does not let current political alliances distort history or impair morals and indeed celebrate the defeat of fascism in WW2 and the sacrifice which so many million people gave to make that happen. They chose instead to do the opposite, and insult people with whom the EU does not have bad relations with on top of it, merely for not doing everything the EU says. In this way China came off as representing reason and consistency, while the EU came off as petty, moralizing and imperialist mentality refusing to let people follow a different way than the western way.


That’s a win for China, and a loss for the EU. While many in the EU may agree with Kaja, it is not the job of the EU foreign affairs representatives or vice president, to make EU people feel good about their own superiority, but to build relationships with our global strategic partners.

China excels at this, and the EU frankly sucks at it presently. Unelected EU officials are not chosen for their diplomatic skill any longer, but for their willingness to follow a doctrine. Probably why the EU chose a lawyer for this position, rather than a diplomat. Kaja herself got out of Estonian politics when it turned out her husband had invested in companies in operating in Russia, with Kaja’s own personal money, in 2020, something she kept secret until it was revealed in 2023, after she for years had condemned any business still operating in Russia, while secretly her own husband profited.

China did not choose Kaja, the EU line or the self destructive rhetoric of the west. I am sometimes convinced that the meme about China winning by sitting back and doing nothing, as they watch western institutions lose all credibility and influence in the global south, due to sheer incompetence and corruption is very accurate.


On a historical note during the cold war, experience showed that China’s domestic and industrial issues were far more complicated and large than Mao was truly able to acknowledge. China was not a state remotely ready for the world revolution Mao wanted, and eventually the USSR and China rebuild their relationship. China did not “side with the west against the USSR”, indeed China blamed the USSR for trying to negotiate with the west, and refused to join several of the armament control schemes invented by the USA and USSR.


On a final note, Modi prime minister of India, was in a brief war with a country funded by China, has long term territory and other disputes with China, a population which 60–70% feels very negatively about China, and attended the SCO in China personally, said nothing stupid, and is not just maintaining, but improving relations with China. All because of western policy decisions. China is not opportunistic, but the west is throwing the easiest simple opportunities at China, bringing China closer to even their long term rivals without China doing a damn thing. It’s honestly mind blowing.

Sir Whiskerton and The Llama’s Love Song; A Tale of Terrible Poetry, Yodeling Sabotage, and One Bear’s Questionable Taste in Music


Act I: The Haiku Heard ‘Round the Barn

Divine Llama (仙踪驼 Xiān Zōng Tuó), the farm’s resident romantic, penned a haiku for Tony the Bear (猫熊托尼 Māoxióng Tuōní):

“Mud / Your fur is like mud / Beautiful mud.”

Sir Whiskerton (reading it): “This is either profound… or proof poetry should require a license.”

Just as Divine Llama prepared to recite it, The Yodeling Fish (who lives in the pond and really loves attention) began its daily concert:

“YODEL-AY-HEE-HOOO—wait, was that a B-flat? YODEL-AY—”


Act II: The Case of Mistaken Melody

Tony, waking from hibernation, heard the yodeling and sighed dreamily:

“Who is this angel? This siren of the mountains?”

Meanwhile:

  • Divine Llama mouthed the haiku silently, looking heartbroken.

  • The Fish yodeled louder, now with improvised backup dancers (three confused tadpoles).

  • Porkchop tried to help by beatboxing (it sounded like a dying tractor).

Tony, tears in his eyes: “I must meet this musical genius!”


Act III: The Great Serenade Debacle

Tony serenaded the pond with a honey-coated roar:

“Your voice is like… uh… slightly melted snow?”

The Yodeling Fish, flattered, responded:

“YODEL-AY—[gulp]HEE-HOO—[bubble]“*

Divine Llama, watching from afar: “This is the worst love story ever.”

Then—DISASTER STRUCK. The Fish’s high note summoned a lost alpaca (who just wanted directions to the hay bale).

Alpaca: “…Is this a cult?”


Act IV: Silence is Golden

Finally, Sir Whiskerton intervened:

“Tony. The ‘singer’ is a fish. The real poet is Divine Llama.”

Tony, squinting at the silent, haiku-holding llama: “But… where’s the passion? The fire?”

Divine Llama (writing in the dirt): “I express love through not yodeling.”

Tony, after a long pause: “…That’s deep, man.”

They slow-danced under the moon—while Tony’s original tree partner swayed sadly in the breeze.


The Moral of the Story

Silence speaks louder than words… especially when the alternative is a yodeling fish.


Post-Credit Scene

  • The Fish gets a record deal with Tadpole Records. First single: “Yodel Me Maybe.”

  • Doris the Hen writes a tell-all expose: “Love, Lies, and Llama Spit.”

Best Lines

  • Divine Llama: “My heart is a haiku… and also full of grass.”

  • Tony: “I thought love was loud! But turns out, it’s… chewing sounds?”

  • The Fish: “YODEL—[coughs up a fly]AYE, THAT’S SHOWBIZ!”*

Starring

  • Divine Llama (仙踪驼 Xiān Zōng Tuó) – Muted romantic

  • Tony the Bear (猫熊托尼 Māoxióng Tuōní) – Tone-deaf sweetheart

  • The Yodeling FishUnwitting homewrecker

Key Jokes

  • Tony slow-dancing with a tree (it’s very committed).

  • Porkchop’s beatboxing being mistaken for a choking noise.

  • The Alpaca’s resume: “Skills: Standing. Interests: Leaves. Weaknesses: This situation.”

The End (until the Fish’s world tour…)

I had a dog when I was a kid that was scary smart. His name was Jason when we got him, but I preferred to call him Bob. Bob Dog to be exact.

I refer to him as scary smart because we quickly learned we couldn’t say certain words around him. A LOT of words—likely 1,000+.

We got him when I was in the 7th grade and right away he seemed more like a brother than a dog. Within a day or two, he picked up on the standard words/phrases like “Walk”, “No”, and “Come here, Boy!”

We then noticed that he started picking up on when we would discuss leaving the house (which cued his sulking) and when he was going to the vet. We started spelling some of the basic things like “Go for a walk,” that would set him off.

This is when scary smart started.

He continued to understand more things we were saying. He would react sadly when we talked about me going off to college. He would react happily when I would tell mom I was going to the store, as that meant dog treats and a possible ride in the car if it wasn’t too hot.

In short, he started reacting accordingly to our conversations. If we discussed going on vacation, he became sad. If we disagreed about something (even in normal, calm tones) he would seek to intervene between us by wagging at each of us and trying to ensure all was well.

Once we realized he could understand what we were saying, we started spelling out more words we didn’t want him to hear, like “V-E-T V-I-S-I-T. But being the super-smart guy that he was, he quickly learned what we were spelling. If we spelled out B-A-T-H he would run and hide under the bed.

It came to the point that if he’d done something wrong or you needed him to do something, you could calmly (with no voice-inflection of any kind) tell him and he would respond appropriately. It was like talking to a human; you knew he understood what you were saying.

Friends were always blown away because he’d growl at strangers if he didn’t like what they were saying. “How does he know what I’m saying?” most would ask. “Trust me, he does,” we’d respond. It got the point that mom would get mad at me if I said something in front of him that she didn’t think he would like.

And it wasn’t based on intonation; if someone got animated or sounded angry in telling a story, he wouldn’t react as long as he knew it wasn’t aimed at us.

We began to think of him as not our dog, but another member of our family, and a highly beloved one at that. I found myself talking to him about my day.

He lived to be 16. This was him at about 13 after his body had started to age quite a bit. He eventually died of cancer of the nasal passages after mom moved to Florida.

We loved each other like brothers. He passed in 1989, and I miss him every day.

I think he knows this.

Chicken Tenderloins with Cranberry Mustard Sauce

Chicken Tenderloins recipe

Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 pound chicken tenderloins
  • All-purpose flour
  • Salt and pepper
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 2 tablespoons oil
  • 2/3 cup dry white wine
  • 2/3 cup chicken broth
  • 3 tablespoons country-style Dijon mustard
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons cornstarch
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons water
  • 1/2 cup Ocean Spray® Craisins® Original Dried Cranberries
  • 1/4 cup sliced green onions, green part only

Instructions

  1. Lightly toss chicken pieces with flour; shake off excess.
  2. Sprinkle lightly with salt and pepper.
  3. Heat 1 tablespoon of butter and oil in a large skillet. Add half of the chicken; cook for about 2 minutes, turning once until chicken is golden brown on each side and cooked through. Add more butter and oil if needed.
  4. Remove to a platter; keep warm.
  5. Repeat with remaining chicken.
  6. Add wine, chicken broth and mustard to skillet, scraping up browned bits.
  7. Combine cornstarch and water in a small bowl.
  8. Stir into skillet.
  9. Add dried cranberries. Boil for 1 to 2 minutes or until sauce thickens.
  10. Stir in green onions; cook 1 more minute.
  11. Pour sauce over chicken.

Nutrition

Per serving: Cal. 307 (15% DV), Fat Cal. 135, Pro. 23g (46% DV), Carb. 15g (5% DV), Fat 15g (22% DV), Chol. 48mg (16% DV), Sod. 588mg (24%DV), Vit. A 58RE (5% DV), Vit. C 1mg (1% DV), Vit. E 2mg (7% DV), Calcium 23mg (2% DV), Iron <1mg (2% DV), Folate 2Ug (0% DV), Zinc <1mg (1% DV), Pot. 63mg (1% DV)

Exchange: Fruit 1, Meat 3, Fat 1.5

Recipe and photo used with permission from: Ocean Spray

Grenades are offensive weapons for close combat situations. They require a certain mindset and also some courage from their users.

The more intense the fighting and the more experienced the unit, the more you’ll see them throwing grenades. It takes some time to appreciate the efficiency and versatility of this weapon.

Experienced soldiers love grenades: John Stryker “Tilt” Meyer was a Special Forces operator assigned to MACV-SOG (Military Assistance Command, Vietnam – Studies and Observations Group) during the war in Vietnam. (Photo: MACV-SOG)

However, grenades aren’t the best weapons when you’re trying to minimize casualties or if you have to avoid collateral damage (dead civilians).

In today’s conflicts, for example in Afghanistan, Iraq, or Mali, Western military forces aren’t engaged in a full-blown war, but their main mission is to help stabilize the country and support local forces.

Their rules of engagement won’t permit the excessive use of grenades. Additionally, these forces are extremely risk-averse: instead of fighting it out, most Western armies prefer to take cover and call in an airstrike or their artillery. Therefore, besides a few Special Operations Forces and elite fighting units, most soldiers will probably never have used their grenades.

This doesn’t mean that grenades have become obsolete. Should there be a new “hot” conflict with intense infantry versus infantry engagements, once again, the hand grenade will play an important role.

Giant Claw 1957 Full Movie

ksnip 20250918 203307
ksnip 20250918 203307