Reality is still in flux. Note that it is not what you might think.
Reality is like a kitchen table.
- Over the years it has gotten worn, shaky, rattled. On top of it is all kinds of clutter. There are old condiment packets on the table, tooth picks, salt and pepper containers getting dirty and dusty. There are kids toys, brick a brack, and parts o things. It’s cluttered on one side with tissues, and papers.
- What is going on is that reality has “backups”; these are “snapshots” from earlier days. There was a snapshot taken in the early 1960’s. And that snapshot replaced the current “table”.
- Now the floor of the kitchen has gotten wobbly, and dusty, and has broken tiles and concrete exposed. Well, there is a working crew fixing that. I call them the oompaloompas. (A name from the Willy Wonka movie). And they have been busy doing this for a while now.
- But, all that clutter is still on the table. But with the floor stable, and the table new and pristine, there is a natural tendency to clear off the clutter. And over the next few months and years you will see things clearing off, being put aside and generally getting better.
- So, it’s really a good thing. Sure, the world is talking about World War III. Uh, that has already happened on another world-line, but you and I and us have slid to a better and safer one. One with the core structures from the early 1960’s.
Don’t freak out. -MM
Meanwhile, the broadcaster of doom has a few things to say…
Kuwait Broadcasting Nuclear Radiation Warnings to Citizens – Laguna Beach California Tests Nuclear Attack Sirens
Hal Turner World March 25, 2026
Last night, the country of Kuwait began issuing televised nuclear/Radiation warnings to their citizens. Yesterday evening, Laguna Beach, California, began testing their air-raid/Nuclear Attack Warning Sirens!
From television in Kuwait, the government and military in that country has begun telling citizens:
STAY INDOORS — SEAL YOUR HOMES — RADIATION PRECAUTIONS ISSUED
Authorities in Kuwait have issued urgent guidance as tensions escalate across the region.
The instructions are stark:
- Do not leave your homes.
- Seal all doors and windows.
- Stay inside until further notice.
Officials say there is no immediate need to panic.
But these measures are being introduced as a precaution against possible airborne contamination — including potential Nuclear radioactive fallout from regional escalation.
The concern is not confirmed exposure.
It is what could happen if the situation worsens.
Because in modern conflict:
Critical infrastructure
Military facilities
Sensitive sites
All carry risks beyond the blast itself.
Authorities stress that distance reduces the immediate threat.
But they are preparing for worst-case scenarios.
And when governments begin advising people to seal their homes…
It means they are planning not just for conflict — but for what comes after it.
This is precaution.
But it is serious precaution.
CALIFORNIA
The City of Laguna Beach began testing its Nuclear Attack Air Raid Sirens yesterday evening. Video Below:
This is here . . . inside the United States.
When I Heard the Laguna Beach Video, I wanted to Cry
Those sirens in Laguna Beach brought tears to my eyes. I’ve been TRYING to warn all of you – for months. I’ve told you and told you and told you to prepare.
So many laughed at me. Called me “Chicken Little, the Sky is falling.” Said my news stories and article advice was “Click Bait” and “Doom Porn.” Then went about your life having done absolutely nothing.
Well, here we go. They’re testing the nuclear attack warning sirens here in the United States.
You’re smart; why do you think they’re doing that? Because the danger has become so close, so real, there is now public government acknowledgement of it.
What I’ve been warning about is now so close, even government can’t conceal it.
So NOW what are you going to do?
For what it’s worth, I will repeat my warning again, hoping there is still time for SOME of you to take action:
Get Emergency food:
Shelf-stable items that do NOT require refrigeration: 10 lb. bags of Rice, Boxes of Pasta. Jarred Sauces. Cans of Tuna, of Chicken breast, of other meats. Cans of soups you can heat and dump on top of the rice or pasta to make a meal.
Emergency Water:
Humans can only go three DAYS without water. Have a supply: Bottled water – enough for each person in your household for at least a week. Some people are buying tub liners so that when the alert comes, they can put the liner in their tub, turn on the tap and fill the lined tub with thirty, forty,, maybe 50 gallons of water. Others are buying 50 gallon water drums. Trouble with those is, they weigh 400 lbs when full, so you can’t move them once they’re full.
A Way to Generate Electric:
Get some type of emergency electric generator. Most people are getting gasoline-powered, which is fine — as long as you have (or can get) gasoline. But there are other types of generators that are Dual-Fuel (Gasoline and natural gas) or Triple-Fuel(Gasoline, Natural Gas, Propane) Again, all of them good, as long as you have fuel.
Other people are getting SOLAR which is really just a deep cycle battery that holds a little energy to power a light, or phone, or laptop for a few hours, but can be recharged with a SOLAR PANEL that comes with it.
People like me went all-out and got WHOLE HOUSE solar electric systems. But they take weeks to order, to get, to install and it is really very expensive to do that.
FUEL:
Have several 5-Gallon gas cans, FILLED. But you need to preserve that fuel so it doesn’t go bad. SO buy a small bottle of something like “STA-BIL” fuel stabilizer. Add it to the can once it is filled with gasoline and it will help preserve the gasoline.
Others, like me, realize that gasoline will go bad within a few months, so we bought Fuel RESTORATION fluids like a product called “Pri-G” (for gasoline) or “Pri-D” (for Diesel). If the fuel has gone bad, you can add a specific, measured amount of these products into the correct fuel, and they cause a chemical reaction to make the fuel LIKE NEW again! But they’re expensive.
COMMUNICATIONS GEAR:
If the SHTF, it is highly likely that “the grid” will go down, meaning no electricity and NO TV/RADIO/PHONES/CABLE/INTERNET etc.
You really should have emergency gear like a CB radio or a HAM Radio in your house and/or in your car so you can communicate with other people nearby. Both CB and HAM can operate with a car battery – even in your house. Get a small, portable radio, a spare car battery, antenna cable (coaxial cable RG-8 or RG-58) to go from the radio to your outdoor antenna, and a small, cheap, outdoor antenna or car antenna.
You can communicate a good five miles with a CB and there’s a lot of people in that 5 miles you can get info from.
PORTABLE AM/FM/Shortwave radio that runs on internal batteries for news, information and to hear what’s going on.
FIRST AID KIT:
You need to have an EMT TRAUMA KIT, with bandages for injuries/wounds. When the bombs hit, and things collapse, a lot of people will have cuts and bruises ranging from minor, to complete detachment of arms/legs/ and other horrifying injuries. You need to have some way to treat what is treatable, on someone who is savable. There will be people who are so badly injured, they cannot be saved. Prepare to make those decisions. Be prepared mentally to walk away. It will be gut-wrenching, but you have to do it.
This list of “Preps” is woefully incomplete. But it is the most basic items you need to even have a CHANCE for you and the ones you love.
I URGE you to get ready. I BEG YOU to get ready while there is still some time to do so.
GET RIGHT WITH GOD:
A lot of us have lived the overwhelming majority of our lives never even thinking about God. It is time to start thinking of Him. In fact, it’s long overdue.
I am not a Priest, a Preacher, a Minister, or a Reverend. I’m a Catholic by upbringing, a Christian by choice.
I don’t know the formal rituals adopted by men over the ages, to try to get right with God, but I DO know this: God is real. He is there, with you, right now. He sees all, and knows all — and always has.
HE knows you don’t know much of anything about praying. HE knows you haven’t prayed for decades. He still loves you. He created you. He knew you before you were born and he loves YOU the way you love your child. Get quiet. Concentrate. Pray to Him.
I dunno what you’ll say; I started with “God, it’s me, Harold. I haven’t prayed to you in years, but I think I’m in big trouble, and you’re the only one I can think of to try to talk to. Please God, hear me. . . .” and go from there. I told Him “I’ve lived fast and loose. I’ve (insert sins here . . . . lied, cheated, stolen, had sex with . . . .)” and whatever else I did.
Tell Him ‘Looking back, I really have lived like a selfish, self-centered, self-important JERK. I didn’t know how to get along in life, so I acted this way to protect myself from being vulnerable. I shouldn’t have done those things. I’m sorry. I repent.”
Look, I can’t tell you what to say, only YOU know what to say because it’s YOUR life and YOU know what you did. He knows, but he’s waiting to hear it from your own mouth. You have to SPEAK the prayer, SPEAK the sins, not just THINK it and expect God to read your mind. He wants to HEAR IT from your own mouth. And in order to do that, you actually have to get humble. Humble enough to admit the (ugly) truth out of your own mouth, to the one who created you.
I think that’s how you confess to the one who made you.
I could go on endlessly, but I won’t. You get the idea.
None of us is guaranteed Salvation. NONE of us is likely worthy of being saved. But we DO have a chance at forgiveness, and I think it’s really a worthy endeavor to at least TRY.
Time is short. They’re testing nuclear attack sirens and issuing radiation warnings. Take the hint.
Sir Whiskerton and the Ethics Section: Is It Okay to Eat the Exam?
Or: When Philosophy Meets Hunger in Kittens Taking Tests
Introduction
Welcome, dear reader, to a tale that asks the ultimate question: When faced with an impossible exam, is it morally permissible to eat your way out of failure?
Today’s story follows Ditto the Echoing Kitten as he grapples with this very dilemma during his kitten-version of the Chinese Gaokao (高考). While Ditto ponders ethics, Porkchop the Pig declares all food sacred (“If it fits in your mouth, it’s ethically delicious!”) and Bessie the Tie-Dye Cow waxes poetic about “vibes.” Chaos ensues when Ditto accidentally nibbles on the corner of his test paper, sparking a barnyard-wide debate over morality, munchies, and mindful chewing.
So grab some snacks—but maybe not any exams—and enjoy Sir Whiskerton and the Ethics Section: Is It Okay to Eat the Exam?
Act 1: The Great Debate Begins
Ditto sat at his tiny desk, quill trembling like a leaf caught in a storm. His eyes darted between the daunting question—”Is it okay to eat the exam?”—and the blank space where his answer should have been.
Before he could think too hard, Porkchop sauntered in, snout gleaming with leftover crumbs from breakfast.
“YES!” Porkchop bellowed, slamming a hoof onto the table. “If it fits in your mouth, it’s ethically delicious! You’re doing science, kid. Food science.”
Bessie the Tie-Dye Cow floated into view, her aura shimmering with kaleidoscopic energy. She placed a gentle hoof on Ditto’s shoulder.
“But consider the vibes of the paper, man,” Bessie said solemnly. “This isn’t just pulp—it’s potential. Maybe it dreams of becoming poetry instead of pulp fiction.”
Ditto blinked, overwhelmed by their conflicting advice. Then, true to form, he echoed both voices:
“If it fits… vibes… Mmmph?”
Act 2: The Corner Conundrum
As the philosophical battle raged, Ditto absentmindedly gnawed on the corner of his exam paper. Suddenly, his eyes widened.
“MORAL CRUNCH!” Ditto yelped, spitting out bits of ink-stained fiber. “I didn’t mean to—I swear!”
Sir Whiskerton appeared, monocle glinting ominously. He inspected the damaged document with the precision of a detective investigating a crime scene.
“This,” Sir Whiskerton declared, holding up the chewed edge, “is either the beginning of a moral crisis or the world’s most avant-garde study guide.”
Porkchop snorted loudly. “Avant-garde? Dude, it’s lunch.”
Bessie sighed dramatically. “No, it’s karma. Every bite disrupts the universe’s balance! Do you really want to upset cosmic harmony for… what flavor even is recycled paper?”
Chef Remy LeRaccoon waddled in, sniffing the air. “Ah, mes amis! This calls for my newest invention: Edible Examination Paper™! Gluten-free, organic, and lightly seasoned with existential dread.”
The animals stared at him in horrified silence.
Act 3: Resolution Through Reflection
Sir Whiskerton gathered everyone under the old oak tree for a moment of reflection.
“Let us consider,” he began, pacing thoughtfully, “whether eating the exam solves anything. Does it alleviate stress? Perhaps. Does it demonstrate critical thinking? Unlikely. And does it taste good?”
Porkchop raised a hoof enthusiastically. “YES!”
Ignoring him, Sir Whiskerton turned to Ditto. “Young apprentice, remember this: Life presents many choices, but not all are wise. Sometimes, the bravest act is resisting temptation—even when it comes wrapped in shiny ink.”
Ditto nodded solemnly. “So… no more eating homework?”
“Exactly,” Sir Whiskerton replied. “Unless it’s Chef Remy’s lasagna. That’s exempt.”
Post-Credit Scene
Chef Remy stood proudly beside a tray of glowing exam papers. “Behold! My Edible Gaokao Collection. Each sheet infused with ancient wisdom—and a hint of garlic butter.”
Doris the Hen pecked suspiciously at one. “Are these radioactive?”
Remy grinned. “Only slightly.”
Cue horrified squawks.
Moral of the Story
Not everything that looks edible should be eaten—especially if it involves ink, ethics, or existential seasoning.
Best Lines
- “If it fits in your mouth, it’s ethically delicious.” – Porkchop, philosopher-pig extraordinaire.
- “But consider the vibes of the paper, man.” – Bessie, tie-dye sage.
- “MORAL CRUNCH!” – Ditto, accidental ethicist.
Starring
- Sir Whiskerton (Detective & Ethical Advisor)
- Ditto the Echoing Kitten (Philosophical Snacker)
- Porkchop the Pig (Self-Proclaimed King of Cuisine)
- Bessie the Tie-Dye Cow (Vibes Enthusiast)
- Chef Remy LeRaccoon (Mad Scientist of Munchies)
Summaries
- Moral: Resist temptation unless it involves actual food—and avoid radioactive snacks.
- Key Jokes: From Porkchop’s unapologetic appetite to Chef Remy’s questionable creations, laughter abounds.
- Future Potential: Could Chef Remy open a restaurant serving only edible homework? Or will Ditto face another ethical dilemma involving lasagna?
Until next time, may your decisions be wise and your snacks non-toxic. 🍕
Looking to start bulk buying groceries for storage. Things like rice, oats, beans, and other items that can store long term. Any other suggestions? Looking for items that I can use for multiple different meals.
What you store will depend on the reason you want to have food stockpiled. If it’s because you hate going grocery shopping, you probably won’t be overly concerned with longevity. If you’re doomsday prepping, your focus will be more toward having things that won’t spoil.
Store a good supply of salt. Get both iodized, for general use, and non-iodized for pickling and canning. Also, a person should lay in a good supply of various seasonings. If you eat the same, dull bland food, week after week, you’ll be prone to appetite fatigue, and your nutritional well-being may suffer.
Powdered eggs are a good thing to have, although you’ll need to be conscientious about using and rotating your stores. Powdered milk is another great choice and, properly stored, can last a very long time. Powdered drink mixes, with high vitamin levels, are another easy way to stay properly nourished.
You’d be smart to lay in a supply of plain, white flour. Whole wheat flour doesn’t last as long as white flour because it contains wheat germ and wheat germ has oil that will go rancid, after a while.
A life with nothing sweet would be dreadful! White sugar lasts indefinitely, if properly stored. Honey is also a great storage item.
Consider storing some sort of cooking fat. Coconut oil and ghee have the longest shelf life, but tallow and lard will last for a very long time, too. Avoid seed oils, they can get nasty in less than a year. Some preppers claim canned butter will last up to twenty years.
Some sort of ready protein is essential to have, and canned tuna is an easy one. Canned tuna, packed in oil has a longer shelf life than tuna packed in water. It can be eaten straight from the can or mixed with rice to make a more satisfying meal.
I hope this helps!
Has anyone used Linux Mint instead of Windows?
Have been on Mint Linux since Microsoft kept raining on my parade. The one thing that held me back was the lack of games. That changed when Steam + Proton was introduced to Linux, several years now, used to stream RDP from my window box for games, but it all runs native now.
Have been on Mint for over a decade now. Tried some Chinese Linux, but the messing with Latinized fonts was annoying. So back on Mint.
I’d probably switch over to Mint debian series, as Canonical Ubuntu, which the standard Mint is based off will be experimenting on Rust based tooling. I’d hold off that till it’s stable.
The good thing of Mint is the GUI is customizable, dev tools are matured, you get VSCodium for dev work, that’s VScode without telemetry, privacy matters to me, and for AI engineers, Jupyter Notebook running off GPU enabled containers, you can mess with it and prevent taint to your core operating system.
Browser support is good, you get Chrome, Edge, Firefox support. Thunderbird Emailer is decent, but if you need Outlook, suggest to use MS web based cloud emails.
Audio toolings are decent, you have a slew of audio editors, video editors are kinda meh, or at least I’ve not found anything I’d say is production ready. Screen caps and video caps are decent, Flameshot and Voko is my go-to, but I switch up from time to time.
For my video conversion tooling, it’s all command like via FFMEG, so not exactly user friendly, it’s a bit scary, but with modern chatgpt or Claude, you’ll be able to use it like a champ quicky.
I automate most of that using a web to CLI tool I built, so commonly used commands go there. Less requirements to remember what I hacked up to make and stich various data formats.
I still have my entire series of windows VMs, but hadn’t had a need to fire it up for many years now. Some finance tools still insist on running in windows, so I have a proxmox server pool for that.
Otherwise MINT is my primary desktop when doing serious work, I keep the Mac mini for lighter work.
Linux also comes build in with a really awesome wireguard VPN, so my entire office net regardless where I am, always is connected back to my home office network.
With LLMs today, Linux isn’t as scary as it was for new users as it was before.
I run ZFS, and when one of my disk died a while back, and because I was on RAID-Z and had disk redundancy, no data loss, just hook up another disk and all data recovered, this is a relatively advance topic, so nothing new users to be concerned about.
The Bell
Written in response to: “Center your story around someone who has (or is given) the ability to time travel.“
Jaxen Dreamerman
The Lawyer speaks. His words are for some other man who measures life in appeals or stays of execution. “…they made a mistake in the trial, Arthur. The judge… he gave the jury bad instructions. It’s a real opening.”
A fly buzzes near the single bulb, a frantic, tiny engine going nowhere. I follow its vibration, and a different sound surfaces from eleven years ago. Not a buzz. A pop. Two of them, small and flat in the wet night air. Rain on hot asphalt. Slick, sweating grip of a wooden handle. Smell of gunpowder and exhaust fumes.
“Did you hear me, Arthur?”
“Heard you,” I say, the words traveling out with a breath.
A sigh, like a man trying to inflate a punctured tire. “This is it. This is the one that could get you out of the chair, put you back in the general population. Maybe even out in ten. We need you engaged.”
Ten years. Ten more years of staring at that ceiling. Maybe the river delta would reach the wall by then. The numbers are just noise.
“Right,” I say. The fly buzzes.
A click of a briefcase latch, rustle of paper. Scrape of a chair. “I’ll file the motion tomorrow,” he says to the back of my head. “Try to have a little faith, son.” Heavy clang of the door, shooting of the bolt, fading footsteps down the concrete hall.
Faith. The only thing belonging to me has nothing to do with men like him, not in motions or rulings. I close my eyes. A different kind of faith, as persistent as the water stain on the ceiling.
I lie for hours as the prison settles into its iron skin. Calls and coughs from other cells. Rhythmic clank of the night guard making his rounds, like a tick of a clock I stopped following years ago.
A quiet shuffle of soft-soled shoes comes later, mixed with a rustle of a robe. A faint ting of a bell. The floor feels hard against my knees. I lower my head. The door closes. The bolts click.
“Bless me, Father, for I have sinned.”
A scrape of a chair once again, pulled away from the wall. I keep my head bowed.
“Arthur.”
I raise my gaze to a stranger. A young man with an old man’s eyes. Priest’s collar. A wooden cross and a tiny bell. “Where’s Father Michael?”
“Your lawyer seems hopeful.”
He ignores my question. Not a mistake. A choice. I study him. A stillness, an unnerving patience in those old eyes. I blink.
“He’s selling something I’m not buying.”
“And what is that?”
“Tomorrow,” I say. “And the day after that.”
The priest nods, his gaze on mine. “You’ve been praying for an absolution, Arthur. For a way to make it right. Not with the state. With God.”
Again the memory, sharper this time. The weight and taste of the one word in my mouth just before I say it. In. I press my eyelids shut.
“There is no making it right,” I whisper. “There’s only living with the wrong.”
He leans forward, hands clasped. “God can offer you an absolution, not a pardon.” His voice has no echo like all the other sounds in this place.
“How?”
“A day of grace, bought with every day you have left. You will feel the warmth of the sun, and you will feel the chill as it is taken away forever.”
He leans back in his chair. “But you need to pray for the man you were supposed to be. Not for you.” He holds my gaze. Eyes like magnets pulling on metal.
I take two breaths. I nod and lower my head.
“Pray with me, son. Pray that man had said ‘no’.”
I pray. The bell tings at his neck.
***
“…not even listening to me! Arthur, you promised you’d sell the car. We need the money!” The sharp voice tears through the silence.
I snap my eyes open, gawk around. Haze, no ceiling, no bars, nor river delta of rust. A floral wallpaper, faded yellow, and a woman standing with her hands on her hips. Eleanor. My Eleanor. My breath catches. Vision blurs again.
A fly buzzes before my face. My fly? No. The dull, constant ache in my lower back from the prison cot is gone. I raise a hand to my face. Smooth skin. No lines or gray stubble. My fingers sink into thick hair. A sharp chill runs across my scalp, like the barber’s razor in prison.
“The doctor’s office called again,” she says. I focus my gaze on her. “The bill, Arthur. And you spending our last five dollars on beer with my brother…”
Lilacs. Her perfume. A scent lost to time makes the small kitchen tilt on its axis. I push myself up from a wooden chair, my legs steady and strong. I look at her, at the fierce, beautiful anger in her face, the swell of her stomach beneath her apron. My son.
The wallpaper behind her flickers, changing into a sweating concrete. Familiar water stain. Clang of a cell door. I reach for a glass of water on the counter. My hands shake.
“…and now this, finding out you lost the warehouse job two weeks ago and never said a word! My father was right about you. You’re not a husband who can provide.”
Those words. A throb travels through my whole body, but the anger isn’t with me. The shame is gone. Eleven years of stored-up love, the crushing weight of regret. I step toward her, my hands raised in surrender.
“Ellie,” I say. An alien’s voice, a young man’s tenor. I cough. “I’m sorry. None of it matters. Just… none of it.”
She recoils, her eyes widen. “None of it matters? The rent doesn’t matter? The baby doesn’t matter?”
“No, that’s not what I…” I reach for her, for the curve of her belly, to touch him just once, feel his movement, just once. My hand shakes. She flinches back, pulling away from my touch as if it were a snake.
“What is wrong with you? First you’re yelling, now this? What kind of trick is this, Arthur?” The air leaves my lungs in a rush, as if I’ve been punched. She protects her belly.
“Please, Ellie… I’ll stay. I won’t go out. I’ll stay here with you. We’ll fix it.” I take off my jacket and drop it on the chair. A choir of bells starts to ting inside my head the moment the jacket hits its back. I raise my hands to block the sound. No use. It grows louder. A rhythm. A voice. The priest.
Eleanor stares at me. Anger turns into fear, and her arms tighten over her stomach, protecting our son from her strange, unpredictable husband.
I pick the jacket back up, and the ting fades. “I have to go,” I say. “Going to see about a job. On the docks.” The lie tastes like tar in my mouth. I walk out the door, closing it gently behind me, and take the stairs down two at a time.
My dented blue Ford waits at the curb. The most expensive thing in my life. The key slides into the ignition. The engine turns on, settling into a low growl. I put it in gear, place my hands on the wheel. No shakes. I pull away from the curb.
The garage door is half-open, a dark mouth yawning into the afternoon. I kill the engine. Heavy silence follows, broken only by a steady ting… ting… ting from within. I get out of the car. Smell of gasoline. Taste of old oil on my tongue.
I duck under the door. Inside, shadows cling to everything. A single bare bulb flickers, casting a dirty yellow light on a half-disassembled engine block. Eleanor’s brother emerges, wiping his hands on an already-black rag. He smiles, gaze lit with desperate energy.
“Art, there you are, and you brought the car. Good. I was about to call the house.” He claps me on the shoulder, pulling me deeper inside. In the far corner, another man I remember slams a wrench down on a metal table. Sound of a cell door. My teeth grind together as I grimace.
“It’s on, Art. Tonight. It’s perfect. A textile mill payroll delivery. The driver’s a drunk, the route’s always the same. We’re not hurting anybody, just taking from a guy who’s been skimming off the top for years. It’s practically justice.”
He’s pacing from the workbench to the door, a tight, three-step rhythm of anxiety. I watch him, and I see it all—the whole rotten future spooling out from this one greasy room.
“Listen,” he says, stopping right in front of me, grabbing my arm. “Think about it. Think about Ellie. The look on her face when you come home with a stack of bills. Enough to pay the doctor, to buy a real crib, to shut the old man’s mouth for good. This is for her, Art. So you can be the husband she needs.”
Every word builds the wall of my cell. Every breath adds a year to my sentence. They place a gun on the table. A ting, as it touches the scraped surface. Sweating grip of the wooden handle. I open my clenched fist. Empty.
“No.”
He blinks and pulls back. “What? What do you mean, ‘no’?”
“I mean no.” The word feels light. “Don’t you see? This money… it’s finality. It’ll weigh you down until you can’t breathe. It’ll stain everything it touches… Ellie, the baby, everything. It’s not an answer. It’s an ending. For their sake… walk away. Please. This road only goes one place.”
His face twists. “You’re backing out? Now? You coward. I’m trying to help you provide for my sister, and you’re getting cold feet?” He shoves me. I fall against a workbench. “You’re letting her down, you son of a bitch. You’re letting us all down.”
I hold his gaze. “I’m not letting her down by saying no to this.” I turn to leave. Ice shoots up my spine. I keep my steps calm. Every muscle in my back tightens, waiting for a shout or a blow. I duck under the garage door and step back into the sunlight. I get back in the car. The key slides into the ignition. The engine turns over. I raise my hands to the wheel. No shake.
As I pull away from the curb, the faint ting of the bell returns, growing clearer, melodic, bright.
***
The ting fades. A whisper. “Grandpa… Grandpa, wake up.”
I open my eyes, not to the preternatural clarity of the world outside my car, but to a hazy morning light filtering through lace curtains. A warm and soft bed. A small, joyful weight on my chest.
“You promised, Grandpa! The Cyclone! You promised!” a little girl’s voice chirps. Another child, a boy, scrambles beside her. “And the cotton candy!”
Grandpa, name like an unfit coat. I glance around, back to their faces again, bright and expectant. There is no memory of love in my heart, but it still aches. I sit up. My joints protest with the stiff language of old age.
“All right, all right, you little monsters,” I say, the words coming from a throat feeling raspy and unfamiliar. “Let an old man find his teeth.” They giggle and tumble off the bed. I swing my legs over the side and stand. My muscles are weak, the body a stranger to me.
In the bathroom, I brace myself against the sink, raising my gaze to meet the image in the mirror. Not the face of a man on a death row. Not the face of the desperate young man, but the face of a man with a life I never lived. Deep laugh lines etched around kind blue eyes, like a map of the river delta of rust and time. A crown of snow-white hair.
Downstairs, the kitchen is a pond of sunlit chaos. A man who must be in his forties flips a pancake at the stove. A son. A woman I don’t know pours orange juice for the kids. A daughter. Eleanor stands by the coffee pot. Her hair is silver, her face is lined like mine. Our eyes meet. Her smile, the key unlocking the weight I’ve been carrying for eleven years. It’s gone.
Smell of bacon. Sound of laughter. The sight of her, alive and old and beautiful. A lump in my throat. I walk over to my son, the baby I never held, the man I never raised. I put my arms around him, and a sob tears its way out of my chest, a dry, rattling sound of unendurable gratitude.
He stiffens. Pats my back. “Whoa, Dad. You okay?”
The whole room goes quiet. Eleanor comes over. My body remembers her touch; my mind does not. “It’s just the excitement,” she says. “His heart. Let’s all just have a nice, calm breakfast.” She smiles and hands me a warm mug. The heat seeps into my palms. I take a sip, and the taste—rich, dark, and real, not the grey, watery sap from the prison mess—is so powerful I almost choke.
A plate is set before me. I take a bite of the pancake my son made. Butter, sweet syrup, the slight char from the pan—simple and perfect flavors. The taste of a meal made in a home I never built, with a family I never had.
At the amusement park, I am a phantom observing my own heaven. My son wins a stuffed bear for his daughter. Teaches his own son how to throw a ball. My granddaughter shoves a cloud of pink cotton candy into my mouth, its sweetness melts on my tongue, a flavor from a world I had forced myself to forget.
I ride the Ferris wheel with Eleanor. At the very top, she rests her head on my shoulder. The first time in a lifetime of first times. The noise of the crowd below. A joyous roar of happiness. I swallow my tears.
My borrowed body is frail. I have to sit on a bench while the younger ones ride the coaster one last time. I am with them, but I am separate, a tourist in my own promised land.
The drive home is quiet. Night has fallen. My son is driving, my daughter beside him. The grandkids are asleep in the third row, smiles on their faces. I sit in the backseat with Eleanor, her soft, wrinkled hand in mine. I trace the wedding ring I don’t remember giving her.
“You were quiet today,” she says.
“Just taking it all in.” The truest thing I have ever said.
A single, pure ting. A chill.
The priest’s voice, echoless inside my own head.
I look at Eleanor, at her profile in the passing glow of the streetlights. I lean closer. “Ellie. I have to go now.”
She turns to me and smiles, her gaze holds a lifetime I never knew. She pats my hand. “Go to sleep, my love,” she says. “We’re almost home.”
I squeeze her hand. My eyes close, and the last thing I feel is the warmth of her skin.
The end.
What are the key reasons behind the belief that the US can’t practice gunboat diplomacy against China anymore?
The reason are legion. The most obvious of which is that colonialism has died. It’s both morally wrong and recognized as such, and it’s no longer feasible. China has fully adopted the capitalist systems that made the Eest powerful. As a result.
China has nukes. If an invasion fleet showed up off its coast, it would be nuked. Period.
China has historically been a land power with little or no navy. Anyone who came ashore would be met with overwhelming numbers of highly trained soldiers. Expeditionary forces that could land at will and who were backed by naval cannons could pulverize masses of even highly rained soldiers. Now?
Now? If some magical event relieved China of its nukes and an invasion flotilla showed up? It would be met by a flotilla in return. That includes heavy investment in a wry capable Air Force.
China has also invested heavily in Area Denial capabilities.
The J20 is designed to pinch through air defenses and take out tankers and C2 aircraft. No tankers? You aren’t getting air over China from the Pacific. There are a lot of fighters that would make getting close to China’s coast extremely difficult.
There are also thousands of anti ship missiles.
Getting a flotilla near the coast would result in swarms of those missiles being loosed. Add is swarms of drones and it gets even harder.
There is also simple logistics and economics.
The US has the most amphibious assault ships in the world. It’s a whopping nine. Each one carries 1,800 marines. If all nine showed up, that 16,200 Marines – one division. Even the dedicated support ships to transport troops would get us to 100,000. That might be enough to hold one coastal city. These are also blue water ships that cannot sail up China’s rivers. There is, stated simply, not enough amphibious capacity in the entire world to punch through China’s defenses to raid up its rivers.
Assuming all of China’s military magically disappeared, and China reverted to just ground forces, then these amphibious ships could maraud up and down the coast like some kind of modern pirate fleet. Groups of special operations guys could get up river, but again, even with ground forces, artillery and mass makes any actual progress by the units almost useless.
Even if magic wizards showed up and magiced away China’s military, the reality is that it wouldn’t remain at zero. China now dominates global manufacturing. Any country showing up and attacking China (even with those magic wizards) would be starting a war.
All of China’s industry would be put on a war footing. You can see for yourself who would build a naval flotilla fastest. An enraged China would have no problem building up its forces, creating a flotilla capable of reaching whomever attacked them.
And Theron lies the heart of the issue. China is a large country with a large population. To successfully attack it would require a full mobilization of a state. A raid would trigger such mobilization in both the attacking state and in China. This endeavor would be ruinously expensive. Any nation that could even entertain the ability to generate the military needed to fight a war with China would quickly conclude that nukes would be the best way of shutting down what would be a catastrophic military confrontation.
One of the major reasons gay colonialism ended was because it was no longer profitable. There is no conceivable cost that could be extracted from China, including the capture of its labor force, that would make a military operation against China profitable. Even though humanity retains leaders who are fine throwing away the lives of peasants, those same people are loath to waste gobs of money. There is currently no credible military threat toward China.
There is also the realization that modern colonial piracy, even backed by a state, is morally wrong. In an amazing coincidence, unprofitable, infeasible, and unethical prove to be an effective deterrent.
If I found one million dollars in a hidden safe in a house I bought, can I just deposit it in my bank account without getting into trouble?
In the case that this actually happens, which it won’t, the worst thing to do is to put it in the bank. Buy a good safe, and keep it in your home.
Switch over to a cash only form of life. Buy gas with cash. Buy groceries with cash. Buy prepaid debit cards with cash, and use them to pay your bills.
You can make small cash deposits every once in awhile. You can even have multiple bank accounts, but don’t go crazy.
Go to gun shows. Buy guns. Pay cash. You can later sell those guns, albeit at somewhat of a loss, to a dealer and receive a receipt for the sale.
Go to jewelry stores. Buy gold. Pay cash. You can later legitimately sell the gold to a gold buyer, and get a receipt..
Hire someone to clean your house or mow your lawn? Pay them in cash. Want to buy a used car? Buy from an individual, and pay cash. You can later trade it in on a new car, and use a cashier’s check, purchased with cash, to pay the difference.
There are lots of ways to launder it without going through a bank. Be creative, and be smart.
What happened at a family get together that made your jaw drop?
Back in 1991 my Grandmother asked if everyone could get together for what would likely be the last time for her, her health wasn’t bad but she was 91.
So as many as could gathered at my Aunt’s home in Oregon.
We all went crabbing and got a pretty good haul of dungeness crabs so my Aunt, Grand and a cousin of 3 made a huge delicious seafood stew.
So far so good and the stew was delicious, everyone took a small bowl planning to go back for more while keeping it hot.
While everyone sat out on the deck chatting and finishing the first round my cousin’s wife, who is the size of a medium sedan, parked her vastly overstuffed body next to the pot and proceeded to pick out all of the crab chunks and salmon cubes. So when everyone came back for a second bowl the only thing left was broth and noodles. EVERYONE was absolutely dumbfounded and pissed that she had been that selfish.
I don’t think anyone said a word to her for the next 2 days til they left.
It wasn’t just that she was a total pig it was more that everyone had worked very hard catching cleaning and cooking those crabs, which she hadn’t done any of.
Why was Steve Jobs so much richer than Steve Wozniak even though they founded Apple together?
Paul earlier gave basically a perfect answer for your question.
Although there is one point that he didn’t mention, that I will.
Before Apple Computer held its initial public offering (or IPO) in 1980, Steve Jobs played a bit of a dickish move.
Jobs decided not to grant stock options to a few of the earliest Apple employees – such as Daniel Kottke, Chris Espinosa and Bill Fernandez.
As a result, these men who helped found a soon to be billion dollar company were to make no money from the upcoming IPO, which would be the biggest since Ford Motors in 1956.
Here’s what Wozniak did.
Wozniak sold some of his own shares to his friends (at very low prices) because he thought Jobs was being an unfair anal cavity.
So at the end of it, Wozniak was left with fewer shares than Jobs and so made less money than Jobs after the IPO.
Steve Jobs eventually went on to invest very wisely in Pixar Animation Studios, which made him a healthy $1B when Pixar held its very own IPO.
He founded his own computer company, after leaving Apple in 1985, which was called ‘NeXT’.
When Steve Jobs finally returned to Apple, he eventually got a megagrant of stock which made him another twenty or thirty million USD.
So it was out of both Wozniak’s generosity and Jobs’s own investments that put Jobs valued at about $8 Billion, whereas Steve Wozniak’s net worth is estimated to be somewhere around US$100 million today.
Wozniak is still richer than most, and his hobbies involve riding on Segways.
– Happy Woz on a Segway.
Is it true that NATO is sending Ukraine outdated weapons and technology which directly results in more Ukrainian military casualties?
There are indeed some weapons arriving here that are better suited for a museum—or even a scrapyard:
- I recently passed a convoy of flatbed trucks loaded with old and rusty BRDM-2 reconnaissance vehicles and BTR-60 armored personnel carriers. The BRDMs are from the early 1960s, and the BTRs are even older—the first BTR-60 entered service in the Soviet Army in 1959!
- Some of my friends in the Armed Forces of Ukraine received a batch of US-delivered M249 “SAW” machine guns. Not a single one of them was working. They had to cannibalize two of them to get enough functioning parts to build one that actually worked.
- Some of the HUMVEEs I’ve seen also seem to come from older production batches.
On the other hand, you can also see plenty of brand-new equipment on the battlefield. A lot of the wheeled armored vehicles and trucks are fresh from the factory.
The damaged Humvee of an assault unit that we support with equipment. This is certainly not the best and newest vehicle on the battlefield, but it beats most of the Soviet/Russian-made models. (Picture: all rights by the author of this post)
In general, the weapons the West is sending are in working condition. It’s understandable that Ukraine’s friends aren’t always sending their newest equipment:
- The German Army, for example, has already emptied its ammunition stocks for Ukraine—there’s simply not much left they can give. Western governments are legally required to keep their militaries operational. It would be nice if they could simply say to Ukraine, “Take everything you need,” but legally, that’s not possible. Surplus stocks, however, often held by private companies, can be sent without such restrictions.
- Old technology also means proven technology. When the new PUMA infantry fighting vehicle entered service with the German Bundeswehr, it was plagued with technical problems. Imagine if Ukraine had received these IFVs instead of the older “Marders”! They would have run out of functioning vehicles within weeks.
- It’s easier to train the Ukrainians on older weapons than on more sophisticated ones. In addition, many Ukrainian soldiers are already familiar with older Russian/Soviet technology that Eastern European NATO countries are sending them. This makes everything much easier, from logistics to maintenance to training.
Saying that the West has caused additional Ukrainian casualties by sending only its oldest equipment is simply wrong.
What happened to Iryna Zarutska?
She was killed by a man who, by all appearances, should have been in either a prison or a psychiatric facility. Her killer, DeCarlos Brown is a black man, and she is white. Of course, the people who want to stir the race pot in America would never pass up this golden opportunity of a tragedy.
I won’t post the picture of her final moments riding the train here, because I think we’ve all seen it by now. Some people have taken her death up as a cause célèbre. Not to shine a light on the vulnerabilities of Ukrainian refugees that have fled to America as you might have guessed. They believe this is a clear case of black racism and hatred against a white woman.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has pledged $1 million to have murals of Iryna painted all across America. No mention has been made in the press of CEOs pledging support to Iryna’s family in the US or in Ukraine. Surely they are having a difficult time.
(Iryna Zarutska, image source: ABC News).
In any case, I have no idea if DeCarlos Brown is a racist or not. Maybe he is. But he also appears to be literally crazy. Plenty of people had called the police on him before, most of whom were probably black. He was even put in jail last January for repeatedly calling the police on himself. He called the police because he needed help with the “man-made material” in his body.
So, we have a man who was either in jail or psychiatric hospitals a lot, but they kept letting him go. Most of the people in his life seemed to agree that he needed help, including his relatives.
Since he could not be committed to a mental health facility or kept in jail, his mother dropped him off at a homeless shelter when he stopped taking his schizophrenia medication. Days later he committed the tragic killing of Iryna.
Now as for the actual stabbing of Iryna, I am not sure what video you saw, but it was apparent to me that no one on the train realized what had just happened to her. This even includes Iryna herself.
Why has China claimed the 2016 South China Sea arbitration illegal and invalid for 9 years?
I’ll give a very detailed answer about the 2016 South China Sea arbitration:
Background
On January 22, 2013, the Philippines unilaterally filed the South China Sea arbitration case with the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea.
On July 12, 2016, the tribunal announced its ruling on the case, resulting in the US-China standoff in the South China Sea. The U.S. dispatched two aircraft carrier strike groups, including 10 warships, 150 fighter jets, and a total of 12,000 troops. Then-Pacific Commander, Japanese-American Admiral Harry Harris, threatened to “start the war tonight”; China mobilized elite forces from its North Sea, East Sea, and South Sea fleets. Dongfeng-21D anti-ship ballistic missiles were placed on alert. The result was The U.S. forces withdrew after China preciously positioned the aircraft carriers.
What conclusions did the arbitration make?
The arbitration denied China’s historic rights to the South China Sea. It concluded the historical navigation and fishing by China in the waters of the South China Sea represented the exercise of high seas freedoms, rather than a historic right, and that there was no evidence that China had historically exercised exclusive control over the waters of the South China Sea or prevented other States from exploiting their resources.
It also concluded that: Among the 7 reefs and islands China currently exercises effective control, only Yongshu Island, Huayang Island, Nanxun Reef and Chigua Reef were entitled to 12 nautical miles of territorial sea; None reefs or islands in the South China Sea were entitled to a 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone.
Why the arbitration invalid and illegal?
First, The South China Sea Arbitral Tribunal is not an international court. It has no connection with the International Court of Justice under the United Nations system in The Hague, and while it has certain links to the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) in Hamburg, Germany, it is not part of ITLOS. The tribunal merely used a courtroom at the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) for its hearings.
Second, The tribunal, made up of five arbitrators, lacked neutrality.
Aside from Professor Rudiger Wolfrum from Germany appointed by the Philippines, the other four were appointed by Judge Shunji Yanai of Japan, who was then the president of ITLOS and who actually manipulated the tribunal.
Third, The tribunal exercised jurisdiction over a dispute it should not have had jurisdiction over, and proceeded with the case in the absence of one party, which led to factual misjudgments.
Forth: Double-Standard conclusion
Taiping Island, one of the largest naturally formed islands in the South China Sea, covers an area of 500,000 square meters, with fresh water, vegetation, and permanent residents. Its area is more than 150 times that of Japan’s Okinotorishima. While, it was ruled as a “reef,” the Okinotorishima is allowed to support a vast exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
For nine years, the arbitration reflected the dilemma faced by small countries caught between great power rivalries. Former President of the Philippines Benigno Aquino III bet on the United States, ultimately turning the Philippines into cannon fodder in international politics. In contrast, Rodrigo Duterte chose an independent and pragmatic path. Now, Marcos Jr. seems to be leading the Philippines back into the same old predicament. Will the country continue being a pawn? Or, will it learn from history and return to the right path of good-neighborliness and shared development? Manila must make the choice
Orange Cinnamon Chicken
The aroma of this dish is heavenly as it cooks, the spicy warm smell of cinnamon mixed with energizing citrus is sure to bring them to the table fast.

Ingredients
- 4 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon pepper
- 1/2 cup mandarin orange sections, drained and chopped
- 1/4 cup orange juice
- 3 tablespoons orange marmalade
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Instructions
- Flatten chicken breasts to 1/4 inch thickness with a meat mallet or rolling pin.
- In a small bowl, combine orange sections, orange juice, marmalade and cinnamon. Set aside.
- Sprinkle chicken with salt and pepper.
- Coat a large nonstick skillet with cooking spray, heat over medium high heat.
- Add chicken, cook for 3 to 4 minutes until lightly browned.
- Turn chicken, reduce heat to medium low and cook for 2 to 3 minutes longer.
- Pour orange mixture over chicken, then heat for 3 to 4 minutes until heated through.
What is the darkest episode of a TV show that’s roughly considered a comedy?
Pretty, Pretty Dresses (S03, E09 of King Of The Hill)
This Christmas episode primarily focuses on Hanks neighbor and close friend, Bill Dauterive.
Basically, 7 years prior to this episode, Bills adulterous wife, Lenore, left him and Bill clearly hasn’t moved on. And the holidays, normally a time of togetherness and warmth, are a bitter reminder to Bill of his loneliness. So, Bill begins the episode even more depressed than usual because he’s still clinging onto hope that Lenore would come back.
Hank decides to check in on Bill one day, and he notices Bill has everything from that fateful Christmas hanging up – the decorations, the presents he bought Lenore, and even Christmas tree from ‘91. Hank tries to tell Bill that it’s highly unlikely that Lenore would come back all these years later, but Bill starts to weep and Hank stops himself. Hank, however, decides to invite Bill to join the family dinners so he’s less lonely over the holidays.
Dinner however, doesn’t go well. Bill decides to bring up a boy that Hanks wife, Peggy, had a crush on back in high school who didn’t reciprocate which clearly made Peggy upset. He also asks Luanne (Hanks niece), if she still thinks about her dead boyfriend Buckley and if she thinks that’s the only chance she has at love, which makes Luanne emotional. He also brings up Marie, the girl who broke the heart of Bobby (Hanks son).
The second dinner, Bill brings along a pet iguana that he got and named it “Lenore.” He feeds Lenore a live cockroach, and this makes Peggy tell Hank that Bill needs more help than what his friends can offer. Bill barges into the Hills bedroom that night and says he had a nightmare that his ex-wife Lenore stole the iguana Lenore and asks to sleep on their couch.
Hank uninvited Bill to dinner and after Bill sees the Hills having a happy dinner without him, he steals Hanks 10-foot ladder and uses it to attempt to take his own life. Bill survives, but after Hank sees this, he hatches a plan to always have an eye on Bill to make sure he stays alive. He, and his other neighborhood friends Boomhauer and Dale each take a shift to watch over Bill.
Boomhauer and Dale soon get tired of watching Bill and quit, forcing Hank to watch Bill full-time. Hank asks Peggy to set up Bill with a lady friend. Peggy reluctantly agrees and sets him up, the date taking place at the Hills home. The date goes horribly wrong again, and this time it ends with Bills iguana running out of an open window, causing Bill to spiral again and run home. Hank follows Bill this time, and when Bill begs Hank to help him find the iguana, Hank tells Bill sternly that it’s time to move on and put his feelings for Lenore in the past. He throws around the old presents for Lenore and asks Bill how he feels….Bill replies with “I don’t feel anything.”
Hank finds the iguana the next morning and goes to take it to Bills place, and finds someone in Bills backyard. It’s Bill, wearing a dress and speaking in a high-pitched voice, claiming to be Lenore. Hank tries to snap Bill out of it, but he does not listen and when Hank leaves, Billnore tells Hank that he’s excited for his Christmas Party. Hank tries to uninvite Bill, not wanting a bunch of old school-minded people to see this.
Billnore goes to the party anyways, much to the shock, disgust, and discomfort of Hanks guests. Peggy ends up getting ahold of Lenore on the phone, and tells Billnore. Peggy asks Lenore to drop by, which she declines. She asks Lenore to talk on the phone with Bill, and she declines. Peggy simply asks for Lenore just to say she sends her love, and she even says no to that. Peggy hangs up the phone and Bill starts weeping again. This time, the guests confront him, before Hank runs into the living room wearing a dress too and saying it’s “that kind of party.” Billnore runs out of the house in tears, and Hank follows him into the streets.
Outside, Hank claims to Bill that he (Hank) is Lenore, and that Lenore left because she does not love him. Hearing Hanknore say that, Bill comes to his senses and says that it was rude of Lenore not to call, and that she does not deserve him. Bill finally has some closure from Lenore leaving him, and snaps out of it. Bill admits to Hank that he hit rock bottom, but that meant it was only up from there.
An incredible episode that has both humorous moments and a realistic storyline about mental health and how rough the holidays are for some people. A true masterpiece from an already excellent show.
Has anyone used math to get rich?
The Massachusetts State Lottery made a mistake when it listed the odds of winning that were associated with combinations of letters.
They unintentionally exposed themselves to a loophole that would be spotted by none other than a math teacher, named Jerry Selbee.
Years prior, he was already great at solving puzzles and had done so throughout his life. He and his wife, Marge, in 1976:
Compressing a series of events:
It is decades later. Jerry and Marge are retired. And like many retirees, they enjoy playing the lottery.
The lottery game, Winfall, had tickets they sold at the retail level. The main jackpot was given when 6 matching numbers were made.
If nobody won, the lottery purse went up each week. But after 6 weeks, or when the jackpot hit the $5M dollar cap— it did what was called a “Roll Down”. A Roll Down occurs when winnings are spread downwards to the lower tier winners, to the winners at the 5, 4, and 3 level matches.
Jerry studied the patterns of the letter combos, the winnings odds, and the timing of those Roll Downs. He knew that statistically, a single one dollar lottery ticket was worth more than one dollar in those final weeks. (Source: Gaming the lottery seemed as good a retirement plan as any. Fagone, Jason)
And so, Jerry began dipping his toes into the water of the Roll Down weeks. And quite quickly—he realized he could win.
As he kept winning, his bets began soaring higher and higher, some weeks betting hundreds of thousands of dollars, his wife and him clearing out entire convenience stores throughout the city.
Over the course of 7 years, he won more than $26 million dollars from the state lottery.
Shortly thereafter, the government investigated him but could find no wrongdoing on his part.
The state subsequently discontinued the Winfall game.
Jerry and Marge, having outsmarted “the man” laughed all the way to the bank.
20,000 Leagues Under The Sea (VHS HD)
It is estimated that the USA would lose up to 4 aircraft carriers and 900 aircraft if they attempted to defend Taiwan from a Chinese invasion. Is it worth the humiliating defeat for a country not even in NATO?
US won’t risk World War for Taiwan
The Neocons have admitted that direct war with either China or Russia in today’s scenario is IMPOSSIBLE without the entire devastation of the United States with millions dead and the country plunged into a nuclear winter (Russia and China will have the same devastation too, and Europe, and UK too)
I. Chinese Invasion of Taiwan will either involve pawns or economic blockades/sanctions
It will be Japan who will be asked to bear the brunt of the Taiwanese defense since they are closest to the straits
The Alternate and most likely scenario would be harsh economic sanctions
II. Trump and Biden have been of IMMENSE HELP to China
Had Trump not imposed his 2017 Tariffs and had the US Chinese relations been the same as they had been before Obamas ‘Pivot to Asia’, it’s possible an economic shock to China would have been a blow
Now, China is insulated against any major US Economic Shock
The US strategy to deal with China involves Color Revolution, Internal Sabotage, Food and Energy blockades rather than direct war
China is preparing for their own ways to deal with the situation by focusing on rapidly expanding renewable energy, focusing on cleaner coal burning and extensively focusing on pipelines for Oil and Gas and on their own Oil and Gas reserves
Why is China not invading Taiwan?
THE PERFECT WIND
China wants the winds to be perfect for a Taiwanese invasion
The Taiwanese people should be either in favor of a Mainland oriented change or at least not against the same
Until then, as long as Taiwan doesn’t declare Independence, China will keep to status quo
US China War will end up Nuclear because US will lose
US cannot win in the South China Sea
US has to resort to blockades of Malacca and Indian Ocean to throttle China Trade but that would throttle 70% of all Global Trade and plunge the world into a chaos, 30 times harsher than the Ukraine conflict
China has rocket power enough to devastate all US Bases several times over and US doesn’t have a tenth of the interceptors
China makes Missiles in assembly lines
Their stockpiles are 15–20 times that of Iran indicating around 100,000 to 150,000 ready to fire ballistic missiles
The US needs 1–3 interceptors for each Chinese Missile
Once the US runs out, it’s a sitting duck and the only way to avoid humiliation is a NUCLEAR THREAT
Remember I am NOT saying China can win EVERYWHERE
In a conflict that is more than 1000 Kms away from the Chinese Sphere, US is certain to be far more dominant
However in the South China Sea, today, US will lose in a Non Nuclear Escalatory conflict
The Most Terrifying Nuclear War Movies Ever Made

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Women Are SHOCKED As Men GHOST Them After Being Told “NO”

Orange Tarragon Chicken Breasts

Ingredients
- 2 cups orange juice
- 1 cup chicken stock
- 1 teaspoon dried tarragon
- 2 whole split, skinless, boneless chicken breasts, pounded thin
- Salt and pepper to taste
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
- Orange sections (garnish)
Instructions
- In a large skillet, bring orange juice, tarragon and broth to boil.
- Season chicken breasts with salt and pepper and add to skillet.
- Cook chicken for 2 minutes per side over medium heat. Remove chicken and set aside.
- Reduce sauce over high heat to about 4 tablespoons liquid. This should take about 10 minutes.
- Remove pan from heat and whisk in butter until melted.
- Return chicken to pan and heat for 1 minute per side.
- Arrange on heated serving platter.
- Garnish with orange sections.
What are some literally crazy things?
In Ukraine, they have entire roads and highways covered in anti-drone netting:
You can drive for miles in this, because it has become so dangerous, and because Russians forces will target anything that moves in certain areas. It is painstaking building these nets:
But proves an effective way to help save lives.
I genuinely hope there is a resolution to this war soon.
The Trouble with Nuns
Written in response to: “Center your story around someone who has (or is given) the ability to time travel.“
Rebecca Hurst
She saw him immediately, sitting in a booth with a pint of Guinness, sporting a suit and tie. If he appeared incongruous amid the lunchtime gurners and yarn-spinners, he didn’t show it, and neither did they. She, on the other hand, attracted glances; not lascivious but simply curious.
‘I forgot my umbrella’, she said, by way of limp introduction. (I carried a water melon ..)
‘There’ll be plenty behind the bar,’ he said, rising to greet her, to ask her what she wanted to drink. ‘People bring them out and forget them when the rain stops. I don’t think I’ve ever bought one in my life.’
She watched him walk to the bar, aware that her pulse was racing. How ridiculous. She was at least a decade older than him and every one of those years showed at least once. Her friend Miriam had warned her of the Dallaglio Effect, made all the more devastating because he seemed so oblivious to it.
Nursing her G&T, (it’s too early, too early,) they settled into a businesslike talk about the nature of her problem.
‘It’s not a problem,’ she began. ‘Not really. In fact, now I’m here it feels so trivial. It isn’t much of a story, I’m afraid.’
Noticing that Dallaglio wasn’t one for conversational fillers, she ploughed on under the gaze of his striking eyes.
‘My grandmother lives with me and my children. And my husband (an afterthought). She’s 97 now and still as bright as a button. We have to speak more loudly than we used to, but beyond that she’s in fairly good shape. She doesn’t even have arthritis … ’
‘But something troubles her,’ Dallaglio said, licking the creamy Guinness from his lips, an action which she found shamefully provocative.
‘Yes.’
She settled her back against the banquette, this woman of rational mind reduced, as she saw it, to expose the vulnerability of fantasy.
‘You see, all her life she’s been completely dismissive of the supernatural, the spiritual, or anything else you can name along those lines. She is fearless and often quite rude about it.’
‘Me too,’ said Bram, taking her by surprise.
‘Really? You’re not a time traveller then?’ She said this with irony, but still, there was talk that he could.
‘Time travel is theoretically impossible,’ he said. ‘Certainly when it comes to going backwards. There is talk of forward travel, but it involves a lot of spinning objects in space and countless and unknowable variations of gravitational pull from which you would never return, least of all recover. Besides, no one needs to know their future.’
‘I suppose not,’ she said, aware of a flush creeping towards her cheeks. ‘But you have a talent for solving past mysteries. Surely there is more to that than a Holmesian instinct?’
‘I am simply connected to it,’ he said modestly. ‘A gift I was born with. But I still have to focus, like everyone else … ’
That, she realised, was a subtle prompt to get on with it.
*****
Her grandmother, Heather Rose, had been evacuated in the first months of the war. She had just passed her exams and was heading for Grammar School when the War Office decided that children should be sent away from the industrial cities and the port areas, especially those along the south coast.
So she, with a cohort of other children from her former primary school, were sent to a country house in Worcestershire called The Elms. Like a lot of these places, its foundations were much older than the building that replaced it over time. By the time Heather Rose went there, the main body of it was Georgian. The owners were a Baron and his wife, Sir Richard and Lady Marion Brooke, who were polite but otherwise disengaged, just doing their duty. The children shared a spacious attic room in the main wing, where they were regularly but sparingly fed, and otherwise left to amuse themselves. It was a stud at the time, which the year before had produced a Derby winner, so there was a lot to do and see. Horses, open countryside, an intriguing clock tower, a stuffy old Boy’s School and lanes as far as the legs could walk and the eyes could see.
*****
As she continued, she wondered at his concentration. He never once let his attention roam, as though this rather workaday story was the most fascinating thing in the world to him.
‘You mentioned in your email that something happened one night,’ he prompted. ‘Can you explain to me what it was and why it bothers her so much?’
She cleared her throat, noted her empty glass. ‘Another?’ he asked.
‘Please,’ she said.
*****
‘She’s not sure of the exact date, but it was sometime in the late November of 1940. Her friends, those she shared the attic with, dared my grandmother to sneak down to the kitchens to see if there was any food in the pantry. They were growing children and rationing made things tight.’
‘That was brave of her,’ said Bram.
‘Like I say, the woman was born fearless. So she slipped down the servants’ stairs in the middle of the night and exited through a door that led out to the main part of the house; where the sweeping staircase was and the main reception hall down below. It was pitch black, but she daren’t use a candle, so she felt her way down the grand stairs, holding on to the bannister and measuring every step before she took it. And as she was about halfway down, a light suddenly appeared.’
‘From where?’ he urged.
‘She doesn’t know,’ she replied. ‘All she remembers is that two horrible faces lit up in the dark. They were nuns.’
Dallaglio sat back. She felt a girlish pleasure that she had somehow managed to shock him.
‘She said they seemed to loom out at her, sometimes flickering and other times just glaring. She swears she heard some sort of thud, too, a noise which didn’t seem to come from anywhere. She was so frightened she fled back the way she’d come, and the children just had to go hungry until breakfast.’
‘And that’s it?’ he asked.
‘I’m so sorry, I shouldn’t have wasted your time with this—’
He leaned forward and took her hand. His palm was cool and dry. ‘I mean, is that the one and only time she saw them? The nuns?’
She nodded. ‘And here’s the more human part of things. My grandmother doesn’t believe in ghosts, but she believes she saw them on that night. She can’t rationalise it, and it’s making her last years increasingly difficult. You see, she doesn’t believe in the afterlife either, and that’s the problem.’
‘Because if she believes in ghosts then she has to accept the afterlife?’ he said.
She nodded. ‘Something like that. Some people look forward to it, I suppose, but it fills her with horror, the thought of existing in perpetuity – or to be reborn and have to go through life all over again. She just wants to be dead and done with it, when the time comes.’
‘Have you tried lying to her? Making up an explanation?’
‘I’ve thought about it, but I can’t think of anything,’ she said haplessly.
The rest of their time was involved with business arrangements. Very shortly after the war ended, The Elms was turned into a Hotel and Spa, and she had booked Bram in for one night. He assured her that would be enough, and at the prices they were charging she was glad of it.
He glanced at his watch and stood up, shaking her hand. ‘I’ll get back to you as soon as I know,’ he said.
‘I can’t imagine you’ll discover anything,’ she said, ‘but I’m hoping you can at least come out with a convincing lie I can pass on ..’
He frowned at her. ‘Oh, I think I already know,’ he said. ‘I just need to go there to confirm things.’
He didn’t wait for an answer. Just seconds after he left, she looked for him all along the main street, but he was nowhere to be seen.
*****
The hotel had undergone various extensions and renovations since the ’40s, but the main body of the house remained the same. He had asked for the attic room, once the servant’s domain, and then later the evacuees’. It had become, by dint of the space and view, the most expensive room in the hotel. Although much had changed, in the distance he could see the grammar school and the clock tower. Beyond the necessities of modern life, the new roads and the electricity pylons, it was the same view that eleven-year-old Heather Rose would have seen. He sat on the bed, briefly, but felt nothing. He placed his palms on the walls and waited until he heard it; the faint chatter of pre-pubescent girls. He was connected. He was in.
He spent some time on his laptop, and then walked the grounds, but nothing of what he felt was pertinent to Heather Rose. Later again, he went to the village pub, which for centuries has been the only place to discover the truth of anything in this country.
*****
She received a text message from Dallaglio the next morning. She was to meet him in the same bar at 1pm. Clearly he hadn’t taken advantage of the spa facilities.
*****
He was in a different place this time. She thought there might be a message in that, a clue as to his nature. She doubted he was ever in the same place at the same time.
They ordered the same drinks. He wore the same suit but a different tie. He was impeccable in all respects. She took a deep breath and looked at him with her head cocked, as if to say Well, Romeo, I’m waiting ….
‘Okay,’ he said. ‘Here’s the story.’ He raised a finger. ‘Don’t interrupt unless you have to.’
‘Guides’ Honour,’ she said.
‘Apart from one thing. Were the children ever allowed into the main body of the house?’
‘No. They used the servant’s stairs to get to the attic. They could enter the kitchens through the outside door, but it was locked at night. I thought I told you that …’
‘You didn’t,’ he said, ‘but I guessed it. Of course, running around the grounds, they must have looked through the ground floor windows on occasion; see how the other half live.’
‘Yes, I suppose they did.’
‘So they could see the staircase, but not what was in front of the staircase. That’s why your grandmother knew the layout, but only up to a point.’
‘Yes, I suppose so.’
He took a deep draft of his drink and fixed her again with those abiding eyes.
‘The exact day she saw the apparition was the 29th November 1940. It was a new moon on that night, the perfect time for the Junkers 88 bombers to fly. No natural light at all. They must have flown over the village and The Elms before that night, because it was on the direct flight path to Coventry, where all the vehicle plants were.’
‘She never mentioned it.’
‘They would usually have been asleep by then. But that night was a Friday, so no school in the morning. They’d already flown by when she decided to take that dare, on their way to bomb Coventry again. That’s why she didn’t hear them when she walked down that staircase. But she did hear a thud. And that thud was Theodor Schinkel.’
‘Who?’
‘A bad Nazi and a very good German.’
‘I don’t understand,’ she said. He looked at her as though he thought she should.
‘Let’s change direction,’ he said. ‘The house was built in 1745 on the foundations of a Tudor building, some parts of which remain. That is not uncommon at all. But less common is the fate of the original owner, who was hung, drawn and quartered for his part in the Gunpowder Plot in 1605.’
‘So a Catholic?’ She said, realising again that her drink was empty.
‘Another?’
‘Yes please.’
‘In amongst the various priest holes, now used for cleaning supplies, were two terrible portraits of unknown nuns, no doubt commissioned at the time of the first owner. These portraits are situated on either side of the main entrance to the house. They’re still there. Your grandmother would not have seen them when peering through the windows in childish curiosity.’
‘Why are they still there?’
‘No idea, really. The hotel has allowed a rumour to circulate that they are cursed and must not be removed. Customers like that sort of thing.’
‘Do they?’
‘Apparently, yes.’
‘God. Nuns. Really? Who paints nuns?’
‘Especially those nuns,’ he said. ‘They’re enough to put the fear in God in anyone.’
‘Or enough to make you stop believing in Him at all,’ she said.
‘So who was Theodor Schinkel?’
‘A German gunner in the Luftwaffe. On that night he was positioned in the underbelly of the plane, a bubble-type structure, preparing to aim his sites on Coventry. But he bailed out, because he didn’t want to do it.’
‘And he landed on the roof of Elm House?’
‘Yes. It’s got all the usual turrets and pediments, but where he landed, the roof was flat, and it’s directly above the main staircase, which, if you look up, has a large skylight – again, something your grandmother would not have noticed peering through the window. Had there been a moon, she might have done, but remember that on that night, there was none. It was his mag-light, shining through it, that accidentally picked up the faces of the nuns at the bottom of the stairs. That’s what your grandmother saw.’
‘Good grief,’ she exhaled. ‘So that’s it?’
‘Yes. That’s it.’
‘And what happened to Schinkel?
‘He was interned at Camp 287, Perdiswell, and spent an idyllic war farming the English countryside. He also furnished the Home Office with all they needed to know about the Junkers’ satellite systems. After the war, he married an English girl and died, a happy old man, twenty years ago.’
‘How did you find out?’
He looked at her, and in his eyes she could see a flicker of mild and yet not unkind contempt.
‘The main failing of the human race is that most of them lack curiosity.’
It was a rebuke.
‘Well, Grandmother will be pleased to hear it.’
He passed her a sheath of papers in a slim file. ‘It’s all in there,’ he said. ‘Just in case she doesn’t believe you.’
‘Oh, she’ll believe me. It’s too simple an explanation to be untrue.’
‘Almost all explanations are simple,’ he said, rising and offering her his hand, just like before.
‘What do I owe you?’
‘Nothing at all. I only charge when I find lost treasure.’ At this he winked. ‘But you must tell her immediately.’
‘I’m thinking of leaving it until next week. It’s her 98th and I was going to tell her then.’
‘Tell her tonight,’ he said with finality.
*****
In the early morning, she realised why. And all through the grief of it, she was so glad that she had done as instructed. There were no ghosts and there would be no afterlife for Heather Rose. The knowledge of it had tugged a smile to her thin blue lips and induced an unearthly erasure of wrinkles. She had died in her own grace.
She heard no more from Bram Dallaglio, and although she knew that he was entirely corporeal, she couldn’t help but question that reality. It was a small story but a huge final act. It was a play of kindness from someone who surely had better things to do. It was strange and it was beautiful, (he was beautiful), and however much she tried to explain him, she never really could.
And there were many times when she wondered where he might be right now, not in terms of location, but in terms of century. Because for all his denials, she was not at all convinced that he was entirely anchored to his timeline: that in the swell and the vagaries of the wind, he could so easily find himself elsewhere.
