ksnip 20250109 192538

Art has the power to unite, to inspire, and to make even the most mundane barnyard feel like a stage for greatness

In am an Indian

We NEED CHINA badly

I don’t say China is a friend

Yet on an economic scale, India can’t do without China if India wants to advance or grow realistically

Presently Indias Manufacturing represents around 3% of the Global Manufacturing of which 68% is Low Grade & 32% is Medium Grade

This means India represents 0.96% of all Medium Grade Manufacturing in the world

Less than Vietnam (1.7%) , Mexico (2.4%) or even Bangladesh (1.0%)

China’s Manufacturing represents 36.3% of Global Manufacturing of which 14% is Low Grade, 71% is Medium Grade and 11% is High Grade and 4% is Advanced

This means China represents 24% of all the Medium Grade Manufacturing in the world

So to increase our manufacturing base, train our people and increase our output – we need Chinese Equipment and Chinese Investments

Without them we can’t genuinely progress forward


I can’t endorse hitting ourselves on the feet with an axe just for 50 paise nationalism!!

Sir Whiskerton and the Beatnik Barnyard: A Groovy Tale of Poetry and Peace

Ah, dear reader, prepare yourself for a tale so far out, so utterly groovy, that even Sir Whiskerton’s monocle nearly popped off in disbelief. Today’s adventure takes us to the heart of the farm, where Jazzpurr the Beatnik Cat has decided to unleash his inner poet upon the unsuspecting barnyard. What follows is a story filled with puns, gags, and enough beatnik flair to make even the most stoic cow say, “Far out, man!”

So grab your bongos, don your beret, and let’s dive into The Beatnik Barnyard.


The Arrival of Jazzpurr

It was a quiet afternoon on the farm, the kind of day where the sun lazily stretched its rays across the fields, and the animals were content to doze in the shade. Sir Whiskerton was perched on his favorite hay bale, contemplating the mysteries of the universe (and whether the farmer would remember to refill his food bowl), when a strange sound interrupted his thoughts.

Boom-ba-doom-boom. Boom-ba-doom-boom.

The rhythmic thumping grew louder, accompanied by the jingling of bells and the faint smell of patchouli. Sir Whiskerton’s ears twitched as he turned to see Jazzpurr, the farm’s resident beatnik cat, striding toward the barn with a bongo drum slung over his shoulder. His fur was unkempt, his eyes half-closed, and he wore a tiny beret tilted at a jaunty angle.

“Jazzpurr,” Sir Whiskerton said, raising an eyebrow. “What in the name of whiskers are you doing?”

“I’m here to blow your minds, man,” Jazzpurr replied, his voice dripping with poetic gravitas. “I’ve composed a masterpiece. A symphony of words. A Howl for the barnyard.”

“A howl?” Rufus the dog barked, wagging his tail. “I can howl! Want to hear?”

“Not that kind of howl, Rufus,” Sir Whiskerton said, rolling his eyes. “But by all means, Jazzpurr, enlighten us with your… art.”


The Beatnik Performance

Jazzpurr climbed onto an overturned bucket, his bongo drum at the ready. The farm animals gathered around, some curious, others confused. Bessie the tie-dye cow lounged nearby, her psychedelic spots shimmering in the sunlight. Doris the hen and her entourage clucked nervously, while Porkchop the pig munched on a carrot, utterly unfazed.

“Alright, cats and chicks,” Jazzpurr began, his voice low and dramatic. “This is for all the lost souls of the barnyard. For the cows who moo in the night. For the chickens who cluck in the void. For the pigs who dream of mud and freedom. This… is The Barnyard Howl.”

He cleared his throat, adjusted his beret, and began to recite:

“I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked,
Dragging themselves through the hay at dawn looking for an angry farmer,
Who passed out in the barn with a bottle of moonshine,
Who cut themselves shaving with rusty pitchforks,
Who ate moldy oats in the desperate loneliness of the feed bin,
Who mooed and quacked and clucked and honked in the madness of the midnight barnyard,
Who bared their udders to the moon and howled for the dawn of a new day…”


The Farm Animals React

As Jazzpurr’s words echoed through the barnyard, the animals began to react in their own unique—and hilarious—ways.

  • Bessie the Tie-Dye Cow swayed her head back and forth, her bell jingling with each movement. “Groovy, man. Like, totally far out. I feel this in my soul.”
  • Doris the Hen clucked nervously, her feathers ruffled. “What is he saying? Is this about feed? Is he criticizing my feed?!”
  • Harriet the Hen squawked, “I think it’s about existential dread. Or maybe worms. I can’t tell.”
  • Lillian the Hen fainted dramatically into a pile of hay. “Oh, I can’t bear it! It’s too… too… artistic!”
  • Porkchop the Pig stopped chewing his carrot for a moment, tilted his head, and said, “I don’t get it, but I like the beat. Can I eat the bongos?”
  • Ferdinand the Duck flapped his wings and quacked, “This is art! I must perform it at the next barnyard talent show!”
  • Rufus the Dog tilted his head and howled along, completely missing the point but having the time of his life.

Sir Whiskerton’s Verdict

As Jazzpurr finished his poem, the barnyard erupted into a cacophony of clucks, moos, quacks, and howls. Sir Whiskerton, ever the voice of reason, stepped forward, his monocle glinting in the sunlight.

“Well, Jazzpurr,” he said, “that was certainly… something. I’m not sure if it was poetry, a cry for help, or just the result of too much catnip. But I must admit, it was entertaining.”

Jazzpurr grinned, his beret slipping slightly. “That’s the beauty of art, man. It’s whatever you want it to be.”


A Happy Ending

In the end, Jazzpurr’s beatnik performance brought the farm animals together in a way no one could have predicted. Bessie organized a “groovy” tie-dye workshop, Ferdinand started a barnyard poetry club, and even Doris the hen admitted that the poem made her “feel things.”

The moral of the story, dear reader, is this: Art has the power to unite, to inspire, and to make even the most mundane barnyard feel like a stage for greatness. And as for Sir Whiskerton? He returned to his hay bale, content in the knowledge that even in the chaos of the farm, there’s always room for a little creativity—and a lot of laughs.

Until next time, my friends. Stay groovy.

The End.

Here are seven problems which I’ve pieced together from reading tech business publications on this topic:

  1. For the average user, they don’t care how “efficient” the money spent is, what they care about is the quality of the answer. Don’t use market news to change your technology product. That’s absurd.
  2. We are still locked in the hype cycle. I wouldn’t be surprised if when the dust settles on this hype cycle we will know the holes in the DeepSeek system. For instance, I heard it’s real strength is quantitative, which makes sense because it was a Quant firm that built it.
  3. The hacking risk seems highest with DeepSeek based on evidence from it’s launch.
  4. There is also a risk of government censorship and/or getting a Chinese-based worldview from DeepSeek answers.
  5. DeepSeek could very well track you and give your data to the Chinese government.
  6. DeepSeek is just a copycat of Open AI. It’s absurd to make comparisons when one copied the other. Apparently when you ask DeepSeek it says its “a version of ChatGPT.”
  7. This isn’t the last word in this exchange. Chat GPT will have another product roll out. This will go dozens and dozens of more rounds in all likelihood. Don’t declare the match in the first round.

All seven of these are significant and each independently is a reason to reject DeepSeek.

We have a significant problem with the hype cycle in both tech and economic news and seeing beyond it’s constraints and limits is critical if you are going to make the best decisions about the apps you use.

Finally, if you still want to use DeepSeek, you can use Perplexity which hosts another version of DeepSeek, but theoretically without the Chinese government getting your precious data.

I was stuck in an 8 mile backup on the NY Thruway. We moved a few yards every 5 minutes. Since I was driving a stick, I would wait until traffic moved a lot before driving forward. No use burning out the clutch.

This made the moron behind me go apeshit in his new BMW. Riding my bumper, giving me the finger, cursing at me thru his open window. I took some pics and made a video of his behavior just in case he actually hit me.

After a half hour of his immature behavior, he decides he is going to drive down the center grassy, probably littered with broken glass middle. About an hour later, I catch up to him and the 2 state troopers that are ticketing him.

But the best was that he had 4 flat tires on his brand new car…it didn’t even have real tags on it, just the paper ones. When I got along side one of the troopers, I called him over to my car. I showed him the pics & vdeo I that I had taken. Moron got more tickets from the trooper.

BTW, I blew the moron a kiss as I passed him….lol

Americans Can’t Believe China’s Grocery Prices—Why Are We Paying So Much?!

”Flying Saucers?”

Submitted into Contest #210 in response to: Make a mysterious message an important part of your story. view prompt

Kendall Defoe

 

At first, no one believed it. No one who paid attention to the signals caught by scientists believed it. No one who heard rumours about those signals believed it. And when the press finally took the men and women in lab coats seriously, they still did not believe it. But it was true. Earth had received a signal and it was a message they could all understand: the planet had made first contact with life in outer space.

The celebrations began almost immediately everywhere the news traveled. Some religious leaders worried that they would no longer be able to keep their adherents in churches, temples, and mosques, but they were a very weak minority of voices. Many governments made plans for greeting the visitors; there were endless meetings about protocol, gifts, and possible exchanges of information (military leaders in many nations demanded this last condition). Ordinary citizens celebrated by imagining what the aliens would look like, what they would wear, how they would communicate, etc. School children and graduate students at the best schools wrote papers about all of this. Science-fiction fans had long and noisy debates about the alien’s possible friendliness or hostility (military official also paid attention to these debates). And everyone looked up at the sky, often through tears, and imagined what would happen next.

And then they waited.

The scientists who first tracked the signal believed that the aliens would land or make further contact in at least one or two months. That was how various teams interpreted the message after it was translated. The shock of discovering the vehicles already in orbit after only two weeks made many governments, military leaders, and scientists worry about having enough time to prepare for their visitors. There was also the other question about how the aliens had arrived in their galaxy. With the best equipment available, no one could track the trajectory of the alien’s possible flight path. The ships simply appeared in their telescopes as they did their daily observations. This was seen as an example of how advanced the aliens were and no more was said in public about this, although many scientists wanted to have answers about this as soon as the ships landed (the military if the ships could travel undetected because of possibly unknown speeds of travel). The rest of the world just reveled in the news.

And then they waited…again.

The ships landed. At first, only one ship landed, in northern Russia; another traveled to northern Canada. And then they waited. Scientists tried to communicate using radio signals of every kind. Military leaders sent in tanks and soldiers, demanding the aliens appear and speak to them. But there was no response to either group, not until the last ship appeared over Australia and landed in the Outback. The aliens finally had something to say:

“Hi, hello!

We’re here!”

This was translated into many languages – all corresponding to where the now fifteen ships had landed. Soon, various governments replied and extended greetings to their extra-terrestrial visitors.

Again, they waited.

And this is what they finally heard after all the replies were sent in:

“So, thanks for that.

Bye.”

And that was it. The ships, small silver cylinders that revealed no doors or propulsive sections that could be used for travelling across the galaxy, did not leave. They just stood there, revealing nothing. Nothing but silence.

*

Many questions were asked. Citizens wanted to know if there were any ways by which they could continue the conversation. Some demanded to have the ships cut open and examined, an idea that the military supported. But this was a view that no one wanted to try. Since there was no detectable threat from the aliens, or their ships, most people thought it best to just leave them alone. Several government papers were written, and debates were held about the cost of monitoring the ships. But, once again, this was a concern that very few worried about in public. In private, many were quite disappointed. If the aliens wanted to be left alone, why did they travel to their planet and leave themselves onboard their ships. Still, it was their choice. Disappointing, but a choice they were comfortable with; what could they do?

A few months passed. Soldiers who were assigned to monitor the ships were at first pleased to have such an easy assignment. However, they soon complained about how boring things were. And not every country monitored the ships quite so closely. TV networks, after the first jump in ratings during the landings, realized that they would lose viewers if they continued to report on the ships in prime time (even satellite channels got bored with the ships). Graffiti began to appear on the bodies of the unguarded ships. Most of it was not obscene; some of it was actually clever or quite polite (“Knock, knock?”, “What’s the Deal?”, “Are You Shy? Then call…”, “Nanoo! Nanoo!”, “Live Long and Prosper”, “Was it something I said?”, and so on). Usually, other citizens would come along and clean up the mess (the metal was remarkably easy to clean). But not a single word was heard from the inside of the ships. Not one sound could be detected.

Some people were quite happy with the way things were, specifically philosophers, artists, and the same religious leaders who had been worried that the presence of aliens would draw away congregants and believers. Far from it. The number of people attending churches, temples and mosques grew along all denominations. Priests, monks, imams, rabbis, all had to deal with believers who thought the presence of the ships was a sign, or some sort of great test of faith. The Pope felt compelled to broadcast a sermon warning his church not to settle for some idol worship “over the promise of a greater reward in the hereafter”. And some of those religious leaders, in their private moments, even wondered if having so many people attending their services was a good idea. But once again, no one said anything too loudly against the visitors.

And what about those philosophers and artists? They were having the time of their lives. Every major news organization, pundit, journalist and the like wanted to have them on the air and in print. Philosophers with remaindered or unpublished books discovered that they now had best sellers and demands for more writing. Opinions were needed; debts were forgotten. Universities and colleges had extra courses added to their schedules, often hiring the same philosophers whose work was now popular. Many other people simply read the books themselves (editions of the work of the pre-Socratics up to Nietzsche all sold very well; no noticeable sales fluctuation took place with 20th century thinkers). And the artists began to write music, books, poetry, plays; they choreographed dances; there were even puppet shows that ran in several theaters in Eastern Europe and Asia (the title of one play translated into English as “They Don’t Really Like Us, Do They?”). Everyone had something say, do or think about the aliens.

And then the pods disappeared.

 

*

As noted, some countries kept a very close watch on the ships, but most of them had grown so accustomed to their presence, they often had no one monitoring them. At first, the various armies thought they had simply forgotten to keep the cameras running when they saw the footage and noted that the ships just disappeared. But there were no technical problems. There were no time jumps or other problems gone unnoticed. The pods had just disappeared. It was seen that they left the various continents at the exact same moment, meaning that the aliens did not mind departing when they could be observed doing so; when they could be seen attempting to get away from the planet they had inhabited for almost three years.

Again, the responses varied. Scientists and the military were the most disappointed. Philosophers and artists were next, but many of them had already become tired of having to debate or discuss the late visitors (some even did their best work after the ships departed). The average person on the street felt annoyed, disappointed, indifferent and even relieved with the change. There were demands that scientists attempt to contact the aliens, but all the messages sent into deep space were met with silence. The visitors were really gone.

It did not take long for conspiracy theories to grow and explain the absence of the ships. There had always been theories about why they landed: garbage disposal; hostile takeover; deep observation; harvesting of minerals and species, etc. The idea was that the ships had never landed; there was instead an international conspiracy to distract people from other problems. At first, once again, it was only an opinion held by a very small group of loners. But the voices supporting the theory grew louder and angrier. Visitors to the sites once monitored by the various armies noted that there were no real signs of “spaceships” apart from indentations in the soil and rock. Also, why had the ships chosen to land in areas with a very small population (mainly in the northern hemisphere) instead of contacting us through the world’s capitals? Some pointed out that maybe the aliens had not wanted to cause a panic, or knew the importance of the capitals but wanted to wait. But the theorists would not change their minds, and they began to appear on the same programs that had once featured artists and philosophers who had debated the reasons why the aliens appeared at all. Many nations that had formed peace treaties now had to deal with old hostilities (the threat of war had never been closer). Again, a distraction against dealing with problems that were long ignored was needed. Negotiations for peace were often very loud and full of the threat of violence; rooms filled with grown men and women threatening each other in the same place where they had once negotiated reductions in arms and soldiers. The UN held extra-long sessions for peace treaties, but they often ended in stalemates and even more threats.

And just when it seemed as though war was inevitable throughout the planet, the aliens returned. At least, that was what the scientists observing them believed. Many government and military officials were at first doubtful…again. And citizens around the globe, already used to the first visit, thought these were new visitors. They had every right to believe so. The ships were quite different. Instead of the silver cylinders of before, these ships were designed like something seen in a bad 1950s sci-fi movie: round black discs rotating with a steady central section that bulged on top with a clear glass dome.

Now, many thought this was a joke, until they began to land in the exact same locations as the earlier ships. Once again, the military was called out; pundits, artists, philosophers and religious leaders gave their predictions. But the scientists observing these new ships were more concerned about how they arrived. They tried, as before, to trace the flight paths of the ships. They had just suddenly appeared around the planet once more.

It was as if they had always been there.

And then they spoke for one last time. This was broadcast into every language through every computer, radio, television, cellphone and other electronic devices. This is what they said:

“Hello, um…it’s us.

“We have returned with new ships because they seemed to be forms that would make you more comfortable with our presence. Those first ships were just observers. And we did observe.

“All we wanted to do was to observe and learn. You have been cut off from the rest of the universe for such a long time because we were not sure that you could handle the knowledge.

“And it seems you can’t.

“Seriously, graffiti? We know what that stuff is. It’s not some tribute to us or even very nice work. We have studied your history through your satellites and signals, so we know what you mean with that painting.

“Don’t bother trying to solve the great mystery of how we got here. We teleported our ships here centuries ago and paid attention. We have seen you develop yourselves, your tools, civilizations, all your discoveries, wars, crimes, moments of glory. And we saw you finally making it into outer space with all that equipment (you should really try to clean up after yourselves, by the way). And you still behave like bad children. Why?

“So sad.

“Oh, and don’t worry about what we look like. You couldn’t handle it.

“Now, here is what we are going to do…”

 

It was a long list. The aliens spoke for almost an hour in all the languages of the planet. Most listeners grew bored after the first ten minutes. Some decided to record the message. What was clear was that the visitors, the aliens that had lived among them for many years, were very angry. And they were done with the Earth.

In the newspapers, magazines, news reports broadcast over the next few weeks, most of the headlines covered the decisions made by the aliens with the exact same tone. Some of the headlines and title segments were the following:

Alien Life Rejects Earth

Earth: No Go Zone

The Final Frontier (No, Really)

The Hate from Outer Space

 

Again, scientists tried to trace the aliens; find some sort of way of communicating, but this just led to frustration and dead air. Artists, politicians, philosophers, writers and religious leaders tried to provide comfort to the public, but too many people found it too difficult to accept that the first real contact with alien life led to their collective shunning by the rest of the universe. Attendance at religious ceremonies plummeted; philosophers went back into obscurity; many writers found former bestsellers now in remainder bins. But people continued to look at the sky. They wanted to see the flying saucers again.

I think this is a great question, but it is late and I am ready for bed.

So I shall put this one thought up there and come back to it in the morning.

Germany has been thoroughly crushed by the West over its refusal to back Ukraine in the American adventure in that country. Germany has a visceral hatred of Nazi’s. They also remember who kicked their ass in WWII. Also the German car industry has been playing fast and loose with our money and rules over the past 15 years, including writing software to void pollution standards, cars that barely last the lease period and care that are getting more and more expensive by the hour.

Germany has two choices, Join the Chinese in building cars on German soil with German workers. Or go broke.

If I were to choose a friend, ally and business partner for the 21st century, I think it would be China. At some point we need to re-industrialise the west, and with China’s help Germany could be leading the way.

Mexico “folded”? Hahaha estás pendejo, amigo.

Let’s see what happened:

Trump announced his tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China (partners #1, 2, and 3, so well over half of all imports and exports and impacting almost all of the US economy) over the weekend, when the markets were closed.

I guess he thought he was being clever.

He wasn’t.

Exactly as the economists predicted, this immediately caused a flash crash (which was well on its way to continue and turn into a “Black Monday” event) in the overwhelming majority of US stocks upon market open (and the Mexican Peso dropped 2% against the USD).

Here, can you guess when the phone calls to Mexico and Canada were made? It’s dead easy to see.

So while Trump was in the phone call and everyone was watching the US economy crash (after they all told him over the weekend it would and he didn’t listen because of course he didn’t), Mexico committed to placing 10,000 Mexican troops at the border.

“Undoing everything Biden did” (some of which was quite good, like lowering drug prices, and yet got rescinded by executive order) meant he didn’t really read things closely. If he had read closely he would have seen that under Biden, they had 15,000.

Panicked that he broke something (which he did), and in a tremendous hurry (which he was), Trump agreed.

So now Mexico can dedicate 5,000 less troops.

But that’s not the coolest part.

The coolest part is that the call did something huge for Mexico.

Because on this same phone call, Mexico also got a commitment from Trump to stop the flow of guns fueling crime in order for Mexico not to retaliate with tariffs of her own immediately.


Now of course, since stopping the gun flow South is as hard-to-impossible as stopping the drug flow North (we all know that all these all-or-nothing requests are fantasies and it’s a bit like trying to trade a unicorn for a griffin, right?), neither will get fully done, ever.

Except now, the US is completely and singularly on the hook and to blame in the exact same way they put Mexico singularly on the hook and was blamed for all drug trafficking and migration issues for all these years.

And now, just like Trump does, Mexico has a tit-for-tat pressing political reason to add tariffs – reason to which Trump agreed. And since Trump just opened the door for forcing countries to change policy for political reasons… Expect the 11 countries in Latin America that are coordinating response with Mexico to start doing the same (get rid of the Honduras base! Do this! Do that! or we’ll impose tariffs on US products all over LatAm!). Not all will work out, but it will be a constant headache and a constant multi country economic threat – against US product exports – for at least as long as he’s around wrecking the place.

And of course, Trump agreeing this is a huge problem that is killing people and agreeing to help fix it on a phone call in the first place bolsters Mexico’s huge lawsuits in US courts against US gun manufacturers.

Heck, they could call the stable genius to testify directly, in the knowledge he’s probably on tape admitting it.


From Courthouse News Service – Mexico Opens two front war on US Guns:

“For the first time, the U.S. government will work jointly to avoid the entry of guns to Mexico,” Sheinbaum said during a news conference Monday.

According to the article, part of the legal argument is a claim that Colt is marketing the guns to drug traffickers, in full knowledge that they will end up in Mexico, where they are illegal. Colt’s special-edition handguns like the Super “El Jefe” pistol or the “Emiliano Zapata 1911” pistol are recent proofs of that.

If this sounds like the same (successful) argument as Joe Camel illegally marketing to kids even if they claim they did cartoons “because adults also like cartoons of camels”, it’s because it is.

You were always a jackass, Joe. And so is the Emiliano Zapata revolver.


Face it, thrall, with the US economy in a complete free-fall, Sheinbaum calmly and matter-of-factly took Trump onto the mat, grabbed him by the short-hairs and forced him to sing like a canary so she’d let go.

And she didn’t even have to get angry and take off her chancla.


Trump walked out with less than what the US had under Biden (but rescinded with his own orders out of spite, like he did all of Biden’s work), got the tariffs delayed a month so Mexico’s “Plan B” on massive retaliatory tariffs (which she only partially revealed, while hinting at further economic and also political measures) can get even more advanced, and then gave some more concessions of US clamping down on the Gun Lobby and “oppressing” US gun owners (to investigate and stop the over 200,000 illegal weapons that are smuggled a year using US citizen straw purchasers) across the entire set of US border states: Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas. Basically the same impossible task as asking Mexico to stop the flow of migrants and drugs over 4 states.

And a Republican president will have to try to convince his rabid 2nd amendment base to restrict something (background checks and some of the sensible Democrat plans on gun control may be fairly effective, for example, but they hate that).

This is a first. No US president had ever acknowledged the damage US guns do to Mexico (or any other country including the US, really, because plenty of terrible conflict has come about through the wrong people heavily armed; ask anyone who’s ever survived a school shooting) because they knew they’d be held legally and monetarily responsible along with the gun industry if they did anything more than offer “thoughts and prayers” (sound familiar?).

Not Clinton, Not Bush, Certainly not Obama (especially during the Fast & Furious operation where the government illegally aided in smuggling them themselves and caused deaths), Not Trump 45, Not Biden. Nobody said “yes, it is on us, yes we will fix it”. They all gave platitudes with no plan.

But Trump just committed to it, under a Mexican threat of counter tariffs that he had been told about since Sheinbaum’s November letter (he was told even the guns part), but somehow still did not see coming on that call, which was urgent to Trump, but Sheinbaum had all day (never negotiate under time pressure – I wonder if that’s in his dumb book).

And did we mention he has a month to do it, as per his own tariff timeline?

And now he’ll never be able to talk about the Southern border on immigration or drugs again without Sheinbaum blasting him for his failure to stopping the gun flow south as he had agreed on the February 3rd, 2025 famous and very public phone call.

Mexico’s peso is now doing slightly (0.65%) better against the USD than as it was doing a week ago, but the Dow hasn’t fully recovered from the weekend’s idiocy, it’s down 0.74% for the week.

Not only that, Mexico’s lawsuit seeking injunctions and compensatory monetary damages from US gun manufacturers for the cartel murders in Mexico is looking way better, now that the top official in the nation agreed with her position.

And that’s even without counting his other panicked call, with the guy that threatened to cut electricity to the US East Coast and stopped all US booze sales in the Great White in a weekend, and within mere hours.

“El arte de la negociación”/ “L’art de la négociation”

In only 45 panicked minutes with the Dow tanking because he shot himself in the foot, he lost to two countries in simple phone calls.

Do you think he used a “Colt Emiliano Zapata 1911″?

And the end result, at least on the Mexico call, was.. less than ideal for him.

You do know how these… work, right?

ETA: As of early Februrary 2025, Egg prices are sky high and continue to climb all across the US. In the SF Bay Area they are hovering around $10–13 a dozen. In Canada, they’re a little over $6.80. In Mexico they’re $1.84.

The administration will say it’s the bird flu outbreak. And while it could be, the bottom line is today we really don’t know how that is going, because the Federal Government no longer gives infection data as per Trump’s gag order on all agencies. But that the price is going up rather than down, and that there’s panic purchases, is undeniable.

But even if that was the case, in times when you are not picking fights with all your neighbors and partners, the US would be able to purchase eggs from either one – or both – of its partners (and the UK, and other places) to resolve the crisis. Instead, egg orders are being exported from Mexico to Spain, Colombia, Italy and Morocco, and Canada is exporting to Brazil and France instead. Nobody knows if there will be tariffed or if it will become more trouble than it’s worth, so they just.. go sell somewhere else. Yes, already. Even the threat of a tariff is inflationary.

It gives a good snapshot of what happens when rather than remaining friendly so your farms are part of an economic ecosystem, you choose protectionism and to pick fights with your friends because you see everything as a zero-sum for the owners of the companies instead of trying to lower prices for the people using free markets.

So yes, this egg thing, much as he’d like to continue blaming everything on Biden forever, is part of Trump’s economy now. He’s keeping you in the dark about the details of why things are so much more expensive, and making sure you don’t get relief. These things are on purpose.

But he won’t tell you. Trump, as we say in Mexico, “lacks eggs” (this time literally and figuratively). And he especially lacks eggs to tell his partners (and his supporters) that he lacks eggs.

One of the most famous incidents of enemy aircraft being captured and flown by opposing forces during World War II was the capture and use of American P-51 Mustangs and B-17 Flying Fortresses by Nazi Germany. The Germans had a specialized unit for this purpose called the Zirkus Rosarius (Rosarius Circus), that was tasked with evaluating captured Allied aircraft. In the UK the Air Fighting Development Unit, and the Allied Technical Air Intelligence Unit were used for evaluating Axis aircraft during the war.

The Soviet Union was able to capture several B-29’s and reverse engineer them into the Tu-4 Bomber.

The capture of a Focke-Wulf Fw-190 by the Allies was a significant intelligence victory during World War II. In June 1942, Oberleutnant Armin Faber, a German pilot, accidentally landed an Fw-190A-3 at RAF Pembrey in Wales. This mistake handed the British a fully operational aircraft to study. Testing revealed the Fw-190’s excellent roll rate and powerful engine but also exposed its weaknesses, such as poor high-altitude performance in early variants. This allowed Allied pilots to adjust their tactics, avoiding horizontal maneuvers and forcing engagements at higher altitudes, where Allied planes like the Spitfire Mk IX had the edge.

A representation of Fw-190 A3.

The Fw-190’s design influenced improvements in Allied aircraft. The exceptional roll rate of the Fw-190 inspired modifications to Allied fighter designs to improve agility. The Fw-190’s radial engine performance was analyzed, leading to insights that benefited Allied aircraft like the Grumman F6F Hellcat and the P-47 Thunderbolt, Allied pilots were also impressed by the speed, maneuverability, and climb rate of the Bf-109 and Fw-190. The Fw-190, in particular, surprised test pilots with its excellent roll rate and rugged construction. The testing led to changes in Allied fighter tactics to counter these aircraft effectively.

Messerschmitt Me 262

After the war ended, the Allies tested the Me 262, the world’s first operational jet fighter, in great detail. Its speed and power were unmatched at the time, but test flights revealed considerable operational challenges, such as unreliable engines, long takeoff runs, and poor low-speed handling. The study of German jets also helped accelerate postwar jet technology, influencing aircraft like the Gloster Meteor and later Cold War designs. During World War II, numerous test pilots from the Allies flew captured enemy aircraft to uncover their performance characteristics, strengths, and weaknesses. These flights provided invaluable insights and occasionally led to surprising discoveries about enemy technology and tactics.

The Zero stunned Allied pilots with its extraordinary maneuverability, range, and climb rate, which were achieved through extremely light construction and lack of armor. The Zero’s innovative use of combat flaps enhanced its maneuverability at low speeds, a feature that intrigued Allied engineers. Its exceptional range (due to fuel-efficient engines and drop tanks) was a revelation. The deliberate design choices explained how the Japanese were able to project airpower over such vast distances early in the war. Before testing the Zero, there was an overestimation of its durability and firepower. Once test pilots flew it, they realized it was much more vulnerable than previously thought, which altered Allied tactics and helped save the lives of countless number of Allied pilots.

Mitsubishi A6M3 Zero Model 22

The Arado Ar-234 was the world’s first jet powered bomber and it too surprised Allied test pilots. It introduced innovations such as pressurized cockpits, advanced autopilots, and ejection seats, which were far ahead of their time. After the war ended, two aircraft were shipped to the USA. One of the them was reassembled by the United States Navy at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, for testing, but was found to be in unflyable condition and scrapped. The second aircraft was transferred to Wright Field in Ohio and delivered to the Accelerated Service Test Maintenance Squadron of the Flight Test Division in 1946. Flight testing was completed in 1946 though the aircraft remained at Wright Field until 1947.

Arado Ar-234

The Horten Ho-229 flying wing was perhaps the most enigmatic aircraft of the World War II era. Its radical design, advanced technology, and potential continue to fascinate and inspire generations of aviation enthusiasts. While the true story of the Horten Ho 229 remains buried in mystery, its pioneering achievement in aviation design is undeniable. The Ho-229 was a precursor to modern stealth aircraft. Test pilots and engineers who examined it after the war were impressed by its design, which reduced radar signature. Although it was not flown in combat, its concepts still influence aviation to this day. In February 1945 the only surviving V2 test aircraft was destroyed in a crash, killing its test pilot.

Artist’s concept of the aircraft. The nearly complete H.IX V3 prototype was captured by the American military and shipped to the United States under Operation Paperclip.

The Italian Macchi C.202 and C.205 were highly maneuverable, beautifully designed aircraft with excellent high-altitude performance. However, captured aircraft revealed that many Italian planes suffered from weak armament compared to Allied and German counterparts, limiting their effectiveness.

Allied test pilots examined Soviet Yakovlev Yak-3 and Lavochkin La-5 Soviet planes in considerable detail. These aircraft were often provided via Lend-Lease evaluations or through captured examples. The Allied pilots found them to be quite rugged, simple designs that possessed the ability to perform well in harsh environments.

The Soviet Yak-3 was s successful combat aircraft. Many of these were captured by Germany.

The P-51, one of the most advanced fighter aircraft of the war, was captured on multiple occasions. These Mustangs were repaired and test-flown by the Germans, providing valuable insights into Allied technology. The Germans painted these planes with distinctive markings to avoid friendly fire. The Germans captured and repurposed several B-17 bombers, nicknamed “Dornier Do 200” by the Luftwaffe. They used these to infiltrate Allied bomber formations and gather intelligence or spread confusion. Pilots sometimes flew these captured bombers to get close enough to Allied formations for attacks.

On the Pacific front, Japan captured several Allied aircraft, including the P-40 Warhawk and B-17 Flying Fortress. These were also studied and occasionally flown for evaluation. Several crashed B-29’s were also examined in detail by Japanese engineers, but none of these was captured in a flyable condition.

One of the most well-documented episodes was Operation Frantic in June 1944, during which German forces captured several Allied aircraft that landed in Soviet-controlled Ukraine after bombing raids. The Luftwaffe used these to improve their tactics against Allied airpower. These captured aircraft provided crucial intelligence and training opportunities for both sides, but their use was relatively limited due to the logistical challenges of maintaining foreign planes

Brandied Chicken Breasts

1b9e12a3a4804293e3fd4b25fb6b2bb2
1b9e12a3a4804293e3fd4b25fb6b2bb2

Ingredients

  • 4 boned and skinned chicken breasts
  • 1/3 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • Ground pepper
  • 1/4 teaspoon tarragon leaves
  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 1/3 cup apricot brandy
  • 3/4 cup chicken broth
  • 1/2 cup sour cream

Instructions

  1. Mix flour, salt, pepper, tarragon, dredge chicken in flour mixture.
  2. Melt butter, and fry chicken until browned.
  3. Add brandy, then flame.
  4. Add broth, and simmer covered 10 minutes or until done.
  5. Add sour cream, warm through and serve.

(Visited 175 times, 1 visits today)
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jambo99

Aha, Metallicman’s also a poet, in addition to his many other areas of expertise, I’m sure. Coincidentally, poetry is something I’ve been thinking a lot about myself, recently, after re-reading Yeats’ A Vision for the umpteenth time. (Tackle Per Amica Silentia Lunae first, for anyone who’s interested, in which Yeats lays out his theory of poetry, alongside a great many other opinions, too– A Vison followed up on these ideas later, and then some– but certainly not for the faint of heart). For Yeats, the Great Poet is a man at Peace with the World, but at War with Himself – an adept of donning The Mask – and well acquainted with his anti-self; of uniting the Shadow with the Light. I’ve always been a dabbler in prose, myself– of which Yeats is a master, too– but the older I get I must admit a draw back to poetry again. Way back in school, sappy Shakespearean Sonnets and Wordsworthian reveries always interested me, but the poet is also a master of other realms, too, I’m discovering– definitely not for sharing with innocent schoolboys for the most part, it seems in hindsight– and some of them work in their own flesh and blood, not just with paper and parchment. I suspect Metallicman’s of the latter type, who turned from admiring himself in The Mirror years ago, and took up a Meditation on his Mask instead– a much worthier occupation, if I do say so myself. And Yeats would agree, because there, the Dragons also be.

1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x