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Adapting to a society of Americans

2023 04 29 06 52
2023 04 29 06 52

Hey guys… there’s a movie that I am trying to figure out the name of it. I watched it once way back in the late 1990’s, and perhaps you all could help me out…

The movie was made sometime in the 1990’s but before 2004.

A female software programmer starts her first day at work for a massive software company. The movie begins with her starting her first day and walking though this enormous campus. Many white buildings, very well tended grounds. But not a lot of people.

We goes into her work area, and meets other people like her. All software people. And they begin to work together. I think there was maybe five or so others.

All of them are geniuses in their respective software fields.

But they notice something is wrong. And they start to investigate, and they discover that they are living in some kind of huge computer simulation, and that they are software routines. They are a software version of the very people who made the program. They were set inside the program to work for free over and over and over.

The software program is really a kind of Hell. They live for three days, and then the routine starts up all over again.

They become determined to stop the forgetting aspect of their existence.

So they hack into the system.

They go over the campus finding a “backdoor” to get into the main system, and when they find it, it looks like a huge human-sized drain-plug set in the grounds of the campus.

So they open it up, and it is a ladder that goes down deep into the bowels of the campus. So they go in and find out what is going on.

They then discover that they have been reliving this software role thousands of times, and then they discover a file of “notes”. A print out is reams and reams of notes. It was surprising (and shocking as a viewer) just how many times they were “recycled”. Then, they set down and they read it, they learn all about what they are, and what they are doing.

So the rest of the movie is spent trying to outsmart the people who made them, and prevent their memory erasure. The over all theme was to stop the “recycle” process, and stop the memory eraser. If I recall, they did manage to do just that, and the end of the movie has the girl saying something to the effect “just wait until we start making the rules”, or something along those lines.

The movie was so-so at the time, but now in light of other issues, I think that is is profound.

I believe that this movie predates “The Matrix”. Or, if contemporaneous, is a movie trying to “ride” the popularity of that science fiction theme. I also think that it is a made-for-TV, or otherwise “low budget” production. The sets were all simple, and not complex at all. The beauty of the movie was the story line.

The movie is American. Not British or Australian. And seems to take place in Silicon Valley.

What is the name of this movie? Can anyone at all help me in this?

Anyways. Today’s installment…

Firstly, cats have scent glands located on various parts of their body, including their head, chin, cheeks, and tail. When they rub against people’s legs, they are leaving behind their scent as a way of marking their territory. This behavior is more common in cats that have formed a close bond with their owners and see them as part of their social group. By rubbing against their owners, cats are including them in their territory and marking them as part of their social group.

Secondly, cats may rub against people’s legs as a way of seeking attention or affection. When they rub against people’s legs, they are signaling that they want to be petted, played with, or simply acknowledged. This behavior is more common in cats that are socialized and have formed close bonds with their owners. For these cats, rubbing against people’s legs is a way of expressing their affection and seeking physical contact.

Thirdly, cats may rub against people’s legs as a way of communicating their emotions. Cats are highly emotional animals that use body language to convey their feelings. When they are happy, relaxed, or content, they may rub against people’s legs as a way of showing their positive emotions. Conversely, when they are stressed, anxious, or upset, they may rub against people’s legs as a way of seeking comfort and reassurance.

Fourthly, cats may rub against people’s legs as a way of establishing dominance. In the wild, cats live in social groups that are based on hierarchies and alliances. By rubbing against people’s legs, cats are asserting their dominance and marking their territory. This behavior is more common in cats that live in multi-cat households or in areas with a lot of outdoor cats.

Lastly, cats may rub against people’s legs as a way of keeping clean and healthy. Cats are fastidious animals that spend a large part of their day grooming themselves. When they rub against people’s legs, they are transferring their scent and natural oils onto their owner’s skin and clothing. This can help to keep their owners smelling familiar and reduce the risk of skin infections or parasites.

In conclusion, cats like to rub against people’s legs for a variety of reasons, ranging from marking their territory to seeking affection and communicating their emotions. As a cat owner, it is important to understand and appreciate these behaviors as a way of strengthening the bond between you and your furry friend. By responding to your cat’s needs and showing them affection and attention, you can help them feel safe, happy, and loved.

De-Dollarization Kicks Into High Gear

China made me cry in Chongqing!

Asparagus Crab Soup
(Sup Mang Tay Cua)

The French introduced asparagus to the Vietnamese, who promptly incorporated this classic vegetable into their cuisine. The Vietnamese word for asparagus is “Western bamboo,” due to its resemblance to bamboo shoots. Asparagus is universally popular throughout Vietnam. This light, tasty dish will delight your family as well.

2023 04 18 20 28
2023 04 18 20 28

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 quarts water
  • 2 pounds pork bones
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 tablespoon fish sauce (nuoc mam)
  • 1 teaspoon vegetable oil
  • 1 clove garlic, chopped
  • 2 shallots or 2 scallions (white part), chopped
  • 1/2 pound crab meat, fresh, frozen, or canned
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 teaspoons cornstarch dissolved in 2 tablespoons water
  • 1 egg
  • 1 (15 ounce) can white asparagus, undrained
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh coriander (Chinese parsley)
  • 1/4 cup chopped scallion greens

Instructions

  1. Bring water to a boil and put the pork bones in. Remove the scum, then cover and continue to boil the bones for 1 hour. Remove the bones from the stock and discard. Add the salt and the fish sauce to the stock.
  2. Heat the oil and add the chopped garlic and shallots; add the crab meat and fry for 5 minutes over high heat. Sprinkle with 1/8 teaspoon of black pepper, stirring constantly, then add the crab meat mixture to the soup and bring to a boil. Add the cornstarch and water mixture and stir for a few minutes.
  3. Break the egg open and drop it into the actively boiling soup while stirring. Cook, still stirring, for about 2 minutes, then drop in the asparagus, along with the liquid from the can and the rest of the black pepper. Continue to cook until the asparagus is heated through. Sprinkle the coriander and scallion green over the soup before serving.

Yield: 6 to 8 servings

Source: The Classic Cuisine of Vietnam – Bach Ngo and Gloria Zimmerman, Barron’s, 1979

Germany is turning around

Yes it is.

This is a hopeful and encouraging development. Only half a year ago, German executives were struggling to convince the German government to cooperate instead of to fight China. Apparently now we are over the tipping point. Germany will cooperate with China, in spite of the possible repercussions from the USA.

A large majority of the German companies have a manufacturing base in China, even the small ones. Some Chinese cities are almost exclusively build thanks to German investments in China. Kunshan, Shenyang and other large Chinese cities are actually German cities. All the large German carmakers get more than half of their revenue from China. The Volkswagen president once said to the workers in Wolfsburg: “After this strike, I'll give you a pay raise. But be aware that it is entirely paid by your colleagues in China. This is the last pay raise given to you here in Wolfsburg.“

________________________

Frans Vandenbosch  方腾波

NO ONE is ready for what Putin is doing in the Arctic, GET READY!

The Empire’s Revenge: Set Fire to Southern Eurasia

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The collective cognitive dissonance displayed by the pack of hyenas with polished faces driving U.S. foreign policy should never be underestimated.

And yet those Straussian neo-con psychos have been able to pull off a tactical success. Europe is a ship of fools heading for Scylla and Charybdis – with quislings such as France’s Le Petit Roi and Germany’s Liver Sausage Chancellor cooperating in the debacle, complete with the galleries drowning in a maelstrom of hysterical moralism.

It’s those driving the Hegemon that are destroying Europe. Not Russia.

But then there’s The Big Picture of The New Great Game 2.0.

Two Russian analysts, by different means, have come up with an astonishing, quite complementary, and quite realistic road map.

General Andrei Gurulyov, retired, is now a member of the Duma. He considers that the NATO vs. Russia war on Ukrainian soil will end only by 2030 – when Ukraine would basically have ceased to exist.

His deadline is 2027-2030 – something that no one so far has dared to predict. And “ceasing to exist”, per Gurulyov, means actually disappearing from any map. Implied is the logical conclusion of the Special Military Operation – reiterated over and over again by the Kremlin and the Security Council: the demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine; neutral status; no NATO membership; and “indivisibility of security”, equally, for Europe and the post-Soviet space.

So until we have these facts on the ground, Gurulyov is essentially saying that the Kremlin and the Russian General Staff will make no concessions. No Beltway-imposed “frozen conflict” or fake ceasefire, which everyone knows will not be respected, just like the Minsk agreements were never respected.

And yet Moscow, we got a problem. As much as the Kremlin may always insist this is not a war against the Slavic Ukrainian brothers and cousins – which translates into no American-style Shock’n Awe pulverizing everything in sight – Gurulyov’s verdict implies the destruction of the current, cancerous, corrupt Ukrainian state is a must.

A comprehensive sitrep of the crucial crossroads, as it stands, correctly argues that if Russia was in Afghanistan for 10 years, and in Chechnya, all periods combined, for another 10 years, the current SMO – otherwise described by some very powerful people in Moscow as an “almost war” – and on top of it against the full force of NATO, could well last another 7 years.

The sitrep also correctly argues that for Russia the kinetic aspect of the “almost war” is not even the most relevant.

In what for all practical purposes is a war to the death against Western neoliberalism, what really matters is a Russian Great Awakening – already in effect: “Russia’s goal is to emerge in 2027-2030 not as a mere ‘victor’ standing over the ruins of some already-forgotten country, but as a state that has re-connected with its historic arc, has found itself, re-established its principles, its courage in defending its vision of the world.”

Yes, this is a civilizational war, as Alexander Dugin has masterfully argued. And this is about a civilizational rebirth. And yet, for the Straussian neo-con psychos, that’s just another racket towards plunging Russia into chaos, installing a puppet and stealing its natural resources.

Fire in the hole

The analysis by Andrei Bezrukov neatly complements Gurulyov’s (here, in Russian). Bezrukov is a former colonel in the SVR (Russian foreign intel) and now a Professor of the Chair of Applied Analysis of International Problems at MGIMO and the chairman of the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy think tank.

Bezrukov knows that the Empire will not take the incoming, massive NATO humiliation in Ukraine lying down. And even before the possible 2027-2030 timeline proposed by Gurulyov, he argues, it is bound to set fire to southern Eurasia – from Turkey to China.

President Xi Jinping, in his memorable visit to the Kremlin last month, told President Putin the world is now undergoing changes “not seen in 100 years”.

Bezrukov, appropriately, reminds us of the state of things then: “In the years from 1914 to 1945, the world was in the same intermediate state that it is in now. Those thirty years changed the world completely: from empires and horses to the emergence of two nuclear powers, the UN, and transatlantic flight. We are entering a similar period, which this time will last about twenty years.”

Europe, predictably, will “whither away”, as “it is no longer the absolute center of the universe.” Amidst this redistribution of power, Bezrukov goes back to one of the key points of a seminal analysis developed in the recent past by Andre Gunder Frank: “200-250 years ago, 70 percent of manufacturing was in China and India. We are going back to about there, which will also correspond to population size.”

So it’s no wonder that the fastest-developing region – which Bezrukov characterizes as “southern Eurasia” – may become a “risk zone”, potentially converted by the Hegemon into a massive power keg.

He outlines how southern Eurasia is peppered by conflicting borders – as in Kashmir, Armenia-Azerbaijan, Tajikistan-Kyrgyzstan. The Hegemon is bound to invest in a flare-up of military conflicts over disputed borders as well as separatist tendencies (for instance in Balochistan). CIA black ops galore.

Still Russia will be able to get by, according to Bezrukov: “Russia has very big advantages, because we are the biggest producer of food and supplier of energy. And without cheap energy there will be no progress and digitalization. Also, we are the link between East and West, without which the continent cannot live, because the continent has to trade. And if the South burns, the main routes will not be through the oceans in the South, but in the North, mainly overland.”

The biggest challenge for Russia will be to keep internal stability: “All states will divide into two groups at this historic turning point: those that can maintain internal stability and move reasonably, bloodlessly into the next technological cycle – and then those that are unable to do so, that slip off the path, that bloom a bloody internal showdown like we had a hundred years ago. The latter will be set back ten to twenty years, will subsequently lick their wounds and try to catch up with everyone else. So our job is to maintain internal stability.”

And that’s where the Great Awakening hinted at by Gurulyov, or Russia reconnecting with its true civilizational ethos, as Dugin would argue, will play its unifying role.

There’s still a long way to go – and a war against NATO to win. Meanwhile, in other news, Hegemon hacks are spinning that the North Atlantic has relocated to South China. Goodnight, and good luck.

Let’s talk about some news (Live)

Whenever they say…

2023 04 29 20 00
2023 04 29 20 00

The Americans screwed badly, very badly in Ukraine

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main qimg f9f0bb237364021c61b2853a055e58c0

2024 is an election year

Putin is not a bogeyman anymore. Americans have gotten tired of Ukraine and Putin. They couldn’t care less.

Plus Trump is clearly , if not Pro Putin at least definitely not Anti Putin

The US DESPERATELY NEED A BOGEYMAN

It’s Xi Jingping and China

Somehow US want to provoke China into a war and make China out as the bad guys to their populace

They are trying for months to do this now

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main qimg 271523e8a7417844645b2c69ac8ff804

Provoking them every second of every minute of every hour of every day of every week of every month

Pushing Japan and S Korea to the limit

Pushing EU to the limit

Desperately goading China every second into taking a false step

This is just one step

They blackmail all the leaders of various nations into baiting China with Taiwan again and again , hoping for some action

Yet China is a master of patience

CHINA KNOWS THE US IS A DYING ANIMAL

DYING ANIMALS are very dangerous. They should be kept as far away and allowed to die like rabid dogs or rabid raccoons without getting bitten and infected

So China sticks to the Law

Minding it’s own business, Playing to it’s strengths, Playing the card of peace, Trading and developing it’s Technology

Waiting out the US baiting and strengthening its energy supply, food supply and restructuring it’s economy

Obvious Signs that the United States Is Regressing

Plus a handful of other nations.

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Sometimes you come across a sign that states something so obvious, you wonder why the heck somebody decided to put it up in the first place. But then you wonder if maybe, just maybe, somebody did something so stupid once that someone else put a sign up to dissuade other people from doing something equally ridiculous.

Check out the list below for some perfect examples.

h/t: boredpanda

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But my cat does do useful work. I’m not referring to keeping down vermin, that’s not really an issue, but her main job is keeping me sane and relatively healthy.

Here she is hard at work

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main qimg 8addbc83785bd786c7c59116e65feaef

Without her companionship I’d probably cost the NHS far more than I do already. I know for a fact that she can reduce my blood pressure. I think she gets something out of it too.

14 HOURS ON A CHINESE BULLET TRAIN (Shanghai to Chengdu)

TikTok: Chinese “Trojan Horse” Is Run by State Department Officials

A MintPress News investigation has found that dozens of former officials from the State Department, CIA and FBI are working in key positions at TikTok and affecting the content that over one billion users see.

Alan Macleod

Amid a national hysteria claiming the popular video-sharing app is a Chinese Trojan Horse, a MintPress News investigation has found dozens of ex-U.S. State Department officials working in key positions at TikTok. Many more individuals with backgrounds in the FBI, CIA and other departments of the national security state also hold influential posts at the social media giant, affecting the content that over one billion users see.

While American politicians demand the app be banned on national security grounds, try to force through an internet surveillance act that would turn the country into an Orwellian state, make clueless statements about how TikTok is dangerous because it connects to your Wi-Fi, it is possible that TikTok is already much closer to Washington than it is to Beijing.

 

State Department-affiliated media

For quite some time, TikTok has been recruiting former State Department officials to run its operations. The company’s head of data public policy for Europe, for example, is Jade Nester. Before being recruited for that influential role, Nester was a senior official in Washington, serving for four years as the State Department’s director of Internet public policy.

Mariola Janik, meanwhile, left a long and fruitful career in the government to work for TikTok. Starting out at the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, Janik became a career diplomat in the State Department before moving to the Department of Homeland Security. In September, however, she left the government to immediately take up the position of TikTok’s trust and safety program manager, a job that will inevitably include removing content and reshaping algorithms.

While there is no suggestion that Janik is anything other than a model employee, the fact that a U.S. government agent walked into such an influential position at the social media giant should be cause for concern. If, for instance, a high Chinese official was hired to influence what the U.S. public saw in their social media feeds, it would likely be the centerpiece of the TikTok furor currently gripping Washington.

Janik is not the only former security official working on TikTok’s trust and safety team, however. Between 2008 and 2021, Christian Cardona enjoyed a distinguished career at the State Department, serving in Poland, Turkey and Oman, and was in the thick of U.S. interventionism in the Middle East. Between 2012 and 2013, he was an assistant to the U.S. ambassador in Kabul. He later left that role to become the political and military affairs manager for Iran.

In the summer of 2021, he went straight from his top State Department job to become product policy manager for trust and safety at TikTok, a position that, on paper, he appears completely unqualified for. Earlier this year, Cardona left the company.

Another influential individual at TikTok is recruiting coordinator Katrina Villacisneros. Yet before she was choosing whom the company hires, Villacisneros worked at the State Department’s Office of Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs. And until 2021, she was part of Army Cyber Command, the U.S. military unit that oversees cyberattacks and information warfare online.

Other TikTok employees with long histories in the U.S. national security state include: Brad Earman, global lead of criminal and civil investigations, who spent 21 years as a special agent in the Air Force Office of Special Investigation and also worked as a program manager for antiterrorism at the State Department; and Ryan Walsh, escalations management lead for trust and safety at TikTok, who, until 2020, was the government’s senior advisor for digital strategy. A central part of Walsh’s State Department job, his own résumé notes, was “advanc[ing] supportive narratives” for the U.S. and NATO online.

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2023 04 20 06 30

Walsh, therefore, is illustrative of a broader wave of individuals who have moved from governments attempting to manipulate the global town square to private companies where they are entrusted to keep the public safe from exactly the sort of state-backed influence operations their former colleagues are orchestrating. In short, then, this system, whereby recently retired government officials decide what the world sees (and does not see) online, is one step removed from state censorship on a global level.

For all the talk of digital influence operations emanating from Russia or other U.S. adversaries, the United States is surely the worst offender when it comes to manipulating public opinion online. It is known, for instance, that the Department of Defense employs an army of at least 60,000 people whose job is to influence the public sphere, most of whom serve as “keyboard warriors” and trolls aiming to promote U.S. government or military interests. And earlier this year, the Twitter Files exposed how social media giants collaborated with the Pentagon to help run online influence operations and fake news campaigns aimed at regime change in the Middle East.

Evidently, Project Texas also secretly included hiring all manner of U.S. national security state personnel to oversee the company’s operations – and not just from the State Department. Rebecca Pober, for instance, moved straight from her post in strategy and policy at the Pentagon to become a U.S. policy manager at TikTok.

A number of influential TikTok employees are former longtime CIA agents. Alex S., the company’s former trust and safety/global content integrity policy lead, was previously a leadership analyst at agency headquarters in Langley, VA, for almost nine years. Before the CIA, she worked for the State Department and U.S. Pacific Command.

Casey Getz, meanwhile, spent nearly 11 years at the CIA, rising to become branch chief, before later being hired by TikTok to work on data security and security integration. He was also previously a director for cybersecurity at the National Security Council at the White House.

And according to the résumé of TikTok trust and safety manager Beau Patteson, not only was he a CIA targeting analyst until 2020, he is also a currently serving military intelligence officer in the U.S. Army while moonlighting at the social media behemoth.

Indeed, virtually every branch of the national security state is present at TikTok. Before becoming the company’s trust and safety manager, Kathryn Grant spent more than three years working at the White House before moving to the National Security Council and then the Department of Energy. Her TikTok trust and safety colleague Victoria McCullough has a similarly state-heavy background, working two years at the Department of Homeland Security before joining Grant at the White House, where she was an associate director in the Office of Public Engagement. And TikTok crisis manager Jim Ammons served for more than 21 years as a unit chief in the FBI.

Meanwhile, a 2022 MintPress study described what it called a “NATO-to-TikTok-pipeline” whereby dozens of officials from the military alliance had also been given jobs in key fields within the company. Perhaps the most startling of these hires were Greg Andersen, whose own LinkedIn profile noted that he worked on “psychological operations” for NATO immediately before moving to work in social media.

Former state officials are overwhelmingly being appointed to politically sensitive positions such as security and trust and safety, rather than more neutral departments like customer service and sales. While this article is not specifically arguing that any of the individuals listed here are unworthy of consideration for their posts, taken as a whole, together with dozens of other spooks, spies and mandarins not profiled here, it is difficult to understand this phenomenon other than as a powerplay from the U.S. government to try to establish control over one of the world’s most popular and fastest growing social media companies.

Spies in our midst

Some of the furor over TikTok’s supposed threat has been stoked artificially by its rivals. Facebook, for example, is known to have contracted a PR firm to carry out a nationwide smear campaign against TikTok, presenting the platform as a “threat to children” and placing articles talking up the dangers of its competitors in newspapers across the country.

Yet Facebook itself has been subject to the government TikTok treatment. In 2018, Mark Zuckerberg was hauled before Congress and grilled for hours on the dangers of his platform. Elected officials discussed breaking the company up or even imprisoning Zuckerberg for his role in promoting misinformation. If the goal was to intimidate him into giving up editorial control of the platform, then it may have worked. Only weeks after the inquest, Facebook announced that it was “partnering” with the Atlantic Council, an arm of NATO, whereby the group would now influence what billions of people saw – and did not see – in their news feeds.

The Atlantic Council has long been among the most hawkish organizations on China and Russia, publishing lurid reports about the extent of the latter’s penetration of Western society. It is also strongly suspected that the Atlantic Council was involved in the infamous “Prop or Not” group, a shadowy organization that labeled hundreds of alternative media outlets (including MintPress News) as likely Russian propaganda.

As a result of recent algorithm changes, Facebook traffic to alternative news websites has been completely throttled, as the platform strongly privileges establishment media or conservative outlets. MintPress, for instance, has lost over 99% of its Facebook traffic. For the state, this sort of corporate algorithmic strangulation is far more effective than outright government bans; it achieves virtually the same suppression metrics while provoking far less public outrage.

Facebook itself is teeming with agents from the national security state. Aaron Berman, for instance, who leads the team that is ultimately in charge of content moderation for the platform, was, until 2019, a high-ranking member of the CIA, writing the president’s daily briefings until he jumped ship to Facebook.

Another Berman, Deborah, spent nearly a decade as an intelligence analyst at Langley. As a Syria specialist, it is quite possible she was part of the CIA’s ongoing dirty war against the country, whereby the agency funded, trained and maintained an army of jihadists to overthrow the Assad government. In early 2022, however, she left the CIA to take up a position managing Meta’s trust and safety team.

The Bermans are just two of dozens of CIA agents now running Facebook’s worldwide operations that were profiled in a previous MintPress investigation, “Meet the Ex-CIA Agents Deciding Facebook’s Content Policy.”

Facebook and TikTok are far from outliers, however. It is sometimes difficult to find a senior Google employee who was not previously a member of the CIA; Twitter has been hiring an alarming number of FBI agents to run its operations; and Reddit mysteriously appointed hawkish Atlantic Council member Jessica Ashooh to become its director of operations, despite her having little to no relevant experience.

Political Theater

TikTok is an immensely influential medium shaping how the world understands itself, particularly for younger generations. A 2021 study found that 31% of people aged between 18 and 24 worldwide had used the app in the past week, with 9% using it as a primary source of news.

This is, no doubt, part of the reason U.S. officials are so concerned with it. Last month, TikTok CEO Chew Shou Zi was brought before Congress and challenged on his company’s connections to the People’s Republic of China. Though TikTok is a subsidiary of Chinese firm ByteDance, it insists it operates as an independent entity and that it has never shared any user data with Beijing.

Nevertheless, questions persist about the app’s practices and security features. Unfortunately, the opportunity to interrogate Chew on more substantive issues was overtaken by political grandstanding from elected officials, who seemed uninterested in his answers and more concerned with scoring political points or achieving quotable soundbites.

There was also more than an undertone of xenophobia throughout the events, with Chew, on multiple occasions, having to remind his questioners that he was not, in fact, Chinese, only for them to ignore him and continue to insinuate that he was. Republican senator Tom Cotton went further, demanding that Chew be deported and insisting that “We can’t allow Chinese citizens, or anyone affiliated with the [Communist Party of China], to own one more inch of American soil” – a statement that evokes memories of the Chinese Exclusion Act, a racist immigration bill that was only fully repudiated in the 1960s. Chew is from Singapore.

 

“We’re committed to providing a safe, secure platform that fosters an inclusive place for our amazing, diverse communities to call home. It’s a shame today’s conversation felt rooted in xenophobia,” wrote TikTok COO Vanessa Pappas.

Chew was also subjected to bizarre questioning from politicians entirely ignorant of how modern telecommunications work. Congressman Richard Hudson (R—NC) asked whether TikTok could access Wi-Fi networks, a question so obvious it left Chew assuming he had misunderstood the question. Meanwhile, Buddy Carter (R—GA) demanded to know whether the app utilized users’ phone cameras to track dilation in their eyes so that they could market shocking videos more effectively to them. Watching “clueless” Congresspersons asking boomer questions was “hard to watch,” concluded tech magazine Futurism.

Here are some mind-blowing facts about cats:

  1. Cats have a unique collarbone structure that allows them to fit through small spaces, such as narrow gaps between railings or fence posts.
  2. A cat’s purr is not only a sign of contentment but also has therapeutic effects on their owners, reducing stress levels and lowering blood pressure.
  3. Cats have a remarkable ability to orient themselves in space, even in complete darkness. This is due to their sensitive whiskers and inner ear.
  4. Cats are more active at night because they are crepuscular animals, which means they are most active during the twilight hours of dawn and dusk.
  5. Unlike most other animals, cats do not have a sweet tooth. They are unable to taste sweetness due to the lack of receptors for it in their taste buds.
  6. Cats have a flexible spine and powerful leg muscles that allow them to jump up to six times their body length.
  7. A cat’s nose pad is unique, like a human fingerprint, and can be used to identify individual cats.
  8. The average cat has 32 muscles in each ear, which allows them to rotate their ears 180 degrees.
  9. A group of cats is called a clowder, and a group of kittens is called a litter.
  10. Cats have a powerful sense of smell, with up to 200 million scent receptors in their nose. This makes them much more sensitive to smells than humans or dogs.

No. They are not even the richest poor in the First World.

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This is a poor neigbourhood in Finland (council housing).

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This is a poor neigbourhood in the United States (makeshift shelters and tents).

The Gini index of the United States (0.49) is similar as in many Third World countries. It suggests the rich are filthy rich in the US and the poor are dirty poor in the US.

20 years for watching a dance video

Nevertheless, these ignorant politicians are currently legislating an anti-TikTok bill that would forever change the internet and prove a death knell to privacy online.

HR 1153, the DATA Act, which recently passed the House Foreign Affairs Committee, is almost surreal in some of its implications,” wrote the Institute for Responsible Statecraft. Not only would TikTok (and possibly other large Chinese apps like WeChat) be banned, but accessing them using a VPN would become a criminal federal offense and subject to 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $1 million.

The bill also gives the government the power to secretly and permanently spy on any individual it suspects of interacting with foreign adversaries. While it names those adversaries as including China, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran, Russia and North Korea, it also notes that the list can be changed at any time. Thus, the bill would blow apart freedom of speech online and implement some of the most Draconian, authoritarian internet laws anywhere on the planet, far more strict than even the famously censorious Chinese government.

Don’t mess with Project Texas

The influx of State Department officials into TikTok’s upper ranks is a consequence of “Project Texas,” an initiative the company began in 2020 in the hopes of avoiding being banned altogether in the United States. During his time in office, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo led the charge to shut the platform down, frequently labeling it a “spying app” and a “propaganda tool for the Chinese Communist Party.”

It was widely reported that the U.S. government had forced the sale of TikTok to Walmart and then Microsoft. But in late 2020, as Project Texas began, those deals mysteriously fell through, and the rhetoric about the dangers of TikTok from officials evaporated.

Project Texas is a $1.5 billion security operation to move the company’s data to Austin. In doing so, it announced that it was partnering with tech giant Oracle, a corporation that, as MintPress has reported on, is the CIA in all but name.

Red Menace

While it was once seen as an endless source of cheap labor and a potential ally, over the past decade, Washington’s position on China has radically changed. Beginning with the Obama administration’s 2012 “Pivot to Asia,” the U.S. began preparing to go to war with Beijing in order to prevent its economic rise.

To date, it has encircled China with 400 military bases and attempted to form what many have called an “Asian NATO” – a military alliance of states seeking to counter Beijing. One willing participant is Australia, which has recently agreed (under considerable American pressure) to purchase a fleet of nuclear submarines, potentially costing a quarter-trillion U.S. dollars. This is all despite the fact that China is Australia’s largest trading partner.

The United States has used sanctions and other acts of economic warfare in its attempt to slow down China’s seemingly inevitable rise. Last year, it banned Chinese semiconductor chips from American products and blocked electronics giant Huawei from operating in the U.S.

Furthermore, It has engaged in a massive propaganda war against Beijing, painting the country as a menace. Domestically, the propaganda has worked; only five years ago, a majority of Americans held positive opinions about China. Today, that figure has crashed to an all-time low of 15%.

Washington has supported all manner of separatist groups in China, including in Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong and Taiwan, and attempted to highlight China’s mistreatment of its minority populations on a world stage. Its efforts have largely fallen on deaf ears internationally as countries in the Global South continue to pursue ever-deeper economic, cultural and political ties with the emerging superpower. Many nations see Chinese cooperation coming with comparatively few strings attached and no threat of a military response, unlike working with the United States.

Even more concerning for war planners in Washington is the rapid advancement of the de-dollarization trend worldwide. In past weeks, countries around the world have announced that they are moving away from using the dollar for international trade, a move that will drastically weaken the U.S. economically and reduce its ability to use sanctions as a means of coercion.

It is in this light, then, that we should see the latest TikTok furor in Congress. A global empire is on the decline and is desperately attempting to maintain its hold over the worldwide means of communication. TikTok certainly does record an alarming amount of personal data on its users, and there needs to be a debate on the ethics and implications of such practices. But this data model is a little different from that of its competitors.

With billions of users worldwide, big social media companies hold vastly more power to influence global public opinion than even the largest of old media empires. The U.S. clearly understands that he who controls the algorithm controls minds. In decades gone by, the State Department and the CIA spent fortunes creating networks of hundreds of paid informants in newsrooms across America and even secretly set up hundreds of newspapers and magazines to plant information (or misinformation) to alter public opinion. Today, however, for the U.S. government, it is much quicker and simpler to place a few operatives into key positions in big tech companies – and they can have a much greater effect.

Thus, Americans should not fear that TikTok is some sort of Communist Chinese Trojan Horse; it is already being run by the State Department.

 

Tucker: This is the end of the First Amendment

Tom Kha Gai Soup
(Galanga Soup – Vietnam)

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70e0f2f3994877671d611f11f4837d20

Ingredients

  • 6 ounces sliced white chicken meat
  • 6 ounces sliced white onions
  • 2 or 3 medium pieces galanga (Thai ginger)
  • 3 (1-inch) slices lemon grass
  • 1 ounce chopped green onion
  • 24 ounces water
  • 1 (2 ounce) package coconut milk concentrate
  • 4 ounces fresh lime or lemon juice
  • 4 ounces fish sauce
  • 1 tablespoon ground red chile

Instructions

  1. Start heating the water. Add coconut milk concentrate, galanga ginger and lemon grass.
  2. Add sliced chicken. Bring to a boil. After the soup has boiled for 2 minutes, add the onions.
  3. In a serving bowl add the lime juice and fish sauce. Do not add this to the boiling soup!
  4. When the chicken is cooked, place the soup in the serving bowl with the sauces.
  5. Garnish with the green onions, spice to taste with red chile and serve.

https://youtu.be/DPOax05QiS8

How do we detect an imminent Chinese invasion of Taiwan?

I assume that you are an American, or a member of a proxy state loyal to the United States.

I also must assume that you failed geography. Never studied war. Have no idea at all about China, and are just emotionally entangled with the anti-China nonsense being spewed forth from the Western media.

Well, I’ll try to answer this one.

But as we used to say in Mississippi; there’s “few things stupider than a mail box pole”.

Taiwan is close to China.

In close. As in really, really, REALLY close.

Not only geographically, but socially, economically, financially, culturally, historically, and in all other ways… Chinese.

There is so much cross-strait migration back and forth, that you cannot tell who is from Taiwan and who is from the mainland.

So what does this mean?

Well…

  • You cannot detect a build up of any kind of an invasion force.
  • You cannot discern who is who, and where is what.
  • China controls Taiwan. Even though there are DPP elements who believe otherwise.

So, to spell it out clearly… let’s just say this.

You can supply Taiwan with all the weapons and bombs in the world, and you can convince them that LGBQ+ is the “new sexy”, but China is far too big, far too powerful, far too influential, and far, far too well managed. If China said “enough is enough”. All the games and charades would be over.

President Biden would have a fit, the United States media would howl, and the neocons would demand war!

But you know what would really happen?

Nothing. A whimper. And the United States would slither back under the rock from whence it came from.

The United States continues to act like “dick wads”.

China’s new foreign minister is the former Chinese ambassador to the United States, Qin Gang, who has worked diligently in the United States for more than 500 days.

According to diplomatic etiquette, the principal official in charge of foreign affairs of the host country should take the initiative to receive the ambassador to that country and accept the credentials. For example, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi took the initiative to host U.S. Ambassador to China R. Nicholas Burns at the State Department.

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Not only has Antony Blinken not actively eased relations with China, he has not interacted with Qin Gang.

What is even more mind-boggling is that Blinken did not formally meet with Qin Gang at the U.S. State Department, but perfunctorily sent Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman to meet with Qin Gang on an informal occasion to accept the credentials, with his arrogance in full view. This is a breach of diplomatic decorum.

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Not only did Blinken deliberately slack off, but other senior U.S. officials also chose to snub the Chinese ambassador to the United States.

Perhaps the U.S. side thought this rude and childish behavior would express its assertiveness toward China.

Thus, the Chinese ambassador to the United States, Qin Gang, who is not officially received by the United States, has more time to visit the grassroots in the United States.

During his more than 500 days in the United States, Qin Gang visited many places, reached out to American Grassroots people, and actively promoted and improved the development of U.S.-China relations.


Recently, Blinken is about to visit China, and Qin Gang has just been promoted to Chinese Foreign Minister.

Since Blinken refused to receive Ambassador Qin Gang in the United States, he will seek to see Foreign Minister Qin Gang in Beijing this time. (Imagine the embarrassment for Blinken)

Blinken is going to visit China soon, and Foreign Minister Qin Gang is on an equal footing with him. Is Blinken still acting arrogant?

Yesterday, Blinken ignored Ambassador Qin Gang, but today, Blinken must take the initiative to beg to see Foreign Minister Qin Gang.

I was very curious to know the first words the two of them said when they first met. LOL.

Happy Story

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main qimg 8e047c691a8211a2f58378f7429cebb5

Why do people who have been to China and the USA prefer China?

MM responds...

I am an American. I have been living in China for nearly twenty years now.

I have the option to return back to the ‘States.

Instead I decided to stay in China.

Here’s some bullet points of MY reasons why I stayed, and why I have absolutely no inclination, nor desire to return “home”.

  • I have a family here. When I tried to move back to the United States, the Consulate official refused to grant a spousal visa to my wife. Claiming that she was too beautiful, and was only using me to go to America. Well, we decided against moving to the ‘States. Instead, we moved to American Samoa which is a US Territory. Played a bit, and then returned back to China. China is THE place to raise a family.
  • I own homes / property here. I have roots. I have homes. I have a nice car. I have clubs, and social groups that I belong to. But in the United States, it’s a different story. I don’t own any homes, or cars, or property or businesses, or storage lockers there. It’s one big land of “empty” as far as I am concerned. My possessions and all the rest is in China.
  • I have a modest income. Fixed plus some international income. It’s enough to life off of in China with a nice middle class lifestyle. But I would be living in absolute poverty if I were in the United States.
  • I have friends and a social life. In the ‘States, I had a television set, and a computer. That was my social life. The towns and suburbs where I lived were all quiet and lonely places. Nice well mowed lawns, but zero social interaction. Not so in China. It’s boisterous and entertaining. Everyday is Christmas and the fourth of July.
  • I will live longer. In Western Pennsylvania, as a white male, my life expectancy is to age 76. China’s life expectancy is around 84, but here, in the Pearl River Delta, the life expectancy is 94. I can expect that by living the local lifestyle to approach the local life expectancy.
  • The food is healthy. No GMOs. No hormones. Everything is fresh. Lots of fish to eat, and the prices are so reasonable. And it is delicious too. In America, it’s all grilled and fried GMO laden protein slabs. Breakfasts of sugar coated something in homogenized milk substitute, eaten cold while in a rush.
  • I eat better. Sure, I could eat “city chicken”, pot roasts, meatloaf, at fine family sit-down meals. But truthfully that is something that never really happened. Instead, I often ate fast food, pizzas, and a weekend meal in a chain restaurant like Olive Garden, Shoneys, or a “King Buffet”. Here, we eat formal sit-down meals, and enjoy the many, many food venues that are so cheap and easy to experience.
  • It is pet friendly. Contrary to the Western “news”, the Chinese absolutely love dogs and cats. On a scale that blows my mind. I have never seen such pampered and adored pets in my life, but here it is normal, and I am really ok with that.
  • It is safe. I mean super safe in China. No violent crime, and personal crime is way down. You don’t need to carry a gun. You don’t need to put locks on your doors. You don’t need to worry about a mass shooting at your kid’s school.
  • Orderly. I love the order, and the attention to detail. Street sweepers in the early morning, followed by large group dancers. Delivery services delivering goods, and people calmly going about their business.
  • Medical Care is affordable. Really. You don’t need to pay $5000 every month for American insurance. You also don’t need prescriptions to buy most medicines. Costs are super affordable. So no need for medical insurance. Easy access to doctors and clinics. New, state of the art, hospitals. And access to Chinese traditional medicines.
  • No pollution. Seriously. Blue skies every single day. Where I live is lush, tropical, with amazing smells, and fine weather. Even when it is overcast, and humid (Monsoon season) the lushness and the scents of all the flowers is simply wonderful.
  • The Schools are great. My kids attend local Chinese schools. They are bilingual, and they have instilled military discipline. I’ve read a lot of disparagement about the Chinese educational system, but I really disagree. To get where I am was though difficult choices, tough efforts, and a rigorous sense of discipline. That is automatically instilled into my children. I really admire that.
  • You can participate. China is a society of participants. While the United States is a nation of spectators. If you are “local”, you don those yellow, red or blue vest and help. You clean the streets. You organize events. You help others in need. You watch over the children. It’s so refreshing from the entitlement society that I came from.
  • Nothing is “woke”. No LGBQ+ pushing their strange ideas on your children. No obese people riding four-wheeled electric gurneys. No tattoo laden Chicks with big-ass nose rings, and green hair. No gangs of thugs preying on people, cars waiting at a stop light or looting stores.
  • People are happy. China is up-beat, happy. The music is calm and soothing or up-beat dance music. Dance venues, singing venues are everywhere. You are not living life if you are not dancing and singing, and this fits me well.
  • China is convenient. Everything is orderly, and volunteers are often available to help you. You pay by QR, and I haven’t carried cash in years. Face scanning is normal, and it is used to go in most places. There’s no April tax reporting American style, and taxes are graduated, but tiny in comparison to the massive American chunks taken from you.
  • I can save. In the United States, it was impossible to save money without taking a hit on lifestyle. I lived paycheck to paycheck, and with the endless layoffs, and downsizing, I just couldn’t save. This caused all sorts of stress. Not so in China. China doesn’t have all those rules, laws, or hands on your wallets. And because of that, I have a very nice savings and financial cushion.
  • Drinking culture. It’s no big deal. Alcohol is not “carded” and you are always served high end super potent alcohol when you have get-together’s. Same with cigarettes, and betel nut. You just go to a store and buy it. No “liquor laws” specifying “dry counties” and “Sunday rules”.
  • China is reasonable. A comparison between American “news”, and Chinese news is all you need to see. I’ll leave it at that.
  • Chinese leaders deserve respect. China is a merit-driven society. So everyone got to where they are through hard work and perseverance. So it is something that I am comfortable with. As, that is my personality, and my story. So like attracts like, and I am very comfortable here.
  • China is a peaceful place. It really is. Even in the most boisterous places, there’s oasis of sanity everywhere. You just simply pass through a door, and you are in another world. parks, trees, flowers and birds are everywhere.
  • China is the future. No matter what the American media says. And America’s days are gone. With the probable sunset some time in the early 1960’s.

So, what’s the problem? I mean, and am being clear about it. I like China far more than America. I spent 40 some years in the United States, moved to China and have been here some 20+ years. And, based on my personal experience, it suits me.

I am healthier, happier, safer than I ever was in the United States.

This is where I live; JiDa my residential subsection, check out the sky. Check out the clean streets. Check out the crowds. Check out the restaurants, and the people. I am not lying. China is AWESOME!

Can you blame me for wanting to stay?

2023 04 29 20 07
2023 04 29 20 07
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Rod Cloutier

Funny signs!

I notice locally that the first thing that happens in a disaster is the signs get made up, flooding, fire, so forth. Can people not see the world around them without having signs to read ?

Trak

Dear MM,

The name of the movie is The Thirteenth Floor.
The Thirteenth Floor is a 1999 science fiction neo-noir film written and directed by Josef Rusnak, and produced by Roland Emmerich through his Centropolis Entertainment company. It is loosely based upon Simulacron-3 (1964), a novel by Daniel F. Galouye, and a remake of the German TV-film World on a Wire (1973). The film stars Craig Bierko, Gretchen Mol, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Vincent D’Onofrio, and Dennis Haysbert. In 2000, The Thirteenth Floor was nominated for the Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film, but lost to The Matrix.

PlotIn 1999 Los Angeles, Hannon Fuller (Mueller-Stahl) owns a multibillion-dollar computer enterprise and is the inventor of a newly completed virtual reality (VR) simulation of 1937 Los Angeles, filled with simulated humans unaware they are computer programs. When Fuller is murdered just as he begins premature testing of the VR system, his friend and protégé, Douglas Hall (Bierko), who is also the heir to the company, becomes the primary suspect. The evidence against him is so strong that Hall begins to doubt his own innocence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Thirteenth_Floor

mtness

Ok, my bet now !

My first thought was the 13th floor, too –
But it didn’t quite fit into your description.

The movie you are asking for is
ExistenZ
!

(1999)
– by David Cronenberg features main characters who plug-in and out of a game throughout the movie, and what is actually the real world become less clear as the movie goes on. It tells the relation between humans and the technologies surrounding them – which has great validity in the present condition. The film is highly immersive, thought-provoking and obviously thrilling. It has elegance, seemingly lifting it above the initial efforts put on and has really aged well too.

(From here: https://thecinemaholic.com/movies-like-matrix/ , some other good recommendations there)

Ah, that was quite well hidden in the attic!

I might add another recommendation,
“Avalon” by Mamoru Oshii.

Best regards and happy watching!

mtness

Ah, too bad, but we will figure this out.

mtness

I am very certain that I have seen this movie, too…
but I have not found any reference on it until now –
although I have skimmed through the imdb with the keyword “simulated reality” :/
Will keep on digging.
Best regards, MT.

Trak

The answer from ChatGPT:

Yes, there are other movies with similar themes of characters discovering they exist within a simulation or artificial reality. Here are a few examples:

“The Matrix” (1999): Directed by the Wachowskis, this iconic sci-fi film follows a computer programmer named Neo who discovers that the world he knows is a simulated reality created by intelligent machines. He joins a group of rebels seeking to free humanity from their simulated existence.

“Inception” (2010): Directed by Christopher Nolan, “Inception” explores the concept of shared dreaming. In the film, a skilled thief named Dom Cobb enters people’s dreams to extract information. The story evolves into a complex narrative where characters question the nature of reality and the boundaries between dreams and reality blur.

“Dark City” (1998): Directed by Alex Proyas, “Dark City” is a neo-noir science fiction film set in a mysterious city where its inhabitants have no memory and are controlled by a group of extraterrestrial beings. The protagonist wakes up with no memory and discovers his world is an artificial construct.

“Source Code” (2011): Directed by Duncan Jones, “Source Code” follows a soldier who wakes up in another man’s body and discovers he is part of an experimental program that allows him to relive the last eight minutes of a person’s life. He must find a way to prevent a terrorist attack and uncover the truth about his situation.