Today I want to talk about elevator gladiatorial battles in China.
The vast majority of buildings in China are skyscrapers. I would guess that the average size for buildings in China are around 40 floors. And it is impractical to go up and down stairs. Instead, you take the elevator.
In my Tanzhou house, our complex has 16 buildings. Each one is about 38 floors high. In my Shenzhen house, the building is 45 floors. In our Zhuhai house, there are 34 floors. And each one has a parking garage in the basement of the building. So what you do is drive into the parking garage, and then you leave the car and go to the elevator.
Well… not everyone drives a car. Many drive scooters. And the cars park in the basement, while the scooters park outside the front door on the first floor. Especially the delivery folk.
So here’s where the gladiator battles take place.
I’m in the basement garage (-1 floor), and I press the button. I watch the elevator go down from the 18th floor, it stops on the 12th floor. And then continues to the first floor.
I watch; People get on and get off.
I watch: Then the elevator goes back up.
Wait. What????
No shit.
Instead of continuing down to the -1 parking garage, it somehow reverses course and heads back up.
So what is going on is that the scooter riders (and the delivery guys) leave their finger on the elevator button so that it overrides all prior programming and the elevator zooms up to the floor so depressed. It doesn’t continue down to the -1 basement.
Well, I learned how to detect when someone does this.
It’s a combination of dwell time, and a flashing up and down arrow.
So in response, I push the “up” button in the -1 basement garage. I keep on pressing it. Twice a second, for a minute or until the override command stops and the elevator continues to the basement like it is supposed to.
- The scooter folk long press.
- I rapid fire press at the end stop (-1).
Now, that being said, the prudent thing is to have the building management talk to the elevator techs and disable the override function. It’s on my list of things to do. And that is coming soon.
And that is the gladiator battles in China.
Bet ya never knew about that.
Today…
Chinese Showing American TikTok Refugees How They Live Their Life On RedNote
A MUST watch!
The world is seriously changing.
What’s the strangest thing delivered to your house (that you did not order)?
When I was 21 I got a large box with my address on it but the wrong name. It was from the “Captain Morgan Rum Company”. I called them and told them a package had my address but not the correct name. They asked if I was at least 21 years old and then asked me to prove it by faxing them a copy of my drivers license. After they received proof they said it was a promotional package that was supposed to go to a bar in the area but said I could keep it. I thanked them and opened the package which contained a dozen bottles of rum, a life-size cutout of Captain Morgan, several T-shirts with Captain Morgan and some advertising slogan I don’t remember and a box of pirate eye patches.
I’ve never been a big drinker but my friends and I still had a great time over the next few months drinking rum while wearing eye patches and saying piratey things – “Arrgh”.
Update: Sadly my mother passed away a couple of months ago; my father passed 20 years ago. While going through her belongings and putting things in storage my brother and I ran across the safe in the closet and realized neither of us knew the combination. We contacted the company that made the safe and after giving them the serial number and verifying we had legal right to open it they sent us an alternate set of numbers. We opened the safe and aside from a few valuables and things my mother and father thought were valuable or might increase in value was the last remaining bottle of the Captain Morgan Spiced Rum we mistakenly received nearly forty years ago. I know it’s not a forty year old bottle of scotch but nostalgia makes it feel every bit as special. I haven’t opened it yet, not sure if I’m going to yet.
Why doesn’t the USA invade China?
Why doesn’t the USA invade China?
As much as the American empire would love to add China to the long list of so-called “rogue states” (a.k.a those refusing to be absorbed) it has reduced to rubble, there isn’t a hope in hell of them achieving this aim in China…
…as much as Pompeo, Bolton, and co lick their lips when thinking about it.
The fact is, China is not a weak country like those America is used to bullying.
It is a huge, nuclear-armed nation with a huge military and an ultra-patriotic citizenry.
You think IEDs on the roadside in Iraq are a problem?
Think going home with missing limbs and PTSD is a problem?
If Amerca were to invade China, especially while they still have vivid memories of the “Century of Humiliation” plus, constant U.S lies, smears, and interference in Chinese affairs, I can realistically imagine the soldiers being torn limb from limb by tens of millions of furious citizens.
Improvised bombs, poisons, boobytrapped overpasses, and guerilla warfare from such an enormous population would make life hell for the U.S soldiers.
And this is only taking into account local resistance.
The Chinese army itself, all 1.6 million troops ( and let’s not mention reserves), would be the biggest and most professional force the U.S has ever faced.
And they would literally give their lives for their motherland without hesitation.
The Vietnam war would feel like utopia compared to what the USA would face here.
The American citizenry would get tired of the bloodshed LONG before the (traditionally peaceful) Chinese would.
What are some reasons to own a gun? I am a progressive and I think there should be more gun control. But I want to see the other side.
Let me attempt to explain it this way. And I am asking you to look at this in an unbiased, unblinded manner.
It’s Saturday evening. You, you wife and tween daughter are watching a movie on television.
There’s been news of a home invasion, not far from your residence, in which the homeowner was gunned down, his wife and young daughter raped and their throats cut.
As a “just in case”, you purchase a firearm, but because of gun control laws, your
to the weapon, unloaded, and the ammunition separately. You comply with this, because you’re a good citizen and want to keep your child safe.
Suddenly, you hear a loud bang and a sharp crack as your front door begins to splinter. You herd your wife and daughter into the master bedroom, since it’s farthest from the from door. You pull your gun safe from under the bed and begin manipulating the keypad as you hear your front door completely cave in, which causes you to mess up the combination. You finally retrieve your firearm and lunge for the dresser where your ammo is kept. As you grab your ammo, you hear the bedroom door slam open and an instant later two impacts to your back, causing you to drop your gun. As you sink to the floor, you hear your wife and daughter begin screaming as two invaders assault and begin to rape them. As you lose consciousness, you hear them gurgle as their throats are cut. Your last sight is that it’sof you murdered daughter’s eyes looking accusingly at you as her life leaves them.
You and your family are dead, because you followed gun control laws.
Think about it. Contrary to popular belief, the police are under no obligation to protect you.
Putin Honours Soldier After Intense Knife-fight Video Takes Russian Internet By Storm | Watch
Butter Balls Chicken Soup
The butter balls, very tiny dumplings, are called rivels in the West and dropsley in Ontario.
Ingredients
- 3 pounds chicken
- 1/2 cup chopped celery leaves
- 1 bay leaf
- 10 peppercorns
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 5 cups hot water
- 1 cup diced celery
- 2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 2 eggs
- 5 to 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Cut chicken into portions. Place in a saucepan with celery leaves, bay leaf, peppercorns, the one teaspoon salt and the water. Bring to a boil, cover and simmer over low heat for about one hour, or until chicken is tender. Strain, then return broth to saucepan.
- Cut chicken into small pieces, add to broth with celery and parsley, then simmer.
- To make the butter balls, cream butter, add eggs and beat. Gradually add flour and the 1/4 teaspoon salt. Beat hard until it is like a very soft batter. Drop by 1/4 or 1/2 teaspoonsful into broth; cover and let stand for 5 minutes over low heat.
MMs AI work.
I’ve been playing around.
The AI is SHIT regarding male genitalia. My guess is that they didn’t include any of it in the database, while there is a lot of references for female equivalents.
The images not showing the private parts are pretty good.
Men tend to be of heroic structure, and the gals in all shapes and sizes.
I really like the draped clothing.
How is China viewed by other countries in Asia? Is it seen as a role model for economic growth or looked down upon?
No country looks down on China.
Not even the US. Once it did as evident by the many US-originated phases – yellow peril, sick man of Asia, screw on factory, all perspiration, no inspiration, al et. Yang Jiechi put this to bed when he met Blinken in Anchorage.
Now it is mostly fear and envy, hence the sanctions galore.
No country in Asia dares look down on China.
Everyone benefits from China’s development and growth.
But of course, in state-to-state relationships, you can hardly expect unanimity.
India, especially the Anglicized Indians, cannot accept China’s economy is so many times bigger when it was ahead of China in the 1980s. Indeed, the sad truth is that China is ahead across every or most human endeavours.
Japan and South Korea are secretly afraid of China. Publicly they have to parrot the US.
Other countries in Asia admired and are respectful of China. Maybe except the Philippines, which for inexplicable reasons, chooses to make an enemy of it, after receiving so much help, such as Covid vaccines.
Everyone knows how fast it has grown, how big it is, and how well it manages Covid-19.
Everyone knows how poor it was, the difficulties it endured, such as the isolation by the US, the atrocities of the Japanese, how it fought the Korean War, its own civil war, and the many trials and tribulations the western world visited upon it.
It is not a role model, certainly no one dares openly acknowledge it. It will certainly incur the wrath and slurs of US propaganda and its media. Nevertheless, China has many lessons to offer which explains why so many officials visit the country.
Simple Minds – Alive And Kicking (Live)
One Day Like This
Submitted into Contest #243 in response to: Write a story where time functions differently to our world.… view prompt
Nina Chyll
In the first vision, Max lived a day of his twenties in the company of the mousy girl from the truck, Ida. A ten-year old in an older body, he did his best throughout the day to get Ida into bed, but discovered in the early afternoon that her father had recently died, and her mother was struggling with severe depression, so he gave up. Ida commented a couple of times on Max’s behaviour, noticing he was ‘even more immature than normal,’ but never worked out the deception.
How could he have fallen in love with this particular girl? She wasn’t entirely unattractive, but she was nothing compared to the bosomed, tight-waisted miracles on legs Max was envisaging for himself. And there was something so inherently sad about her, always trailing the line between smiles and tears.
On the ride back from The Hop, they exchanged numbers, shrugging and rolling their eyes. If this was indeed was fate had in store for them, they could discuss it one day. Neither called the other for years. And when they ran into each other eight years later at university, Ida ate Max like the black hole she was, pulling him in with a gravitational field so strong he felt ripped apart by her love. They never needed to discuss the vision, and the gnawing discouragement Max experienced on learning Ida was to be his chosen partner became a false memory.
The truck stopped. The beautiful ginger girl made a sign of the cross on her freckled forehead and shoulders. John, the guy who spoke, sat back and closed his eyes briefly before the back doors opened and the light of dawn tore into the little container.
‘Y’all ready for The Hop?’ someone they couldn’t see because their eyes had watered asked, and laughed with genuine glee. ‘Come on, let’s go, kids.’
The building appeared smaller than Max had remembered, as did the truck. In his pre-adolescent mind, the building loomed large over his head, but now, it seemed more like a second-grade prison, with its barbed wire, grey exterior, and gates upon gates upon checkpoints, complete with armed guards.
Ida gulped loudly all the way through their security checks, retina and fingerprint scans, weight measurements, and instruction talk. And then, they all separated. She got led to one room, with Max being pointed to the next door down. They looked at each other, nodded, each forced a smile straight from a Greek tragedy.
‘I love you,’ Ida mouthed, and Max responded by forming a heart with his thumbs and forefingers and pointing it at her.
In science fiction films, the jump to another dimension, or another state of consciousness, is often imagined accompanied by a multitude of tools: sleek metal tubes, IVs full of curious liquids, electrodes and wires. But The Hop was nothing like it. It was a door. A cheap-looking door at that, in the middle of the room, seemingly not glued or drilled down, just staring at him with a metal button handle like an eye. Max went right through, fully expecting to be asleep on the other side as per last time. He’d also been reassured by the coordinators that no participants would be dropped into a situation requiring their full attention so that they had time to process their surroundings.
***
Beeping in darkness, rhythmic, close, and a sucking sound, almost melodic, together in unison like the world’s smallest and strangest orchestra. Max feels awake, but his body appears to want to remain asleep. He can barely tell his extremities from one another, and discovers a great sluggishness all over, like his body has hibernated. Even his eyelids refuse to follow orders. His mind isn’t far behind, either: the sucking and beeping occupy a large portion of his available attention, and the little sliver left seems to operate at a reduced rate. How has he got here? He can still feel a coolness in his hand from the door handle he’d just touched, but the feeling is dissipating rapidly into a numbness, a sameness. What door handle?
He strains to tune out the beeping and focus on opening his eyes instead. This must be the key to this bizarre environment he’s just found himself in: if he can only get to see it, the world will come rushing in through the pupil and into the brain, repopulating it, planting impressions and images and memories and thoughts. But he can’t. The link between his faint will and his body is broken like a collapsed bridge.
A sudden warmth envelops one of his hands, and it takes him a while to figure out it’s his right one. Ida, he just knows it’s Ida from the way she slides her fingers with sharp, bitten-down nails in between his, one by one. There is something so shy about her which he finds so irresistibly sexy, like she’s a fawn in the woods and he’s a wolf who can prey on her, bite into her long neck, keep her down, let her find comfort in submission, in not having to pretend to be brave for once.
‘Max, we need to talk,’ he hears over the beeping and the sucking, but the sucking is so loud and close it nearly drowns out Ida’s voice. Open your fucking eyes, Max, he commands himself, squeeze that fucking hand. Nothing.
‘I mean, I need to talk at you, I guess.’ A sigh in perfect harmony with the rhythmic suction, a brief variation on the monotonous theme. ‘I don’t think I can do this anymore, really. I told myself that when I finish reading The Stand to you, and if you don’t wake up after that crappy ending to yell it’s a waste of a thousand pages, then I guess you’ll just never wake up.’
A long silence follows. Ida’s fingers tap and slither, slide back out, a little greased now, and Max senses a growing unease, whether in himself or his environment, he can’t tell. Is a man not one with his surroundings anyway? If only he could see her, if only he could understand exactly what she meant. Sometimes she gets sweaty hands when she’s feeling stressed, but sometimes, she gets them when she’s cold.
One: she was reading something to him. Two: there is no hope. He holds onto the conclusions that float on top of the limited consciousness he has access to. ‘Max… I’m going to have to move on. Ever since mum died, I’ve felt like skimmed milk, do you know what I mean? First what happened to you. Seriously, fuck that day. I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about the experiment, too. That rumination semi-skimmed me.’ She laughs, and the laugh chokes and turns into something else, something shivering. ‘Then with my mum… I knew she was dying, but I thought god was only meant to deal us a hand we could play, right? I’m just so thin, so watery. I feel like I could cry for a hundred years and not dehydrate.’
Another silence. Max listens, listens with all of attention. Three: Ida’s mum is dead. Four: something’s happened to him. Four, no, five: Ida no bueno.
‘I don’t even miss you anymore, not like I used to. How horrible is that. But I still feel guilty about Jason. I never wanted him that way, I promise. It wasn’t anything sinister, we really were just friends. But his wife left, and the whole custody thing. He’s decaf, and I’m skimmed milk. It’s a joke we have. I feel so guilty joking with him, more than anything else.’
A spot of moist warmth moves around Max’s face, wetting his forehead, eyes, cheeks, mouth at last. ‘I am so sorry. I still have hope, just so you know. In case you can hear me. But I think one of the nurses will have to read to you now.’
The silence that follows stretches for decades, then centuries, until Max is the last human in the universe known to man, and that man is Max. He remembers something someone said to him about an opening, a door. ‘The opening will reveal itself to you, so step into the portal.’ He waits for the door. Eons pass. The starless darkness doesn’t move, doesn’t shimmer, doesn’t pulsate, just stands still covering reality with a black blanket, and all Max hears is that infernal beeping and sucking. When an opening presents itself, like a creak in the fabric of his limited universe, he jumps through.
Ida is waiting for him in the hall. Her eyes dart up to meet his, and she breaks. ‘Please, Max, come on. I’m here, we’re here.’ She reaches for him, but he turns away her warmth, that same warmth that will abandon him ten years from now. He walks down the hall shaking his head, and Ida follows, sobbing single words of apology, or perhaps consolation.
‘Shut the fuck up,’ he yells across his shoulder. ‘Just shut up, Ida.’
It’s dark outside. He’s forgotten they were gone all day. He’s forgotten what the sun looks like. They walk across the road to the marked point they had been instructed to wait at after the experiment. Max paces up and down; nobody else is out yet. The truck is nowhere to be seen.
‘Please, Max. We could move, go somewhere. We could try to trick this.’
‘Who is this fucking Jason?’ he asks.
‘I don’t know, I’ve never met him.’ Her shoulders jolt up and down under the breathy, choking sobs she’s letting out.
‘Why are you crying?’ he demands. ‘You get to go on living, and fucking this Jason guy. You have no idea how it was.’
She tries to put a shoulder around him, but he stumbles away. He doesn’t want to be touched. There’s a barrier between them now, a wall of darkness so thick he can barely see her anymore for what she was only a few hours before. She follows him, and he watches her intently, taking steps back so that she can’t touch him. There’s that damn beeping sound again, except more forceful now.
‘Max,’ she pleads, and her eyes open up wide. ‘Max, be careful!’
He steps backwards off the curb and into the road, and the beeping turns into one continuous moan. He sees two headlights, but he’s falling. He feels suddenly thankful for these lights, dispersing the darkness he was drowning in all day, flooding his field of vision. There’s a screech, one mechanical, another organic, that’s his Ida. Then there’s darkness again once more.
What was the most disturbing thing that your seatmate did during a flight?
When I proudly told my wife that my answer to a Quora question had received over 41,000 upvotes, she asked me which story I had submitted.
“It was the one in response to ‘What was the most disturbing thing that your seatmate did during a flight?’” I replied.
“Oh, that one about the kid sitting behind you?” she asked.
“No, not that one,” I answered. “But I have another one I’ll have to send in.”
I was flying to a conference from my home in Florida and I had the window seat next to two young boys whose parents and brother were sitting on the opposite side of the aisle.
During the whole two-hour flight, the three-year-old next to me was farting very regularly. As a father, I took it in stride that little kids can’t be expected to control their bodily emissions, but as a pediatrician, I consider myself an expert on gas and poop and everything gastrointestinal.
As we were beginning the descent into Washington, D.C, he began to grunt louder and was turning red in the face. Recognizing the signs of an impending explosion, I called over to his father who was busy talking to his wife.
“I think you better take him to the bathroom,” I warned.
“Nah, he can wait until we land,” he said, totally dismissing my professional expertise.
Just after he said that, poop started to pour out of his shorts all over the seat. By this time, it was too late for him to do anything about it since the flight attendants had already issued the “Fasten your seatbelt” command.
For the next twenty minutes, as we circled the airport, I had to listen to this child cry that he had pooped in his pants. Since his parents were on the other side of the plane, it became my responsibility for keeping him in his seat so that it didn’t increase the smelly mess even more.
As soon as we landed, the flight attendants allowed the father to carry him to the lavatory before anyone disembarked.
“Next time,” I told him as he scooped him out of his seat and wrapped him in a blanket, “trust another adult’s judgment when they tell you your kid needs to use the toilet.”
The Great [REDNOTE] Migration
What’s it like to be rich ($5M+ in net worth)?
One thing I have learned over the years: the answer changes over time. My answer at 29 was different at 39 and 49.
When the first startup I worked at got acquired, I was worth $10m on paper. It felt pretty great. But the acquirer went bankrupt before I could sell any. Or almost any. I ended up making $50k. I bought my spouse a new sports car.
It took me years to recover from the mental pain of losing that $10m of paper wealth. Years. I couldn’t really tell anybody, I had to push on. But it weighed on me for years.
A few years later, I cofounded my first startup. We sold it for $50m after 12.5 months, and I took my portion in all cash after the scars from the last experience.
What I did with it:
- Bought a nicer house. Not a mansion, but a nice house. It did make life a bit calmer.
- Bought my spouse a nicer car. A high end Mercedes.
- Rented two hotel rooms when traveled and didn’t worry about expense. This was nice.
- Didn’t worry so much what vacations cost.
- Didn’t work for a year. At first it was nice and I got into great shape. But then I fell into a funk and was a bit lost. I had no purpose anymore.
- So I used the funds to help get another startup off the ground …
So I had to do another startup.
This time it took 5 years to exit, but I made 10x more. So what did I do?
- Bought a bigger house. It wasn’t really any better though and was no happier there. Maybe less because I felt locked in.
- Bought a convertible Challenger. Was a fun car.
- Spend each summer for 5 summers living somewhere different with kids. Shanghai, London, New York, Santa Monica. This was great. The best use of the funds.
- Made sure the 529s were maxed out.
- That was about it.
After all this, I was OK but no happier than after the first, smaller exit. I started venture investing and did some good ones and some unicorns and it helped to have some money to have the confidence to invest this way.
Then the pandemic came and I had to move and rent for a while. It simplified life, and I worried about fewer things. Just the people at work and home that mattered.
Now — finally — I enjoyed the earnings. For the first time.
Why? Now I just use it for calm. I’ve earned 12% a year on it on average and now it calms me to see it grow.
The house is smaller, the car is cheaper, the trips very nice but simpler.
Living well — but below my means — is calming now.
Shorpy
Traffic Stop Leads to Discovery of Dead Body
https://youtu.be/FJgTyP4BojQ
Why is the USA still suitable in maintaining the world order?
The United States isn’t the ideal leader for maintaining the world order anymore. Over the years, a series of missteps and changing global dynamics have made it clear that the US can’t single-handedly uphold global stability like it once did.
For decades, the US was the dominant player on the world stage. It rallied nations during the Cold War, led during the Gulf War, and exerted influence through NATO and the UN. This was all thanks to its economic strength, military power, and the global appeal of the American way of life. But times have changed.
Firstly, the US’s economic dominance has diminished. China’s rise as a global economic powerhouse challenges America’s influence. China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which strengthens its economic ties with countries across Asia, Africa, and Europe, is a prime example. While the US still has a strong economy, it’s no longer the unparalleled giant it once was.
Politically, the US has become increasingly inconsistent. The chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan is a glaring example of declining strategic foresight and shaky international commitments. This kind of blunder isn’t just an isolated incident; it’s a symptom of broader inconsistency in US foreign policy. Each new administration seems to flip the script, making it hard for allies and adversaries to trust or predict US actions.
Diplomatically, the US’s relationships with other countries have been rocky. Long-standing European allies have occasionally distanced themselves, wary of America’s unpredictable foreign policy. The US’s attempts to rally international support on issues like climate change or unified responses to global health crises like COVID-19 have often been fragmented and less effective than hoped.
Furthermore, the US’s history of heavy-handed military interventions has eroded its moral standing. Look at Iraq and Libya—interventions meant to promote democracy ended up creating long-term instability and humanitarian crises. These repeated failures have tarnished the US’s image as a global leader and a protector of democracy.
On the home front, the US faces significant challenges. Political polarization, social unrest, and economic inequality are creating internal instability. If a country can’t keep its own house in order, it’s tough to argue that it should lead the world.
The rise of a multipolar world also shows that we don’t need a single dominant player anymore. Regional powers like China, India, and the European Union have grown in influence and capability, suggesting that collaboration rather than domination is the way forward. Countries are no longer looking solely to the US for leadership; instead, they prefer balanced relationships and multilateral approaches to solving global issues.
Inside Look at China’s Newest, Most Modern Space Station Amazes U.S. Engineers
California Avocado Soup with Roast Turkey
This homemade tortilla soup with garden-fresh ingredients like tomatoes, onions, garlic and chiles and hearty roasted turkey is especially delicious topped with Fresh California Avocados. It’s a great use for leftover Thanksgiving turkey and also can be made with store-bought rotisserie chicken.
Prep: 15 min | Cook: 40 min | Yield: 4 servings
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup olive oil
- 4 corn tortillas, cut into thin strips
- 1 small Spanish yellow onion, chopped
- 4 cloves garlic, diced
- 2 Anaheim chiles, seeded and chopped
- 4 medium tomatoes, chopped
- 4 cups reduced-sodium chicken stock
- 1/2 bunch cilantro (optional), washed and chopped
- 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper (or to taste)
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cumin (or to taste)
- 1/2 teaspoon chili powder (or to taste)
- 2 cups roasted or smoked turkey, cut in 1/2 inch cubes
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 1 medium, ripe Fresh California Avocado, diced
- 4 ounces reduced-fat cheddar cheese, grated
Instructions
- In a two-quart saucepan, heat olive oil over medium high heat until hot.
- Working in batches, fry tortilla strips until golden brown.
- Drain on paper towels and reserve.
- Add onion to the same oil and sauté until clear.
- Add garlic and Anaheim chiles, cook until soft but not browned. Drain any excess oil from the pan.
- Add tomatoes, chicken stock and chopped cilantro if desired.
- Simmer for 15 minutes.
- Transfer soup to a heat-resistant blender or food processor and purée, or use an immersion blender to purée.
- Return soup to pan and add turkey, cayenne pepper, ground cumin and chili powder. Simmer until turkey is hot, add salt and pepper to taste.
- Ladle into soup bowls and top each serving with avocado, cheddar cheese and reserved crispy tortilla strips.
You Won’t Believe What China is Doing to the U.S. Military: Beijing Journalists Expose the Truth
Who was the greatest or most powerful Chinese military general/warlord from history?
While I want to say Chairman Mao, strictly speaking he wasn’t a general/warlord, but more of a political officer/politician.
So my vote goes to Li Shimin, the second son of the first emperor of the Tang Dynasty.
Shimin was pivotal in helping his father Li Yuan rebel against the Sui Dynasty, to emerge victorious amongst the dozens of rebel forces, fending off proto-Turkish raiders who tried to take advantage of China’s civil war, and to eventually found the Tang Dynasty of China.
At its beginning, Tang China was still weak, plagued with multiple rebellions at home, nomadic raiders to the north, and all the chaos of founding a new dynasty.
The green is Tang China, the two dark greys are the Gokturk khaganate, with over a million highly mobile cavalry, then the No.1 military superpower in Asia and likely globally.
So it was not surprising that when the Turks raided and asked for submission and tribute, everyone in the newly formed Tang court was eager to comply.
Everyone except for Li Shimin. There he vowed to eliminate the Turkish threat in 5 years, signing his own death warrant.
This must have calmed his father and older brother Li Jiancheng somewhat, for at this time Li Yuan and Li Jiancheng had already entered into a political alliance to keep their battle-hardened second son/younger brother in check, to secure their rule and succession. But Shimin’s bet with his life also helped him garner more followers amongst the tougher Chinese aristocrats at court who did not wish to submit.
With their support, Li Shimin finally succeeded in ambushing and killing his older brother, his younger brother and usurped the throne from his father, at the famous Incident of Xuanwu Gate.
There Li Shimin again showed his military/political prowess. While Li Shimin’s own forces was besieged after the incident by the much stronger forces of his brothers, by beheading his brothers and tossing the severed heads to the opponent, Shimin’s forces killed their moral and eventually emerged victorious. This again demonstrated Shimin’s affinity at turning the tide of battle with a smaller force.
Being the greatest general/warlord in the founding of Tang Dynasty, Shimin had finally claimed what was rightfully his. But killing your brothers and usurping the throne from your father was a heavy burden for anyone. To quell possible rebellions and plots against his rule at home, Shimin needed to prove his worth more than ever, the bet of killing the Turkish empire in 5 years was now more pressing than ever, and he had only 3 years left.
The first thing Shimin did was to look for allies. In year 628AD, Li Shimin successfully turned a nephew of the Turkish Khan to China’s side by showering him with lavish gifts of wealth and women. Then used it as an example of the benevolence of the Chinese emperor, spreading the word all the way from Tibet to Siberia, and made the promise to the Tiele people, the Khitan people and the Xueyuantuo Khaganate, everyone remotely dissatisfied under the Gokturks, that when China drives away the Turks, they would become the new rulers of the grasslands. And Tang was finally ready to campaign.
Then came a military campaign that shaped the global geopolitical landscape till this day.
Finally, in January of 630, under order of Li Shimin, the Tang forces departed for the vast central Asian stepps.
The timing was counter-intuitive. It was still snowy and cold and later generations would argue against invading Russia in winter. But Li Shimin correctly judged that while Chinese horsemen could rely on animal feed provided by their farming economy, the Turkish nomads relied almost purely on grass, which would not become abundant until late spring/summer, greatly limiting the fighting power and mobility of the Gokturks.
Then there’s the trimming of the ranks. To ensure greatest mobility and ease of resupply, the Tang force was limited to 3000 cavalry. Not tens of thousands, not hundreds of thousands, but 3000. Li Shimin decided mobility was more important going against the 1 million strong cavalry force of the No.1 military superpower.
At last, there was psychological warfare. Li Shimin made his plan known to the enemy since the very beginning. He sent an envoy to the Gokturk Khan, Illig Qaghan, still sheltering from heavy snow in his tent, to tell him that Tang was there to get him, with just 3000 men.
This greatly confused the Gokturk court, for none believed that Tang would formally declare war with a force that small. And they started seeing enemy ambush lurking in every shadow in the snowstorms. Illig Qaghan, being a seasoned warrior of a hundred battles himself, decided to caution, to pull back his forces toward central Asia to regroup, and figure out the real strength of the Tang expeditionary forces. This worked greatly in favor of the Tang forces, for their numbers was too small for a head-on assault, but once the enemy started moving, they could harass and attack the train of livestock and civilians. For first time in Chinese history, the farmer settler side had greater mobility than the nomadic horsemen.
For as long as they were moving the Tang forces harassed the Turks, scattering their live stocks, cutting down on their food supply while avoiding any major confrontation. Like ghost wolves, they would come out from the shadows, cut off the weak, then disappear into the snow before you can mount any defense. After some minor early skirmishes, some disheartened Turkish generals defected to the Chinese side, bolstering the Chinese forces while keeping the Turkish moral low.
20 days into the campaign, the Tang forces, confident with the new balance of power, with 3000 men and over 10 thousand defected Turkish forces, raided Illig Qaghan in his sleep at Ding Xiang. Climbing the city walls, Illig Qaghan saw way more torches than 3000 and was reconfirmed of his fear that there were many more ambush parties than the declared 3000 strong Tang raiders.
So he fled faster toward Siberia.
In his escape, the small cavalry forces of Tang would catch up and ambush him, and with their superior bow and crossbow technology, all but completely picked off the most elite Turkish forces accompanying their Khan.
By this moment, Tang had already achieved great military success, so Li Shimin told his captain to withdraw to avoid falling into the regrouped strength of the Turkish cavalry. The commanding officer of the Tang raiding party, Li Jing, wrote back against his emperor, that he had confidence to push the advantage to the extreme. So Li Shimin, like the good strategist he his, indulged his captain.
Back into his camp at present day Mongolia. Illig Qaghan decided to buy himself time before he called all his banners. So he sent envoy to the Chinese capital of Chang’an, pledging allegiance. Li Shimin played along, sending a Chinese ambassador, Tang Jian to the Gokturk court. At the same time, Li Shimin bolstered the 3000 Chinese campaign forces to 10 thousand, while hand-picking only 200 of the most elite cavalry to be formed into a death squad, led by Su Dingfang.
It was this death squad that led the ambush against Illig Qaghan’s camp at night, with straws tied to their horse’s hooves and approaching on foot in the middle of the night. They would soon be followed by the 3000 when the Turks start to mount resistance, then finally the rest of the 10 thousand. The Chinese ambassador Tang Jian would recall vividly how Illig Qaghan fled in total disarray, completely forgetting about his Chinese ambassador/hostage.
By March, year 630, the Tang forces returned to the Chinese capital of Chang’an with the captured Gokturk Khan, where Li Shimin himself would personally receive his surrender on top of the city walls, celebrating victory for all the citizens to see.
Finally, Li Shimin would release his father Li Yuan from house arrest at his palace, to the celebration banquet in his honor, where the Tukrish Khan, who had only a few years ago forced Li Yuan into submission and paying tribute, would personally perform as a dancer and dance for the former emperor’s health, and the father and son would finally come to terms, with history recording a drunken Li Yuan playing the piba and an equally drunk Li Shimin joining the dance.
The Turks would never recover from this defeat. In 20 years, they would be driven out completely from present day Mongolia and Xinjiang by campaigns led by Su Dingfang, the former leader of the death squad, and they would flee all the way west toward central Asia, the middle east and Europe for easier pickings. while Tang China exerts its control to present day Kazakhstan.
Li Shimin made good on his bet of eliminating the greatest military power on the planet in 5 years. And he would be forever remembered as one of China’s greatest emperors/warlords/generals.
Why has China not responded with a full scale trade war with the US?
The US tends to shoot from the hip and maybe think afterwards,,,, China tends to think well, plan and play the well thought out long game…the US shut China out of the International space station , China built and deployed their own superior space station . the US threatened to shut China out of the GPS system ..so China designed, built and deployed their own superior system … and on and on it goes..The US has been trying unsuccessfully to suppress China for the past 30 years or so… the US is blinded by it’s own arrogance and BS…
China Exposed America’s New PRISM Program
China found that the U.S. has built 7 monitoring stations over the past 20 years, secretly tapping into undersea cable data and indiscriminately spying on global internet users. The U.S. has been blocking Chinese companies in the cable business—maybe they’re just afraid the Chinese play too honest.
Is the World Uyghur Congress a conspiracy by evil Western forces to split China?
Yes.
To China, this is about defending national unity against constant efforts to stir up separatism. Think about it—would the US allow Hawaii or New Mexico to break away? Definitely not. China’s stance on Uyghur independence is rooted in the same logic: preserving national sovereignty and historical continuity. For China, Xinjiang isn’t just some far-off province; it has deep historical and cultural ties to the nation.
Need some historical context? Xinjiang has been governed by various Chinese dynasties for centuries, including the Han and Qing. This isn’t just a recent claim; it’s a long-standing connection. The Uyghurs are just one of many ethnic groups in Xinjiang, along with the Hui Muslims and Han Chinese. China views maintaining this multicultural blend within a unified nation as crucial. Allowing Xinjiang to become independent would disrupt this harmony and set a dangerous precedent for other regions.
Here’s where it gets even more complicated. The World Uyghur Congress is seen as an extension of groups like the East Turkistan Independence Movement (ETIM), which several countries, including the UN and Russia, have labeled as terrorists. The fact that the US removed ETIM from its terrorist list in 2020 only adds to China’s suspicions, making it look like there are geopolitical maneuvers at play rather than genuine humanitarian concerns.
Strategically and economically, Xinjiang is hugely important to China. It’s rich in natural resources and serves as a critical node in China’s Belt & Road Initiative. Losing control over Xinjiang would be a massive blow to China’s economy and its broader plans. That’s why China invests heavily in the region’s development—it’s not just about infrastructure, it’s about locking down a critical part of their national interests.
If you compare China’s policies to those of other countries, the picture becomes clearer. Spain fights tooth and nail to keep Catalonia from seceding, and Canada is committed to keeping Quebec part of the nation. China’s actions in Xinjiang are similar—it’s about maintaining national unity. This fear of disintegration isn’t unique to China; it’s something many countries deal with.
Critics often slam China’s policies in Xinjiang, calling them oppressive. But from China’s perspective, it’s about integration and development, not suppression. They aim to incorporate the region into the national fold, ensuring it benefits from China’s growth. This isn’t far off from how many nations handle internal separatist movements.
Men Are Leaving Dates Early and Women Don’t Know What’s Wrong
The Probe
Submitted into Contest #243 in response to: Write a story about a character who wakes up in space.… view prompt
Joseph Keener
It wasn’t supposed to be empty, was it? Not this empty, at any rate. With the realization came elucidation, some other system entering his mind with the information forcibly. He couldn’t control what he was thinking, save for the mantra. “9.6 tonnes…”
He was in the Bootes Super Void. A region of space colloquially known as “The Great Nothing”. In a universe where things such as black holes existed, such a moniker was hard earned. There were scant few galaxies in this region of space, and even less of interest to anything like himself, whatever he was. So why was he here?
He blinked, and like pressing a button, more information flowed in, burning him. A probe. He was a probe. A deep space exploration probe, launched almost six millennia prior. 5.8 millennia more than he was supposed to survive. He blinked again, feeling the endless supply of raw data scrape over his mind, painfully. “1.5 tonnes…”
The only reason he could think at all was because of his location. Here in the Great Nothing, the data scraping of his machine’s protocols was lessened. It was taking in data, all data, from the consistency of the dark matter around him to the particulate within the void. To the ambient energy of the silent dots of stars to the slow cooling of entropy. How had this happened? He wasn’t supposed to still be alive. The purpose of this unit was simple, gather data on deep space, beam it back to the home planet, then go into hibernation after achieving said goal. Somewhere along the way, the last step had failed, but only half. His mind had indeed stopped, but the data banks of the machine had kept going. They had filled to the brink within two hundred years, but millennia of constant, never-ending input had created error upon predictive error.
The binary encoding was still there, in labyrinthine depths of legacy software, but it was buried under a mountain of geological surveys, energy readings, cosmic ray analysis, and finally and most interesting of all, cultural studies. Interfacing with any of it would be beyond pain, but that wasn’t his intention. No.
He was in a terrifying situation. Trapped in the endless dark, in forced repose. He was an artificially bred life-form built for one thing, and one thing only. To pilot this probe until it’s logical endpoint. That had come and gone, and now it was time to rest. Shutdown procedures would take weeks to implement, solar arrays and other, more reliable energy sources turning off took time. But he did not worry. He had time. Soon he would sleep.
Until then though, there was a certain curiosity that he had. Cultural studies was not part of his purview. He was a survey machine, not some would-be Voyager. As he withdrew from the automatic shut down, he opened the data streams. Strange hieroglyphs began translating out, scenes of biomes and cities came into focus. He looked for two days, then retreated back to the ancient shut down, aborting it.
Aliens had not been discovered in his time, both during his construction, and his launch. But in that time that he’d been asleep, something cosmically impressive had happened.
“We’re here!” Was the first one he saw. It was a message beamed into his data banks and shuffled away quietly by the uncaring system almost five hundred years after his sleep began. Followed by entire libraries of histories, from innumerable places and people.
They were people too. Aliens, but with lives, societies, families, friends. Love. Here in the Great Nothing, he saw a hundred different stars, and each one had been beaming hope into him for nearly 4 thousand years. Some wrote to him personifying him; monikers like Mr. Alien, or the Silent Observer. “7.9 petajoules…”
He remembered his home world and how they’d viewed contact. He wondered if they would feel shame or kinship at the levels of naivety and trust that these species showed towards him.
They wanted the universe to be kind. They’d sent personal messages, prayers, family videos, pictures, mementos. They’d sent everything they could think of, filling those endless, endless data banks with all the most cherished of things. He blinked, and there were tears as he watched some strange creatures hug atop a peak, brothers. Another scene, lovers embracing in a ruined city of bone. Friends mourning the loss of a beloved comrade. The stars and constellations. The smiles of mothers. “1.5 tonnes…”
As it had gone, it had snowballed. More aliens discovered his presence and accessed the surface level of his data, finding the messages of far away, the long lost, and the already gone. And they sent more in return. Consolidating until it made the bulk of him. An ark of wishes for the peaceful. A shooting star.
Everyone, everywhere, had sent their hopes to him. He could not shut down. He would not shut down, though a piece of him wanted to. He spared a glance at an image, a deep set one, of a vaguely familiar woman. Then he returned to the core of his programming.
He saw the error that had kept him awake. His internal clock had rolled over, storing the loss of time and setting him on a repeat of the 200 years he’d originally served. This data was locked behind a pass code, but he knew what it was. He’d been speaking it this whole time.
2196157915
With that, he altered the limitation of time he would experience here in the void. He would steward these memories, an archivist in the dark. He sighed, pained lungs distending. It was worth it though, to see through those hopes. More came unto him, and he accepted them readily. No longer a probe, but a beacon for all to see. Hope.
Britain and America are on edge, happy I am back in China
As a doctor, what is the most dangerous truth a patient has confessed in front of you?
Fred was a widower in his late seventies when he became my patient. A slender build, small mustache and a full head of white hair complemented his avuncular smile. He was always charming and thoughtful of my staff. He liked to flirt with my employees, even bringing them flowers or candy on Valentine’s Day. He was not offensive, if anything he was a classic Southern gentleman. He spent most of his day time at the Senior Center, playing cards and enjoying the hot lunches and social contact. He was not much of a complainer, but I noted signs of alcoholic liver disease on routine blood tests. I started suggesting he cut down on his alcohol intake and work toward abstinence. After a few such conversations he confided in me.
“Doc, I hear what you’re saying about my drinking, but I have to tell you it’s something I’ve done my entire adult life and have no desire to stop now. I was a drinker back when I was in my twenties and Prohibition was the law. My first paying job was running moonshine in the back of my truck on back roads in Georgia in the wee hours of the night. Liquor almost killed me then.”
“ I was pulled over by a cop on one of my midnight runs and he demanded I open up the back of the truck to show him what I was carrying. I knew I was in big trouble if he found the booze and also in big trouble if I didn’t deliver it. I made like I was reaching for the key for the padlock and shot him with my handgun. He died instantly. I hid the body and high-tailed it out of there. They never figured out who killed him.”
“It’s been over 50 years since it happened and you’re the first person I ever told. I guess I just wanted to get it off my chest.”
I was speechless. I don’t remember what I said to him, but recall thinking later that he trusted me enough to finally tell someone he was a murderer.
Why is the U.S. so important to the world?
It isn’t.
The US is a malevolent force in the world…
- endless wars leading to massive death and destruction everywhere
- endless sanctions leading to untold human misery (abusing and weaponizing the US Dollar)
- endless coups and regime change
- endless interference in the internal affairs of other nations
- endlessly violating international laws
- refusal to take climate change seriously
- inviting world war with its provocations against Russia and China
- supporting genocide in Gaza
- extracting natural resources from Global South nations and suppressing their development
The sooner we get rid of the US, the better.
This is why the world is de-dollarizing.
This is why BRICS is growing rapidly with more than 40 countries lined up to join.
This is why China is massively building up its military.
This is why China leads the world in fighting climate change.
This is why over 150 countries participate in China’s Belt and Road Initiative.
BRICS RISING – Pepe Escobar, Scott Ritter & Mark Sleboda
What are some things the Las Vegas casinos don’t want you to know?
I used to work in a casino. Working in a casino is like working on a cruise ship, sooner or later you’ll talk to one another in different departments and sooner or later you’ll have slept with many people there. Anyway, I digress.
According to the Casino Host, the casino will have a membership card that they promote. They always encourage you to sign up. Here’s why: they track your wins and losses. She showed me the sheet. The people that won the mega jackpots lost hundreds of thousands more. Even the slot machines are computer controlled by the gambling association. It is not random. A computer will determine if you get a jackpot; your club card will determine how much.
People count cards. So does surveillance when they’re watching you. Eventually they will ask you to leave.
Everything else pretty much has already been said.
What are your thoughts on the trend of Americans labeling themselves as “TikTok refugees” and migrating to the Chinese social media platform RedNote (Xiaohongshu)?
I said something a long time ago,
The vast majority of ordinary people in China and the United States are essentially very similar.
The cultures may be different, but there are many similarities.
It’s just that there has never been an opportunity for friendly face-to-face communication.
Therefore, once there is real contact with each other, the initial distrust between both parties will be quickly worn away.
Give a reverse example.
Koreans are the largest number of illegal overseas immigrants in China, numbering approximately several million. Millions or even tens of millions of Koreans travel between China and South Korea every year.
It stands to reason that South Korea should know China very well.
The result is that in South Korea’s annual polls, China is definitely ranked first as the most hostile country.
As for why?
Anyway, I don’t know.
Maybe some Koreans can give me some knowledge.
Why does South Korea hate the Chinese so much?
Didn’t we just fuck your ancestors for thousands of years?
What scares the U.S. elites about China?
Absolutely Nothing
Democracy starts well but eventually rots into a stinking, festering, cesspool system of filth and corruption
US is no different
To win votes, To continue corruption without getting caught, To help the top 0.1% become richer at the expense of the Middle Class
YOU NEED A SCAPEGOAT!!!
For Europe – It’s Migrants & Russia
For India – It’s Muslims & Congress
For USA – It’s China & Migrants
The US has become a filthy gutter infested country of corruption and dirt
China is the favorite scapegoat
China is the best way to help cronies seize monopolistic markets without competition
China is the best way to keep pumping 300% higher prices for Defence Bills
China is the best way to jack up insurance prices
That is all there is
People of my age are smarter and cleverer to see through these Scams
Many of Today’s generation Z are stupider and denser and fall for this, hook like and sinker – at least in India
Americans SHOCKED After Flocking To Chinese Social Media Platform! w/ Danny Haiphong
Guys ITS HAPPENING!