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Even straw brains deserve respect—if only to avoid trouble

My mom died during childbirth, so for 10 years of my life all I had was my dad, until he told me that he had been diagnosed with cancer and wouldn’t have long to live. He gifted me a flash drive with videos I was supposed to open up on each of my birthdays so he could be there for me in spirit. He sent me to live with my grandparents, saying he wanted me to remember him as he was. I was heartbroken, but felt so loved that my dad put so much thought into making sure I never felt too far from him. Last year was my 27th birthday, and I went to watch the video with my grandparents, just like every year, when suddenly my grandpa said he couldn’t do it anymore. He said he had something to tell me and revealed that I was old enough to know the truth, that my dad never actually had cancer. He felt like it was too much to raise me by himself, so he lied about his sickness to make sure I let him go. I refused to believe him at first until he literally called my dad and put him on speaker. He sounded so much younger in the videos, but I would recognize my dad’s voice anywhere. My grandpa gave me his address and told me that he had made a new life for himself, and I shouldn’t take whatever I found personally. I showed up at his front door and met his wife. She knew who I was instantly and told me I wasn’t welcome inside. I begged to just speak to my dad and she threatened to call the cops. Just as I was leaving, I saw my dad pull up into their driveway. As soon as he saw me, he backed out and took off. I went straight home and deleted every single birthday video.

REACTION TO Simple Minds Someone Somewhere In Summertime Live 1983 | THE WOLF HUNTERZ REACTIONS

The United States is almost Insignificant and not ranked in the industry of maritime supply chains, let alone in the automation aspect of it.

Essentially, the maritime supply chain involves ships that carry goods across the sea, machinery that transfers goods between the shore and the ships, and equipment that moves goods around the terminals in the ports. Below is a rough illustration.

My job involves the sales and service of components supplied to the shipbuilding and port machinery industries for over 30 years. Throughout this time, I have been closely monitoring the trends and changes within these sectors.

Nowadays, the U.S. is not even in the running in these fields.

In 2024, China delivered 58% (51% in 2023, as shown in the chart below) of the world’s ship, while the U.S. only 0.1%.

In the harbor machinery and equipment sectors, China has maintained approximately 70% of the global market share for many years. Chinese companies ZPMC and SANY have delivered around 70% of the world’s STS (ship-to-shore) cranes, RTGs (rubber-tired gantry cranes), RMGs (rail-mounted gantry cranes), reach stackers, and straddle carriers. In addition to these two, there are also another 4–5 smaller Chinese players.
European companies such as Liebherr, Konecranes, and Cargotec etc. are also major players in the industry.

I have attached some photos of one of ZPMC’s factories to give you a sense of its breathtaking scale. I still remember my visit to this factory in 2010, together with a CEO from a European port crane manufacturer. As we viewed the colossal setup from a high-rise watchtower, the CEO shook his head and remarked to his colleague: ‘There is no way we could beat them.’

Cool.

Sir Whiskerton and the Scarecrow Strikes Back: A Tale of Hypnotized Hay, Pranks, and Feline Diplomacy

Ah, dear reader, prepare yourself for a tale of mischief, magic, and one very confused scarecrow who decided to take matters into his own straw-filled hands. Today’s story is one of hypnotic hijinks, farmyard pranks, and a cat who proved that even the most unlikely adversaries deserve a little respect—if only to avoid chaos. So, grab your sense of humor and a bag of popcorn (for snacking), as we dive into Sir Whiskerton and the Scarecrow Strikes Back: A Tale of Hypnotized Hay, Pranks, and Feline Diplomacy.


The Hypnotic Scheme

It all began on a quiet morning when Edgar the crow, ever the bold and brazen trickster, decided to have a little fun. “Watch this,” he cawed to his fellow crows, his beady eyes glinting with mischief. “I’m going to hypnotize the scarecrow into thinking he’s alive. Then we’ll sit back and watch the chaos unfold!”

The crows cackled with glee as Edgar swooped down to the scarecrow, who stood motionless in the middle of the cornfield. “Listen carefully, my straw-filled friend,” Edgar said, his voice low and hypnotic. “You are not just a scarecrow. You are alive. You can move. You can think. You can… prank!”

The scarecrow blinked his button eyes and tilted his head. “I… I can?” he said in a creaky voice.

“Yes!” Edgar said, flapping his wings dramatically. “Now go forth and cause some mischief!”


The Scarecrow’s Reign of Pranks

With his newfound sense of life, the scarecrow set out to make his mark on the farm. His first target was Doris the hen, who was busy pecking at the ground. “Boo!” the scarecrow said, leaping out from behind a hay bale.

Doris squawked in alarm, flapping her wings wildly. “What in the name of cluck is going on?!” she cried.

“Cluck!” Harriet echoed, tilting her head.

“Head!” Lillian added, fainting dramatically onto a pile of straw.

Next, the scarecrow turned his attention to Rufus the dog, who was napping in the shade. “Wakey-wakey!” the scarecrow said, poking Rufus with his straw-filled hand.

Rufus yelped and leapt to his feet, his fur standing on end. “What the—?!” he barked, looking around in confusion.

The scarecrow’s pranks continued, each one more elaborate than the last. He tied Porkchop the pig’s tail in a knot, filled Bessie the Tie-Dye Cow’s love beads with mud, and even convinced Ferdinand the Duck that he had been cast in an opera about scarecrows.


Sir Whiskerton Investigates

As the chaos unfolded, I knew it was time to intervene. “This is getting out of hand,” I said, flicking my tail. “We need to find out what’s going on.”

I enlisted the help of Sebastian the tomcat, the farm’s mysterious and centuries-old feline. “Sebastian,” I said, “we need to break the spell on the scarecrow before he starts demanding snacks.”

Sebastian, ever the enigmatic figure, nodded solemnly. “Very well,” he said, adjusting his bowler hat. “But be warned—this may require… unconventional methods.”


Breaking the Spell

With Sebastian’s guidance, we confronted the scarecrow in the cornfield. “Listen here, you overstuffed haystack,” I said, narrowing my eyes. “Your pranks have gone too far. It’s time to put an end to this nonsense.”

The scarecrow crossed his arms (or at least tried to, given his limited mobility). “Why should I?” he said. “I’m alive now! I can do whatever I want!”

Sebastian stepped forward, his extra claws glinting in the sunlight. “Perhaps,” he said, his voice calm but firm. “But true life comes with responsibilities. And respect. If you continue down this path, you’ll only alienate those around you.”

The scarecrow hesitated, his button eyes flickering with uncertainty. “But… but Edgar said I could do whatever I want!”

“Edgar is a trickster,” I said, flicking my tail. “And tricksters rarely have your best interests at heart.”


The Moral of the Story

As the scarecrow pondered our words, the animals reflected on the day’s events.

The moral of the story, dear reader, is this: Even straw brains deserve respect—if only to avoid trouble. Whether you’re a scarecrow, a crow, or a cat with a knack for solving mysteries, treating others with kindness and understanding is the key to harmony. And while a little mischief can be fun, it’s important to know when to draw the line.


A Happy Ending

With the spell broken, the scarecrow returned to his post in the cornfield, his button eyes once again staring blankly into the distance. The animals, relieved to have their peace restored, returned to their usual routines. Even Edgar, though initially disappointed, admitted that the scarecrow’s pranks had been a little too much.

As for me, I returned to my favorite sunbeam on the barn roof, content in the knowledge that I had once again saved the day. The scarecrow was back to normal, the farm was at peace, and all was right in the world.

And so, dear reader, we leave our heroes with the promise of new adventures, new pranks, and hopefully, no more hypnotized scarecrows. Until next time, may your days be filled with laughter, love, and just a little bit of feline genius.

The End.

I don’t remember all the tips we left but the one that comes to mind was we left a $0.01 tip. Yes, you read that right. Here’s what happened.

We went for a vacation down in San Diego and we went to a Mexican restaurant. I ordered the chicken fajitas. The meal comes out with no rice and beans. I asked the waitress she tells me it doesn’t come with it. Odd, I thought. It usually comes with this.

My oldest son, probably 8 at the time, happy kid, was also served his food. He got excited for some reason. The waitress very rudely said “wow. I never seen anyone get excited over a meal before.”

Oh mother fucker you don’t go there with my family. I got up, grabbed that plate of food and smeared it right in that bitches face and said “I bet you think that’s funny don’t you?” — Ok that never happened, but I wanted it to. We were surprised by what she said and when the check came, we left a one cent tip.

Cryptids Vol. 3: The Antarctic Cover-up | Predators Beneath the Ice

Shorpy

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Love Is The Drug – Roxy Music | Andy & Alex FIRST TIME REACTION!

Well I’ve got to say, I’m not impressed. And I own one of these:

First of all, the seat is way too hard. For a so-called grand tourer, I expect a very comfortable seat. Instead my bum is aching after about 40 minutes. After an hour, I’m more than happy to be heading home. I never feel refreshed after a long drive unlike a Mitsubishi Ralliart I had before the Mustang.

Second the seatbelt is horrendous as it digs into the side of my neck. As if the hard seat isn’t bad enough, the seatbelt is even worse.

And I had none of these problems with an Australian made car – ever. Sure there may have been minor irritations, but nothing like these.

Now sure, the 0–100 kph time of the Mustang is great, the handling is just as good, and it is surprisingly economical on the open road, but these things hardly make up for the two issues which really annoy the crap out of me. Honestly I prefer driving my old 1966 Hi-Po Mustang instead.

Gas Station at the End of the World

Submitted into Contest #279 in response to: Write a story from the POV of a zombie, mutant, or infected creature. view prompt

Asia W

The gas station tucked between your hometown and Memphis only accepts cash or party favours, so Marie opens her satchel over the counter and lets memories freckle the toothpaste-blue linoleum.An alabaster poker die. A spindle of hair-thin cotton. A deck of playing cards. A button popped from the collar of a school shirt.  This is all you have between you and the attendant is looking down at it like a janitor skirting a subway. You want to say: “That’s our lives, it’s all written down, but you can’t see what it means.” Instead, you keep your eyes on the cigarette case backgrounding the man’s head, the quilting of cardboard technicolour.“Come on,” Marie says, “There must be something you want. You gotta give us something.”She’s halfway over the counter, one hand flat, the other in the air like she can wrestle a win out of it. The attendant looks up from the queen of spades pinched between his fingertips. He has the eyes of a barn owl, a globe of carnelian pirouetting from his left earlobe like a tiny execution. There’s a paisley bandana knotted over his nose and mouth. Here is a man with a care for survival greater than yours.“Nothing here worth the trouble,” he flicks the card across the counter, “But I’d take a story. You lot clean?”“A story? The hell’s that meant to mean, man?”He shrugs, “Words. Easy deal, I thought. So, y’all clean or not?”Marie catches your eyes, a question mark carved into her forehead. She is looking for an answer. Here is what you know:Marie is clean.

You are unclean.

Neither of you are clean in the ways which matter.

Her tongue globes through the flesh of her cheek, pearled and sunburnt. Here she is, backlit, a messiah in the buttery sunburst of the open door. She shuffles down the collar of her aviator jacket and bares her throat. Skin the colour of burnt almonds, the colour of coffee and milk. No marks; nothing to see here. You lift your hair, present your throat to the boy behind the counter, hold your palm over the greening nape of your neck.

You are the only thing that marks Marie.

She leans against the counter and shoots a smile with too many teeth, a scattering of pebbles.

“That good enough for you, captain?”

“Sure.” He nods once, then twice. The traffic mirror in the corner of the shop chokes down your reflections and spits them back up a little bloated, a little faded. Seeing yourself is always like this these days; like staring down the dead. Seeing yourself is always like this these days; too near to swallowing glass.

 

——

The evening is the colour of an unripe plum and swallowed in the stench of motor fumes. Pools of gasoline smile up at you from the kicked-up pavement, raked through with purple and gold. Everything is quiet, unmoving. The boy sits down on the curb and you and Marie follow. He slaps three sweaty cans of Pepsi down by the toes of his roughed-up combat boots and gestures at you to take them. The tab slips under your fingertips and the drink goes down your throat like half-dead stars, a little flat in its violence. Sugar grits behind your molars, leaves your bottom lip rough and sticky.

The boy struggles with the pocket of his red plaid jacket, long hair curling over the grey hollow of his left under-eye. He places a joint between his lips where it hangs like a cut of straw. The boy cups his hands, ignites a match, and paints his jaw golden.

“I grow it in the back,” he nods at Marie, “Got a neat set up. Proper mattress, VCR, food, clearly.”

Marie stretches out her legs,

“Cool it Romeo, we’re not truck stop hookers. Just proper poor, poor, starving ladies.”

“Ha. You’re hardly my type,” He ashes his joint against the curb, “And we actually call ‘em ‘lot lizards’.”

He blows out a plume of silver smoke that curls over his hooked nose like the strokes of the Van Gogh paintings that you studied tirelessly in art class. He pulls a chapped, red-covered notebook from his back pocket and thumbs his way to the middle of it. He takes a pen from behind his ear and clicks it.

“You two gonna talk or what?”

——

In the beginning, you stole the car from her father’s impound. A Chevrolet the colour of spoiled salmon, scraped to ribbons of silver at the bumper.

“This is a bad idea,” You’d said, the mark at the base of your neck not yet the size of a fingertip and your fear of loneliness the only thing bigger than your guilt.

“There are no bad ideas,” she said, a lollipop bleeding sticky red over her bottom lip, “Only lame-ass bitches.”

She dangled the key under your nose,

“Come on, Thelma. Let me be your Louise.”

She wasn’t a film buff, so you didn’t say anything; omitted the detail of a car swooping over the Grand Canyon, of certain death blacked out only by rolling credits.

Fear makes monsters of us all.

At school, folded behind gum-stuck English desks, you’d studied a book about sailors, so from the stretch between your hometown and Nashville you played at being pirates. The static cracks of Billy Joel songs pushed through the radio became sea shanties. The silver insignia welded to the front of the truck became a sirenesque figurehead. You covered one eye with your palm and took from whoever you crossed paths with; dimpled cans of pears like minute treasure chests.

What you don’t tell the boy is of the chapter on gangrene, how the sailors would lop limbs off at the base to stop the swirling spread of disease. You don’t tell the boy of the joke, whispered through a cicada-heavy night, Marie’s fingers tracing your neck.

“Hack it off,” You’d said, “And we’ll end this mess once and for all.”

“I’d keep it on my mantle.”

But things felt different after this, and Billy Joel sang alone through the radio.

You tell the boy about the family Nashville, their slow-working faces, their mold-coloured skin. The girl, her child’s eyes reduced to hollows, her fists like rotted stone fruit, her teeth rusted with blood. What you don’t tell him is how in them you’d seen yourself and Marie had to settle you, palms at each side of your skull like a cage. You tell it through a different lens, keeping the three swift kills at the end of a snapped-off bedpost, the tins of food and bars of soap stolen away into a yellowed pillowcase, omitting the pale recognition of what was to come.

In the story “You have to leave me, I can’t have you end like this,” becomes, “They can’t be left, not with the disease spreading the way it is. There’s only monsters here.”

It’s true, really, if only sparing a few key details.

But he wants a better story and he tells you this, his fingernails planted between cracks of ashy asphalt, his heel crushing down on an empty Pepsi can. So you tell him the story about the girls kissing in sharpie-ridden bathroom stalls, hands locked under math-class tables. You tell him how you climbed your neighbour’s fence and stole into their pool, floated on your back in the water that did not belong to you, imagining that your eyes were someone else’s. How, at your first party, you drank too much and kissed a boy who was not a girl and felt like your lungs were burning. How, two years later, she kissed you behind a paint-peeled milk bar, and you felt like you had the final piece to a puzzle you didn’t even know you’d been solving.

Or should you say how these days memories come to you backwards, slotted into reverse?

Your father coughs blood into a handkerchief and then smokes twelve cigarettes, ashing them into his own urn.

You run away from something you cannot outrun with the girl and end up back in your bed, where the air is soapy clean and nothing has ever hurt you.

A newborn crawls back into her mother and makes a white-picket life in the gap before living.

Do you say how your own humanity is unravelling, but you won’t tell?

——

The boy leans back onto the cement, plaid-clad arms hoisting up his frail body. He looks at you, then Marie. In the melting sunlight, his eyes are bleached clementine. He flips his notebook shut and removes the ballpoint pen from between his lips, where it has left behind a bruise of watery ink. He stands and, one by one, kicks the cans standing before you. They roll off, scraping asphalt as they go, until they land and come to a stop in the middle of the vacant lot.

“I’m thirsty,” he says, “Wait here.”

As he leaves, he tosses the ballpoint pen in the air and catches it without looking, again and again. Sunlight scabs the red plaid of his shoulder blades. Once he’s swallowed up by the red and white haze of the gas station, Marie turns to you, takes your chin between her fingers. You clamp down on her wrist and try not to notice the press of bones, the sinews pressing against her skin like they might break away. You push her hand away.

“I’m poisonous, darling, don’t forget.”

——

The boy returns with one can of Pepsi, a buckknife, and a look in his eyes that spells ‘survivor’ like the scar under your skin spells ‘death.’ He is quiet, stripped of boister, and it takes a moment for you to register the press of a blade at the nape of your neck, pushing at your collar. You reach up to grab at his arm.

“What the hell are you doing?”

Marie moves to speak and he holds out his hand, pulls the bandana back up his crooked nose.

“Sorry ladies,” The knife-tip bites hard enough to draw blood, “You seem a nice pair but ‘nice’ isn’t worth my life.”

Marie’s hands move inside her jacket. The boy jerks his head, and the knife digs deeper,

“And I don’t appreciate being lied to.”

 ——

Here is a story the boy won’t hear; here is the story of why you don’t bring a knife to a gunfight.

Here is the story where the boy is laid dead on the asphalt with a bullet buried between his barn-owl eyes, and all you can do is cover his face with his own bandana, ransack his home, and get in the car.

Here is the story where you slip pills tight between your molars and and the girl beside you says,

Spit, spit goddamn it. I’m not doing this alone.

But you both know you’re running on borrowed time.

Here is the cherry-coke air freshener penduluming from the rearview mirror. Here is the revolver set back in the glove box. Here are the fists beating the sun-singed dashboard, the ache of your fresh pearl knuckles.

 You’re an asshole, you’re an asshole. Don’t talk, just drive.

He was going to kill you, you idiot, you sentimental moron.

Just drive.

Marie thinks that in order to be clean one must first be dirty. Marie thinks holiness is worth jack unless it lives first as sin.

Marie thinks a lot of things.

Here is the story where the girl holds out her hands as a saint and you spit mushy pills into her cupped palms like milk teeth, because you’ll do whatever she tells you, for better or worse. Here is the part where she pulls a coin from the dead boy’s wallet and places it face down on the back of her hand.

Heads or tails? Win or lose?

I don’t want to play anymore.

We’ve got a long way to go until the end, Red. Just play the game.

China is not in deflation. The economy is not declining, but vibrant. Businesses are not retrenching, but expanding. Employment is stable and rising, the annual jobs creation steady at 11 million. Household income and savings are rising. Consumer expenditure is rising. The society is in the state of confidence and jubilance, not malaise.

What it is is an economy growing at 5%, twice the US pace and 4 times the other rich countries. CPI at +0.5% to +1%. No inflation as it did not need to pour trillions into the economy during Covid-19 to salvage it. These are the signs of an economy growing at a sustainable pace, not the signs of a weak economy. If these were US numbers, it would be hailed as an unprecedented achievement.

China has a dynamic growth economy that is in transition to a high-tech/green-tech economy. Jobs creation and jobs destruction are the essence of this process. The transformation of the traditional industries by new technologies and digitalisation has speed up.

AI is new. DeepSeek’s open-source has democratized it. For sure this would generate wide applications, greater power, algorithmic efficiencies, innovations, and ever rising uses. Already there are collaborations of AI with EVs, smartphones, other consumer electronics, and manufacturing. There would be productivity gains and new demands will be created. The net result may well be jobs creation rather than jobs destruction, bearing in mind that China’s is an industrialized economy.

Meanwhile, the level of confidence is high. On 17 February, President X Jinping met with leaders of tens of China’s high tech companies. He told them – the opportunities are immense. It is time they use their talents.

Pennsylvania Dutch Cherry Pie

ec4cb06e137f971df38a33e236e9f0da
ec4cb06e137f971df38a33e236e9f0da

Ingredients

  • 1 pastry circle from 15 ounce refrigerated pie crust
  • 2 (21 ounce) cans cherry pie filling
  • 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon grated orange peel
  • 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/3 cup butter or margarine
  • 1/4 cup unblanched almonds

Instructions

  1. Heat oven to 425 degrees F.
  2. Fit pie crust into a 9 inch pie plate. Lightly dampen underside of crust and turn edge under pressing firmly to rim of pie plate.
  3. In a large bowl, combine pie filling and orange peel. Spoon into pie crust. Set aside.
  4. In a small bowl combine flour, sugar and cinnamon. Using pastry cutter or blender, cut in butter until it resembles coarse crumbs. Sprinkle mixture over cherry pie filling, covering completely and evenly.
  5. Bake for 20 minutes until filling is hot and top is golden brown.
  6. Sprinkle with almonds.

WARNING!!! ELDERLY DUMPING IS QUITE COMMON PLACE!

An elderly woman, wheelchair bound. Nursing Home could no longer keep her, no one’s sure if it was family or relative, but they came and picked her up and at night dropped her in the rear end parking lot of a church and left her there.

The storms came in, torrential rain, throughout the night. Then came the morning, when one of the church volunteer stopped by. They found an elderly woman, (estimated age – approximately 89 to 94) bound to the wheelchair, soaking wet, her diaper was soiled, with the blanket wrapped around her (that was also soaking wet).

She could not talk, she showed signs of possibility having Alzheimer’s. There were no form of identification at all. No markings, not a single clue where she came from, who she is, why she was placed here. If she was on medication, there were no way of knowing.

She was not capable of moving (in other words, she couldn’t use the wheelchair, she needed help).

I was called because the Church’s Senior Pastor was on vacation and the assistant Pastor was out of town, and all the Elders were at work, and one of the Elders told the person to call me and gave him my telephone number.

When I arrived, the Office personnel already took the woman to the Gym, to give her a bath. The Men went into the storage to pull out “yard sale items” for the upcoming Church Yard Sale. The Elder’s wife was rummaging through them trying to find a dress and some “PJ’s”. The other women (Ladies Bible Study group), were already in the gym – found her some diapers, and were clothing her.

Then one stated, that we had no idea what happened, the Maintenance men were reviewing the cameras, and it doesn’t show anyone being there before the power outage (power went out for almost 7 hours), then around 3 in the morning, there’s a woman in a wheelchair sitting there in the parking lot. I mean, no one even bothered her to put her by the sidewalk where she could at least have overhead shelter from the storm.

One found a hair dryer, and a couple of women were blow drying her hair. As for this elderly woman’s reaction – remained “neutral”.

At that time, I had rapport with just about ALL Nursing Homes, Assisted Facilities, and Specialized Homes. No one had a woman removed, like several had remarked, she might not be from this area. (Which I would term this “Out of Range”.)

Yes, I am fully aware that Nursing Home Administration “lies” just to cover their backsides.

Once that woman was all dolled up, I spied a Baby Bib, and told them to “Give her Baby food” – I wanted to see how she could eat (If she could swallow). They fed her squash, applesauce, and decided to give her “chicken noodle soup”, which she slurped that happily. She is not able to feed herself, someone has to feed her.

The Law Enforcement Elder Officer was present, we were going through laundry lists. There were some females (and males) that were evicted and put out in the streets (yes, that’s 100% legal), but none of them were her.

She does not talk. At least she had most of her teeth (I was hoping if she had dentures, her name would be etched on her dentures).

She was taken to be under the State Custody, marked as where the person was found. (Example: Calvary Church Parking Lot).

Why do families do this? I do not understand. When all overhead resources have been exhausted, there’s other programs. Yes, it’s frustrating because they’re often with long waiting lists. One would have to be with the Elderly person 24 hours a day and night.

I would rather that someone would pin a note with a name (example: Ada Doe).

Is Elderly dumping common? Far more than you realize!

I’ve seen people abandoned elderly men and elderly women:
At the park
At the Stores / Malls
At a Library
At a beach
At a bank (we had 2 that were dumped there)
At a bus stop
At a Hospital grounds or near it

While yes, it’s true, some Elderly are able to move about – but of course, they have no idea where they are! There’s been some that walked for miles and miles, confused, in a daze.

Nursing Homes and Facilities – even State Owned ones too – are just equally guilty of evicting patients! They take them outside on the sidewalk and leave them. (When family members are not able to accomplish anything and/or aren’t able to pick them up, or worst, they have no family members.)

To me, personally, it is sad! The world will blow up if someone did this to a helpless baby, but yet, the world is completely SILENT when someone does this to a helpless elderly person!

Why Western Hegemony Is Crumbling: China’s Rise & the Global Power Shift!

AI generated, but really, REALLY, good.

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inkagnitta

Thank you so, so much for posting the above video (which was deleted meanwhile)!

After watching it, I went to the app store and installed HelloChinese, which got mentioned in the video. It’s a great introduction into Chinese and pinyin.

Even better though, I think, is ChineseSkill, as you’re starting directly to listen and speak sentences, combined with reading pinyin and Latin words paired.

I cried for joy after the first lesson. I love the sound of this language, and now I’m gonna learn Mandarin!!! Finally!

mtness

Any chance to find this video elsewhere?

inkagnitta

Here: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=DXVg0Wmn4ts

The video I meant is up above in this post though, and still available 😄 ~ AMERICAN APOLOGISES FOR NOT LEARNING MANDARIN SOON ENOUGH|BREAKTHROUGHS IN CHINESE LANGUAGE REDNOTE ~ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xOmY2yS330

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