It is said that there are many names for snow, and rain in Northern areas. But I grew up in the ‘States. And I learned English.
As far as rain is concerned, we have rain, downpour, rain, light rain, drizzle, wet fog… and not much else. As far as snow; we have heavy wet snow, light snow, dusting of snow, and “ice storm”.
Consider all the names that Eskimo use.
Anyways, I asked Google AI about the different names for snow used by them:
Here are some different names for snow and rain, including specific types and terms for when they mix.
For Snow:
- Snowfall: A general term for the amount of snow that falls over a period.
- Blizzard: A severe snowstorm with strong winds and low visibility.
- Flurry: A light, brief fall of snow.
- Powder: A light, dry, and fluffy snow.
- Graupel: Also called “soft hail” or “snow pellets,” this is a form of precipitation consisting of opaque, white ice pellets.
- Sleet (in the UK): A mixture of rain and snow. In the US, this is often called “wintry mix.”
- Névé: Partially compacted granular snow, often found at the top of a glacier.
- Diamond dust: Very fine ice crystals that fall in extremely cold weather.
For Rain:
- Downpour: A heavy, sudden, and continuous rain.
- Drizzle: A light rain of very small drops.
- Shower: A brief, light rain.
- Cloudburst: A brief, sudden, and very heavy rain.
- Monsoon: A seasonal wind that brings heavy, persistent rain, especially in South and Southeast Asia.
- Torrent: A large, fast-flowing amount of rain.
- Mizzle: A very fine rain, often a combination of mist and drizzle.
- Virga: Rain that evaporates before it reaches the ground.
For Mixed Precipitation:
- Sleet (in the US): Small, translucent ice pellets that form when snowflakes melt and then refreeze before hitting the ground. In the UK, this is called “ice pellets.”
- Wintry mix: A general term for a combination of different winter precipitation types, such as snow, ice pellets, and freezing rain.
- Freezing rain: Rain that falls as a liquid but freezes upon impact with a surface that is below freezing, creating a layer of ice or “glaze.”
- Hail: Lumps or balls of ice that fall from thunderstorms.
- Scotch mist: A mixture of mist and light rain.
And now you know.
Today…
Israel Finally Went Too Far; Dept. of Justice Opens FARA Investigation into AIPAC
Hal Turner Nation April 02, 2026
The state of Israel finally overplayed its hand with the government of the United States; pushing the US into a war it didn’t want, and refusing to do as the US requests to stop the war. The US Department of Justice has announced it is opening an investigation into AIPAC for possible violation of the Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA)
DOJ Announced a FARA Enforcement Action Against AIPAC.
In an unexpected move this evening, the Department of Justice announced the launch of a formal investigation into the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) for alleged violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA). AIPAC has declined to comment, but sources inside the organization describe the mood as “panicked.”
This is expected to have a shocking effect immediately. No member of Congress will be willing to risk continuing to meet with, or even speak to AIPAC lobbyists, until the investigation is complete, for fear of being investigated or potentially prosecuted for dealing with a (potential) Foreign Agent.
Russian Soldiers To Fight The U.S. In Iran! w/ Ben Swann
Who’s the most ridiculously good-looking person you’ve ever met?
It almost causes me pain to admit this, but the most ridiculously good looking person I’ve ever met was my first husband.
I can’t even say he was the devil incarnate or anything. He did not abuse me.
He was actually a nice guy. He wasn’t perfect, and he had his moments, but he was a generally good person.
However, he was also inordinately self centered and what bothered me the most was that the MF never stopped making noise!
He was constantly talking, singing, whistling, chirping…all sorts of sounds came out of him. Nonstop.
That was in addition to the tv or music he constantly had blasting.
I couldn’t take it anymore!
I’m a quiet person. I never make much noise.
I don’t talk a whole lot. I speak concisely.
I don’t whistle. I can’t.
I don’t chirp. I’m not a bird.
I don’t sing. I might get hurt if I subjected someone to that level of catterwalling, and rightly so.
I’m just quiet and peaceful.
People thought I was joking when I told them the main reason I wanted to divorce him was because I wanted peace and quiet in my life, but it was true.
With him, it was constant noisy chaos.
ETA: Someone asked a very fair question: was he quieter before we were married? Actually, yes, he was. He was always a bit of a talker, which was okay with me because I had always been criticized for being “too quiet.” It was as if we complemented each other that way. He wasn’t as bad about the extra noises, like whistling for example. However, as he got older his noise-making gradually got worse. That’s one thing that makes me think it might have been an anxiety disorder.
I Asked AI What’s Hurting Us Most. This Broke Me

Is it possible for the United States to completely stop foreign trade with other countries? How long would it take for serious problems to arise from this decision?
OK, you have a couple of minutes until power goes out in the Northeast.
You have maybe 2 weeks till you run out of heavy oil to refine for diesel and gasoline.
Depending on the time of year you could last a couple of months till natural gas runs out and takes out about half the remaining electricity generation, as well as heating for much of the northern states. If it happens in the spring you will be out of natural gas within a week.
You probably have enough Aluminum in the supply chain to keep manufacturing for a month or so.
You probably have enough steel in the supply chain for three months of manufacturing.
You have enough potash to supply farmers through June.
Now for the good news.
In two years you will have retooled the refineries to use the oil that the US produces, so you can start driving your diesel and gasoline powered vehicles again. Assuming of course that you allocate all of the Steel manufacturing to this task.
You should be able to get enough production to meet your (now greatly reduced) demand for steel within five years.
Aluminum unfortunately is out of the question, as you have no bauxite, and you cannot meet the demand for electricity to produce it even if you find some.
You would need to find more potash reserves to meet the demand, and figure ten years to bring it to market.
The USA would be a very poor nation without international trade.
What unique things did you encounter while studying for a master’s degree at Cambridge University?
One thing that is very unique when studying at Cambridge (or Oxford) is the formal hall tradition. Have you ever heard of formal halls?
Cambridge University consists of 33 colleges. Each student is a member of one of the colleges. Each college has its own kind of ‘small campus’. There is a student dorm, security guard office, classrooms, church, and formal hall.
What is a formal hall?
Did you know that in the Harry Potter films, students all eat in long rooms at the beginning of every year? So JK Rowling got the idea from formal halls in Cambridge and Oxford. Formal hall is a large dining room commonly used by students. Usually this room is hundreds of hundreds of years old.
What’s special? Dinner at the formal hall or what is known as the Formal Hall Dinner (FHD).
Usually the college will issue a dinner schedule at the formal hall every week. Each college has a different schedule. Some every Wednesday, some every day, some twice a week.
Each FHD consists of 3 food courses. Appetizer, main course, and dessert. The price is not that expensive, from 100–200 thousand rupiah for 3 courses. In FHD, students are required to wear a toga. Professors sit at different tables with students, referred to as high tables. The table is located higher than the student table. Just like in Harry Potter.
My Indonesian student friends and I at Cambridge posed at FHD.
Before eating, a prayer is usually recited by one of the professors in Latin. All students must stand. HP prohibited. Even in some colleges, there are no lights in the hall. There are only candles.
When I studied at Cambridge, I enjoyed inviting my guests to eat at the formal hall. They are always fascinated by the food served and all its traditions. I think this is one of Cambridge’s unique things that I miss.
Madame, the Mystic.
Written in response to: “Set your story in a world where astrology and the movements of celestial bodies deeply impact the lives of inhabitants.“
Julie Grenness
Jade now awoke half an hour earlier, just to greet dawn with her guardian angel. She rehydrated with coffee, interpreting her coffee cup, making her bed, tidying her clutter, practicing her new skills in tarot cards. Once per weekend, she rose and changed her sheets, polished and mopped, flung open the windows, and lit her sage smudging. She wafted the aroma through her flat, opened doors. She still did not need a puppy, this guardian angel was demanding enough.
Jade had not, of course, told her father, who was called Bernard. The astrologer had got that bit right. She was getting crosser with God on a daily basis, smiling at strangers was not very effective. She was getting some very funny looks at the coffee shop, as she taught her students. Still she could not fix men, as astrology states.
Life took a turn for the worse. Bernard phoned, asking Jade to take him to his appointment at an oncologist. The news was dreadful, he had stage four tumors, riddled with cancer. His prognosis was very grim. Bernard was not as upset as Jade. He told her was grateful for all the blessings his Lord had granted him during his days. Treatment was planned, so he rapidly became an in-patient at an oncology unit.
Jade and the church people visited him regularly. In between tutoring online, she made a daily pilgrimage to her father’s bedside. He went downhill very quickly, the chemo was futile. Jade had been brought up with filial piety, but inside, she was now furious with her father’s divine Lord. How could this happen to such a faithful believer?
One grey morning, while channeling her guardian angel, her tarot cards finally showed a pair of lovers. “Yeah, right.” Jade wondered, but she was now a keen follower of astrology. At her father’s bedside, she held his hand .She felt that she was never quite good enough, never met a husband, never had his grandchildren to love and cherish.
Bernard suddenly opened his eyes, he was lucid for a while. “I am so proud of you, the apple of my eyes,. You are so bright and loving. I want you to got to the chapel and pray, like you used to. God has a plan for every one of us. I shall always be loving you. This journey goes on, true love.” With that, he breathed his last, and smiled his way to eternity.
Jade was devastated. The nurses were summoned, she walked to the chapel, frozen. She sat, silently yelling at God, Jesus, the holy church, her guardian angel. More than cross, angry. She nearly kicked a hole in the church walls.
But she was well-behaved,. Not praying, just recalling some happier times with her father. As she sat in the back pew, not doing any knee mails, she felt a hand touch her shoulder. She glanced up, meeting the eyes of her father’s junior oncologist. “These things happen, ” he told her, “Look, I have seen some mysterious things here, stranger than anyone can perceive. I took a photo of your father’s monitor, as you were holding his hand.”
Jade looked at his phone, there was an image of an angel, with wings. “Is this possible?” she asked. “Can I send it your phone?”asked Dr. Ben, that was on his name tag. “it is a comfort for you. You have your own guardian angel.” He laid his hand on hers. They swapped phone numbers, and Jade soon had a miraculous image of her own guardian angel.
Nearly eighteen months later, Jade sat in the chapel. Dr. Ben had given her his paw of emotional support, and that was not all. She did have a white wedding, but not in that fancy dress, simple, fitting, respectful. His name did start with a B, after all. She cuddled their brand new baby son, healthy with a good set of lungs already. Maybe she wasn’t so cross with the greater powers after all. Madame, the Mystic, was spot on. Jade had been open to a nuanced understanding of her guardian angel, and the theory that love will find a way.
Dr. Ben sat beside her. Their baby boy looked like Jade’s father, and himself. “Welcome to the world, little Bernard Benjamin……” A journey that continues for everyone. ……
Is JK Rowling really that horrible of a writer?
JK Rowling is not James Joyce, but she’s still a genius.
Her genius lies in two places.
#1, understanding that her audience is predominantly children.
#2, writing her books for a child’s point of view.
As an adult, I read the books and watched the movies. I constantly thought to myself “that’s so silly, if they would just say why the kid used the wand all the problems would be solved” or “That’s so silly, a real adult would never act that way.”
But that’s the genius. To a ten year old, the world seems that way. The world seems unfair, it seems arbitrary it seems like no one asks them what they think, no one listens to them when they do, and no one accepts the child’s motivations or feelings. The world seems very adult dominated and kids have no agency.
Classic example? The very first book. Harry and his friends are attacked by an troll in the bathroom. The monster is trying to kill them. They use the only weapon available to them, their wands. They manage to fight off an attack that surely would have resulted in their deaths and then what happens? They immediately get scolded for fighting the troll.
Like, seriously? They would have died. But the adults seems to take no heed of this (completely ignoring their own failure to protect children in the castle) and they get dressed down for essentially saving their own skin.
It doesn’t make sense to us, but it makes sense to kids, because to them that kind of stuff happens every day. That’s why it appealed to them immediately, it was a reflection of the world they think they live in, but these characters have agency.
Lemon Cream Chicken

Yield: 6 servings
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup + 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour, divided
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon pepper
- 6 boneless skinless chicken breast halves
- 1/4 cup butter, cubed
- 1 cup chicken broth
- 1 cup heavy whipping cream, divided
- 3 tablespoons lemon juice
- 1/2 pound fresh mushrooms, sliced
Instructions
- In a large resealable plastic bag, combine 1/2 cup flour, salt and pepper.
- Add chicken and shake to coat.
- In a large skillet, cook chicken in butter for 8 to 9 minutes on each side or until juices run clear.
- Remove chicken and keep warm.
- Add and broth to the drippings. Bring to a boil over medium heat; stir to loosen browned bits from pan.
- Simmer, uncovered, for 10 minutes or until broth is reduced to 1/3 cup.
- Stir in 3/4 cup cream, lemon juice and mushrooms.
- Cook over medium-low heat for 5 minutes.
- Combine remaining flour and cream until smooth; stir into skillet. Bring to a boil; cook and stir for 2 minutes or until thickened.
- Return chicken to skillet and heat through.
Is it true that Russia is the “big, bad guy” of the world?
Did you see Russia and or China messing around running military drills on the other side of the world? Arming its allies in the Western hemisphere? No? After Trump is done, China might well have some allies in the Western hemisphere.
Why does Washington have a military budget larger than the next 13 nations combined? And a national debt 72 times greater than that of Russia? Here’s why.
The Thing – 1950’s Super Panavision 70
Is it really worth it for truckers to sleep in their trucks to save money, and what are the pros and cons of doing that?
I have driven a Tractor trailer combo for 15 years.. Five years was over the road ( OTR ).
Pros: More space, comfortable sleep, better shower, more relaxing
Cons: Pain to park at most hotels, expensive and wasteful
It does happen though. My first gig was team driving with another driver who lived in another state. We were required to go out 3 weeks and then get 3 days off. Since we lived in different states, we took turns to where we would spend those 3 days. It was either stay in the truck 3 days and do nothing but read and sleep, or stay in a hotel ( that allowed trucks ). I tried staying in the truck ( cause I’m cheap ), but that really sucked…so I did the hotel thing. It was bad enough that I was out 6 weeks, 3 days away from my family at a time. The few other times I did the hotel thing was doing 34 hour restarts in Las Vegas, and when Houston had an NFL playoff game. ( so I could drink beer and watch ).
Sir Whiskerton and the Purr of Happiness
Or: When a Kitten’s Purr Becomes a Superpower
Introduction
Dear reader, prepare for a tale of warmth, whiskers, and the wondrous power of purring. Today’s story follows Ditto the Echoing Kitten as he discovers that his tiny purr holds immense power—not just to comfort himself, but to bring joy to others.
With guidance from Sir Whiskerton, Ditto learns an important lesson: “A cat’s purr is the sound of a happy heart.” And when a sad piglet loses its favorite toy, Ditto’s newfound understanding transforms the farm into a place of laughter and light.
So grab your coziest blanket (and perhaps a squeaky mouse toy), as we dive into Sir Whiskerton and the Purr of Happiness.
Act 1: The Sad Piglet
It was a quiet morning on the farm when Ditto noticed something unusual. Porkchop’s youngest piglet, Peppa, sat alone in the mud puddle, sniffling softly.
“What’s wrong?” Ditto asked, tilting his head curiously.
“I lost my favorite chew toy,” Peppa whimpered. “I’ve looked everywhere!”
Ditto’s ears drooped sympathetically. He wanted to help but wasn’t sure how. That’s when Sir Whiskerton appeared, adjusting his monocle with a knowing smile.
“Ah, young Ditto,” Sir Whiskerton began, “sometimes the best way to help isn’t with words—it’s with actions. Or in your case… with a purr.”
Act 2: The Lesson in Purring
Sir Whiskerton led Ditto to a sunny patch beneath the old oak tree.
“A cat’s purr is no ordinary sound,” Sir Whiskerton explained, settling into the grass. “It’s the music of contentment, the hum of happiness. And happiness, my dear apprentice, is contagious.”
Ditto blinked, processing this wisdom. “So… if I purr, it could make someone feel better?”
“Precisely,” Sir Whiskerton replied. “Your purr has the power to soothe, to cheer, to remind others that they’re not alone.”
Encouraged, Ditto practiced his purr, which started as a faint rumble but grew stronger with each try. By the time he finished, even the nearby butterflies seemed to flutter more cheerfully.
“Excellent!” Sir Whiskerton praised. “Now, let’s see if your purr can lift Peppa’s spirits.”
Act 3: The Power of Purring
Ditto approached Peppa cautiously, his tail twitching nervously.
“Peppa,” he said gently, “can I sit with you for a moment?”
Peppa nodded, still sniffling. Ditto curled up beside her and began to purr—a soft, steady hum that filled the air like a lullaby.
At first, nothing happened. But then, Peppa’s sniffles slowed. She leaned closer to Ditto, resting her chin on his furry back.
“That feels nice,” she murmured, her voice lighter than before.
Soon, Peppa was smiling again, giggling as Ditto playfully batted at a fallen leaf. Even Sir Whiskerton couldn’t resist joining in, offering a dignified purr of his own.
Act 4: A Happy Farm
Inspired by Ditto’s success, the other animals gathered around to share their own ways of spreading happiness.
- Bessie the Tie-Dye Cow: “I moo soothing melodies!”
- Ferdinand the Duck: “Quack jokes—are timeless classics!”
- Porkchop the Pig: “Mud baths—for everyone!”
Even Chef Remy LeRaccoon arrived, holding a tray of suspiciously glowing muffins.
“These are Happiness Muffins™,” he announced proudly. “Guaranteed to spread joy—or indigestion!”
The animals exchanged wary glances but couldn’t help laughing.
Reflection Scene
As the sun set over the farm, Sir Whiskerton addressed Ditto privately under the stars.
“Today, you learned a valuable lesson,” he said, sipping a cup of moonlit tea. “Happiness is contagious—spread it whenever you can. Whether through a purr, a kind word, or simply being present, your actions ripple outward, touching lives in ways you may never fully understand.”
Ditto purred softly, feeling a warm glow in his chest. “I like making people happy,” he said.
“As do we all,” Sir Whiskerton replied, smiling. “Now, go rest—you’ve earned it.”
Post-Credit Scene
Chef Remy unveiled his newest invention: Glow-in-the-Dark Purring Powder™, designed to make any animal’s purr visible (and slightly radioactive).
“These are safe, right?” Doris asked nervously.
Remy grinned. “Only slightly.”
Cue horrified squawks.
Moral of the Story
Happiness is contagious—spread it whenever you can.
Best Lines
- “A cat’s purr is the sound of a happy heart.” – Sir Whiskerton, imparting wisdom.
- “That feels nice.” – Peppa, rediscovering joy.
- “Guaranteed to spread joy—or indigestion!” – Chef Remy, ever the optimist.
Key Jokes
- Chef Remy’s glowing muffins add absurdity to the mix.
- The idea of “radioactive purring powder” sparks both curiosity and concern.
- Sir Whiskerton’s dignified purr contrasts hilariously with Ditto’s enthusiastic attempts.
Starring
- Sir Whiskerton (Wise Mentor/Feline Philosopher)
- Ditto the Echoing Kitten (Purring Prodigy)
- Peppa the Piglet (Sad Sniffer/Turned Smiler)
- Chef Remy LeRaccoon (Mad Scientist of Snacks)
Summaries
- Moral: Happiness spreads like ripples in water—start small, and watch it grow.
- Future Potential: Could Ditto become the farm’s official “happiness ambassador”? Or will Chef Remy invent a way to bottle purrs?
Until next time, may your hearts be happy and your purrs be powerful. 🐾
Why is the US investing in aircraft carriers costing billions, with over 5,000 sailors that can easily be sunk with drone swarms?
I work in drone warfare for the US Navy, specifically in battery management and smart charging systems. I can speak from authority that there’s a lot of flawed assumptions in this question.
First of all, this is not going to “easily” sink a US Navy carrier:
ETA: Since I apparently have to spell this out, I answered the question as written. You want to quibble over “sinking” the carrier versus doing some other kind of damage to it, go find somebody else to bother because I’m going to start deleting your comments as off-topic.
A battery-powered quadcopter, or even a larger drone like the eight-motor ring drone we have at NSWC Crane, doesn’t have the range to even reach a carrier standing out to sea. Certainly not while carrying any load able to sink it. They’re not unsinkable, but people like my father, a naval architecture engineer, work damn hard at making it as close to impossible as you can get. And since an F-18’s combat radius is close to 500 miles, our admirals would have to be blithering idiots to bring the carrier within reach of any feasible drone swarm.
Now, there are current projects for drones that could feasibly sink a carrier, but that’s with drones the size of manned aircraft: for example the US DoD’s “Loyal Wingman” program.
Secondly, even leaving aside questions of whether a drone could sink one of our carriers, there’s a fundamental misconception baked into this question: that the ability to destroy something makes it useless. Take these guys for example:
These are infantrymen: just guys with guns. It’s trivially easy to kill them, and it’s been trivially easy to kill them since some prehistoric tribal chief, his name lost to history, decided he wanted to kill the next chief down the road and steal all his shit.
But the infantryman still exists. He’s the oldest weapon system on the whole goddamn planet, because nothing has come along that can do all the jobs he does better.
Weapon systems don’t disappear when they can be defeated. They disappear when something comes along that can do the same jobs better.
Exhibit A: the aircraft carrier you pooh-pooh, which took over the jobs of the battleship, killing other ships and shore bombardment, because it could do it more cheaply, from greater range, with greater accuracy.
Behold: an F/A-18 Super Hornet prepping to launch with the equivalent of a late-model battleship’s entire broadside (plus some “break glass in case of fire” Sidewinders), which it can drop from 500 miles away virtually onto a postage stamp. No naval gun ever built can do this: they had to fire on the move at a target that itself is also moving, and over-the-horizon accuracy wasn’t possible without spotter planes or radar.
So no: drone swarms alone are not going to make aircraft carriers go away. Something is going to come along that can do the job better.
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“History Is REPEATING Itself & It’s Getting UGLY… | Lawrence Wilkerson”

My seventeen-year-old daughter wants to get a tattoo of her SAT score on her upper thigh. The design she made for the tattoo artist is rather large. How do I talk her out of making this choice?
This is one strategy that should work for any fashion-conscious teenager, though I never had to try it.
Show your kid your senior pictures. Most likely, you look like the weirdest freak with horrible taste in clothing and hairstyle. If you like, show them pictures from back in the day of other older relatives and friends they may or may not know. Get her laughing at how ridiculous everybody looks.
Now, explain to them that these clothes and hairstyles were all the rage back then. For my generation (graduated high school in 1986) every girl had big hair and hairspray stocks were booming. And who could forget the ladies wore shoulder pads that made them look like Earl Campbell.
The next step is to tell them how lucky you are that clothing and hair styles are easy to change. That although big hair and shoulder pads were fashion essentials back then if a girl wanted to be in the “in” crowd, you wouldn’t be caught dead looking like that today unless it was for an ‘80’s theme party.
Tattoos are for life. Your daughter needs to realize that, although her SATs are awesome now, after college, she might not even care and tattoos may once again be out of fashion. Bonus points if, like me, you have no idea where your class ring and letter jacket are.
Betokened
Written in response to: “Set your story in a world where astrology and the movements of celestial bodies deeply impact the lives of inhabitants.“
Jorge Soto
“A real beauty, silver gilded sea’s and cloudless skies today!” Is all the Fisher needed to utter for the day to begin. The Boater always took comfort in the Fisher’s poetic diagnosis of the heavens.
Not another word was spoken between the two men for the remainder of the day’s work, as even sneezes or loss of footing from one was always followed promptly with a well meaning grunt from the other. Non-verbal language was their preferred mode of communication.
The Boater steered along the foaming currents expertly and grumbled obscenities at deck birds between his pipe and teeth, occasionally throwing a stone from his pocket at those that dared to near his helm. All the while, the quick Fisher methodically maintained baited hooks, mechanically returning lines and nets from the sea onto the deck below. Lines went out, nets were dragged in, and within half the day, half the vessel’s fuel was exchanged for a barrel full of silvery fish and blue crabs. The pair worked in perfect unison, as a hammer and nail would, both reliant on the other in mutual livelihood. There were many different trades and professions on the island, but none worked as intimately on their craft’s together, save maybe the Smith his Apprentice.
A prompt lunch was taken when the sun was highest in the sky, and both men found themselves retired separately to eat, occupied by their own respective meals and pastimes. The aged Boater sat in his cabin and played some lude sea shanties on a wooden stringed instrument, stopping only to nibble at a wrapped cheese between sips from a jar of potent alcohol. The seaman cursed the women passed in his life, and reserved a special teary eyed ballad last for his most recently escaped sweetheart, who he couldn’t quite remember past a vague few syllables- “Ma, Me, Mar- Mavis perhaps?”
The young Fisher below made his lunch from a tacklebox, while seated quietly under the shaded awning of the stern, dangling his legs above the water. He ate a chicken sandwich with a wide palm of lettuce spilling out from its seams, and sipped from a sloshing metal canteen of milk. He finished quickly, and retrieved a warped paperback book from his long coat pocket, to begin where he had left off.
He kept his prized stories stocked among a humble bookshelf of his cottage, and put one in his coat before setting out for the beach every morning. Other than some of the adventure nonfiction and fish research books, which were written just off shore, most literature found on island and in his collection were written and printed locally. His favorite genre to turn over in his few unoccupied hours was that of romantic fiction, which was fortunate, seeing that it was one of the few genres to be found in abundance in the town’s dusty shops.
The paperback he was flipping through now was about a mermaid, who’d fallen from the stars, and found herself washed away, far down an inland stream after becoming disoriented during a storm. She happens upon a veteran ferry boat captain who, in exchange for her ancestral gem necklace, promises to guide her back through the channels, and eventually to the shores of the heavens she aired from. He’d probably fall in love with her or something, that always happens in these books.
The moon winked at him from the corner of the horizon, time to get on. He earmarked it and folded up his meal’s contents into the tin box. The slightly boozed pilot of the vessel hobbled back to his helm swiftly. Upon a slight nod of affirmation between the two, the ship engine groaned and sputtered forward once more, taking up its former domain. She was the uncontested sea-monster of these waters.
With the cyclic laboring finished and the whale’s appetite satisfied, the lines were reeled in and packed up, as the ship’s point was turned towards shore.
The sun had almost reached the black peaks of the island’s crags, while at its base, the ocean’s tides swelled the pale beachline. A radiant hue of rose and orange tinted itself against the cloud peppered sky, bathing the water and vessel below it in a sherbet dimness. From behind this lightshow, crept the approaching night, which was bespeckled with dim stars, beginning to stretch their lashes. Though darkness grew, the Boater steered expertly between sharp jutting masts of rock, shooting glances above to dead-reckon his course with the tip of the Eastern Scythe, a well known constellation trusted to bring northbound Boaters home east from storms.
A pair of pale sea bird’s flocked to the top railing, anticipating the free ride home. The Boater benevolently permitted the winged stowaways. He was out of stones.
**The Fallen Mermaid
The Fisher hung over the railing, dipping his stick in the front wake listlessly while he scanned a large rock they neared. He couldn’t remember a time where he was unable to recall the minutest detail about the island’s features. He saw how spring was just starting to show its pale yellow signs among the mossy sides and grass which draped lazily over the edges of the cliff.
Just as he was looking out, a green glimmer caught his eye. Following the flicker to its source, he made out a jittering shape, cast from just below the dark marble surface of the water at the foot of a remote sea stack off their port. Through the white frothy tide that beat against the rock, it was impossible to make it out, at least for most men’s eyes.
“Boater-”
The captain of the helm was pulled from the daze of his tranquil humming, and looked down at the Fisher below with narrowed eyes, unsure if he had really heard him.
The engine was lowered a click.
“Ya say something son? Speak up!”
The Fisher took some hurried steps to the center of the deck and pointed over at the lonely rock’s direction.
He repeated solidly, “There, something with a shine to it. Just off the portside”
The Boater scanned the far rock with strained eyes and scratched at his stubbled chin before returning with a nod to the young lad.
“Aye. Seen it too. I’ll pull her around, ready the gaff.”
The nearly blind helmsman who almost certainly hadn’t seen a thing, was too proud to admit otherwise.
Nonetheless, the ship edged its course towards the stack, as the engine tugged away gently. It wasn’t uncommon for a smaller ship or a dinghy delivering Vacationers to be carried out past too far by the temperamental tide, so the two veteran seamen weren’t too weary of bringing the ship around to get a closer look. Coming to its right flank, the idle was set low, as the boat drifted gracefully into position just out of reach from the rock.
The Fisher speared the gaff in and began raking, slowly working the water by the boat’s side, as the Boater hung cautiously over the top cabin, leaning with a grip on the railing. He tugged at his pipe impatiently while he tried to get a good look at what it was they were searching for.
Before calling it quits, the Fisher set the gaff down, removed his coat, folding it atop his boots, and amid a volley of curses from the disapproving Boater above, he dove in. The pair of birds on the railing took advantage of the stillness to head to shore on their own wings, and departed with a few squelches, an outburst that startled the pacing captain.
The Fisher sprang out of the water coughing and was quickly helped back on board by the Boater, all the while being lectured about the dangers of imprudent Fishers and the likelihood of treacherous sirens to pray upon such careless men. When he had recovered, he dropped a dark and round object that was in his hands onto the deck with a thud, and took some steps back, now standing dripping wet near the Boater looking down at it. The two men looked on in silence at the anomaly laid before them.
It was unlike anything they had seen, and was very clearly not naturally originated. It was about two fists in width and perfectly round as an orb. Its surface was sleek, smooth and wet, and rendered not a seam or scratch in to be found. It was clear it hadn’t been assembled from different pieces, and was homogeneous; being of the same dense glass-like element through and through, like a meticulously cut gem.
“What the devil is that?” The Boater finally spoke up, in a half choked whisper from behind.
Before an answer could be supplied, the object began to illuminate from within, streaking lines of emerald light through the cracks in the deck as a musical ominous chiming rang out. They backed away a step further and exchanged a pair of wild glances.
As it rolled under the shadow of the pilot’s deck, the light and sound died away to glossy darkness. The Fisher stepped around the anomaly in the manner of a hunter pacing his netted beast. He squatted and cocked his head sideways to study it while the rocking boat rolled it gently around the deck. Seeing the Fisher was now moving ever closer with his stick in hand, the Boater ejected a low and firm warning of “Careful”. The Fisher nodded, and prodded the orb until he had it pinned against a raised board in the open which still had some sunlight clinging to it.
The deep blackness of its material was spotless, with a few drops of seawater beading off it immaculately. Just then, as the men watched, it grew to life in the sun light, giving off a bright green and blue flutter of light, which worked their way from the edges like lightning bugs, this time connecting, forming a single burning core in the center of the apparently translucent stone. It hummed a single unbroken tone, similar to the underwater resonance of whales, growing and dying in synchronization with the pulsing light from within.
“Unworldly… It’s-” The Boater took up the gestures of a frantic Preacher as he searched for the air above his hat for the words, pointing a frenzied finger down at the gem.
“Unworldly! And dangerous is what it is, Fisher! Mark my words carefully son, the Witch’s instrument such as this isn’t to be trifled with. Overboard with it.” he decided resolutely, tugging his hat down firmly and crossing his arms.
The Fisher was too mystified with the shape that danced inside the stone to heed any words. Summoning his courage, he took his coat and laid it over the stone, attentively wrapping it like a gift before lifting it slowly. As soon as it was covered, the light and sound suspended once more.
“It’s no danger to us Boater, see? You’re too superstitious for your own good. I could bring this to the village tomorrow to show the learned men. They may have answers.”
The old sailor shook his head like a pendulum and retorted, “Curses on the ‘learned men’ is the only thing you’ll be bringing home! Have you not heard what I’ve said? An unnatural relic such as the one you hold is best to be tossed overboard with the chum. I don’t know as much as any star-gawking Professor, I surely never will be as studious a lad as you, but-” He tilted his chin up high in superior finality, “but I DO know it’s not wise to dip a toe into bewitchment. For ‘a toe dipped in foiled waters is a toe to go’ .”
“ ‘Dipped in foul waters’ you mean.” Corrected the Fisher distractedly without taking his eyes off the bundled up orb.
The Boater’s shoulders relaxed as his face darkened over sourly. He snapped his pipe back into the corner of his teeth, and stormed back up the dinky ladder to the helm.
“Keep you’re pretty words, and your stone then. But don’t say I didn’t warn ya’ boyyo.”
“Boater, I-”
“Pull that gaff in now, we’re to be heading back. It’s getting much too dark.” He said pointedly.
The Fisher, having worked several fruitful years with the captain, felt keenly abashed to have angered the old spirit. Nonetheless, he knew an apology would never be in order, and the only proper way of remedying bad blood between the pair would be time and silence. He racked the gaff up and tucked the wrapped object underneath his lunch tin by his foot, as the boat turned slowly to aim towards the shore.
***Snuffed Lanterns
After the ship was all tied down and the haul unloaded, the Fisher turned and made his way to the jetty’s entrance.
The old Boater cleaned and adjusted the instruments of the vessel, the same one he slept in every night, stopping only briefly to call back to the Fisher.
“Make sure you get a good price for those pairs of spears we snagged! I should suspect the Cutter will pay a good price for the sword on the big one we hauled, he’s a habit to be collecting them for his shop wall.”
“Aye, I’ll get it offloaded in the market first thing in morn’. You won’t be needing me tomorrow?”
“Nay, just a net load or two I’m planning. Besides, I don’t need any more omens being dragged aboard my vessel.” Said the Boater grimly as he turned to complete his scrubbing.
The Fisher called goodnight and went to join the Porter by his wagon. After seeing the payload and Porter off up the cobble road with a wave, he turned some 5o paces up and faced out at the dark cove below. The object underneath his arm vibrated like a rolling wave breaking below a ship’s bow. He pushed aside the coat and revealed the face of his treasure. Its muffled humming became clear with the moon’s pale reflection, which danced off it gaily. The little white crescent seemed to sink down into its hard surface and collected at the center, forming a tumultuous molten core of lime-etched red which rippled in an angry hum. Looking up, at the horizon, he took note of a peculiarly blood red lining at the edge of the blackness, with a singular, almost imperceptible, speckle of green at its center point. A warm wind scrubbed his right ear from the northern cliffs, while an icy western breeze nipped at his left. He nodded, finally comprehending the sign..
“Ay, core of green and a red line at night- Boaters take fright.”
He watched as the Boater’s wide hat ducked under the cabin door and a lantern lit from behind a port curtain snuffed out. Some lonely stringed notes and lyrics were heard echoing from within. He knew he’d probably stay up drinking all night before his work tomorrow.
The Fisher re-wrapped the gem under his arm and continued up the beach path, away from the boat. He mused, staring thankfully up at the throned night above him, “Every man must interpret his own stars.”
Lime Chicken Picante

Ingredients
- 1/2 cup chunky salsa
- 1/4 cup Dijon-style prepared mustard
- 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
- 6 skinless, boneless chicken breasts
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 6 tablespoons plain yogurt
- 1 lime, sliced into segments
Instructions
- In a shallow nonporous dish or bowl combine the salsa, mustard and lime juice. Mix well.
- Add chicken, cover dish and refrigerate. Marinate for at least 30 minutes.
- Melt butter or margarine in a large skillet over medium heat.
- Remove chicken from marinade and add to skillet. Sauté, turning frequently, until browned on all sides.
- Meanwhile, boil remaining marinade in a saucepan for 4 to 5 minutes, to remove all possibility of bacteria.
- Add boiled marinade to chicken and sauté for another 3 to 5 minutes or until chicken is fork tender and marinade is starting to glaze.
- Remove chicken to serving platter; raise heat to high and boil marinade for 1 minute.
- Spoon marinade over chicken and top each breast with 1 tablespoon yogurt and 1 lime wedge.
- Serve.
What really happens to your muscles if you stop working out for a few months? Do they shrink a lot, or can you still keep some of your gains without much effort?
In my experience, which coincides with that of others, this is what happens:
You can safely take a break of up to three weeks without noticing any loss of strength or muscle. So if you train consistently and it’s time to take a well-deserved vacation, relax, enjoy yourself, and just forget about your muscles.
I promise you that this break will be beneficial, well-deserved, and that you will come back stronger.
Most people train too much and simply don’t understand the importance of rest and recovery. Your body needs rest to grow. It’s like a plant that needs water regularly to grow. Watering it twice a day won’t make it grow faster. In fact, it can drown it.
And I bet you, as an enthusiastic learner, are overworked. I have no doubt about it.
After three weeks, you’ll start to lose some strength, but it won’t be dramatic until much later. You can always resume training, and if you’ve experienced any loss, you’ll be back to normal in a matter of days.
As for maintaining muscle, you can do it by training just one third of what you used to train while progressing.
So you could train once a week instead of three. Or you could do one set per exercise instead of three.
Can China’s K-Visa be the best opportunity to Indians than the US’s H-1B visa?
Good Lord No😁!!!!!!
The K Visa is meant for the BEST and MOST SKILLED TALENTS in critical emerging areas of technology
China has 14/15 year olds who can write quality code and China has hundreds of part time code monkeys (Coolies) who work 30 hours a week and make 7000 Yuan a month writing code part time
Chinese have their own Business Managers within their own domestic markets
They don’t need too many migrants for this work
They want the best brains!!!!
This includes
Postdocs in
- Applied Physics
- Semiconductor Engineering
- Machine Learning
- Nuclear Physics
- Astrophysics
- Biochemistry
- Artificial Intelligence
- Aerospace Engineering
Post Graduates keen to pursue Industry oriented Research
Graduates interested in Design and Fabrication
Opportunity for Indians
Indians would find China too competitive compared to the US
You need to be on your toes
The Language is a major hurdle as even in the “English Designated” Campuses , you need a minimum HSK 2/3 to survive and a translation device
For Indian Veggies , life is an absolute nightmare. Finding Vegetarian food on campus is not difficult but it is 90% Tofu, Bok Choy & Winter Melon Soup with Noodles & Black Soy Sauce 😁😁😁😁
Within 3 months you either become Non Veg Or suffer
Target for the K Visa
The K Visa targets not Indians but talents in BRI countries
For instance in 2024 The largest group of applicants for STEM related Resident Permits in China were Indonesians & Malaysians
Are armed attacks on ICE facilities in Texas becoming routine? Is this MAGA and American conservatives’ idea of “law and order”? Doesn’t this show that Trump’s entire agenda is spinning way, way out of control?
Speaking as an outsider…
There are two things that have been absolutely fascinating to me about what is going on in the USA:
First, the absolute indifference so-called “conservatives” are showing to roving bands of masked and armed thugs, snatching American citizens off the street with no warrant and no probable cause. What’s even more shocking is that neither Congress or the Supreme Court — supposedly co-equal branches of government — are lifting a finger to stop this.
Not too many years ago, this was the stuff that “patriots” were predicting that Biden and Obama and even Clinton would be doing, I’m sure you remember the “black helicopters” scares. But it turns out that, as predicted, every time a Fascist makes an accusation, it’s actually a confession. Every. Single. Time.
These cosplay-cops are literally indistinguishable from criminals. And their makeup is fascinating: Male, middle-aged, white. These are the brownshirts of modern times. And they know that they are doing wrong, hence the masks.
At the same time, I have been astounded at the number of Americans fighting back against these thugs, and winning. In LA and Chicago and Rochester and DC, normal citizens are showing up to stop the slide of their country into fascism, and in many cases they are showing up these Temu-troopers for the cowards they are
I Switched From Windows to Linux Full Time: 30 Days Later (Honest Results)
World Hits “SELL” Button After Trump Address to the Nation
Hal Turner World April 02, 2026
The world listened to President Donald Trump’s speech Wednesday evening . . . and hit the sell button.
Asian markets cratering overnight.
Japan down 1.4%. South Korea down 2.6%.
Oil surging back above $105 after briefly dipping on peace hopes.
Gold and silver collapsing as safe-haven trades unwind.
Gasoline in the US just crossed $4 a gallon for the first time since Russia invaded Ukraine.
Diesel at $5.50. Oil futures posted their largest monthly dollar gain in history, up 51% in March alone.
Oil executives are warning that physical crude is even more expensive than futures suggest.
Trump promised 2-3 more weeks.
Markets heard “more bombing” and priced accordingly.
The two-day rally that preceded the speech evaporated in 19 minutes.
The energy shock is spreading beyond fuel into aluminum, fertilizer, helium, and semiconductor supply chains.
Traders are repricing inflation assumptions in real time.
The speech was supposed to calm the world.
Instead it reminded everyone that the president who says the war is almost over . . . just threatened to send Iran “back to the stone age.”
Israel vs. China? It’s a Chihuahua Barking at a DRAGON! 🇨🇳🇮🇱

END

I for one would be curious on your Moon Mission Artemis take, Metallicman. I recall the DC confirming that conventional space travel with humans aboard never made it past Earth orbit for a number of technical reasons, yet now we’re supposed to believe that a Murican diverse crew of photogenic clowns are flying me to the Mooooooonn~~
😂,
Right at the same time the US as a coherent nation is facing or about to face its greatest crisis ever, financially and geopolitically. Let alone internally.
Coincidentally, they’ve decided to wag the Moon doggie one more time, and plenty of luxurious full colour media spreads to back it up this weekend.
Surely they can’t get away with that again, right? And just as Russia China are heading there for real sometime during the next decade, or so. And in the meantime, NASA pulls Artemis out of their arse with just a few years’ planing. They must have dusted off those previously “disappeared” blueprints from the 1960s,
>cough<
I thought a janitor had binned those accidentally?!
That might belong to one of those “Back to the sixties” apects, too?!
And most certainly a result of the afforementiones slides…
Since I my last recalled information on “moon missions” was “years away” “If ever”
And now, out of the blue, round the moon? OK.
There is a Chart somewhere which correlates fsiledcoffensives in Vietnam to Apollo launches, im eerily reminded of that now.
Ah, we want to be fooled.
Very insightful, thanks for that. The less cynical aspect of me had indeed considered the slide reverting everything back to a cleaner, early 1960s baseline. That’s not the kind of Metallicman detail that one should overlook. Maybe the Artemis engineers have figured out a way (or had, on an alternative timeline) to bypass the radiation problem using solutions from a time when the Domain were working closely with US based, “WUSAP” cutouts. Now they’ve somehow synced up with ours.
I’d definitely be open to that possibility. And maybe it’s even likely. It certainly has a ring of truth about it too, if I’m being honest with myself.
And as we’ve noticed: it practically all came out of nowhere. And seemingly overnight.
As for the Vietnam situation, that echoes something I heard years ago and had completely forgotten. The original goal was to crush the North Vietnamese easily and quickly using the South Vietnamese muppet proxy, backed to the hilt by US special needs farces (😂, yeah right, familiar sounding playbook, right? These people aren’t very original, or very good– and let’s not even get into the hapless South Vietnamese military), and then invade China from what was perceived to be the vulnerable southern border, since the North Koreans kicked their arse when they tried the North Eastern flank a decade previously, and Johnson wanted revenge for that military rout. But instead, practically the whole US Army had to be rushed prematurely into Vietnam once things started going very, very tits up. Including mass conscription, they were that badly prepared.
Again, sounds disturbingly contemporary. The Past echoes.
The rest is history, of course. But I’ve heard the Apollo missions were originally meant to be a distraction from what was intended to be a massive war for China’s southern regions, involving not just the US, but the entire western bloc. Enormous casualty rates expected, too.
(Kinda like the way it all worked out for the strategic geniuses in Korea earlier… and in the very former ukraine later… and probably will do again in Iran in the very near future.
As I said, not very original.)
The major companies in South Korea such as Hyundai Heavy Industries, Daewoo Industries, Lucky Goldstar Electrical, etc, even Korean frikking Airlines, were set up in the early 1960s to provide equipment and supplies for that planned war on China’s southern flanks after the Korean disaster didn’t quite produce the required effect.
Or something like that. That’s all broad strokes, obviously.
They won’t tell you that in their atrociously boring museums, or their history books, or in their cheesy corporate brochures either, I assure you.
Yeah. Sigh. -MM
Another very interesting aspect might be this one:
https://nitter.poast.org/humanvibration/status/2039710490499137809
Happy easter to all of you!
(1) Formal dinners at my university (City, University of London) was held at Halls of Residence (student dorms).
The only reason why students want to go for Formal dinners were for the free booze, free flow of wines. Nothing else. Not for the food nor the tradition nor the formalities. Just free flow of wines.
(2) As for sinking of aircraft carrier by drones, you just need to stop the carrier from doing its job, launching aircrafts. Iran has already succeeded in this. The threat alone has pushed the carrier further out to sea, hampering its job. The writer has not taken the spread of weapons that Iran can launch against the carrier, from drones to anti ship missiles to hypersonic missiles, each coming in waves to exhaust the defence. Just a few lucky strikes on the deck will decommissioned the carrier.