You all know this right? You can feel it, right? Don’t fight it. It’ll be good.
Good. Really.
Good.
Does the United States need a “reset”, or a “make over” of the government and society? And if so, how will it come about?
Everything benefits from a freshening up and a renewal. Even a tidy house benefits from a round of deep cleaning. And just as spring cleaning doesn’t mean moving away or burning down the house, but only sweeping away the dirt under the couch and throwing away the packets of soy sauce in the back of the knife drawer, a constitutional and societal reset would clear away things that get in the way of American amity and keep the values we share.
I’ve been yelled at on this forum by people who cry, “Let well enough alone!” But the society we have today isn’t “well enough.” Hardly anyone agrees the country is moving in the right direction. The country needs reform. When Matt Y refers to “a few whiny people” he ignores that fact that the great majority of Americans are discontent.
how will it come about?
I’m not sure that it will.
We agree that it is needed. But that doesn’t mean it will happen. Possibly, the country will resist reform and keep on getting more angry and violent and intractable for years to come. There’s no floor to how much worse things can get.
But if it does come about, it should begin with a slow, grass roots process of listening to other citizens for a period of years.
Nobody should start talking about what should be done until there is renewed agreement about what we aspire to. William Hembree, in his answer, articulates “What I would do.” But William Hembree is speaking from selfish position, and we don’t need that. We’re not talking about “The United States of Hembree.” We’re talking about a nation of 330-million people.
Starland Vocal Band – Afternoon Delight (1976) Uncut Video
Happy times!
The Mirror
Spookytooth.
Why is there less fried chicken served for breakfast in the USA?
Because “breakfast food” comes from certain rural farm traditions, combined with more recent urban traditions.
On a farm, you wake up at dawn and do the “chores” of caring for the animals. Then you eat breakfast, then you start your actual work day.
So since you go out to care for the chickens, you collect the eggs at this time. And so eggs make an easy breakfast meal. You milked the cows, so you have fresh milk. It takes hours to make bread, so instead you take yesterday’s leftover bread and toast it to bring it back to life. You don’t have time to butcher an animal, so any meat is preserved meat, likely pork. Cooking sausage/bacon/ham creates grease, no farmer is going to waste that, so that’s perfect to cook potatoes or pancakes or corn cakes. Preserved fruit and homemade sweeteners like maple syrup are ready made.
There you go, a classic American breakfast.
If you don’t have any of those fancy things, because you’re dirt poor, you can at least boil some grain and make porridge, flavored with whatever leftovers and odds and ends you have. Another classic breakfast food. Grits, oatmeal, congee,
Other classic breakfast foods are products of urban living. You can’t buy a pastry for breakfast on a farm, only if you live near a bakery. Dry cereal is an processed industrial product that replaces the grain porridge that farmers would eat. Fresh fruit and juice require modern transport networks and refrigeration, they replace the preserved fruit. So that’s a modern layer added on to classic rural breakfast foods.
Nowadays with modern supply chains you could literally serve anything for breakfast from lasagna to Boeuf Bourguignon to Peking duck.
But people are used to what they’re used to and so they want the same sort of thing they’re used to. In many parts of the world breakfast is just last night’s dinner leftovers. That would horrify lots of Americans.
The only thing about breakfast food is that you either have to make it yourself, or you have to buy it from someone who made it for you. And so breakfast foods will always tend toward easy convenient foods rather than involved complicated preparations, even if you’re buying food from a restaurant.
But something like making doughnuts is insanely complicated for a home cook to make a dozen doughnuts. But the complexity is all setup. For a doughnut shop it’s easy to crank another dozen doughnuts, because everything is ready all the time.
Fried chicken is just like this, once you’ve got the kitchen set up you can crank out fried chicken in industrial quantities. So why do people eat doughnuts for breakfast but not fried chicken? Because they aren’t used to it, because it isn’t a traditional breakfast food that comes from rural origins.
Poco – And Settling Down
Map
Southfront.org map based on the daily Russian Defence Ministry operations bulletin. For identification and enlargement of locations and reports, click on the link and scroll magnifier across the map.
What psychology says about a normal person?
- You don’t need to explain yourself to anyone. Start living for yourself, never live just to impress others.
- Comfort zone will destroy your life. Life starts at the end of comfort zone.
- Your family and friends can only support you, you have to do it yourself.
- Happiness doesn’t come from sleeping, relaxing and hanging on social media.
- True happiness comes when you give your best in life.
- The less people you chill with, the less bullshit you have to deal with.
- Life is too short to become angry and to seek for revenge to those who did you wrong. Just let it go.
- It’s never too early or late to do the things you have always wanted to do.
- None really cares unless you are rich, beautiful and popular, at least not forever.
- Readers are leaders. Never stop reading.
- No matter how much we try, some situations are never in our control.
- Don’t believe everything you hear and see. Be curious, question them.
- It is not necessarily important to know who likes you and who doesn’t. What really matters is how you see yourself.
Thanks for reading !
Why does Burger King struggle so hard in trying to compete against McDonald’s?
Boy is this the right question for me! I have worked in around Burger King for over 40 years, and was deeply involved in the competitive wars with McDonald’s in the 1990s. There’s a very simple reason why Burger King has struggled… Inconsistency.
Burger King is nearly as old as McDonald’s, haven’t been founded in 1954 in Florida. Their paths stayed pretty parallel into the early 1960s, when McDonald’s took off due to a very well planned program of franchising and development that focused on real estate. McDonald’s owned it, rented it to the franchisees, and used the money from that to pay for the purchase… So McDonald’s really is a real estate company more than a restaurant company. Seems a little far-fetched, but it’s true. Solid company structure from the mid-1960’s until today.
Burger King on the other hand has passed through numerous owners since it’s existence, starting in the 1960s with Pillsberry (yes, the dough boy folks), who kept it as a subsidiary until the late 1990’s. Under Pillsbury‘s ownership, the company stayed stable and grew its franchise base in a consistent manner. However, when Pillsbury sold the company to Grand Metropolitan (GM) out of England, things began to go south quickly.
GM was an alcohol company, who owned such brands as Guinness and Baileys Irish cream. They had involvement in bars in England, but never with a fast food restaurant chain. GM saw BK as a cash cow, and basically drained the company of money for years to fund other non-restaurant needs. They brought in executives from England who had no knowledge of the food industry, as sort of a training ground for them. Not a good combination.
Burger King also owned a lot of real estate under Pillsbury, though under a different program than McDonald’s. But once GM got involved, the real estate started to be sold as a way to pay for the purchase of the company. They nearly completely paid for their entire purchase by selling off the real estate- which was a stupid move for BK, as it removed an important asset base for the company.
GM later became Diagio, and under Diagio’s ownership they began to look for a buyer, because they realized it wasn’t a business they wanted to have within their liquor organization. This was a time when large investment groups were getting involved in the restaurant industry, so they sold the company at a profit to a US company called Texas Pacific Group (TPG). TPG then began their own dismantling of the US corporate structure, as a way to save money.
After TPG held it for a few years it was bought by a Brazilian group – who paid a lot of money for BK because of the ever expanding trading environment. They proceeded to remove even more of the corporate structure of BK – reducing it to basically nothing more than a holding company. They focused on international franchising, and did a good job in bring in new franchisees across the world. But By eliminating real estate, operations, training, marketing, and other departments almost in their entirety in the US, and eliminating hundreds of experienced people who were very loyal to Burger King, it just ruined the brands operations and strategic planning capabilities.
The Brazilian group eventually combined with the Tim Hortons group out of Canada, and recently Popeyes to create the new entity RBI, which runs all the businesses. While very successful as an organization, growing the company over the years internationally to a great extent, it really never addressed the fundamental differences between McDonald’s and Burger King when it came to quality and operations. Burger King‘s are just not up to the same level as McDonald’s, and I doubt ever will be because of the way they’ve been handled. By having virtually no company stores, decisions are made that seem reactionary and off the cuff, loading the stores with gimmicky products and putting undo pressure on the franchisees to shoulder nearly every task with little to no backup from BKC.
I know several McDonalds executives who I have discussed this BK subject with, and to a person they agree with my assessment, and were happy that BK was so disorganized as a competitor. BK’s food in its original form (like the Whopper) were superior to McD’s offerings, and they knew it. But with the constant turnover at BK it was a recipe for disaster long term.
I love BK, and even 20+ years since leaving I still stay in touch with my former executive colleagues. There is even an alumni group of BK folks. Great people who were basically tossed aside during these various sales, and have gone on to work with other brands and enhansed them as a result.
BK is a classic example of corporate greed taking a great brand and diminishing it as a result. 😉👍
THANK YOU ALL FOR YOUR READING THIS POST. I am humbled by your response to it – I am overwhelmed and appreciative. There are some interesting opinions that have been shared….I encourage you to read a desenting opinion below, and my response. Free speech is what makes our world better, versus places where you can’t proper an opinion. But also, facts are facts….something we have lost sight of recently here.
Balance of emotions and facts are what makes life work, don’t you agree? 😁🤟
UPDATE TIME. Hello folks, thanks so much for reading my post. Over 500K views…wow! I have been answering questions on other chains due to your requests, so if you want to learn background about KFC, Chick Fil A and others, check into my profile.
I did visit a brand new rebuilt BK yesterday here in California. Had to see what was new. Building was nice, and it was loaded with crew, training. Because of all those people, I got my food quickly. I was the only inside customer at 4:30. But, sadly, the underlying issues are still there. My food was warm, not hot; the fries were way too salty and only warm; I wanted an ice tea (there was a picture of it on the drink machine), but they didn’t have it. Not part of the rebuild. While I was eating inside, a couple of cars came through the DT, but one came back because he didn’t get his full order. Seriously? A new store with about 12 employees at 4:30, and it still wasn’t right?
Their system is clearly broken. They’ve made it overly complicated to produce the food, using lots of holding equipment to allow the pre-cooking of nearly every menu item, in a bid to save labor. Getting a fresh piping hot sandwich is basically impossible now, because of the production methods. People are willing to wait for a quality product, like the made to order food at In -N -Out. I have seen wait times in the 10–20 minute range there, with no one complaining. And they do 2–3 times the BK sales. Sacrificing speed for quality is stupid. I had this nearly exact argument 23 years ago at a BK corp meeting, and I was basically dismissed. Too many way smarter people in the room I guess🤨.
One more thing….I did real estate for BK for a long while, and I just don’t understand why they rebuilt this restaurant. It’s not in a good location at all, being a bedroom nighttime area, not a daytime one. A lot of money was spent, and I doubt that it will ever make a profit.
And the beat goes on….stay tuned!🤨
Does the United States need a “reset”, or a “make over” of the government and society? And if so, how will it come about?
You have asked the One Million Dollar Question!! We need SOMETHING, in general, and a lot of other people and things to get us right again. The clowns we have now running this government have lietally turned this government and this country into a multiple ring circus. Anyone with eyes, ears and brains can clearly conclude that we need to flush the toilet, drain the swamp, get rid of the leftist seditionists and traitors in leadership positions. We must get rid if things like “woke”, CRT, socialism in any form, get back to being more energy independent, elect leaders who support an unborn human’s right to be protected from being murdered, protect our chidren in their schools, support law enforcement, plug the holes in the “Southern Sieve” (formerly The Southern Border), and more. We need to elect leaders who know right from wrong, men from women, and other basic truths because they are “self evident”. It all begins this November with mid-term elections. It will contine wirh the next Presidential election. People are mad as hell and they (We) are not going to take it anymore.🇺🇸
Dead Broke
I lived as a very young girl, already at 17, in a commune in Florence, Italy.
We all almost never had money.
What usually happened anyway was that there was no toilet paper, but we “recycled” newspapers.
These were , ifs went well, even cut into rectangles , punched , with a thread through and hung on a hook.
Mostly the most important was read again before.
At that time, newspapers were still good for something.
Sometimes we didn’t know in the morning what we would eat in the evening. We didn’t eat anything in the morning anyway.
Then one of the men went into a bookstore and stole a book. There was another bookseller who bought these books for then for little money.
For a good book there were 5000 lire. That would be 2 Dollars fifty today.
For that I bought food for everyone. That was always pasta. I remember one day it was noodles with rape, which is a green vegetable.
Eight of us sat at our big kitchen table and each had a not very big plate of noodles.
The doorbell rang. We didn’t have a phone and anyway, we always had visitors.
So two more people. Sigh.
It was normal then to take so much from each of our plates that the two visitors also got a portion each. And no one let on.
It was so long ago, but I remember going to bed very hungry that night.
Skid Row – I Remember You (Official Music Video)
The US helped China, Japan, and S. Korea industrialize and become wealthy. Japan and South Korea show their gratitude to the USA by being strong allies. Why does China treat the US as an enemy?
A highly distorted question.
The U.S. helped China, Japan and South Korea. . .true, but the U.S. also obstructed China, Japan and South Korea in so many critical ways to hinder their real potential.
Japan and South Korea showed their gratitude to the U.S. . . . true, because they have little choice, militarily being made dependent on U.S. protection.
China treats the U.S. as an enemy. Get the facts right. It’s been the U.S. attacking China, not the other way around.
The U.S. was never a friend to China. . . assisting Taiwan against the CCP and then “dumping” Taiwan to switch to China for geopolitical positioning against the USSR, but obstructing China at every turn for anything strategic.
- Military. It was the USSR who assisted China in building up its military. And in so many ways, the USSR was instrumental to the CCP when they literally had nothing to start their nation-building process in 1949. They were China’s friend-in-need.
- Economic development. U.S. embargoed to cripple China from 1949 to help Taiwan and the other Asian tigers get their head start, opening up to China for geopolitical advantage and allowing China to join the WTO only in 2001 expecting China not to be able to catch up with its far more developed neighbors. Japan then had more than a 50-yr head start and already the world second largest economy, did anybody even consider China a threat to even catch up?
- GPS. China was shut out by the U.S. and the West and had to develop its own satellite navigation system. China now has its own indigenous BeiDou navigational system that is the backbone to its defensive system as well as commercial satellite system.
- Space Exploration. China has been barred from the ISS since 2011, when Congress prohibited official American contact with the Chinese space program. China has been on its own – today, launching Tianhe, the core element of China’s own space station and also making headway on its Mars program.
- Chip Manufacturing. Even though not even in control of fab technology, trump tried to block Huawei’s access to the most current chip supply. This has only forced China to finally mobilize to develop its own chip supply chain. This is the last critical piece needed for China to be in full control of the chip industry. China’s making good progress and should have this done with a 3–5 year timeline.
And yes, the last thing the U.S. should expect from China is gratitude.
What made you leave the US for the UK?
I made the choice to leave because my future was bleak, I had no quality of life and worked multiple jobs to survive. I have rebuilt my life over twice by the time I was 27 from losing everything and after the last big set back of losing my home, I felt I was suffocating. I had come to the conclusion that mentally I couldn’t go through it a third time and I know for a fact if I stayed it would happen again.
I met my husband online we were friends then hit it off, we eventually upgraded to Skype calls…He wanted to come to the US, but that proved impossible because I could never make the income requirements to sponsor him.
I decided that since the house was gone, I would work and save the money, all he needed was the income requirements and I put up the money for our visas, as it was easier to save once the house was out of the picture.
It took me 4 years and I managed to get out, I brought my daughter and next my son. I can live all expenses paid on half of what it cost me to keep a roof, utilities, healthcare and transportation in the US.
Upon leaving I seen multiple things change, I’m here for my children more than I ever was in the past. Their grades have improved and my son is excited about attending college, something I couldn’t help him with in US. Worrying about food is no longer a problem, worrying if I have enough gas to get to work is no longer a problem. Needing 3 jobs is no longer nessecary. The kicker is if my husband walked out tomorrow I would still be able to make most of the bills on a just above minimum wage job, something I couldn’t have in the US with 3 jobs since the cost of living is drastically cheaper.
Overall I can work, be a productive citizen, spend time with my family and not have to struggle. UK wants me to follow the rules, and it rewards me by not sucking the life blood from me. I also have peace, security, beautiful parks in abundance, I have never worried about danger.
My family went on camping trips all around the UK this was the first family vacation they ever been on, apart from spending the night at a family members.
I never wanted spectacular things, my life course was determined pretty much the minute I was out the door as a teen. I just want to live, spend time with my family, and enjoy life without struggle. UK gives me a quality of life I could never have in the US.
If someone told me I’d have a million dollars tomorrow if I go back to the US, I wouldn’t take it. There is no way I will leave UK to be thrown from the frying pan into the flames for a third time, life is too volatile, too unpredictable, you can have it all one minute and lose it the next.
Can cats recognize their owners by sight?
Cats are fascinating animals. Unlike dogs, they typically don’t consider humans to be superiors. To them, we’re merely fellow cats who are larger in size. But their reputation as aloof creatures is undeserved. They actually make deep emotional connections when raised properly, and recognize their names when called (even if they don’t feel compelled to come).
Cats also hold grudges when mistreated. It’s an important survival tactic to retain long-term memories of people they consider dangerous. With all this attention to detail regarding humans, can they identify some of us by sight alone, without the benefit of their other exceptional senses?
Cat senses
Felines have blurry vision up close, but focused sight when viewing objects farther away. Despite their impeccable night vision, cats only see about 10% as well as humans in bright daylight. But their other senses are unusually sharp. They can tell which owner is petting them with their keen sense of touch. They have up to 80 million scent receptors in their noses, making their smelling 20 times more sophisticated than humans.
Their hearing is far more developed than dogs, humans, and most mammals, the fifth best in the animal kingdom. When it comes to high ranges, cats hear an additional octave above canines. Cats can isolate the location of a sound emanating from even the tiniest insect three feet away to astounding accuracy.
Recognizing their owners
With such acute senses, almost all cats can identify their owners’ voices when played audio recordings. They instantly recognize the sound and vibration of vehicles and footsteps, differentiating between their owners and – let’s say- the mailman. All cats can smell beyond cologne, perfume, shampoo, and lotion, remarkably detecting the distinct smells of their owners’ skin.
There are so many ways that cats recognize us. But sight is a completely different issue.
Visual recognition
Cats do not find human faces as important as their smell, touch, and the sound of their voice. Researchers believe this is hereditary as cats historically made the choice to join human society in search of food, not human affirmation. They didn’t care about the faces of those who fed them. Conversely, dogs were willingly domesticated by humans, leading some researchers to believe that craving our attention is hereditary for canines.
However, modern evidence seems to suggest that cats, at least the smarter ones, do recognize their owners by sight alone. In 2005, a study at two universities revealed that cats identified a photograph of their owners’ faces about 54% of the time. In the same study, cats actually recognized other familiar cats’ faces 91% of the time.
My experiment
Perhaps the two male tabbies I owned for 20 years possessed above average intellect. They passed the feline IQ tests I administered with flying colors. So I conducted an experiment based on sight. Instead of arriving home from work at 5:00 p.m., I broke my usual pattern and showed up at 3:00 p.m. (since cats memorize their owners’ routines). I parked a few blocks up the street so the car didn’t give me away, because they know the sound of each owner’s vehicle. I walked toward my house to see if my cats were sitting on the porch as they often did in the afternoon. And there they were, the two inseparable brothers hanging out together.
Since cats memorize the way their owners walk, I couldn’t just saunter by the house to assess their intelligence. They can identify their owners by gait alone. But the cats had never seen me running, because injuries stopped me from routine jogging decades ago. So I ran past the house at this random time in the afternoon with absolutely no way for the cats to identify me unless they could recognize my profile. Would they pass the test?
Rather than acknowledging my cats as I always did, I acted like I didn’t know them. I was 50 feet away. Only my peripheral vision allowed me to watch their reaction. At first, the cats seemed uninterested in this random guy running on the street two hours before their owner usually arrived home.
Half asleep on a lazy afternoon, squinting their eyes in content, loosely monitoring a man running down the road, only two seconds elapsed before they suddenly sat straight up. Did they recognize me? They studied me intently for another second or two before they bolted off the porch, breaking into an all-out sprint. Racing across the lawn, they ran to catch up, meowing incessantly and desperate for me to stop.
The ruse was over. I turned around, and stooped down to accept my little sidekicks as they nearly jumped into my arms. Seemingly confused by my missing car and sudden appearance, probably wondering why I couldn’t find my own house and kept running, they were quite excited to see me.
So I’ve concluded that (at least smarter) cats will absolutely recognize their owners by sight without the benefit of smell or touch, or the recognition of their gait, their vehicle, or their routine. Lesser intelligent cats may not recognize owners by sight, but all cats recognize you by smell. And they’re the most loving animals when raised correctly.
Can China act on its own in response to a military attack from the West, especially the USA?
Absolutely. China does not need any military ally. China’s military is enormously powerful, the second most powerful on the planet.
Fighting in China’s own backyard gives China an enormous home court advantage.
Nevertheless, Russia has already pledged to come to China’s aid in the event of a war over Taiwan.
You can pretty much count on North Korea and Pakistan, too. Maybe even Iran.
What’s something your cat has done that you’re going to talk about forever?
He saved my life.
When I lost my son at birth in 2003, Mikey was just a kitten.
I didnt realize then, the role he would play in my life.
Mikey became my reason for everything, my reason for just getting out of bed.
Losing a baby a birth is devastating and many women face a life of depression after going through something like this but that didnt happen in my own experience because Mikey helped me find my way.
From the first moments arriving home with no baby in my arms and finding Mikey all curled up asleep in my sons bassinet, he was a comfort to me.
Making sure my arms did not stay empty on that first night home and for the next 18 years made a difference, I wasn’t alone, he was always by my side.
Mikey was born deaf and I knew it from the time he was born. After my son died, I really spent a huge amount of time researching feline deafness and trying to figure out how I would care for this kitten.
Before I knew it Mikey and I had embarked on our own journey, a journey based on love and friendship.
Mikey died on February 21, 2021, He was 18 years old.
For as long as I am still alive in this place, I will tell his story, it was our story.
He may not have been tall enough for me to lean on but he always held me up.
This is Mikey, he was my best friend…
Seinfeld – A Stop at Willoughby (Twilight Zone)
WTF? This was just too hilarious and the editing is GOLD, Jerry. GOLD.
Every time something happens in the US, Americans begin to compare the state of their country with how China is doing. Why are Americans so obsessed with China?
Because China and USA are the two most powerful countries on earth. They are competing with each other.
All other nations are relatively insignificant in this contest.
And China’s rise threatens America’s global hegemony. This fact is foremost on the minds of every US politician.
Most regular Americans aren’t obsessed with China. They have their hands full just trying to survive in their terrible economic and financial situation.
Nvidia CEO Says ‘Moore’s Law Is Dead’
The CEO of Nvidia has a message to gamers complaining about the high pricing of the company’s graphics cards. Don’t blame us. On Wednesday during a videoconference call Q&A with reporters, Nvidia (ticker: NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang was asked about the broad negative reaction from the gaming community over the elevated pricing of its chip maker’s new “Ada Lovelace” graphics cards. “A 12-inch wafer is a lot more expensive today,” he replied, citing rising chip making costs. “Moore’s Law is dead … It’s completely over.” The executive added the expectations of twice the performance for similar cost was “a thing of the past” for the industry. Moore’s Law is an old forecast of innovation for the semiconductor industry by Gordon E. Moore, the co-founder of Intel . He said “the number of transistors incorporated in a chip will approximately double every 24 months,” offering performance and cost benefits over time Over the past day, many gamers on social media and message boards expressed outrage with the pricing of Nvidia’s next generation gaming graphics chips, code-named “Ada Lovelace,” which were revealed on Tuesday at its GTC conference. At the conference, the company announced the coming RTX 4090 card and two versions of the RTX 4080 card, all of which will use the Ada chip architecture. The 4090 will sell for $1,599 and will be available on Oct. 12, while the 4080 cards will cost $899 and $1,199, respectively, and go for sale in November. For reference, the prior generation RTX 3080 was priced at $699 when it was released two years ago. Huang said gamers need to compare performance on a price point-to-price point basis, adding the new Ada Lovelace cards are “monumentally better” versus the prior products at equivalent price points.
Doomsday Machine (part 2 of 7) Star Trek TOS 1966-1968
Enjoy this brief section. It’s VERY TIMELY given the geo-political situation right now.
China is going to kill an Australian citizen who smuggles drug in China. Should the US and other allies help Australia to rescue him?
It wasn’t just China
In April 2005 my country, Indonesia, convicted nine Australians for attempting to smuggle 8.3 kg (18 lb) of heroin out of Indonesia. The heroin was valued at around A$4 million and was bound for Australia.
Two Ringleaders Andre Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were sentenced to death and executed on 29 April 2015.
Six other members, Si Yi Chen, Michael Chugaj, Tan Duc Thanh Nguyen, Matthew Norman, Scott Rush and Martin Stephens, were sentenced to life and another, Renae Lawrence, to a 20-year sentence
Of course,there are large public outcry in Australia, even the BBC says that we have a new “appetite” for execution
the Australian Prime Minister is sending us ultimatum about the death sentence, but the law is the law.
We also sentenced to death a Briton that tried smuggle drugs, her name is Lindsay Sandiford
Our Government takes a harsh stance on drugs, everyone who tried to smuggle or distribute drugs will be treated harshly.
If Indonesia can do this, then PRC surely can do this. I respect China’s Government’s tough stance on drugs, especially considering a dark historical connection between China and drugs (opium war).
The Angel Purza
My father did not really like cats. I moved back home in 2013 to care for him, he was 93 at the time, and adopted a kitten 3 years later. Dad was bedridden the last 3 months of his life so I made sure his door was securely closed to keep Purza out. One day I heard Dad moaning in pain over the intercom, so I hurried to get his meds.
While I was getting them, Dad stopped moaning, which scared me because it was usually 30 minutes or more after his meds before he would quiet down. I ran to his room and noticed his door was open.
What I saw in his room makes me cry even though it’s 4 years later. Dad was in his bed with the head of it slightly raised, and laying beside him with her head right by his ear, was Purza and she was purring away. She has a very loud purr.
Dad had his hand on her, a look of peace on his face, and he was sound asleep. That was the first time he’d fallen asleep without pain meds in over 6 months.
I had named my kitten The Queen of Purza but right then I seriously thought of changing it to The Angel Purza, because that’s what she was.
Journey – Who’s Crying Now
What was the most bone-chilling sentence a loved one ever said to you?
“I just want to go home”
It’s been 15 years. I’m just barely able to look at the accident photos.
“I just want to go home”
Those were the last words my late husband said 7 minutes before he passed away in a horrible trucking accident.
It was March 6th 2007. The day that would forever change my life.
I thought it was strange to receive a call from my husband so late in the night. I was already in bed when the phone rang. I picked up the phone to hear my husband’s voice on the other end. “Is everything okay?” I asked. “Everything is fine”, he replied. He began to tell me how sorry he is if he woke me but a feeling of urgency came over him with the need to call me. For the next few minutes he began to share his gratitude in letting me know how much I meant to him.
Even though Jeff was the mushy, loving kind of guy, him calling me at 1:30 in the morning was something out of the norm. His voice sounded strange. I told him to please pull over because he sounded tired. He reassured me that he was just a few miles away from the truck stop where he could pull over to get some sleep. I made him promise me that he would. He gave me his word. We hung up saying I love you and he stated, “I just want to go home.” And we hung up.
Seven minutes later, my husband, Jeff died. He got in a terrible accident in his big rig and didn’t survive.
I still think about him every day. My life stopped the day he left. It’s been 15 years and sometimes it still feels like it was yesterday.
RIP JEFFREY
YOU WILL FOREVER BE IN MY HEART
Do Chinese people think Chinese political system is better than that of western democratic countries?
Yes, it is true that in the last century when China was groping its way forward, there were some mainland Chinese who thought Western democracy was great. But over the years, the Chinese have not fallen for the lies of democracy woven by the West, and have not been swayed by the West’s vicious attacks on socialism. Now, China has achieved tremendous development through its own system, its own socialist system, and its own democracy, so they have reason to thumb their noses at the Western fake democratic system.
1. The West, which did not achieve its development through a democratic system, now repeatedly propagates democracy as a prior condition for development. How can this kind of ideological core that confuses black and white not be ridiculous?
In the 16th and 17th centuries, Spain, the first empire on which the sun never sets, blazed trade routes across the oceans. It violently overthrew the Aztec, Inca and Mayan civilizations, and established a large number of colonies in North and South America. The Spaniards gained great wealth through large-scale mining in the American continent, but dealt a devastating blow to the indigenous people who originally lived there.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, Britain, the second empire on which the sun never sets, established itself as an international political and military power through numerous foreign wars. Not only did it destroy the maritime power of France and Spain, but it also seized almost all of France’s colonies on the North American continent and in India.
The reason why the United States, the world’s biggest power, has achieved its present achievements is that the United States is the only peaceful place in the first half of the 20th century. This is the decisive condition for the United States to achieve productivity improvement.Western countries now frequently advocate the benefits of democracy, as if they have become the world’s developed countries because they practice it. But throughout the development history of Western countries, there is no true connection between democracy and development.
2. Western democracy has long existed in name only. How can the “democratic farce” that has occurred so frequently in recent years not be funny?
The West is keen to label itself as “democratic and free”. But “freedom and equality” seem to exist only in the mouths of politicians, while racial discrimination and money elections have never stopped.
In the United States, the same American people are subjected to great discrimination and injustice just because of their race. The frequent violent law enforcement against black people and the existence of so-called “Indian reservations” are all signs that the meaning of democracy has long been misinterpreted.
Western countries regard the proud “universal suffrage” as the most important concrete power of democracy. But in recent years, democratic elections have been monopolized by money and shady practices. Anyone who wants to become a government official must give a large amount of money as political contributions, otherwise, he or she can only stay out of “democracy”. However, the means of production in Western capitalist societies are not equal, and the social elite, which is a minority of society, holds the vast majority of material wealth. Nominally, all people have broad and equal rights, but in practice, democracy for the poor is only a formality.
Democracy is a right shared by all citizens, so how can we talk about “freedom and equality” by dividing democracy into levels?
3. China’s development is a road explored by itself based on experience and lessons, and advances with “serve for people” as a guide. Is it not reasonable to ridicule western democracy because it has not copied western democracy but has always been able to protect the interests of the people?
The West has been promoting procedural democracy, characterized by elections, on a global scale. But in fact, people have the right to democracy only for a short time when they vote, and then go dormant after the voting is over. This actually dissolves “democracy” in substance.
China, on the other hand, regards “People’s democracy” as the manifestation of democracy. China is now practicing “whole-process people’s democracy,” in which local departments hold public opinion meetings and expert seminars before introducing major laws, plans, and policies, and also consult the public on websites. China’s democratic system fully satisfies the people’s need for political participation and deliberation, and the people can exercise their democratic rights in different fields.China has truly put into practice the ideal of “democracy” that Western societies always talk in their mouths.
The false slogan of “Western-style democracy” has long been ineffective, and it will not fool the increasingly awakened developing countries. If the West continues to deceive itself with such theories, what it will get in the end will not be a democracy, but a huge social struggle.
The Charlie Daniels Band – The South’s Gonna Do It Again
Twilight Zone – A Small Talent For War
The experiment is over.
BULLETIN: THOUSANDS OF SOLDIERS DEPLOYING ON STREETS OF LONDON
Why are the mainland Chinese people so patriotic?
The answer is pretty simple
Imagine if you live in a country, that almost every foreign power you came across in the last 200 years has fucked you over. Killed, raped, plunder, carve your country piece by piece, and humiliated you to the extent, inhuman.
And now, finally! Just when you see the light at the end of the tunnel. But the foreign powers, the very same ones who put these signs in your country a century ago ( Change the word Chinese to whatever your ethnicity or nationality ). Are shamelessly see themselves on the moral high ground, portraying themselves as the good guys demonizing you, trying everything to shove you back into the shit hole you’ve worked so hard to climb up from.
Would you not too, become patriotic?
I know I would.
Russian Duma Speaker: If the west doesn’t stop arming Ukraine . . .
The Speaker of the Russian Duma, Vyacheslav Volodin, publicly stated today if the west doesn’t stop sending weapons and supply mercenaries to Ukraine, “tomorrow they will have problems that are much more serious than those that are now.”
He went on to say “American satellites and missiles are for military operations and Ukrainians are assigned the role of consumables.”
This comes as Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned yet again, “the United States risks becoming a Combatant in Ukraine war” . . .
It was just yesterday that Russian President Putin reminded the West that Russia has sophisticated nuclear weapons an it “will use them” to protect Russia.
Since Russia began its Special Military Operation inside Ukraine, it has repeatedly cautioned and warned outside entities they risk military attack if they interfere. Yet the USA, the UK, France, and all of NATO, persist in interfering.
One wonders how long it will be, before Russia decides they’ve had enough, and starts firing missiles at “decision-making centers” so that people facilitating the deaths of Russians in Ukraine, can experience battle up close and personal as a consequence of the decisions they’ve been making?
Is it true that many anti-CCP Chinese became pro-CCP after having learnt how Western media are biased against China?
I grew up in Canada. My perceptions of China were formed by reading books such as Jung Chang’s “White Swans” and her account of the nightmarish upheavals of the Cultural Revolution, and spending time with relatives who had fled China during the civil war to settle in Hong Kong. In fact, my mom’s family moved from Shanghai to Hong Kong early in the 20th century.
As a kid, I regularly went to Hong Kong to visit my relatives there. This was before the handover. I recall in the early 1990s going to a place in the New Territories that overlooked Shenzhen and peering into “Red China.” I felt like I was gazing into an alien place (I had the same feeling standing at the DMZ peering into North Korea lol).
My perceptions about China and the CPC started to change when I started working in Hong Kong in the late 1990s. I had to travel into China for business, and it was startling to see how rapidly the country was developing. It blew my preconceptions of China as a backward, totalitarian dystopia where everyone is a drone following the orders of their communist overlords out of the water.
Doing business in China, especially as a foreigner, is not easy. I left (figurative) blood on the ground. But over the course of two decades of traveling there, it also gave me a ringside seat to witness one of the biggest economic miracles in history.
That miracle didn’t come from luck or rest solely on the backs of hard working Chinese. It came from astute and pragmatic policymaking, a recognition and willingness to address domestic challenges. It involved creating a business environment attractive for international investment. All while managing the third largest country in the world by area with over 4X the population of the USA.
I don’t see China through rose-tinted glasses. In my travels there, I’ve seen issues such as corruption first-hand (a business partner was detained and beaten by PSB for the sole reason that a friend he knew had been busted for corruption). I’ve seen the problems of Islamic extremism (an employee almost got blown up by a Uyghur extremist flying from Urumqi to Shanghai). I’ve seen the ongoing issues of poverty and inequality. After the Sichuan earthquake, I volunteered to rebuild houses and saw the frustration and desperation of victims because of the slow government response.
In other words, I’m no CPC apologist.
But I do have a lot of respect and even admiration for what the CPC has accomplished in China in the last 40 years, taking it from one of the poorest countries in the world to its second largest economy.
And because I have spent so much time traveling there, I can recognize Western media bias towards China when I see it.
The premise of this question is wrong. If you are anti CPC, any biases in media coverage of China will simply strengthen your preconceptions. It is precisely because I’ve spent so much time traveling in China and seen the massive changes for the better over the past couple of decades that I can perceive a biased media narrative.
The BEST Garlic Naan
Dottie
My cat is named Dottie, her siblings and her were found in a puddle of muddy water after flooding. She’s a rescue and we adopted her.
A month ago, I was crying in my bedroom because I thought I was fat.
Dottie came upstairs and rolled over for pats. She purred and cuddled with me.
She played a game where she sat behind my blinds and opened them and shut them.
She lay down in the sink because she thought it was comfy.
She did everything to make me stop crying.
What is it like to live in a country with “freedom to roam” laws (Norway, Sweden, etc.)?
When you grow up with freedom to roam, you consider it simply “normal” and do not really reflect on the fact that alternative arrangements are possible and indeed common in other countries in the world.
As a kid in Norway, I spent countless hours in forests and mountains, and the idea that someone might own the mountain or the forest and therefore have the power to prevent me from something as trivial as taking a walk never entered my mind.
[My favourite kind of playground as a young teen. Probably not public land, but the Right to Roam makes this kinda thing both legal and common.]
Sure owners have exclusive rights to (most) commercially relevant activities. If you want to chop down a forest and sell the timber, then you have to be the owner, but it makes no sense to have similar restrictions on simply walking. There’s a lot of nature in Norway and not very many people, apart from a few small areas very close to our largest cities, there’s always going to be plenty of space for everyone.
The practical effect is that most Norwegians have a closer relationship to nature, especially the local nature around where they grew up than we otherwise would. It was our playground, our home, our source of blueberries and mushrooms, cloudberries and trout. It was our gym and our running-path, and probably at some point you had a secret treehouse in some suitably hidden part of the forest.
And yet, you don’t really notice the benefits as anything extraordinary until you’ve tried the alternative.
As you grow older, your range of options expand. In the last half of my teenage years I started taking multi-day hikes in the mountain-ranges of Norway with my friends.
[Trollheimen, literally “Home of Trolls” – one of my favourite mountain-ranges]
Pictures can’t possibly do it justice. You have to be there. You have to wake up at 6am to what you at first assume to be thunder, but then discover to be a herd of reindeer coming out of the fog and jogging down the valley past the cabin you’ve slept in. You have to take a (short) swim in the clear but cold water to get rid of sweat and feel alive in a way you won’t in any office on earth. You have to leave your watch at home, spend a week and then discover that you’ve miscounted the days and it’s been 8 days, not 7.
The Right to Roam is, to a substantial degree, what makes Norway our country. We’ve got a lot of rather neat nature, and without the Right to Roam, we’d risk having scant opportunities to experience most of it.
I tried the alternative 2 years ago, visiting Alentejo, a rural area of Portugal to go hiking there with a small group of other Norwegians. Alentejo is trying to attract more tourists, and towards this end have created a number of paths that are open to the general public for wandering, but apart from these paths there is no freedom to roam in Portugal.
In just a week of wandering in Portugal we ran into at least half a dozen problems of varying severity caused by this lack of freedom. Shortcuts we couldn’t take because that’d mean trespassing on someone elses land. Angry dogs on the path that we couldn’t just go around for the same reason. Once we got yelled at by an angry farmer because we were eating our picnic lunch in the shade under a cork tree about 20 feet from the path — it just so happened that that tree was on his property, so legally he was right, we were trespassing. But at the same time, we were sitting in the grass eating lunch. We’d be gone 30 minutes later anyway, and we caused no harm to anyone or anything. (as it was we were able to bribe him with a piece of chocolate cake and a glass of wine, in exchange for which he let us stay)
[Trespassing picnic in Alentejo, near Castello de Vide; chocolate-cake in the lower right saved us from expulsion]
Is it important that the US stays as the most powerful country in the world? Why or why not?
Good God, I hope not!
USA is the most militant nation in human history. No other country has fought as many wars and caused as much death and destruction as USA has.
USA has also sanctioned dozens of countries and caused untold human suffering.
USA has instigated the current proxy war in Ukraine. The blowback has been tremendous: hyperinflation and high fuel prices in all Western countries. Europe is suffering the most.
USA is now trying to instigate a proxy war in Taiwan. USA just won’t let up on its imperialism and militarism.
North Indian Chicken Korma
NATO INTEL CLASSIFIED AS “SECRET” BEING GIVEN TO UKRAINE; SOME HAS COME INTO MY POSSESSION
Military documents Classified as “SECRET” from NATO, have been revealed publicly, and they show the extent to which NATO is actively assisting Ukraine with targeting info to KILL Russian troops. The release of these documents proves that NATO is, in fact, an actual facilitator of combat against Russia in Ukraine. What NATO is doing is actually CAUSING Russian troops to die.
The documents below were secured by criminal computer hackers working against Ukraine. The hacker group calls themselves “BEREGINI.”
I have had no contact with anyone from that group and I did not solicit these documents, or participate in any of the efforts which got them.
The Hackers posted the documents publicly on the Internet. That’s where I got them.
Below, you will see screen shots of SOME of what the Hackers made public.
For the most part, they are GPS targeting coordinates, with Identifying categories listing what type of Russian military hardware is at each location, so Ukraine can attack them and destroy or kill them, like this one:
Ukraine has used this type of information over and over, to attack and kill Russian Army troops.
Other documents released by the Beregini Hacker group include NATO Maps of Russian Electronic Warfare gear, and Counter-Battery Radar positions, like this one:
And when NATO supplies such maps to Ukraine, they also include a detailed description of exactly what is at each location. Like this for the map shown above:
In many cases there are lengthy lists of military GPS coordinates, the type of equipment at each GPS point, thus giving Ukraine literally dozens of targets at a time, to hit, like this one:
Americans and Europeans need to understand, this is NOT benign “assistance” to Ukraine. This is military operational and targeting information specifically designed to help Ukraine attack and destroy by force, the military of Russia.
This violates the NATO Treaty!
Specifically, Article 8 of the NATO Treaty provides as follows:
Each Party declares that none of the international engagements now in force between it and any other of the Parties or any third State is in conflict with the provisions of this Treaty, and undertakes not to enter into any international engagement in conflict with this Treaty. (Emphasis mine)
The Treaty specifically requires NATO member states “not to enter into any international engagement in conflict with this Treaty” and yet that is precisely what NATO itself is doing with the Russia-Ukraine situation. They have “entered into” an “international engagement” . . .
On its face, NATO’s activities with Ukraine are entering into an engagement . . . NATO is supplying intelligence and literal targeting information. That, in and of itself, is entering into an engagement!
Aside from violating the NATO Treaty, what NATO is doing is causing Russia to have to decide whether WE are “combatants” against Russia? If Russia decides that we ARE “participants” then Russia would have a legal right to bomb . . . us.
Think about that.
Is Xi Jinping the Terminator who tries to take the dominance of the whole world?
Xi Jinping hasn’t done anything to dominate the world. He launched the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to help developing countries build their infrastructure.
He finalized RCEP, the world’s largest free trade bloc.
He’s been leading BRICS, a powerful economic and security alliance.
He hasn’t waged any war.
He has been pursuing diplomacy throughout the Middle East rather than bombing the shit out of the region. Recently, he signed a 25-year cooperation deal with Iran.
He has been negotiating with the Taliban instead of invading and occupying Afghanistan for 20 years.
He has invited all nations to participate in China’s space station program, including the United States. Recall that USA banned China from the ISS.
The Terminator is an American invention which is very appropriate. America is the real Terminator.
When is China going to collapse?
Not anytime in the foreseeable future. Certainly not within this century. This is China’s century.
China’s economy is simply too big to collapse quickly. The same, by the way, holds true for the US economy.
While China’s economy faces many challenges, so do all other major economies around the globe. Will any of them collapse? No.
China will solve its problems. Never underestimate China. Never bet against China.
Kitty Cat thoughts
Every cat is different. But, research has indicated that cats only verbalize (meow) to humans. They don’t meow to other cats. (EDIT: I do not claim that this research is valid, merely that it exists!) They communicate with other cats through their own forms of verbalizations, yes they do, and through hisses, body posture, tail and ear positions. I happen to have a 3 year old cat who I found at the house we were buying – kitty was sickly with oozing eye. Had to grab this kitten and take her to the vet. She’s fine now. But, she loves to greet me with a loud meow when I enter the bedroom and she is sleeping. If I meow back, she will meow back to me. Her second meow almost always sounds like a question, as the sound rises at the end. I sometimes do meows that are “questions” – but she will “talk” to me for quite a while before growing tired of it. She is the most vocal kitty I’ve ever had and none have ever done the meow greeting that she does.
Tucker Carlson: This is insane
This is pretty good.
China heating product exports to Europe surge
By FAN FEIFEI | China Daily | Updated: 2022-09-14 07:21 An employee sorts air conditioner parts, bound for export, at a plant in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province. [Photot by Hu Guolin/for China Daily] High-quality appliances at good prices are increasingly favored by Europeans Despite it still being summer in Europe, China's exports of heating appliances, including electric heaters, electric blankets and air source heat pumps, have witnessed explosive growth this year as the continent is in the grip of its biggest energy crisis in decades, with natural gas supplies from Russia becoming volatile, industry experts said. The European Union's statistics bureau showed that the annual inflation rate of energy prices in the EU reached 38.3 percent as of July, among which natural gas and electricity prices jumped 52.2 percent and 31.1 percent, respectively. Many European countries have hastened efforts to push forward the transition of their energy structures. China's General Administration of Customs said the country's exports of electric blankets and electric heaters skyrocketed 97 percent and 23 percent year-on-year, respectively, in the first seven months, given that European consumers are expanding their purchases of heating appliances ahead of the coming winter. The European market has been a major growth engine for China's home appliance exports. There is surging demand for imported electric heaters, especially in Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain and Germany, while demand for electric blanket imports more than doubled in Greece, Italy, Poland, Germany and the Netherlands.... Read more
Genesis – a trick of the tail.
Russia: Upping the ante’
Yesterday, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered a “partial” war mobilization in Russia. Most folks do not grasp the severity of what that means, or even its historical significance.
Only THREE TIMES in all of its history, has Russia declared a war mobilization. The first time for World War One. The second time, for World War 2. The third time . . . yesterday.
What does THAT tell you about the seriousness of the present situation and the deadly seriousness of Russia?
It is historical fact that Russia lost twenty-seven-million people fighting the Nazis in World War 2.
When the citizens of Russia found out that the government of their next door neighbor, Ukraine, had actual NAZI units in its military, and those NAZI units were firing artillery shells at mortars at the “Russian-speaking” civilians in the then-Ukrainian oblasts (states) of Luhansk and Donetsk, and that the Ukrainina government had OUTLAWED the speaking of Russian in all of Ukraine, the Russian people saw the writing on the wall. What NAZIs in Germany did to jews, NAZI in Ukraine were starting to do with Russians.
As such, the Russian people told their President, ‘Not again. We’re not going through this NAZI thing again. Kill it now before it grows.” And that is exactly what Russia is doing in Ukraine, right now.
The fact that the United States is aiding and abetting the Nazi government of Ukraine, is incomprehensible. Yet that is precisely what the US federal government is doing, sending billions of dollars in aid and military hardware to the Nazi regime in Kiev.
Does that make the US Congress – which voted and approved this aid – “Nazi collaborators?”
In any event, Russia is taking off the gloves. Yesterday, Russia began calling-up 300,000 reserves and last night, they began moving tens of thousands of tanks and pieces of armor, out of storage, and are sending all of it into Ukraine.
The G7 had announced $600 billion for gobal infrastructure programmes in poor countries to compete with China’s formidable Belt and Road Initiative. Are you in support or against this move?
Well, of course, I support it. Anything that may help developing countries should be a good thing.
However, do I think it will succeed? Unfortunately, no.
Western nations cannot coordinate such a massive project. Too much politics. Too much capitalist greed. Too much corruption. Too much incompetence.
Western nations cannot build infrastructure as quickly and efficiently as China can. Not even close.
And it’s a hard sell internationally. Most developing countries do not trust the West, the same people who colonialized them, sanctioned them, overthrew their governments, stole their natural resources, treated them like basket cases.
China, on the other hand, has respected them, helped them with infrastructure and vaccination, and never once ever invaded them. Why do you think over 149 countries have signed up for the Belt and Road Initiative?
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea S03E07 Deadly Waters
What is the kindest thing a pet has done for you?
I saw an orange feral kitten eating out of a trash can. After seeing him a few days in a row, I don’t know why, but I decided to trap him with a humane trap, get him neutered, and try to tame him. I spent a few weeks keeping him in a large wire dog crate/cage in a spare bedroom.
I would leave regular food and water in the cage, and then try to entice him with chicken baby food (it’s called Kitty Crack by cat rescues) on a plastic spoon, duck taped to a long stick.
He had a favorite hiding place made out of a shoebox with a t-shirt over it, the neck opening was the ‘door’, and he would stick out his head and lick the baby food out of the spoon. I talked to him a lot, read him books, sang to him and felt a fool. I thought anyone who could have watched this grey haired lady trying to convince this kitten to trust her would be amused.
One day, after the chicken baby food on a stick/spoon ritual, he paused, looked at me, and did this long meow. Never could I describe it, just thinking about the moment gives me chillbumps. Then he came out of his hiding place and beckoned to me, putting his front paws through the cage, to pet him.
He has trusted me, completely, utterly, ever since. He hides from everyone else. It was a magical and miraculous thing. He is the most loving, devoted pet I have ever had. And I will never let him down.
If vanilla beans are so expensive, then why does vanilla bean ice cream cost the same as every other ice cream?
A good question, and the answer is somewhat involved. I’m an artisan ice cream maker, and I have very direct experience relating to this topic.
First of all, you can dismiss the cheaper brands of ice cream, as they won’t use genuine natural Vanilla Extract, which is made from the Vanilla bean. They will use Vanillin, which is one of the most important flavour compounds found in natural Vanilla Extract. But natural Vanilla Extract contains hundreds of flavour compounds, giving a far richer taste experience. Vanillin can be extracted from wood pulp, amongst other sources, and is cheap.
Another way to avoid the burden of the very high cost of natural Vanilla Extract, is simply to use very little of it. I bought a tub of Vanilla ice cream here in Scotland, made by one of the major brands. It’s ingredient list stated that it use natural Vanilla Extract. This company have a reputation for being commercially ruthless, so I was intrigued that they were using such a costly ingredient. Well, I couldn’t taste the Vanilla Extract at all. I’m sure they were complying with the law, and were adding Vanilla Extract to the mix. But probably by the dropper-full. So that is one way to keep your margins up. They will have been counting on their customers not really noticing the lack of Vanilla taste in their product, as unflavoured ice cream is not far off Vanilla, to most people’s taste buds.
When I began making ice cream in 2015 I could buy top-grade natural Madagascan Vanilla Extract at reasonable cost, about £75 per litre (about $100). The following year it had gone up to £90. OK, I can live with that… But then in March 2017 a cyclone hit NE Madagascar – where all the Vanilla orchids are grown – just two weeks before the harvest was to begin. The crop that year was wiped out. Overnight the price of Vanilla Beans quadrupled, as did the cost of top-grade Vanilla Extract. What would have cost me £90 one day, cost £360 the following day. And the prices of Vanilla beans and extract have stayed up at that level ever since, which is hard to explain. I believe one would need to examine the politics of Madagascar to find the answer.
So I had a choice: use less extract, or raise the retail price of our ice cream. I did neither. We did not put up prices, and I refused to cut back on the Vanilla Extract. I chose instead to live with our #1 best-seller having a pitiful margin. I assumed this was a temporary situation. That was a wrong assumption..!
For a couple of years we did have our larger 500gm tub of Vanilla ice cream at a higher price than our other 15 flavours. (With the small 125ml tubs, no price difference.) But this was awkward, both for us in the office, and for the shops we supply. So 6 months ago we had a general price increase – due to the tremendous inflationary pressures of the global situation just now – and we got rid of that two-tier pricing. We simply chose to slightly increase our margins on the other flavours, and have an acceptable margin on our Vanilla tubs.
It of course is possible to save costs (at the expense of quality) by choosing a lesser grade of Vanilla Extract. But in my view that is rarely a wise choice in a crowded field. A race towards the mediocre? Not an attractive proposition.
In 2017 and 2018, many smaller brands of ice cream simply stopped making Vanilla altogether, due to the very high cost of the extract. I know one company in Scotland that began heavily promoting their “Traditional” ice cream flavour – the one with no flavour compounds added – and made no mention of the fact that they had dropped their Vanilla ice cream altogether at that point.
So try tasting your choices of Vanilla ice cream. It should have a clear and lovely rich taste of the natural Vanilla orchid bean. If it doesn’t, then maybe they are using Vanillin, or maybe they are simply using a very small amount of Vanilla Extract in their product.
Further note… A few days ago we took part in a major Scottish ice cream competition, which highlighted some of the issues with Vanilla. In the Vanilla category, the winning ice cream was one described as “Double Cream Vanilla”. I went to their stand and bought some, to see what it was like, after all, they won the Gold award. It certainly had a LOT of cream, much more than most people would consider the right level – but as a one-off I suppose it will cater to certain tastes. But the shocking thing was that neither I nor my 32 yr old son could detect any hint of Vanilla in it. We also tried a Vanilla ice cream from a different company at this, the Royal Highland Show. The other company’s ice cream had won Silver. It was a good ice cream, and did actually taste of Vanilla, albeit weaker than I would have liked.
This reflects the high price of natural Vanilla Extract these days: ice cream makers are using less and less of it in making their Vanilla ice cream. This wasn’t news to me. But I was shocked that the judges awarded Gold to a Vanilla ice cream which had no taste of Vanilla in it at all.
Rainbow – L.A. Connection
Classic.
US seeking hegemony with nuclear force to harm other countries and itself
- Source
- China Military Online
- Editor
- Chen Zhuo
- Time
- 2022-09-23 18:00:15
Recently, according to a report from the website of the US Defense News, Gen. Anthony Cotton, commander of the US Air Force Global Strike Command, stated that the US military enterprises are facing supply chain problems due to the impact of the COVID-19 epidemic and the recent international situation, which have shown influence on the progress of the US nuclear-weapons modernization programs. Analysts believed that the supply chain problem is just one of the multiple problems faced by the US nuclear-weapons modernization programs, and the negative consequences of the US’ “seeking hegemony with nuclear force” to others will boomerang on itself as well.
The number of nuclear weapons remains high
Since the Obama administration, the US has been promoting nuclear modernization programs. In fact, the US nuclear arsenal has been massive with no marked problem of aging. The so-called nuclear-weapons modernization programs simply serve as a cover for the US to iteratively update its nuclear arsenal to maintain its hegemony with nuclear superiority.
It is reported the US has possessed 5,428 nuclear warheads as of January 2022, ranking top in the world. The US nuclear strikes mainly include three types, that is, with land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles and strategic bombers, forming a 3-D nuclear strike system of land, sea and air. In addition, the US has a large number of small tactical nuclear weapons. Data show that the US has about 400 nuclear bombs, which can be carried and dropped by multi-model fighter jets.
Although the US has issued documents such as the Interim National Security Strategic Guidance and 2022 Nuclear Posture Review and Missile Defense Review after the Biden administration came to power, which repeatedly emphasized the need to lower the role of nuclear weapons, it has in fact been upgrading its nuclear arsenal under the table.
In terms of strategic delivery vehicles, the US intends to achieve all-round upgrading of land, sea and air to enhance its comprehensive strike capability. Specific measures include the development of the Sentinel ICBM to replace the Minuteman III ICBM, the construction of the Columbia-class ballistic missile submarine to replace the Ohio-class, and the development of the Long Range Strike Bomber (B-21) as a platform for future air-based nuclear strikes.
In terms of nuclear warheads, the US has been stepping up the development of the W87-1 nuclear warhead fit to its Sentinel ICBM, the W80-4 for its Long Range Standoff weapon cruise missile, and the W93 to replace its naval W76-1 and W88 submarine-launched nuclear warheads, etc.
Seeking hegemony with nuclear force is unpopular
The US has spared no effort to promote its nuclear-weapons modernization programs, which directly reflects its Cold War mentality and hegemonic logic. Its radical approach like this is bound to bring harm to the other countries and itself alike.
On the one hand, the US has invested heavily in nuclear modernization programs, which is in turn sure to be a heavy burden on the already troubled US economy. According to US media, the capital investment required of the nuclear forces budget over the next 30 years will reach US$1.5 to US$2 trillion.
Given the serious inflation in the US and the sharp downward revision of the economic growth forecast in 2023, such huge capital investment will definitely affect the development of the US economy. Otherwise, these funds could have been used to alleviate domestic social conflicts and improve the quality of life of the people.
On the other hand, the US upgrading of nuclear weapons will also affect the world’s strategic situation and destroy the strategic balance. In particular, the US has attached great importance to low-yield nuclear weapons in the process of advancing its nuclear-weapons modernization programs. The nuclear explosive package (NEP) of the US-developed B61-12 can be adjusted in the range of 300 tons to 50,000 tons as required and can be carried and dropped by tactical aircraft such as F-15E fighter-bombers and F-35 stealth fighters. Analysts believed that the measure taken by the US will lower the threshold for the application of nuclear weapons and be prone to leading to nuclear misjudgments, thereby placing global security at major risks related to nuclear weapons.
Putin issues DEVASTATING warning to NATO if they even try it
What are some of the worst deals in history?
In 1965, a French lawyer André-François Raffray found an apartment for investment purposes. Jeanne Calment a 90 year old woman was the owner of that property with no living heirs.
Instead of purchasing it, he struck a deal with Jeanne that he would pay her a sum of 2,500 francs, about £330 a month, until she died after which he would get to keep the apartment.
He was only 47 years old at the time, so he thought he would have plenty of time with the apartment to benefit from once she’s gone. 30 years later, he died at the age of 77 and on the other hand Jeanne was still kicking it at 120.
Not only that, after his death his family had to keep paying Jeanne for two more years when she met her maker at the ripe age of 122 years.
It is believed that she received more than double the value of that property.
Her only comment on the situation was, “In life, one sometimes makes bad deals.”
Maybe, she was able to live longer as the stress of paying bills was eliminated due to this deal.
Poland Begins Distribution of Iodine Pills for “Nuclear” Emergencies; Passes “Protection” Law looks suspiciously like Martial Law
Poland has commenced the public distribution of Iodine Pills to its citizens, saying they fear a “nuclear incident” – possible an attack against Ukraine’s Zaporozyhe Nuclear Power Plant, causing radiation to enter Poland.
This comes just one day after Russian President Vladimir Putin made clear Russia is willing to use nuclear weapons if Russia is endangered.
To anyone paying close attention to this situation, especially between Ukraine/NATO and Russia, one might get the idea that Poland already knows NATO plans for Russia over Ukraine, and Poland realizes it __must__ give out iodine because Russia’s response might be nuclear!
More importantly, however, Poland enacted a new “Protection of People” law which contains provisions like “mandatory quarantine” “mandatory demolition of buildings” “take over of private property” “no demonstrations or gatherings allowed” “mandatory evacuation” “mandatory take over of private buildings or apartments” “mandatory prices.”
The law goes into effect on Jan 1st 2023 and can be INVOKED by the Polish legislature with just majority of votes at any moment.
(HT Remark: It’s almost enough to make a thinking person wonder if Poland already knows that World War 3 __will_ begin shortly?)
Have you ever sabotaged food because someone was stealing it?
I didn’t sabotage my food. Apparently it’s illegal to teach someone not to eat YOUR food the same way you teach a dog not to eat your shoes when you can’t just hit them.
I did, however, change what was in my lunchbox so that it was incredibly painful for someone to eat.
See, I really like spicy food. At the time this takes place, I kept a bottle of Fiery Fool in my lunchbox. I’d put it on my sandwich or in my chili, so on and so forth. If I was tired in the morning because I’d stayed up too late, I’d preemptively apply hot sauce.
Well, someone keeps taking my food. They didn’t touch it on the days that the hot sauce was already applied (Because the way that I apply my sauce it turns the other sauces orange, so you can’t not see that it’s been altered.)
So instead I mixed peppers directly into the food. My family grows ghost peppers among other things, so it wasn’t hard to procure the right peppers. Shredded it, smothered my sandwich with it, making sure there were seeds everywhere.
See, this isn’t sabotage, this is something I would do anyway. I literally kept a bottle of Hellfire: Fiery Fool in my lunchbox.
There is no excuse.
It was also known that I liked my food incredibly spicy. Someone once tried a sauce I made and was just a few Scoville units from literally breathing fire. So there is no one who can say that I purposefuly sabotaged my food without reading my thoughts, and this plan is not the worst thing you’d find. Or the first.
So, I leave my hell sandwich in my lunchbox in the fridge and go about my day. My lunch period was not the first lunch period in the day, so the culprit was able to get to my sandwich before I could eat it.
It’s not even five minutes into the lunch period when Mr. Mikers (Fake name) comes running out of the room freaking out, begging for the fire department. I get called into the principal’s office later because I “sabotaged Mikers’ food”. I simply turned the lunchbox around to show him that MY name was sharpied on the back of the box, and then pulled out the sauce, and said I carry this with me every day. What I wanted to know was why Mikers thought it was okay to take a student’s food (I couldn’t afford a school lunch)
Never touched my food again.
WFLD Channel 32 – Lost in Space – “Blast Off Into Space” (Complete Broadcast, 4/16/1980)
Very interesting.
The MCCTv (FuzzyMemoriesTV) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit whose primary mission is the preservation and display of off-air, early home videotape recordings (70s to early 80s, mostly) recorded off of TV (in Chicago or other cities now too); things which would likely be lost if not sought out and preserved digitally. If you have any old 1970s videotapes recorded off of TV let us know at: tapes@fuzzy.tv
What do Americans think of Australia?
Don’t laugh, but my first real introduction to Oz was Paul Hogan’s ‘Crocodile Dundee.’ The images in that movie resonated with me as a teen in 1980s Texas. To me, Australia appeared to be hot, arid, and tinged with swagger and lots of cultural traits that a kid from Texas could readily identify. Paul Hogan was even wearing a cowboy hat and boots, for crissakes!
And later came Steve Irwin. – Same spirit, same bull-by-the-horns high energy and easy-going non-abrasiveness. What red-blooded young male wouldn’t like to kick up his heels at the local pub with a mate with a penchant for wrestling crocodiles?
I was in the U.S. Air Force when I got my chance. I received word they were looking for a few guys to go to Alice Springs for a few months. I quickly made my way to my squadron headquarters; before I even knew what I’d be doing there. ‘Screw it. I’ll figure it out,’ I thought. “By the way, where’s Alice Springs, exactly?” I said on my way out of the office.
“Oh, it’s right in the middle of ‘everything,’ I heard someone say. -Probably with a bit of sarcasm that I didn’t pick up on.
Now, if you are as naive about Australia as I was, you frame Oz with the aforementioned croc-hunters, and a whole slew of silly-looking animals that are either exceptionally cute or exceptionally deadly. If you’re more clued-in, you may even throw in Hugh Jackman, Kylie Minogue , the Hemsworth brothers, or if you’re old-school like me, the whole 5-feet tall AC/DC clan. Maybe you even picture beautiful Sydney with that iconic opera house too. But again, these were mostly pre-Internet days. It still wasn’t apparent to me where I was actually going.
I was back to my office when an office-mate inquired: “Why are you so happy?”
“I’m going to Australia”
“Where in Australia?” He asked.
“Alice Springs. It’s in the middle of everything.” I quoted.
“You mean it’s in the middle of nowhere! Dude, that place blows! There’s nothing there! You’ll be bored out of your skull!”
My heart sank. I raced to the local library after work to get on the Internet. Yep. Smack-dab in the middle of nowhere. Trying to find a silver lining, I decided to see how I could use my off-duty time in Alice Springs to go sightseeing in Sydney. That would have been nice, until I realized that Alice Springs is a full 1700 mile drive from Sydney, and just about anyplace else. I thought I was going to be snapping pictures of the Sydney Harbour bridge, but I was actually on my way to ‘Walkabout Creek.’ Ugh.
I was relieved when I landed in Brisbane. In my naivete,’ I didn’t know much about it. But it was BIG. – A lot bigger than most Americans probably know. However, I was going to be there only a few hours before I left for Alice Springs, so I toured the Airport and bought a few silly, cliche’-driven tourist trinkets for the family; a refrigerator magnet with a kangaroo, and a shark-having-tourists-over-for-lunch t-shirt, etc.
You may laugh, but I couldn’t believe how everybody sounded Australian. It was like I was in a movie! You see, Australia is delphic and Australians are elusive to many Americans to this day, because stars like Mel Gibson, Nicole Kidman, Eric Bana, Iggy Azalia and Keith Urban hide their accents so damn well. Australians in Hollywood are sneaky chameleons…
But alas, I left Brisbane for the netherworld of Alice Springs. Now, you may think I was going to tell you that Alice Springs was a sparrow-fart town in the middle of nowhere compared to Brisbane. And you’d be right. But everything that I dreaded about Alice Springs was everything that I ended up loving about Alice Springs. I got to travel to Ayers Rock, do a couple of horseriding tours, and even found a comfortable seat at the local pub. I learned that kangaroos, endearing to most Americans, can be pests and road hazards. The few crocodiles I saw in the Northern Territory were as small and lethargic as the gators in the Florida Everglades. I never saw one of those legendary funnel web spiders either, though I persisted in searching my shoes for one every morning, lest I become the ‘Stupid Dead ‘Yank’ who Didn’t Check his Shoes’ in the local newspaper…
As for the local people, there weren’t near as many wearing cowboy hats and boots in the Northern Territory as I believed there would be. But everyone was really cool. There is a rugged, independence about the people of ‘Alice’ that I really enjoyed. Even if you live in a city in the Outback, you have to be a bit of an outdoorsman on the side. The people there seemed blissfully ignorant of life along the coast, and wouldn’t have it any other way.
Had a few mates at a local pub that liked to talk American politics, but they soon bored with that. I didn’t defend well because I had no interest in it. They also picked at me a bit too, but I had learned long ago to avoid negative reactions to that stuff. That gets you respect, and they soon embraced me (not literally). The conversation soon became like any local watering hole I knew in Texas. -Sports, women and favorite beers. They got a good laugh at the ‘Fosters is Australian for beer’ tag line that was popular in the U.S. commercials. Seems that any self-respecting person in Oz didn’t agree.
My four months soon passed and I said goodbye to ‘me mates’ with a firm handshake; heading out the next morning on a Qantas red-eye flight to Honolulu. My stint in Oz was among the most memorable times in my life.
I saw 56 countries and lived in seven of them in my Air Force career, not including the 4 months I spent in Oz. But there was only one country to which I ever seriously contemplated immigrating during my time abroad. -Australia. About a year after I left, I found out about a program to get people to immigrate there, but in the end, I decided to stay in the States to be nearer my family. It was a promise I had made to my mother throughout my 23 years in the U.S. military.
But I’ll never forget the friendships I made there, and I often wonder whatever happened to the people I knew there. All of the movie-driven cliches were eroded by my time there, and I was left with a different perspective. So, what do I think of Australia?
Well, it’s a damn fine country.
Lynyrd Skynyrd – Gimme Three Steps
Pizza Delivery
I was delivering a pizza in Mountain View, CA as a teenager in about 1972. It was very dark and I finally figured out which was the correct house. The house had a little picket fence around it and I could see nothing because of the darkness. I opened the little picket fence gate, carrying the pizza. As I stepped into the yard, suddenly I heard a number of guns cocked and saw the gun barrels pointed directly at my head. I don’t know how many there were but I was surrounded by gun barrels. There were certainly more than I wanted.
Not knowing what else to do, in a very matter of fact voice I asked, “Gentlemen, how may I be of service to you?”
A disembodied voice in the darkness asked what I was carrying. I said I was carrying a pizza. At that, I heard all the guns uncocked and the arms laid down.
I heard, “Sorry, man. We saw you driving past our house a few times and thought you might be some rivals who are gunning for us.” I told them that was no problem; I understood. I told them the price of the pizza and received the money plus a nice tip! I left and walked to my car to deliver the next pizza.
When I graduated from high school, I joined the infantry. For four years, I saw more guns.
Why did you stop going to a restaurant you liked?
There was a place I used to frequent weekly. It was decently priced sit down eating, but by no means fancy dining. I would stop in almost every Monday, as I found myself driving by there at dinner time, and loved their food.
Many Wednesdays I would make the intentional trip for their steak buffet too.
Regular diner, for close to a decade. Birthday dinners for the whole family. Every time my family would come in from back east… anniversary’s… It was our go to spot.
Eventually, the couple who owned, and ran it for decades, decided it was time to retire. They handed it over to the kids.
Night and day
Those kids tried to squeeze every single last red cent out of the place.
It showed.
Patronage fell off quickly. Staffing suffered as the loyal long standing staff got tired of the daily tirades of the children and quit. The replacements weren’t great either, and were now making minimum wage. After about three months, Mom and Dad came back and took it back over. They ran it for 6 months, and then shut it down, sold the property, and it got demo’d for a crumby truck stop / convenience store / fast food plaza.
Cost cutting to the point of insanity has the inverse result of alienating loyal customers.
Why can’t the damn world just cut off China? Why? Just isolate them, whatever.
Anything is better than going to war with them, like so many in the world want to do (namely the U.S) perhaps the world should just do it’s own thing without China.
The majority of the world is anti USA and wants to cut off the USA. Only European elites support the USA and they will soon no longer like the USA.
How ignorant is the questioner. The world needs China and China isn’t a threat to anyone.
The USA will be cut off from the world one day and that will be good. I assume the questioner is just another stupid American and knows nothing. Terrible lying US media and a very dreadful education.
Why would a British person choose to live in the USA in 2022?
Image: Me with my black Labrador Retriever in our garden in Central California.
Well as a Briton, who does live in the United States of America, and has done so for over 16 years, I think I am qualified to answer the question as to why I would want to continue living here.
My answer may not the often antagonistic comments here on Quora, but I will be sincere in my answer.
I was a reluctant immigrant to the United States, it was never a dream to leave my home in Cheshire for the central valley of California. But I met an American woman who moved to live with me in England for the period of my mother’s life. My mother being my only close relative, after her death, my promise to look into moving to the US was called in. So two years into our marriage, we up rooted from England and moved to be close to my wife’s family in California.
Then I found work, found that dispite some bad experiences, the heat of a central valley Summer, only 116 degrees Fahrenheit just a few days ago. Not even locals like that kind of heat. But then on New Years Day I can sit outside with my cup of PG Tips Tea and drink happily in a temperature more akin to a late British Spring Day.
I like the opportunity to do things. I have even tried my hand at television production in a real television studio. There was never the opportunity to do that in or around my hometown in England. Now you may think anyone can have a YouTube channel, butt that is true, but my television program was broadcast television, not originally on YouTube,. It is now, just search for Blindside Fresno.
I found less social anxiety. I grew up on a council estate, what Americans may call social housing or projects. Working class you may say, the son of a gardener, when later my mother and I bought a shop, convenience store, wow the reaction from friends “Who do you think you are? Lord Muck?” Social climber extraordinaire. When I married my wife as I mentioned an American and they found that I married a school teacher, “Well woo hoo! Lardy dah!” In the US no one even bats an eyelid at my social creep upward.
Americans are in general more interested in the British? They rarely know much about us other than the stereotype, which is sad and very annoying. The stereotype doesn’t fit me too well, except the possible fact that if someone steps on my toe, I say “Sorry!”
As for the stereotypical grumbles, yes it is bad when visiting the Emergency Room to have them frisk you for a weapon or to have them ask for your credit card for a downpayment. Before anyone complains, that has happened to me. Then when I go out for a quiet coffee I can find someone in my local coffee shop who is certain that everyone within a mile radius is interested in their private conversation. Yes America has irritating loud Americans too, and many Americans hate them just as much as we British.
The sound of gunfire is also never far away. But then in my youth in the lawless realms of Cheshire gun fire was never far away either, just there the gunfire was aimed at crows magpies, Pheasant or grouse, not a fellow citizen.
Here I could drive, now I am blind my wife drives, from the sea shore to over 10,000 feet in a few hours. From the ocean to mountain tops with actual countryside for mile after mile, rather than a scrubby patch that calls itself “Green Belt”
Of course you can throw in that some of the food is awful, there is a shopping mall at every corner and the cars are just huge as are many of the people.
But like it or loathe it, the United States is now my home and I for one will not be looking to leave in the foreseeable future.
I Drink Alone – George Thorogood and the Destroyers
Twilight Zone “Examination Day”
Knock Three Times
Christoph Meili.
Some Swiss officials consider him a traitor, I don’t.
He was a security guard at UBS (Union Bank of Switzerland). In 1997, he found out that UBS was destroying WWII-related files.
He had the feeling that something shady was going on, and eventually brought home some of these files.
Turns out that these documents were lists of orphaned-assets, once owned by the Jews, then seized by the Nazis who stored them in UBS which made the informed decision of accepting the seized assets.
Thanks to that man, we now know for a fact that:
- Swiss banks were not neutral during WWII.
- UBS helped the Nazis to rob the Jews by storing assets which they knew were taken from the Jews.
- UBS also tried to get their hands on the assets themselves after the Nazi regime collapsed.
Yet, to certain members of the Swiss authorities, he’s a pure-breed traitor that deserves to be jailed. After he got charged with violation of the banking secrecy and he received death threats, he had to run away. The US eventually granted him and his family political asylum. He lived there until 2003, and eventually went back home after the charges were cancelled.
JOURNEY – “Look Into The Future”, Live & RARE; with Steve Perry 1978 (High Quality)!
Wow! Love the great guitar work at the end.
Something Going on in China; Military Convoy, 80km Long, Headed to Beijing
Something is happening in China; a convoy — 80 kilometers long – of People’s Liberation Army units, is headed toward Beijing. Brief video below, shows a small part of this troop movement.
In addition to this military convoy, we also now know that Beijing Airport canceled more than 6,000 domestic flights and international flights. Also, all tickets sold by the high-speed rail are suspended, and the rail is completely stopped until further notice.
There are now widespread and persistent RUMORS (totally unverified) claiming a “coup” against Xi Jinping, may be in progress. Other RUMORS claim President Xi is “under house arrest.” But no one is confirming any of these rumors, so what we’re left with is what can be proved: Giant military convoy heading to Beijing, and all air-rail travel stopped.
Chinese netizens have stormed Social Media timelines with reports that Beijing is under military seizure. The world, though, has no idea of what’s happening because the city is eventually cut off from the world.
According to News Highland Vision, former Chinese President, Hu Jintao and former Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao had persuaded Song Ping, the former member of the Standing Committee and retaken control of the Central Guard Bureau (CGB).
If the Chinese coup rumors are true, then the expectation is that the REAL hardliners take control. If true, a full assault on Taiwan is soon to follow.
As rumours of a military coup in China turns out to be false, here is how the claims of house arrest of Xi Jinping went viral
The rumours were fueled by large-scale cancellations of flights at Beijing airport, and a massive military buildup in the city for an exercise.
Amid large-scale cancellations of flights at Beijing airport and massive military build-up in Beijing, rumours about a coup in China are going around for the last few days. It has been claimed by many that President Xi Jinping has been removed from the post, and that he has been put under house arrest by PLA. However, nothing has been confirmed till now, and probably the rumours are not true.
In the last few days, several Chinese social media handles had claimed that Xi Jinping has been stripped of his military powers and is under house arrest. It was claimed that the ‘coup’ took place when the Chinese premier was in Samarkand in Uzbekistan to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit. According to the rumours, when Jinping was in Samarkand, his distractors in the party convinced the party’s top leadership to remove Jinping from the leadership of the army.
According to News Highland Vision, former Chinese President Hu Jintao and former Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao had persuaded Song Ping, the former member of the Politburo Standing Committee to take the control of the Central Guard Bureau (CGB) from Jinping.
Central Guard Bureau is a specialised organisation responsible for the protection of senior party members including Jinping, their families, and important foreign dignitaries in China.
After control of CGB was taken away from Jinping, the Politburo Standing Committee abolished Xi’s military authorities, it was claimed.
When Xi Jinping found out about the development, he immediately returned to Beijing, but he was apprehended at the airport on 16th September and was put under house arrest at Zhongnanhai, the rumours claimed. It is notable that the central headquarters for the Chinese Communist Party, the State Council of China, and the office of the Chinese Premier among other offices are located at Zhongnanhai in Beijing. It is also being said that the current situation in China is being controlled by former president Hu Jintao.
To add fuel to the rumour, a video was shared widely on social media claiming that it showed a large contingent of Chinese People’s Liberation Army left for Beijing, and the convoy was 80 km long.
Among many others, this claim with the video was also shared by Chinese activist Wanjun Xie. He wrote that the front of the convoy had reached Huailai near Beijing, while the end was at Zhangjiakou in Hebei Province, and therefore the convoy was 80 km road.
However, the video shared with the claim is less than 1 minute long which shows few military vehicles on the road, therefore the claim of an 80 km long military convoy could not be proven.
Another event that added to the speculation was the large-scale cancellation of flights at Beijing airport. It has been reported by many that around 6000 flights have been cancelled at the airport, with the claim that the flights over Beijing have been cancelled for military operations in view of the coup. Some reports said that 60% of flights were cancelled instead of 6000.
While other claims are hard to verify as getting information out of China is difficult, this claim actually can be easily verified, as flights are tracked by several websites. And we have found that the claims of cancellations are correct. Flight tracking site flightradar24 shows that Beijing Capital International Airport has come to almost a standstill as relatively very few flights landed at and took off from the airport.
The portal also shows that a large number of flights scheduled at the airport are either cancelled or their status is unknown. On the other hand, the portal shows that other major airports in China, like Shanghai and Hong Kong are operating normally.
Therefore, the claim that Beijing airport has seen a large number of flight cancellations is true, which can be verified from flight tracking sites.
However, it can’t be verified whether the cancellations are linked to the alleged coup in Beijing, or it is due to other reasons. There are some reports claiming that the flights were cancelled due to a military exercise which was announced in advance.
Activist and author Jennifer Zeng, who had also made the claim on the 80 km long military convoy to Beijing, tweeted today that the rumour about Xi’s arrest is not true.
However, even if the rumours of the coup are false, there are enough pointers showing that something could be brewing in Beijing. Xi Jinping attended the SCO summit, but he was not present at the dinner attended by other leaders. Covid-19 was cited as the reason for the absence, but it didn’t convince everyone.
It is also being claimed that Xi Jinping was also not present at a high-level meeting on National Defence and Military Reform in Beijing on Wednesday. Although he was already back in Beijing from Uzbekistan, he didn’t attend the meeting which was attended by several senior military leaders, like Army Commander Liu Zhenli, and General Li Qiaoming, in charge of the Theatre Command of the North.
However, there are reports of Xi Jinping addressing the conference, which means that he did attend it, and the reports of him skipping the meeting could be incorrect.
Amid all the rumours, what is interesting is that Beijing has not issued any statement on the issue so far. However, sources in the Argentine embassy in China have categorically denied the claims.
It is also notable that the ‘news’ of the coup was posted on American social media by primarily Chinese activists living outside China, and anti-China Twitter handles from Nepal and Taiwan.
Therefore, the veracity of the rumours was doubtful from the beginning, and by now it is almost certain that they were wrong, and Xi Jinping remains the President of China.
When is a person “old”?
A few weeks ago, I was sitting with a friend at a local Starbucks. Our table was situated so that I was facing the counter and as I idly watched a young woman ordering a latte’ she asked, “Where are the napkins?”
Without looking up, he said, “Over behind the old guys.” She nodded and walked directly behind us, picked up the napkins and walked out of the shop. It was a defining moment in my life.
I could see how they would label my white-haired friend as an ‘old guy’, but my hair was still ‘blondish.’ I guessed the clerk was talking about him.
A few days later, as we were walking out of our church, the pastor’s wife commented on a new suit I was wearing. “I really like your suit, Ed. It goes so well with your hair.”
As we walked to the car, I asked my wife, “Do you think that this gray suit goes that well with my blonde hair?” She said, “You have to be kidding.”
I let it go, not wanting to correct her on a Sunday morning.
A few days later, one of our sons came by to visit and I made a comment about the bald spot starting to gain territory on the back of his head.
He laughed and said, “Like father, like son.”
I wanted to ask him what he meant by that but felt it was better for him to not talk about his balding any further.
Later, after he left, I asked my wife, “I wonder what he meant by ‘like father, like son.’ Funny remark, don’t you think?”
She shook her head from side to side and sighed deeply. “Come with me,” she commanded, taking me by the hand and marching me to the bathroom.
She took a large make-up mirror and held it to the back of my head. I jumped with a start. I had a bald spot twice the size of my son’s.
“When did that start?” I gasped. She smiled and said, “About ten years ago, when your hair turned gray.”
I left her there, smirking at me in the mirror and vowed to never use a mirror like that again. Easy enough for her to judge someone. Her hair seems to get darker every time she goes to the beauty parlor.
Rose Garden
Are Chinese politicians more competent than American politicians?
There is one major difference between China and the US: In the US, there are two dominant parties vying for power. As a result, half the time they are fighting against each other and little gets done for the people and the country. They can’t even have any long term development plans because if the ruling party loses at the next elections, then the new ruling party will cancel all the plans of the previous government and make some new ones of their own.
In China, there is only one party. So, the discussions at the National Assembly are focussed on doing things for the country and the people, and no time is wasted fighting each other’s party. And that is also why China can have a five year plan, a fifteen year plan and even a thirty year plan. No other party is going to cancel it after the elections that they hold once every 5 years. They might modify it to make it better based on new information, but they don’t cancel it.
That is why Chinese politicians are seen to be more focussed on nation building.
But there is more: in order to stand for elections, you need to be a member of the Communist Party of China. You can stand for elections if you are not a member, but your chances of winning would be very low, because CPC members are held in high esteem in China.
In order to be a member of CPC, you need to be fairly smart and have a proven track record of helping your community. If you are good enough to be accepted as a member, you must first go through a probation period, during which time you must show some visible contributions to your community. And this restricts the membership of the CPC to competent people.
Even Xi Jinping had to apply several times before he was accepted as a member of the CPC.
When will leaders around the world get the courage to speak up and tell the USA “enough is enough, stop provoking China, don’t ever again send your warships to pass through the Taiwan Strait as it could be the flashpoint of war”?
Actions. Actions, as we all know, speak far louder than words. Sadly for the world the simple action of refusing to heed an American throat-clearing is interpreted by America as “hostile aggression”.
Gunboat diplomacy. American diplomacy is never anything other. It can’t be. Once Peary’s 1853 “or else we’ll fire-bomb incinerate your home with you still in it” coerced Japanese acquiescence that silent“or else” of an American naval strike force ‘leaning against one’s door-jamb stiletto-paring their nails’ made every American ‘negotiation’ a de facto coercion. The only change to America’s unspoken “or else…” ‘’heavily armed pathological goon at the door’ negotiation strategy is the size of the goons and guns. And one other thing. That thing being? America has ‘reduced the homes of the resistant to ruins with their families huddled in unarmed terror inside. America, having found a sure-fire way to guarantee itself a win, hasn’t seriously rethought the policy over the 169 years since America first threatened to fire-bomb Edo.
American negotiation policy change has never strayed from “we’re going to need a bigger boat”. The current ‘bigger [gun]boat’ being a Gerald R. Ford class aircraft carrier and lethal entourage. Republican to the bone Secretary of State Hank Kissinger declared America’s policy truth when shrugging “An aircraft carrier is 100,000 tons of ‘diplomacy’.”
As the brilliant song-smith Paul Simon wrote: “Still a man hears what he wants to hear/ and disregards the rest.” — explaining Americans’ beliefs about how the rest of the world judges them. To paraphrase a certain little green sage “The listening skills . . . they are not strong with America”
Leaders around the world know that it’s futile to try to tell America anything. Except an ego-stroke.
To America listening isn’t part of its national job description. To America — and to the American consensus — America is always, at bottom line, right, ‘in the right’, and ‘within its rights’. Knowing America’s congenital disdain and incapacity to listen to and consider the perspectives of other peoples? Few nations’ leaders waste breath on anything but token effort to negotiate with the hubris-deafened American nation. The Peoples and leaders of NATO & Co. have long deluded ourselves we needn’t fear intentional harm by America. Especially so we in the rest of the G7.
The global majority haven’t had such delusions since . . . well . . . since forever. By 1960 they had evolved as a self-preservation strategy flocking together in a 120-strong herd called ‘T’he NAM’. The Non-Aligned Movement couldn’t save those on the flock’s fringes from American predation — but it was the best the 2/3 of the world striving to ‘bootstrap’ themselves out of their colonial ruination had.
After WW2 the global playing field was, for every practical purpose, “geo-political governance of the global village, by America & Co., for America & Co”. Of that fact all those America & Co. dismisses as “The Rest of The World’ were inescapably aware.
The UN was shaped to maintain the status quo as America & Co. saw profit in it. This is why as fast as formerly colonized nations ‘held their noses’ and joined the UN they also joined the NAM.
Until the 2010s all ‘The Rest of The World’ had was the NAM’s tenuous moral support. If that America naval wolf-pack showed up off of your shores . . . kiss your illusion of sovereignty g’bye.
But come the 2010s did. And along with them came a plan to empower the NAM members to invulnerability from being besieged by America’s ‘projectors of power’ carrier task forces — and American sanctions.
The raw hopeful potential of the NAM inspired the Belts & Roads Initiative cooperative.
The above map presents the over-arching global geo-political/economic communities determining current and emerging security both of sovereign and economic sustainability. If it’s greenish then it’s that “The Rest of The World’ ‘The West’’ keeps dismissing. The over-arching organization of the 149 of 193 nations — of that 77% of all countries — is two-fold. Their ideals-informed community is the Non-Aligned Movement. Their practicality– informed community is the anti-hegemonic Belts & Roads Initiative + its AIIB Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. The BRI reinforces the efforts of regional communities — the African Union on that continent; continental Eurasia’s Shanghai Cooperative Organization; and Southeast Asia’s ASEAN. Further reinforcing this “The Rest of The World’ is BRICS.
In March of this year (2022) America decreed imposition of a sanction siege on Russia. That America and its 5 Eyes posse traditionally buy and sell little with Russia meant the sacrifices would be made by, well, by whoever else chose not to buy commodities and goods at the price point they’d determined their best option.
The green-hued 3/4 of the world chorused an “enough is enough, America” by ignoring that American decree. Actions speaking loud and clear their dismissal of America as a threat to them going forward. Their complex networks have rendered them able to ignore gunboat threats and sanction threats alike, There’s no need for ‘gum-flapping’ — ignoring America’s efforts to be accepted as hegemon does the trick.
How do I eat less sweets?
1. Make sure you’re eating enough protein and fiber. Protein increases satiety and helps to regulate blood sugar levels, while fiber helps to reduce the absorption of sugar into the bloodstream. Both of these nutrients are important for keeping cravings under control.
2. Avoid foods that are high in sugar and refined carbohydrates. These foods tend to cause spikes in blood sugar levels, which leads to cravings for more sugary foods later on.
3. Drink plenty of water throughout the day. Thirst can often be mistaken for hunger, so drinking plenty of water can help to prevent cravings for sweets.
Does China even have to be so damn ridiculous when it comes to Taiwan? Can’t China just chill?
Why doesn’t the USA just chill and pull all its forces from around the world back home, give up interfering in global politics, mind its own business, try and look after its own people and realise it hasn’t got a very smart populace and just stay out of everyone else’s lives?
USA: GO HOME AND STAY HOME FOREVER.
NOT NEEDED, NOT WANTED, GET LOST!!!
The Medvedev Map
“The Medvedev Map” was posted by former Russian President, Dmitry Medvedev, currently deputy head of the Security Council, on July 30, 2022.
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Chicago – (1973) “Saturday in the Park” & “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?”
Which is worse, drinking one pint every day for six days or drinking seven pints once a week?
What’s worse, taking 1 Advil a day every day or taking 7 Advil once a week?
Let’s use a healthier example. What’s worse, eating one apple a day every day or eating 7 apples once a week? Regardless the same logic applies.
Let’s dive into the pharmacokinetics of all of this. There is a concept of the therapeutic window which is the region between the start of getting a therapeutic response and the start of getting undesired responses i.e. side effects. Side effects occur when the concentration of your drug/entity/poison surpass that critical concentration.
There is also the concept of your CMax, which is the maximum concentration you’ll get after ingesting something. That CMax will be directly proportional to your dose. In this case, 7 times as much. Not only are you pushing your concentration higher thus moving you above the threshold where other even worse side effects can occur, you’ll also be above your adverse range for a longer period of time.
So taking more at onetime is always the more hazardous and dangerous scenario.
Unless you can find away to do controlled release of your alcohol once ingested.
Does the future of US-China relations look very bad?
Look bad?
It is bad, and deteriorating by the year.
The most concerning is the re-orientation of the US military since barack’s pivot to Asia strategy.
The war on terror in the middle east has reached sundown under Joe, as budgets are redirected towards indopacom, already the largest command with twice the number of ships deployed than the rest combined.
The past decade has seen incredible militarization in and around the waters of China, with control of the SCS central to the ambitions of both the pla and USN.
With the difficulties encountered producing clean sheet 21st century designs, the current USN plans calls for approximately 50 Virginia class nuclear fast attack subs and 90 arleigh burke class guided missile destroyers to turn the SCS, ECS and yellow sea into a shooting gallery. Production has been increased to 2 ships a year for each class to meet expansion schedule, at a cost of 11-12 billion a year.
Australia is joining in the fun and games with its own fast attack sub derived off the Virginia platform, slated to enter service in the 2040s, boosting indopacom’s attack sub operation.
Guam and neighboring tinian are undergoing rapid expansion and fortification as a key naval asset, particularly for the submarine fleet.
America is also coercing and cajoling pacific partners to increase their military budget, in order to subsidize indopacom expansion.
All these and more point to a forced realignment of world order, just like the American insistence on the indopacific (hence indopacom) rather than the more inclusive and familiar Asia pacific.
This is a dry powder keg.
War appears more inevitable by the year, as anti-chinese rhetoric and diplomacy increasingly dominate American politics.
The country may be deeply divided domestically, but there are two issues with bipartisan support: Russia and China being “the enemy”.
What are some “forgotten” dishes and recipes that few people make anymore?
A few months ago, my husband and I were watching “Desk Set,” starring Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. In it, there’s a scene where he asks, what’s for dessert, and she says, Floating Islands.
I’d never heard of this. I asked my husband, a pastry chef, “What’s that?” He knew that it was meringue and cream but not the exact recipe. I googled it and, in fact, it’s poached meringue in creme anglaise. My husband actually said, “No one really makes it any more.”
Then, last week, we went out to eat at a French restaurant for dinner and, lo and behold, Ile Flottante was on the menu. I was so excited to try it! It was lovely and delicious and elegant and old school, and basically Katherine Hepburn if she were a dessert. I recommend it.
And now with both Nordstream Pipelines blown up, Europe – first Germany as is has no energy alternatives due to its 10 years of green policies – is done 🙁 The Poles already thanked the US yesterday.
i always laugh when I see american media portraying Fosters as our national beer. It is so uncommon over here that I don’t think I have ever seen a single person drinking it, and only remember seeing it in very few bottle shops around the place.
so, handy tip, if you ever spot an Aussie tourist in your country, offer them either an emu export (also known as red can or the bush chook, call it this for extra brownie points), a carlton draught, swan draught (if they are west australian), or a coopers original pale ale.
Depending on which drink they prefer out of this selection, it will give you a full comprehensive assessment and analysis into the type of character you can expect from them. For example, bush chook drinkers you will know don’t have a sense of taste, and are likely to be a bit more rough around the edges as someone a bit more cultured who drinks coopers. Carlton draught drinkers on the other hand show they are easily swayed by good advertising, whereas swan draught drinkers are usually poor west aussies who will drink pretty much anything you put in front of them, including methylated spirits (yes i know someone who did).
If you want to make someone feel more important than they actually are, you can always offer them a crown lager, as the gold label has an air of elegance to it, even though it is shit scraped off the bottom of an emu export barrel, and practically the same thing as vegemite.
Otherwise if you want to be a little more classy, little creatures and feral brewing company are some good boutique beers (even for you eastern states tourists). Redback beer is also a nice wheat beer that goes well with pizza.
Hahahaha DM, I had this little conversation with a barman in Steam Boat Springs Colorado in 1996, I asked for a beer in a bar and the reply was “Your Australian, right. We have Fosters” I responded “Mate we ship that all over the world so we do not have to drink it”. His jaw dropped LOL.
@Tas I am going to have to buy some now so i can say definitively that it’s shit lol