2022 11 23 14 57

Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (full movie) with some geopolitics and food

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Today’s theme is a movie. I hope you all enjoy this adventure done in 1930’s style.

Sky Captain was a risk, one that did not pay off but you have to admire its audacity.

It was all shot in digital with actors in front of a giant green screen. It pays homage to the black and white Flash Gordon type serials that used to be repeated on TV when I was a kid.

The film is in a steampunk style combining art deco, pulp fiction, film noir and serial film styles of the between the war years.

The story is straightforward, New York is being attacked by giant robots, famous scientists are disappearing and the protagonists race around the world in search of Dr Totenkopf played by Laurence Olivier via the use of archive footage.

Although the script and pacing could be better, the visuals are glorious and the actors are top notch getting in to the spirit of adventure. Angelina Jolie is the standout and sexy as the British Navy pilot with a spot on accent.

The story is pure saving-the-world pulp fantasy. Six eminent scientists have mysteriously disappeared.

Polly, who is covering the story, is summoned to Radio City Music Hall by Dr. Jennings (Trevor Baxter), a scientist who tells her he knows the cause of the disappearances and fears he is next.

In a magical moment of cultural transposition, she meets him in the loge during a screening of “The Wizard of Oz,” one of the film’s touchstones. (Much later in the movie the digitally resurrected image of the young Laurence Olivier appears as an oracular wizardlike technophantom.)

Before an air raid interrupts their meeting, Polly learns that the probable mastermind behind the disappearances is Dr. Totenkopf, the enigmatic leader of a group of pre-World War I scientists, who has faded into obscurity.

As the music hall empties in a panic, a fleet of giant robots approach the city and lands, tramping through Midtown Manhattan and crushing everything in their path.

Polly summons her ex-boyfriend Joe, a daredevil freelance aviator who operates a squadron from a private base not far from Manhattan.

In the initial skirmish, Joe, piloting a P-40 Warhawk, captures a robot.

The enemy retaliates by destroying his fortress.

The next skirmish is a furious aerial battle that zigzags thrillingly through the canyons of Manhattan as Joe’s plane gives chase to a fleet of sinister birdlike robots.

Polly, who was slipped an important clue, refuses to hand it over to Joe unless he makes her his partner, and he reluctantly agrees.

As they zoom around Manhattan, she becomes a pushy backseat driver, snapping directions and arguing with Joe about their troubled romantic history.

She accuses him of dumping her three years earlier.

He says she sabotaged his plane, and their flirtatious bickering continues for much of the movie.

Having determined that the robots are being dispatched from a secret location in Nepal, they fly to Asia, stopping along the way at a British airstrip suspended above the earth where Franky (Ms. Jolie), a regal British air force commander in an eye patch, lends her forces to the cause. Once Joe and Polly reach the Himalayas, where Totenkopf’s war machine is secreted inside a giant ice cave, they discover the dreadful meaning of “the world of tomorrow.”

I travel to the US once or twice a year. There are a few things that are always quite striking to me in the airports:

  • For obvious reasons, the first thing I tend to notice is immigration and customs. I mostly come in through Newark or San Francisco, which both tend to be unfriendly, inefficient and full of absurd bureaucracy. DC and San Diego are much better in terms of efficiency. Edit June 24: I take it all back! I just landed at Boston Logan, and my arrival was smooth, quick and highly automated. A big leap forward from the time I spent two hours in line for immigration at SFO last year! Edit July 1: I take back taking it back! I came in through LAX with my family on Saturday and it was an absolute nightmare. We spent nearly 90 minutes in different lines before finally getting to see a (very friendly) CBP officer.
  • I always feel uneasy from seeing all kinds of security guards (eg. Port Authority) carrying guns. (Please, before commenting on this, read https://www.quora.com/If-you-are-from-Norway-visiting-the-United-States-for-any-reason-what-is-the-first-thing-you-notice-Is-there-anything-in-particular-that-bothers-you/answer/Christian-Bull/comment/97627081)
  • The masses of people doing menial jobs. Labor is expensive in Norway, so we optimize and automate. I remember a friend I traveled with, shocked at seeing people whose job it was to move bags from one conveyor belt to another, blurting out “Where are we? The third world!?”

Then there’s the noise. The US is an incredibly noisy place. Trucks, buses and hotel room ventilation especially so. They’re simply a lot more noisy than European buses, trucks and hotel room HVAC. I’ve been in a lot of hotels with spectacularly noisy ventilation. It’s very clearly possible to move air without every single component generating the greatest possible amount of noise, but I guess that’s unamerican.

So in general the first impressions tend to be not that great (notable exception: San Diego).

Obviously, something keeps me and my family coming back, however. This summer we’re heading to the US again for our 5th family vacation in 12 years, and the kids are beyond excited. There’s just an incredible wealth of things to do, see and experience in what is – once you’re done with the airport – a very welcoming, free and safe country.

  • The widespread use of cash. I honestly can’t remember the last time I paid cash in Norway for anything. I couldn’t tell you how a Norwegian Krone bill of any denomination looks. We mostly use direct debit cards. Even drug addicts selling magazines on the street take Vipps, our Venmo equivalent.
  • …and speaking of cash. 1 cent coins! Really?
  • What you pay at the register isn’t what it says on the label. WTF? I’m supposed to add 6.23% tax in my head?
  • Tipping. Oh Lord! The unspoken, unwritten rules of tipping are just impossible to make sense of. Just figuring out what hotel employees I’m supposed to tip and how much is bewildering and has taken me years. So far I’ve figured out that I’m supposed to tip bell boys $1 per bag, $3 for the valet who brings my car (but nothing for the one who parks it!?) and housekeeping around $5 per day. For the rest of them I have no clue… Receptionists? I have no clue, but I did it once after receiving several packages to my room, and it felt super duper awkward. Not doing that again. Restaurants I’ve got figured out. The rest of the service industries – not so much. I suspect I deeply offended the people who took us on a dolphin safari in Hawaii by not tipping, but I’m really not sure. Tips welcome! Literally.

Oven Crisp Chicken Wings

This is a very tasty way to make wings. You can dip them in your favorite sauce when baked or they are yummy as-is. Recipe from CD Kitchen on the Internet.

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2022 11 23 15 28

Ingredients

Directions

  • Cut wings at joints.
  • Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
  • Be sure wings are thawed and dry them well with paper towels.
  • Combine flour, paprika, garlic salt, black pepper and cayenne pepper in a plastic bag.
  • Shake to mix ingredients and add wings.
  • Line a large baking sheet with Release foil and melt the butter on it. ( Makes for easy clean up.).
  • Add wings to pan and turn to coat.
  • Bake for 30 minutes.
  • Turn wings over and bake for 15 more minutes or until crispy and done.

I have written extensively on this subject, focusing for a moment on what is China doing and what is the US doing which are in opposite directions. If you go the wrong direction for long enough then you are in real trouble, which America is in right now.

CHINA’S RISE

Forget about all the state capitalism vs corporate capitalism, yes this is an underlying difference but results are results. Either you are in the game or you are not and the USA is not in the game, China is.

It is all about one thing, investment. You do not invest you get nothing. Here is Pudong in 1982 when I first arrived in China. NOTHING NADA ZERO development.

main qimg 21c1045a93086fa3cf294ee3f36f7dab lq
main qimg 21c1045a93086fa3cf294ee3f36f7dab lq

Then there is Pudong today, same photo but completely developed.

AMERICA’S FALL

Here is Detroit where I grew up in 1950:

main qimg 769bba236b706352c16d15a2f8bb38bb lq
main qimg 769bba236b706352c16d15a2f8bb38bb lq

Ostensibly the ‘richest’ city in the world the year I was born, 1950.

Here is Detroit a few years ago:

main qimg d7b418ee7474da593a887889b8974c9c lq
main qimg d7b418ee7474da593a887889b8974c9c lq

I chose a nice image, just the after effects of destruction.

It is all about investment. The USA does not invest in anything other than military. Nothing, nada. The Trump administration even litigated against universities who were trying to enroll more blacks and minorities in favor of Chinese and whites, but really Chinese as they were the highest test scorers so they get in and nothing for black, latinos or other US citizens. Incarceration rates and numbers at 2.3 million, drugs, lack of opportunity, do you get it? America is still going in the wrong direction and now we have the QAnon types running the Republican party so you can forget about them to help. Up to the Democrats who are ok but they are no world beaters when it comes to investment as they are govt types and don’t get the private sector.

And Trump? Mr Glitz was the exact opposite of investment, but if you do not invest you die and he invested nothing.

The USA will die and be hollowed out and China will dominate the world completely if the USA and Europe and even Australia, but especially the USA, does not clean up its act and invest.

Invest in their education, in vocational training, in tax incentives to invest to get companies back to Detroit and everywhere else.

I could go on, but this nonsense about China’s gain is the US loss is only because the USA put all of their money and effort and investment INTO CHINA AND NOT INTO THE USA FOR THE PAST 35 YEARS!

As Everett Dirksen, a great US Senator once said when asked about the budget, ‘a billion here a billion there, and before you know it, you are talking about real money’. How about a trillion here a trillion there and before you know it, you are broke like the USA is about to be!

I could easily make a case that every US company was headed up by traitors, strong word I get it, but I want to make a point. If all you want to do is make profits in the next quarter, you and your country and your family and your future WILL LOSE.

China is also investing internally not just FDI any longer.

Good on them, now can the rest of the world get off their bums and stop thinking that selling each other cups of coffee and beers is good enough? And that all of the fake hedge funds and other financial ‘products’ are garbage and are not benefiting Americans rather a small elite that now does their business in China as they make more money there.

Hope that puts a different focus on this debate and gets people to back off on China and to focus instead on their own countries and their own people and solve their own problems.

There is plenty of time to discuss this all with China but clean up your acts first.

Roasted Asparagus with Mushrooms

Simple understated elegance for your table.

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2022 11 23 15 33

Ingredients

Directions

  • Preheat oven to 425*.
  • In a non-stick baking baking sheet with sides, toss the asparagus and mushrooms with the oil and season with salt and pepper.
  • Spread the vegetables in a single layer.
  • Roast for 10 minutes or until the vegetables are tender and browned, turning once or twice.
  • Place vegetables on a serving platter.
  • Sprinkle vegetables with vinegar and toss gently to combine.
  • Season with additional salt and pepper as desired.
  • Serve warm or at room temperature.
  • Makes 4 servings.
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2022 11 23 15 34

Blanche Monnier Spent 25 Years Locked In An Attic, Just Because She Loved The Wrong Man

Blanche Monnier 1901
Blanche Monnier 1901

The disturbing picture above is not a still shot from a horror movie, but rather is a hospital-room photo of Blanche Monnier, a French girl who was kept captive for 25 years in a padlocked, shuttered room where she was forced to live amidst pests, rats, human excrement, and filth.  Her discovery occurred on May 23, 1901 after the Paris Attorney General received an anonymous letter indicating a woman was being held captive in a home located on “21 rue de la Visitation” street in a wealthy neighborhood of Poiters, France.

The anonymous letter read in part:

“Monsieur Attorney General: I have the honor to inform you of an exceptionally serious occurrence. I speak of a spinster who is locked up in Madame Monnier’s house, half starved, and living on a putrid litter for the past twenty-five years – in a word, in her own filth.”

The Attorney General notified local police and asked them to investigate but nobody expected anything to come of it.   According to police who knew the area well, the only two people living at the address mentioned in the letter were Madame Louise Monnier and her middle-aged son Marcel.

Both Monniers had lived exemplary lives, Marcel was  a law school graduate and a former sub-prefect.   Madame Monnier’s husband, Emile, had been the head of the local arts faculty prior to his death in 1879 while Madame Monnier herself belonged to the illustrious Poitier family (the city was named for them).  She had even received an award from the Committee of Good Works for her philanthropic deeds.

Some of the older police officers were able to recall one other strange detail however.   Madame Monnier had a beautiful daughter named Blanche who had apparently vanished without a trace twenty-five years earlier.

Amazingly enough, the disappearance of a young socialite had somehow taken place without any police investigation or alarm being raised by her own family.  Despite the odd nature of the disappearance, nobody  had any idea of what would follow or the heartbreaking story that had remained hidden for decades.

When the police arrived, they proceeded to search the house and quickly found an upstairs room which had been padlocked shut.  Breaking the door open, they were horrified to find Blanche Monnier, naked, emaciated, and  with her head buried under the covers.  According to an account by one of the officers:

We immediately gave the order to open the casement window.  This was done with great difficulty, for the old dark-colored curtains fell down in a heavy shower of dust.  To open the shutters, it was necessary to remove them from their right hinges.  As soon as light entered the room, we noticed, in the back, lying on a bed, her head and body covered by a repulsively filthy blanket, a woman identified as Mademoiselle Blanche Monnier.  

The unfortunate woman was lying completely naked on a rotten straw mattress.  All around her was formed a sort of crust made from excrement, fragments of meat, vegetables, fish, and rotten bread.  We also saw oyster shells and bugs running across Mademoiselle Monnier’s bed.  The air was so unbreathable, the odor given off by the room was so rank, that it was impossible for us to stay any longer to proceed with our investigation.

Terrified at the sight of strangers, Blanche continued to hide her head under a blanket.  She was quickly wrapped in a blanket and taken to a hospital in Paris for observation.

Weighing a mere 55 pounds at the time of her discovery,  Blanche seemed incapable of any kind of coherent speech and was visibly frightened at being exposed to sunlight.  As they would later discover, she hadn’t seen the sun in nearly 25 years.   Police examining the miserable cell where she had been kept found the word “Liberte” (Liberty) scrawled across the walls.

They also determined that Blanche hadn’t worn clothing for the previous twenty years and her only friends were the rats that scrambled to eat the crumbs scattered on the floor of her room. Even as police were sending her off to hospital, Blanche’s elderly mother simply sat in the living room, apparently stunned at what was happening.

After police finished searching the house, they then proceeded to question Madame Monnier and her son.  While Marcel continued to bluster and insisted that his sister was  “foul, angry, overly excited, and full of rage”,  the doctors examining her at the hospital simply saw a frail and almost mute middle-aged woman who seemed excited at being given a bath and given new clothes.

It was only after both Monniers were arrested that police interrogators managed to unravel the entire horrific story.

Twenty-five years earlier, Blanche had been a vivacious and attractive 25-year-old socialite facing pressure from her mother to find a suitable husband.  Among her many suitors happened to be an older attorney who lived nearby with whom Blanche fell in love.

Blanche Monnier
Blanche Monnier

After becoming intimate, it was her announcement to her family that she wanted to marry this attorney that the trouble began.   Her mother was adamantly opposed to the match.

Not only was the attorney much older than Blanche was but he had little money of his own.  For this reason, Madame Monnier insisted that Blanche find someone more suitable.

When Blanche threatened to elope, her family took extreme action.

They locked Blanche up in an upstairs bedroom and insisted that she would only be released if she agreed to never see her intended again. Though Madame Monnier and the rest of her family likely thought Blanche would give in, she remained adamant.

As the years passed, Blanche stayed in her prison with no sunlight and only being fed scraps from her mother’s meals.  Even after her lover died in 1885, the imprisonment continued while her family told everyone that she had disappeared.

But it wasn’t just the Monniers who were part of the conspiracy to keep Blanche imprisoned. Various servants would later testify that they had often heard Blanche’s pleas to be released but didn’t say anything, whether due to loyalty to their employers, belief that Blanche was insane, or fear of being arrested as accessories to her imprisonment.

To this day, nobody knows who wrote the note that eventually secured Blanche’s release.

Whether it was a servant or someone who had heard about her secondhand is anybody’s guess.

Blanche’s mother, Madame Monnier Demarconnay, was arrested the next day and imprisoned at around six o’clock in the evening.  Despite the precautions of the police, a surging crowd gathered at the prison with shouts of hatred and revenge.

Madame Monnier Demarconnay was immediately placed in the infirmary (she suffered from heart disease) where she unexpectedly died 15 days later.  It was said that her last words were spoken to the doctors who entered the room just moments before she died.

They recalled that she cried out, “Ah, my poor Blanche!”

Her brother, Marcel, stood trial alone, accused of being his mother’s accomplice.

The trial opened on October 7, 1901.  Four days later, Marcel was found guilty and sentenced to a mere 15 months in prison.

The judgment on October 11 raised applause in the courtroom and outside on the Palace Square, the crowd showed their approval, screaming and shouting hostile threats at the convicted man.  \

Marcel immediately appealed the verdict and in a judgment announced on November 20, 1901, the court of appeal found that he had exercised no violence on the woman and hence, he was acquitted and released from jail.

Although Blanche Monnier did put on some weight over time, she never regained her sanity. She died in a Blois psychiatric hospital in 1913, 12 years after she was discovered captive in her room.

I can’t speak for *all foreigners* who have been to China, but as for myself…

I started to praise China when I realized that most of what I’d been told about this country were ugly lies.

When I realized this truth, my sense of justice was outraged and I began to see the Chinese people, government, and nation as a whole, not as I’d been told, but as they really are.

Now let me give you some context…

I came to China in 2012, and at that time I believed the mainstream narrative that “Chinese people are okay, but it’s the CCP that is evil”…

And of course, I often spouted the “Chairman Mao 9 trillion dead!”, “Xinjiang!!”, “Free Tibet!!” stories as well.

But then I learned the truth.

I learned of the Imperialist invasions we Westerners somewhat euphemistically refer to as the “Opium Wars

Which basically went down like this…

British Power 1: “oh damn, we want Chinese goods, but have nothing they’re interested in! Short of outright invasion, how do we get their goods?”

David Sassoon: “Why don’t we just get them addicted to opium and soon they’ll be begging us to take their goods! Mwahaahhaha!”

British Power 1: “The royal family gives their full support!”

And then when opium addiction got out of control, the Chinese emperor arrested the smugglers and formally banned opium…

The British invaded, devastated the country and “freed Hong Kong™”

And I learned of the two brutal invasions by Japan and especially the absolutely horrible crimes committed in Nanking and by Unit 731 .

And I started to see China not as the “evil creeping enemy” we are led to believe her to be…

But a traumatized and bullied child who finally had a growth spurt and became too big for the bully to have any power over her anymore.

And so the bully moves onto other smaller targets, but still talks smack behind China’s back and tells the “cool” kids lies about her to stop them from playing with her.

My change in attitude reminds me of a poem, described by deceased rapper Tupac Shakur, who said:

“If a rose managed to grow through the concrete, you wouldn’t judge the damaged petals…
You’d respect its tenacity; you’d celebrate its will to reach the sun!”

I now see China as the rose that grew from the concrete.

Notes (aka Red Pills) for the (still) Brainwashed:

  • in Syria.
  • The West still lies about Uighur “concentration camps” in Xinjiang.
  • The West still lies about Tibet and is strangely silent about the CIA Tibetan program
  • which originally paid the Dalai Lama $180,000 a year to support covert action on China’s border.
  • The West still lies about the Tiananmen Square massacre and is also “strangely silent” about Wikileaks cables proving that no “massacre”
  • took place there.
  • The West still lies about the real situation in Hong Kong and Beijing’s real (rather normal) intentions for the original extradition law.
  • The West still lies about China’s handling of COVID-19 (which as a non-Chinese living in China, I think was VERY good) in order to cover for America’s fumbling, whilst also conveniently heaping international hatred toward China.

With these facts in mind, how can we believe anything we see on mainstream English news?

Did Chairman Kim really shoot anti-aircraft rockets into a dissenter’s body?

Likely not.

Did Putin really pay Taliban for any American deaths in Afghanistan?

Likely not.

I refuse to believe atrocity propaganda

anymore.

This is why I praise China.

Despite 100 years of brutalization, bullying and smearing by the West, I literally never see the same atrocity propaganda, lies and smearing in Chinese news when referring to the West.

Sure, there is criticism, but smears and demonization? Nope.

Confucius once wrote that “The rule of virtue can be compared to the Pole Star which commands the homage of the multitude of stars without leaving its place.”

Ponder that one for a while…and then look at the Chinese flag and tell me what you see.

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2022 11 23 14 48

Conclusion: No nation is perfect, especially China, but I praise them because they are humble, hardworking and family-oriented.

I support the government because unlike Western nations, they do not allow capital interests to rise above government authority – and this makes the ideological/cultural/political subversion that has happened elsewhere – very difficult.

And is also the real reason why the West is so anti-CCP.

AP Fires Reporter Who Claimed “Russian Missiles” Hit Poland

.

The Associated Press has FIRED Investigative reporter James LaPorta over his botched story that “Russian Missiles” hit Poland.

That story, widely repeated across the internet and on TV, almost triggered World War 3.   It was taken offline the following day and replaced with an editor’s note admitting the single source was wrong and that “subsequent reporting showed that the missiles were Russian-made and most likely fired by Ukraine in defense against a Russian attack.”

The piece, which was originally co-bylined with John Leicester (who is still working at the AP), attributed the information to a single “senior U.S. intelligence official,” despite the AP’s rule that it “routinely seeks and requires more than one source when sourcing is anonymous.”

An AP spokesperson did not comment on LaPorta’s ouster but instead wrote: 

“The rigorous editorial standards and practices of The Associated Press are critical to AP’s mission as an independent news organization. To ensure our reporting is accurate, fair and fact-based, we abide by and enforce these standards, including around the use of anonymous sources.”

LaPorta, a former Daily Beast contributor, declined to comment.

The CGI tends to be a little too much for the older folk, but it’s a fun movie.

 

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Tas

Sky Captain is a cool film IMO. The classic P 40 was a perfect choice for Joes mount. 8/10