Snacking though memory late

No, The PLAAF have no requirement for a tanker, however the People’s Liberation Army Navy Air Force (PLANAF) does use air to air refueling.

China uses hose n drogue refueling which can be performed as buddy refueling with one fighter supporting another. None of China’s fighters are equipped to receive fuel from a flying boom tanker.

However it should be noted most Chinese stealth fighters have impressive Combat Radii on internal fuel alone.

J20 has a combat radius of 2,400km.

J-36 Combat radius is 1360km

F-35C Combat radius 670km

This reduces Chinese reliance on tanker support. The Hong-6 bomber based on the Tupelov Tu-16 is easy to convert to the tanker role.

China has 120 H-6 bombers with several more modern variants. The naval H-6 J version has a combat radius of 3,500km.

China also has the GJ-21 Carrier launched stealth drone which can act as a hose n drogue Tanker far out over the Pacific.

A GJ-21 its carrier tail hook lowered.

China has consciously chosen hose n drogue refueling so their aircraft are incompatible with the American flying boom system.

Anecdotal story.

About two or three years ago, shortly after Covid ended, and there was a surge of demand for jobs, I took my car to the mechanic. The work done on my car took longer than expected.

When I finally got to the shop, the mechanic apologized to me: “Sorry for taking way longer than I had promised. We are seriously understaff here.”

I followed up with a: “Why don’t you guys hire some more guys?” And this was when the conversation took a really interesting turn.

The mechanic said he would love to, but “nobody wants to work anymore”. He went to say that he interviewed a very promising young man not too long ago; he really wanted to hire the boy, but the boy ultimately turned down the job offer, for two reasons.

  • First of all the pay was too low. The mechanic didn’t tell me how much he was offering, but he did emphasize: “Everybody starts off with a low wage for the first few months. If you can prove to us that you’re good, I promise to raise your wages by a lot.” The young man was upset, and said that he had helped his dad with cars all his life, and that he graduated top of his class in auto school.
  • Secondly, the mechanic wanted the young man to work all seven days of the week, with no days off! The mechanic saw nothing wrong with this, as the shop is opened all seven days, and he even said weekends are the busiest, since most people work on the weekdays and need their cars.

I’m going to be honest… if I were that young man, I wouldn’t have taken the job offer either. Even if they were offering significantly higher than minimum wage, working seven days a week on a wage that probably still wouldn’t be enough to support myself (I’m in California) doesn’t sound like a good deal.

As I took my car keys, the mechanic was still grumbling about how entitled and lazy young people are…

Can you get century-old eggs in America?

Absolutely — and despite the dramatic name, “century egg” is a misnomer. They’re not a hundred years old at all; on average, they’re only preserved for about six weeks. Some brands even call them “thousand-year-old eggs,” which is even more misleading.

As for availability, you’ll have no trouble finding them in the U.S. There are plenty of Asian supermarkets and Chinese restaurants that stock them. I’d happily eat preserved eggs for 30 days straight if they weren’t available — but they are.

I used to serve century-egg appetizers at a Chinese restaurant in Lucerne, Switzerland, where they were priced absurdly high. But then again, in Switzerland everything is expensive, and century eggs are considered a bit of a delicacy there.

The Aliens Arrive | The 5th Wave

Well one fact that blew my mind was that the United States secretly used to make a white clear Coca Cola specifically for General Zhukov after World War II

White (Clear) Coke

After the end of World War II, General Eisenhower introduced General Zhukov to Coca Cola (Coke) for the first time. Zhokov absolutely fell in love with Coke and couldn’t get enough of it.

General Zhukov

Unfortunately for General Zhukov, Coke was illegal in the Soviet Union and therefore he couldn’t be seen enjoying the lovely soda. Zhukov asked his American counterpart, General Mark Clark if there was a way to produce Coke without the coloring.

Clark passed on this request to President Truman who tasked Coke with making a colorless Coke that was packaged to resemble Vodka. Truman contacted Coke and asked them to create a colorless Coke that tasted the same, but was packaged to look exactly like a clear bottle of vodka.

Zhukov and Eisenhower

Coke found a chemist who could do just that and Coke created their White Coke line specifically to be shipped to General Zhukov. The colorless version of Coca-Cola was bottled using straight, clear glass bottles with a white cap and a red star in the middle.

Zhukov

And while most Western goods flowing into the Soviet Union took weeks to clear, cases of White Coke were never stopped. The United States sent cases of the stuff to Zhukov during 1946.

Many years later, Pepsi became the first American Cola to be licensed and sold in the Soviet Union but White Coke stands as the strangest of American products to be shipped into the U.S.S.R.

Edit: My dad was the first one to tell me this story years ago. It always tickled my funny bone and I thought it was such a great story! And all true!

I hope that clears up any confusion!

I 💖C2, questions, disagreements, curses and hexes!

-Jason

My late sister (she died suddenly at the age of 50), was a geriatric nurse practitioner. She worked in a hospital with alzheimers and dementia patients. I remember her two stories she told about patients that answer this perfectly.

The first was an alzheimers patient she had who was very upset about being in the hospital. She would ask the CNA’s where she was and when they told her she would become violent. My sister told the staff that from then on to tell her she was visiting them. The woman was in a room that overlooked a rooftop with large A/C units. The next time my sister went to her room she asked where she was. My sister said “You’re visiting at my home.” The woman replied “Honey, I don’t want to hurt your feelings, but those statues in your front yard are ugly.”

The other was a woman with dementia who’s son came to visit her every day. Sadly, the son died unexpectedly of a heart attack. A family member told her of his passing and she was devastated. Every day she would say “George is coming to see me.” She had forgotten he died. The nursing staff would just tell her that he was coming tomorrow. Telling her that her son was dead and making her relive that every day would have been cruel.

I was an Assistant Manager in Bozeman MT. It is absolutely beautiful there and we got lots of tourists and campers that would park and sleep in the parking lot. Generally we wouldn’t care or even notice if it was just a day or two but after a couple days it becomes noticeable.

One of the easiest ways to avoid being asked to leave is to not be a nuisance. Don’t leave trash, don’t be making lots of noise. Don’t have a tailgating party. Park as far away as possible from the front. Also, try moving parking spaces. My Asset Protection Associate would mark car tires with chalk and see if they move. She would contact towing companies with a fierce passion too.

Pros: convenience. If you need something you can easily run and get it during open hours. Cheap. Relatively safe. Lots of cameras and lights.

Cons: Not very private. Can cause anxiety wondering if you’ll get caught. No showers.

I slept in my car at the Walmart parking lot one night when I was in between leaving my house with my ex and moving into a spare room I found on Facebook. It wasn’t the worst night sleep I’ve had but it certainly wasn’t great.

The Stitch Between Us

Written in response to: Center your story around someone who turns into the thing they’ve always hated.

K Ray

Fantasy Fiction Science Fiction

 

A brand new Seraph stood in the plaza above her, taller than any man, armor gilded and gleaming in the sunlight. Its eyes glowed white, face serene, as though suffering were a thing it had never known. The crowd fell to their knees. Priests burned incense in golden braziers in its honor, the smoke carrying a bitter scent of frankincense and crushed roses that made Iria’s throat tighten.“Behold the perfection of Calora,” the priest sang. “Behold our safety and salvation!”Iria stared at the Seraph’s hands. They were stitched together, faint white lines circling the wrists like bracelets made of scars. She tugged at her brother’s sleeve, whispering, “That’s not perfection, that’s wrong.”Kael hushed her. “Don’t be so loud.”Years later, when a Seraph’s sword shaped the rest of her life while ending Kael’s in a nonsense border raid, the bitter scent of ceremonial incense clung to Iria’s memory.The river had carried him home. His body washed up against the reeds, broken and pale. Iria’s fingers went numb when she touched his skin. It was too cold.

Around her, the village mourned, though strangely, Iria did not cry. While they burned things and chanted meaningless words, she stole her brother away under cover of night, dragging him to the old tannery where the empire’s scraps lay piled: sinew, shards of bone, coils of thread thick as wire, blood crystals that glimmered faintly red. Refuse the priests called “impure.”

She lit no candles. The dark itself sat witness.

When she stitched Kael back together, her hands shook. The air stank of old leather, iron, and the herbs she burned to mask his rot. Every knot burned her fingers raw, but she didn’t stop. She whispered with each pull of the needle, “Come back. Come back to me.”

And then he did.

His eyes opened, clouded but alive. His lips cracked as he rasped her name.

Iria crumpled beside him, pressing her forehead to his chest, though it was hard beneath her cheek and his heartbeat uneven, it was there. “I have you,” she whispered.

 

 

At first, he was her Kael. He followed her through the fields, his steps a bit heavier than before, his laugh lower but familiar. When she braided rosemary, thyme, and lavender to sell in the market, he carried the baskets for her. When she woke sweating from dreams of blood and damnation, he sat at the edge of her bed and hummed the lullaby their mother used to sing.

But the villagers noticed. They stared at his stitched skin, the faint gleam beneath his fingernails, the way his eyes sometimes caught fire and glowed.

“He’s not right,” a neighbor muttered.

“He’s a Seraph,” another whispered.

Iria spat. “He’s my brother.”

But doubt coiled in her gut.

 

 

The first time Kael killed, it was for her.

A thief cornered her near the well, jeering, hand snatching at the jewels on her arm. Kael’s shadow fell over them. His hands closed on the man, and with a sound like wet branches snapping, he crumpled.

Blood sprayed across Iria’s dress, hot, metallic and filling her lungs until she gagged.

Kael dropped the body like spoiled meat. His hands trembled, but his eyes… his eyes gleamed with a strange light.

“I protected you,” he said.

Iria nodded, heart hammering. She wanted to believe him.

 

 

Kael grew hungry. Not for food, not even for blood. For completion.

“You didn’t finish me,” he said one night, voice low, vibrating in his chest like thunder. “I can feel the seams. I need more.”

“More what?”

“More flesh. More power. Make me whole, Iria.”

The tannery reeked of death when she returned. Discarded limbs, shattered ribs, dried muscle, all dumped like refuse by an empire that worshipped perfection. She pressed her face to her sleeve to keep from retching.

She stitched anyway.

 

 

“You hate the empire,” Kael said, watching her hands move. His voice was softer now, but edged with something she couldn’t pin down, “but you use their tools. Their thread, their bones. You make me their mirror.”

“I brought you back because I love you.”

“No.” His grip closed around her wrist, firm enough to bruise. “You brought me back because you couldn’t let go.”

Her throat closed. She didn’t have an answer.

 

 

The villagers began to fear her as much as him. They avoided the tannery. They crossed themselves when she walked past. Children hid behind their mothers’ skirts.

“Heretic,” someone hissed.

“Monster!”

Iria clenched her teeth. They don’t understand.

But deep down, a seed of doubt began to grow.

 

 

On a bitterly cold evening, a Seraph patrol descended on the village, white eyes glowing, blades gleaming. Kael met them in the square. His roar split the air, raw and guttural. He tore through them like cloth, their bodies falling in pieces, the ground slick with their blood. The villagers screamed, scattering like birds.

Iria stood frozen, the smell of burning herbs and flowers mingling with blood, the clash of steel ringing in her skull. This wasn’t her brother anymore.

When the last Seraph fell, Kael turned to her. His face was streaked with gore, his stitches strained, glowing faintly. His voice calm.

“Finish me, Iria. Make me perfect.”

Her hands trembled. The needle and crystal lay heavy in her pouch. She could unmake him. She could let him go.

She looked at the villagers, huddled in terror, looked at the soldiers’ ruined bodies. She looked at Kael’s hand, reaching for hers, strong and certain.

So she stitched.

 

 

The final seam closed with a hiss. Kael stood taller, his glow bright as moonlight. His voice was no longer cracked, but resonant, commanding.

The villagers fell to their knees.

Iria stared, needle dangling from her hand, her own knees weak. This was not Kael. This was not her brother.

This was a Seraph, and she had made him.

 

 

Smoke curled above the ruined square. Blood seeped into the dirt. The smell of iron and incense clung to Iria’s skin.

Kael’s hand, no, it was a Seraph’s hand, settled on her shoulder. Warm, steady. The touch that once comforted now pinned her in place.

“You see, sister,” he said, his voice like thunder, “perfection was always the way.”

Iria closed her eyes. She had sworn she would never kneel. Never bow to the empire’s twisted worship.

But when the villagers bent their heads to the Seraph she had stitched, she realized she was no different.

Chicken with Jalapeño Peach Sauce

Yield: 6 servings

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Ingredients

  • 1 (21 ounce) can peach fruit filling, divided
  • 1 (14 1/2 ounce) can chicken broth, divided
  • 2 (2 1/2 to 3 pound) whole chickens, quartered
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon pepper
  • 1/2 cup chopped onion
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 (4 1/2 ounce) can diced green chiles
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro or parsley

Instructions

  1. Process half of fruit filling and half of broth in a blender until smooth.
  2. Place chicken in a large roasting pan; sprinkle with salt and pepper, and brush with fruit filling mixture.
  3. Bake at 350 degrees F for 1 hour or until done.
  4. Sauté onion and garlic in hot oil in a skillet over medium high heat for 2 minutes or until tender. Add remaining broth, and cook for 3 to 5 minutes.
  5. Stir in remaining fruit filling and chiles, and cook just until thoroughly heated.
  6. Stir in chopped fresh cilantro, and serve with chicken.

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