Last night I had very active dreams. I think that I am experiencing my own mortality. As I was dreaming about all my elementary and middle-school pals from back in the day.
Ah everyone is retired. Except me, I guess. I’m still plugging away at it all.
As you get older you have issues. Blood pressure, stomach, teeth, and what not. A number of my old classroom friends now wear dentures and have snow white hair. Some walk with a cane. *sigh*
Not me, but I wonder…
Here in China the old men tend to walk alone in a stroll with the hands clasped behind their backs. I saw one guy on the buss, and he was talking to his wife (I guess) and he was 56, and newly retired. He looked old. Much older than myself. Yet he was almost twenty years younger than myself. Sheech!
I got off and then went to pick up my car so that I could get my daughter from kindergarten. Aside from the aches and pains that come with aging, I don’t feel like an old man. I feel maybe a little exhausted at times, but not really old.
You’ll soon see that I will need an afternoon nap. Ah. Already I wake up at the crack of dawn and I do go to bed earlier. I don’t eat as much as I used to. In fact, a bowl of soup and half a sandwich would do me just fine. While back in the day, I ate everything on sight.
Changes.
We all go through changes. Soon it will be your turn. Enjoy what you have NOW. Do not wait for that “sometime” in the future when things will all be set. It will never happen. You have accept where you are at the moment. And make the best of it. No, it’s never perfect, but often it’s “good enough”. So relish in that truth.
I am not sad, nor gloomy.
Just had a roller-coaster of dreams. Times change. But many of my old school mates stayed the same and did not adapt. Success is a matter of adaptation. Adapt or die.
Today…
When have you fired someone on the spot?
Originally Answered: Have you ever fired someone on the spot? If so, why?
I had one employee accuse another of raping her. They had been at a trade show in Las Vegas and afterward she had come into my office and made the accusation. I had not gone to the show, and had received various reports of bad behavior on her part, including a long-time customer who called me and told me that she was behaving inappropriately toward him. She had also stayed behind in Vegas after everyone else left and kept charging the room to the company credit card until I called the hotel and told them that she had no authorization to do that and they threw her out.
Obviously, she was going to get fired, but her accusation threw a giant monkey wrench into that plan. To bad behavior and incredibly poor judgement solely on her part, suddenly I have an felony accusation from her to deal with. Just as suddenly, I felt like I was in a mine field.
The first thing I did is tell her, this is not something you complain to your boss about, this is something you call the police about. So she did. Now there are many, many more mines in the mine field.
So I suspended them both without pay, her for her behavior during the show, and him in response to the accusation. I felt I had to be absolutely fair to them in spite of the fact that I wanted to throttle them both until their eyes popped out of their heads and rolled around on the floor.
The police declined to prosecute for lack of evidence. So the slimy, stinky, miserable ball was back in my court.
I never, ever want to take such an accusation as anything but serious. Truthfully, I never thought about how it would look if I didn’t, I always thought about how I would feel about myself if I didn’t, and acted accordingly. As profoundly self-destructive, and vindictive, and manipulative as the accuser was, I needed to find peace with her accusation before I could move on to deal with her incredibly bad behavior in other areas. There was a chance that her terrible judgement during the trade show was a response to her having been raped. She said she didn’t leave with everyone else because she didn’t want to be in the same car as him. At the same time, she was in the hotel for days charging room service to the company credit card, having told my VP, the supervisor for the show, that she would find her own way home and not telling him why, and not telling him she was going to stay behind on the company’s dime.
So the police, by declining to investigate beyond a simple set of interviews, made it my investigation. I am not trained in law enforcement, and I very much felt that I was put in the position of having to come to some sort of conclusion about a felony.
So I resolved to be as objective as possible. I created two confidential files on each of the people involved. I put them in a manila file folder with their names, and plainly marked each as confidential. As part of their suspensions, each was instructed to not come to the office or contact me during my investigation.
You might be asking, why did I feel the need to investigate? Because obviously one or the other had to go. My company had six employees, it was untenable for one to have accused another of rape and leave that accusation unresolved without making the company dysfunctional. I simply could not get my head around that concept. But I had no idea — none — how things would work out. I was simply trying to move forward without stepping on a mine.
So I filled these files with documentation supporting an assumed resolution where one or both of these employees would be terminated. If that were my decision, I would have to defend it, possibly in court. I called that customer, for instance, who had complained to me about her, and interviewed him in more detail about what her behavior was. I researched all the unauthorized credit card charges on the company card, I researched and found many other instances of bad behavior and poor judgement on her part.
In his file, I researched the same sort of things, but truthfully, there were many fewer of them. He was an idiot, but he wasn’t so destructive, at least purposefully.
And you ask, what complete imbecile hired these people? No comment.
At one point, a few days later, I put her file down on my desk and left my office to deal with some other business issue that had mercifully presented itself. When I got back to my office there she was, with her file in her hands, looking through it. She accused me of having predetermined to fire her. I told her 1) You were instructed not to come to the office during the period of your suspension and you did anyway, 2) You entered my office when I was not present, and 3) You read a file that was clearly marked confidential. You’re done.
About an hour later, the other employee called me and told me he had found another job.
Within an hour, the worst minefield of my professional life had cleared. Profound tension was replaced by chirping birds, daisies, and cool breezes.
To this day I think about that experience. What should I have done differently? How could I have handled it better? I’m sure there are better ways. I have a decent grasp of employment law but I’m not an attorney. I had the intention of consulting an attorney but I wanted to wait until the investigation was further along, so in the end I navigated this issue without any legal counsel, which probably wasn’t the brightest thing to do but then again I’m the one who hired these people in the first place, so maybe that’s par for the course.
I’ve never been in combat, but the memory almost seems like that. Mines and all.
Scott Ritter : Is Israel Prepared for a Three-Front War?
What happened in a courtroom that gave the judge a belly laugh you will never forget?
Back in the 70’s during the gasoline (ahem) shortage and reduced Max speed limit on the highway, I was passing a heard of slow pokes at about 60, and along with two other vehicles got motioned over by a motor officer.
The office came up to my window, stated he didn’t like this situation either but if I didn’t complain and coughed up all the required documents that I would be on my way in less than five as one of the other two drivers wanted to argue. I was outta there in two minutes.
Showed up extremely early in court and then the place starting filling up with a line that formed out the door and down the street.
The judge came in, states he didn’t like the situation (I heard that somewhere before) and said that if we cooperated that it would only take a few seconds for each of us to get squared away. He then raised his voice and announced that with our cooperation that he could get the court room cleared in 30 minutes.
The judge gave the options and told us to state which option we wanted when asked. Judge added that when asked, if you did not spit out your choice that he would roll your case to the end of the line
The very first person called, when asked by the judge what their choice was going to be, then said he didn’t like any of the choices and the whole situation was BS. The judge, along with the packed court room crowd, sent that guy to the end of the line down the street once the laughing stopped.
The next person in line went stupid like a missile that lost radar lock and got sent to the end of the line too.
I was third in line. When my turn came and the judge asked for my choice with a smile. I smiled back and said, guilty-traffic-school-fine-I-don’t-wanna-go-to-the-end-of-the-line.
The judge laughed again and the crowd only started laughing after the judge did.
The judge then told me to see the court clerk to pay up and get traffic court information.
The judge then told the crowd, after pointing his finger at me that was what he was talking about when he sat down in his chair.
Discovery
Two girls from a hotel management college in Qingdao, Shandong Province, went out and found a handbag containing five gold bars and two gold ingots, totaling 500g of gold. They immediately reported it to the police. After checking, the police found a car key in the bag with the owner’s phone number on it and were able to contact the owner.
Oh, and also two lighters by the way. Smoking harms health.
Mother FALSELY ACCUSED Her HUSBAND Of Having MOLESTED Her DAUGHTER For 15 YEARS! | Pearl Daily
China is falling behind the US in the AI race, since China doesn’t have any answer to Nvidia, ChatGPT & worldwide data of US companies. How will China deal with this defeat?
US and China have entirely different approaches to AI development
The US is focusing on the very high end aspects of AI
China is focusing on the basic, low end aspects of AI and expecting to scale the progress to higher and higher end aspects of AI over the years
China is training their AI Models in four areas :
A. Industrial Robotics
B. Healthcare
C. Manufacturing
D. Education
Very basic AI Models, nothing complicated, yet capable of revolutionizing efficiency and making life easier for the common man
These models exist all over China
Intelligent Systems that can help with designs, manufacturing and production
Intelligent systems that can diagnose diseases and suggest treatment lines
Intelligent systems that can instruct and guide students
China has the Data of 1.4 Billion People
The Data is roughly estimated to be 44 Zetta Bytes or 44 Trillion Giga Bytes
This is Four times larger than the US which has 11.6 Zetta Bytes
Chinas Data Collection access is 97%
US Data Collection access is 23% due to privacy laws
So effectively China has access to 20 times as much Data as the United States
An AI System needs hardware but it needs a huge amount of Data as well to establish predictive analytics
Thus these are the two main features of Chinas AI Development:-
A. The Mushroom approach
B. Huge amount of Data collection
The focus is on the lowest aspects of public life and use public interaction to further enhance or develop AI Models
Is China behind the US in AI?
Not at all
ChatGPT is a novelty or a fad
It’s not a critical pioneering move into AI
The AI race is like the Nuclear Atom Bomb race
You had two approaches
In the same way China and US have their own approaches to develop AI
The Race has just started
The Great Pyramid Mystery: The Oldest Cover-Up In History
A father said to his son, “You graduated with honors. Here is a Volkswagen Beetle that I bought many years ago… It is over 50 years old, but before I give it to you, take it to a dealership downtown and ask how much they are offering you.”
The son went to the dealership, came back to his father and said, “They offered me $10,000 because it looks very used.” The father said, “Take it to a pawn shop.”
The son went to the pawn shop, came back and said, “They only offered me $1,000 because they say it is too old.”
Finally, the father asked his son to take the car to a classic car club and show it there. The son took the car to the club, came back and said, “Some people at the club offered me $100,000! because it is a very rare car and sought after among the members.”
The father said to his son, “I wanted you to understand that the right place appreciates you in the right way. If they don’t value you, don’t be angry, it just means you’re in the wrong place. Those who know your value are the ones who truly appreciate you. Never stay in a place where they don’t recognize your value!”
Why do gun nuts keep saying that the AR-15 is not an assault rifle when it was originally designed for and issued to military servicemen? Do they not know the origins of this weapon that they defend?
No, it was not originally designed as a military weapon. The designer was Eugene Stoner. He was a partner in the Armalite Rifle Company (that’s where the AR comes from). It was actually the AR-10 that he figured the military would want because it was a lighter version of the varies 30 caliber rifles used in WWII. But the military was not interested. The AR-15 rifle came about when he heard that Remington was developing the 223 caliber cartridge and was speculating that a more powerful version of a 22 caliber would sell to dad’s wanting a rifle for their sons to hunt small game. Stoner figured he had the other half of the equation – a lightweight rifle, easy for those young sons to carry.
Armalite was purchased by Fairchild Aviation and they attempted to market both the AR-10 and AR-15 to the Airforce. The Airforce bought 15,000 of them, but the program pretty much died after the initial purchase. It was not until Colt bought the designs in 1959. Colt understood how to make the designs into military grade weapons. Colt launched the Colt 601, 602, & 603 models. The Colt 603 is what became the military M16A1 in 1967. It resembled the AR-15 in looks, but the design modifications were extensive. Most notably, it can fire in automatic mode (a machine gun), or in a 3 bullet burst, or in semi-automatic mode. It also uses the more powerful 5.56mm cartridge (same basic bullet diameter as the 223 but measured in millimeters.
Colt kept the old AR-15 design and brought if out as the AR-15 Sporter. A civilian rifle for that dad with a young son he was teaching to hunt. It met with great opposition, until the kids of returning Vietnam war veterans saw it and wanted it because it looked like the gun dad fought with.
I am not a gun nut. I am an historian. There are countless stories about the AR-15, most don’t get it right. But I have seen most of original documents on the gun, patent filings, and letters of rejection from the military. In the early 50’s a low caliber gun like the AR-15 could not possibly of succeeded in the military. Their mindset was large bullets make one shot kills.
You would do well to learn your history through actual research, before you start calling people nuts and embarrassing yourself with garbage opinions you read on-line.
Chopped Steak Special
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 pounds ground sirloin
- 3 tablespoons grated or minced onion
- 1 tablespoon minced chile pepper
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon spicy steak or Worcestershire sauce
- 1/4 teaspoon green or red Tabasco sauce
Instructions
- Combine all ingredients until well mixed.
- Shape into four fat oval patties.
- Pan broil in a heavy skillet.
Restricting Words
Submitted into Contest #247 in response to: Imagine a world where exploration is forbidden, and write a story about a character who defies this rule to satisfy their innate curiosity.… view prompt
Khadija S. Mohammad
She waved, mentally selecting the second ‘informal’ speech option. “Hi Kazuya!”
Kazuya smiled back at her. “Hi.”
Sakura searched her options for something that would get her message across, finally settling on the eighth. “How have you been?”
“I left on a business trip,” her brother replied almost instantly. Sakura envied his swiftness at choosing options – but then again, she would rather be herself, a slower-speaking individual, than him, a conformist who lived entirely on the Restriction’s rules. She pushed the thoughts away; she loved him, despite what the Restriction had turned him into. She did.
There was an awkward silence as Sakura searched the options for something appropriate for the occasion. “I’ve missed you,” she said awkwardly, at last.
“I’ve missed you too.” It was said automatically, as if it was the only speech option. As if it was a necessity, not a choice.
What if he’s been fully turned? Sakura thought as her brother walked away. She stiffened. What had she just thought? What if…
It was a beautiful pair of words, when she thought about it. But she’d never thought about it before, because she’d never thought it before. What if… It was an exciting sentence fragment. Could I… There was another one. Something in the back of her brain told her these were questions, but they weren’t like any questions she’d ever asked before.
Now she knew.
Her mind whirred as she made her way home. On recognising her mind-chip, her front door slid open. She walked through it, barely noticing the slight delay in its closing time.
Up in her room, she forced her mind onto her chip. She’d practised it so many times with Yuto. It had to work.
Focus. Focus on the chip. On its functions, on its existence. She repeated it like a mantra for an agonising minute before, finally, she felt something snap.
It hurt. It hurt as if part of her brain had been set on fire, but she remained steadfast, not allowing her thoughts to sway from the chip. When the fire died, she opened her eyes. She hadn’t even realised they were closed.
She knew the best way to test if the split from her chip had worked. There were no speech options when she was alone, so all she needed to do was say something. Anything would prove her chip had been successfully disconnected.
She opened her mouth. “Sakura.”
The code-word activated her bedroom’s hidden room – a safe place to hide anything she didn’t want the Restriction to find. The wall slid aside and slid back once she had entered.
Inside the room, lay a simple wooden desk, with a crude wooden chair in front of it. Sakura dropped into it thankfully. She rummaged through the vintage drawers and finally drew out a battered, crumpled piece of paper. She paused for a moment to enjoy the memory of her father that always came with the sight of that paper. He’d spent his last year teaching her to write so she could eventually use it, but he’d never told her what she would do with it. The most he’d said was that she would have to learn for herself if she wanted it to be useful.
With What if… readily in her mind, she knew what to do. She knew why the Restriction executed those who knew how to write. Knew why they gave everyone speech options instead of letting them talk how they wanted to. And best of all, she knew how to free herself from their bonds.
Gently, she placed the ragged paper on the desk and smoothed it out with one hand, using her other to search the drawer for a pencil – another of her father’s forbidden items. She placed it on the desk beside the paper, and took a deep breath. This was it. She could – she would – write, and she knew what to write.
She picked up the pen. Positioned it between her fingers the way her father had instructed. Bent down to the paper, and began.
Once upon a time…
Well This Is Strange…
A fly recorded on the ISS exterior camera?
Was there a palace coup at the White House?
Did we just have a palace coup in Washington? Originally published on Substack.
The events have taken a very strange turn in Washington DC this month. Britain’s new cabinet has made it a priority to escalate the West’s proxy war against Russia and to bring the U.S. and other allies onboard by hook or by crook. Part of the agenda was enabling the Ukrainians to strike at Russia with western supplied long-range precision missiles. This wouldn’t be a new thing exactly, but the escalation they are gunning for is quite substantial, involving possibly even nuclear weapons.
The groundwork for this escalation was being prepared for months. In March this year, the Biden administration approved a new “Nuclear Employment Guidance” in preparation to fight and “win” a three-front nuclear war against Russia, China and North Korea. They followed up with plans to deploy long-range nuclear missiles in Germany and Holland. The preparations were being coordinated between the Neocons in the Biden administration, led by the Secretary of State Antony Blinken, NATO and the members of British cabinets, both under Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and under the new PM Keir Starmer.
Starmer’s diplomatic charm offensive
Since its inauguration on July 5, 2024, the new Labour government in Britain immediately engaged in a flurry of diplomatic activity and meetings with many government leaders across Europe, Asia and the Middle East, much of it a charm offensive to “reset” the previously strained or neglected relationships. Within the cabinet’s first ten days, their Defence Minister John Healey visited Ukraine, Foreign Minister Lammy called his Ukrainian and American counterparts on his first day on the job, then on July 6 flew straight to Germany to meet with the German FM Annalena Baerbock, then to Poland the next day to meet with FM Radek Sikorski, and after that, straight to Sweden to meet then FM Tobias Billstrom.
On July 9, his fifth day on the job, Keir Starmer flew to Washington for the NATO summit and a meeting with president Biden. On July 16, Starmer’s government published the new “Strategic Defense Review” – a “root and branch” revision of UK’s defence, so that it is “secure at home and strong abroad for decades to come.” Of course, all these ambitious initiatives ultimately depend on the special relationship itself. Without it, Britain would be punching way, way above its weight.
Trump-proofing the “special relationship”
In terms of military power, the UK is pretty much a lightweight with a handicap, so securing the American protection was top priority. Accordingly, the Mutual Defense Agreement (MDA) between the U.S. and Great Britain needed an urgent upgrade. The agreement was last renewed in 2014 and was set to expire on 31 December 2024. The new major upgrade was formulated by the British government in July of this year: it would make the MDA indefinite, turning it into a de-facto treaty. The idea was to Trump-proof the Agreement in case the DNC fails to steal the presidential elections again this November. The treaty also joins the two nations’ nuclear programs.
Indeed, the nuclear saber-rattling does seem to emanate largely from out of London. For example, Malcolm Chalmers, the deputy director of the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), Britain’s oldest and most prestigious think-tank, proposed already in 2022 that the West should resort to nuclear brinkmanship in order to destabilize Russia. It was this same Malcolm Chalmers who was jubilant about the new Mutual Defense Agreement, seeing it as a diplomatic win for the UK: “It is good news for the UK that it doesn’t need to worry about a future US administration using a future renewal [of the MDA] as leverage.” How clever! Now we can stir the pot around the world and if things get ugly, the Americans have to come to our rescue. This is a good position from which to manipulate the U.S. into fighting Britain’s wars of choice.
This episode once more reinforces the impression that the “special relationship” between the US and the UK is a Master-Blaster arrangement (for those old enough to remember Master-Blaster from the movie Mad Max 3). In this arrangement, Blaster is the powerful, muscular giant who is manipulated around by his Master, a vicious old dwarf riding on the giant’s back. Once you start to pay attention to this dynamic, you’ll find more and more evidence that the drive and the ideas shaping the west’s permanent wars, especially against Russia, originate from London.
Parading the alliance
All the diplomatic activity under the Starmer government also involved much public parading of the “special relationship” with the view of projecting the image of a powerful, rock-solid alliance that remains 100% committed to defending the international “rules-based order” and intimidating any uppity newcomer who would dare to challenge it. On 7 September we saw, for the first time ever, Sir Richard Moore, the head of Britain’s MI6, and William Burns the CIA chief, appear together and on stage!
The body language is interesting: CIA’s Burns’s body is turned away, legs crossed and arms folded, looking at Moore over his shoulder. Sir Richard’s open, facing Burns and the audience directly.
For anyone who missed the occasion, the talented Mr. Moore published a tweet about it, linking to the video recording of the event. Two days later, the pair published an OpEd in the Financial Times, waxing eloquent about the threats to the rules based order and how to defend it. Most importantly, they expressed their iron-clad commitment to defending Ukraine for as long as it takes.
The following day, on 10 September, US State Secretary Antony Blinken came to London to meet with his British counterpart David Lammy and the day after they both went to visit Kiev together. On the occasion, Blinken and Lammy almost certainly finalized the plan to commit both nations to aiding Ukraine to strike deep into Russia with western-supplied long range precision missiles. Only two days later, the Prime Minister Starmer flew to Washington again to meet with President Biden, ostensibly to “discuss” the events in Ukraine among other things.
Something went wrong in Washington
Now, the Prime Minister wouldn’t normally travel and meet with his U.S. counterpart just to “discuss” things. Their meeting would take place only at the point when the agreement could be signed and announced in a joint press conference: a public showing of their unity, shared objectives and determination. In fact, according to British government sources, the decisions had already been made, and Sir Keir brought all the paperwork with him. However, the signing ceremony never took place and neither did the joint press conference. Something went wrong.
The awkward meeting didn’t produce the ceremonial signing or the joint press conference.
It appears that the U.S. military leadership took Vladimir Putin‘s warning about this escalation seriously. His words are worth pondering carefully:
“There is an attempt to substitute concepts. Because we are not talking about authorizing or banning the Kiev regime from striking across the entire territory. They are already striking with the help of drones and other means. … The Ukrainian army is not able to strike with modern long-range precision systems of Western manufacture. It cannot do this. It can only do so using intelligence from satellites, which Ukraine does not have. This is data only from EU satellites or from the United States in general, from NATO satellites. … And so this is not about allowing the Ukrainian regime to strike. It is about deciding whether NATO countries are directly involved or not. If this decision is made, it will mean nothing other than the direct participation of NATO countries, the United States, European countries in the war in Ukraine. This is their direct participation. And this already, of course, significantly changes the very essence, the nature of the conflict. This would mean that NATO, US and the European countries, the United States are at war with Russia. If that is the case, then bearing in mind the change in the very essence of this conflict, we will take appropriate decisions based on the threats that will be posed to us.”
According to some sources, Putin’s warning was reinforced through back-channel communications between the Russian military leadership and their American counterparts who understand that they were being pushed over the edge of total war. In response, it seems that the American military leadership took over the conduct of the US foreign policy, both in terms of military and diplomatic affairs. State Secretary Blinken and his merry band of Neocons appear to have been sidelined. This is why the US-UK agreement to escalate against Russia didn’t get the Blaster’s signature.
The change in leadership could also be felt in the Middle East. General Michael E. Kurilla, the head of U.S. Central Command visited Israel last week (the second time in a week’s interval), apparently also to announce a new policy. Allegedly, he informed the Israelis that if they provoke a war against Hezbollah or against Iran, the U.S. will not come to their aid: they’re on their own.
The palace coup at the White House wasn’t officially announced and it almost certainly won’t be. We will probably only know of these changes with time, by observing the pattern of events. If the U.S. policy really changes course in a substantive way, this would corroborate that the coup did indeed take place. This may seem inconceivable, but it shouldn’t be. Secretary Blinken has been conducting a truly insane foreign policy, inflicting massive damage to the United States in material, strategic as well as reputational terms. Such conduct would unavoidably provoke disapproval and opposition within the ranks of the American defense and foreign policy establishments.
Judge Humbles Woman Who Divorced A Millionaire
This is Texas.
Oh boy is that Judge is pissed.
When Hitler’s general staff mutinied in 1938
The latest escalation, concocted with the British, would put the U.S. in severe jeopardy. The burden of coping with the resulting fallout would fall squarely on the military. At the same time, it remains unclear what, if anything, could be gained from Starmer’s and Blinken’s reckless adventurism. This is a textbook recipe for provoking a mutiny, and such mutinies do tend to happen at critical junctures throughout history.
For example, when, on 21 April 1938 Hitler ordered General Wilhelm Keitel to draft plans to invade Czechoslovakia, German military brass were deeply alarmed – so much so that a group of top commanders, clustered around Hitler’s Chief of the General Staff, General Ludwig Beck, hatched a three phase strategy to disrupt Hitler’s reckless pursuit: (1) they would try to dissuade Hitler from pursuing his plans; (2) they implored the British to stand firmly by Czechoslovakia and warn Hitler that Britain would oppose him; and (3) if Hitler persisted in his resolve to wage war, they would proceed to assassinate him. The date for this act was set for September 28, 1938.
Of course, General Beck and his General Staff had no idea that it was exactly the British who were maneuvering Germany to war (though not against Czechoslovakia but against the USSR), just as they are maneuvering the U.S. to war today. In fact, the most recent episode hopefully helped dispel the idea that the imperial adventures are all hatched in the U.S. and that the UK is only being dragged along reluctantly, their only fault being their unshakeable, steadfast loyalty.
Incidentally, that’s the same defence Prince Andrew used to explain his continuing friendship with the convicted sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein (the Prince’s only regret was being “too honourable”). The truth is that through channels unseen and unknown, London is often in the driver’s seat when it comes to fomenting dirty tricks and military misadventures in defence of the empire. Again, the more you pay attention to this, the more unmistakeable the relationship becomes.
Whatever the case may be, if there was indeed a mutiny at the Pentagon and a palace coup in the White House, the escalation to World War III might have been averted, and this would be the best news you’ll read all day today. Meanwhile, on Thursday, 19 September European Parliament voted in favor of escalating the war, but that move might only serve to accelerate the disintegration of the European Union. The MEPs can vote whatever they like, but as Poland’s Foreign Ministery Radek Sikorski revealed to the Russian pranksters Vovan and Lexus earlier this month, “there is no willingness to enter the war in Western Europe.” From Europe, the moves are mostly about grandstanding and virtue-signalling.
Update (23 Sep. 2024): Britain’s frenzied drive to kick off World War III continues…
As per the Executive Intelligence Review report this morning: In an article that is probably a psyop all in itself, The Times of London once more confirmed that Britain is driving the escalation to World War III. Apparently, Kiev junta might get a “private dispensation” from the U.S. and U.K. to fire Storm Shadow missiles deep into Russia, without a formal announcement. Between the lines, the article gives the impression that “NATO was ‘moving as one’,” rather than Britain or the U.S. pushing for the escalation. Still, just in case things go wrong, y’all will know whom to blame: “the U.S. was moving closer to giving the green light.”
The Times also noted that former Prime Minister Boris Johnson and five former Tory defense secretaries are urging that Britain ignore American reluctance and proceed with authorizing Ukraine to use its Storm Shadows. Johnson said: “There is no conceivable case for delay,” while former Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said that failure to move now would make Britain “appeasers” of the Kremlin [there’s that psyop again].
In addition, when U.S. Secretary of State Tony Blinken was in Paris on Sept. 20, U.K. Foreign Secretary David Lammy was there too, along with the foreign ministers from France, Germany and Italy. “The allies worked to thrash out a deal ahead of the UN General Assembly next week, where Sir Keir Starmer is heading for talks with other world leaders, … Lammy said the talks in Paris on Thursday [Sept. 19] were about ensuring that ‘Ukraine has all it needs, militarily, politically, diplomatically and in terms of aid to get through what will be a tough winter and into 2025.’
Alex Krainer – @NakedHedgie is the creator of I-System Trend Following and publisher of daily TrendCompass investor reports which cover over 200 financial and commodities markets.
Shorpy
Builders of Peru Found Inside Cave?
The Orion Effect
Submitted into Contest #243 in response to: Write a story imagining ‘what if’ one historic invention had never happened. How would our world be different now?… view prompt
Laurie Spellman
I sighed, “Well, we’ll have to agree to disagree, Zephyr. I think it’s important to embrace progress.”
“We need to keep up with the times and adapt to the changing world,” Lyra nodded.
Zephyr shrugged, “Suit yourselves. Just remember to do your jobs and ensure my company stays afloat.”
Lyra and I were preparing for the AI test simulation two weeks later when Zephyr appeared, looking tired and worried. “Galen, I need to talk to you. There is a change of plans.”
I asked, confused,” What do you mean? We’re supposed to start the test run today.”
Zephyr said,” Yes, but we’ve received a demand from the government. They need urgent medical supplies and are willing to pay a hefty sum. Now, don’t argue. Download the AI software and prepare to transport the supplies to Adiona.
“What about the test run?” I asked, stunned.
Zephyr replied, “This is more important. And besides, we’ll make a fortune.”
Lyra asked, worried,” But what about the forcefield?”
Zephyr smiled, “Don’t worry about that. I’ve made a deal with Orion. He’s agreed to turn off the forcefield for us temporarily.”
I scoffed, “This is madness. We don’t know what could happen.”
Zephyr grumbled, “Don’t be a coward, Galen. Think of the money I’ll pay you handsomely.”
Lyra was disheartened. “I don’t care about the money. What about our lives?”
“I’m not doing this. It’s too risky,” I said decisively.
Zephyr shrugged, “Fine. I’ll find someone else to do it. But you’ll regret this, Galen.”
Lyra shook her head and said, “I’m with Galen on this one.” Zephyr stormed out of the room, leaving us behind in shock.
“Thank you for standing up to him, Lyra.”
“Of course, our job is to transport people and goods safely, not to put them in danger,” Lyra said.
“I couldn’t agree more. Let’s go and tell Orion about this. He needs to know what Zephyr is planning.”
Lyra said, “Let’s do it. We need to stop him before it’s too late.”
We found Orion in his lab, who told us the real reason behind the mission. “I don’t understand,” I said, my voice shaking. Why would we risk breaking the trade embargo for the President? Surely, there must be another way to negotiate his release, right?”
Orion looked at me solemnly. “I wish it were that simple,” he said. But Adiona is running out of medical supplies. They’ve announced they will release the President in exchange for a trade agreement.”
My mind raced as I tried to process this information. The stakes were higher than anticipated, and the thought of violating the embargo made my stomach churn. But then I thought about the President, alone and in danger, and I knew I had to act.
“I’ll do it,” I said firmly. “What do we need to do to get the ship ready?”
Orion smiled, a glimmer of relief in his eyes. “I knew I could count on you,” he said. “We’ll start preparing the launch immediately.”
Our government would allow one person to assist me on this secret mission. I chose Lyra, who was eager to prove herself, and she agreed to join me on the rescue run.
“I know it’s high-risk, but it’s got to be done,” I told Lyra as we approached the HoverLoft ship. This new AI-powered craft could change everything.”
Lyra nodded nervously. “I just hope I can handle it. I don’t want to mess up.”
“Don’t worry, you’ve got this,” I reassured her. “We’re here to prove ourselves and show the world what we’re capable of.”
Orion cleared his throat and said, “Oh, egotistical pilots, I don’t care about your personal goals or aspirations. Just don’t screw this up. It could mean billions in government contracts.”
I scoffed, rolling my eyes, and said, “We’re doing this to save our President.
I warned Lyra as we boarded the Hoverloft. “We are breaking the law with no written guarantee. You can turn back now if you want to.”
“I know, it’s dangerous and illegal,” Lyra replied, adjusting her seatbelt. “But we can’t leave him there. We have to do something and help save those people.”
“Orion seems pretty confident in his new tech,” I said, “But it’s still untested. I pray we’re not putting our lives in danger for nothing.”
“I’m not sure I trust Orion,” Lyra said, her voice filled with concern. “But, I trust you. We can do this.”
I smiled at her words, feeling a surge of confidence. “Thanks, Lyra. I’m glad you’re coming with me.”
“Of course,” she said, returning my smile. “I’m here to help in any way I can.”
As we lifted off from Abeona’s military hoverport, we soared higher and higher, and soon, we were gliding over the mountains and the deepest part of the Aetheric Sea. Orion deactivated the forcefield, seamlessly transitioning us into enemy airspace. I had yet to determine what deadly obstacles we might encounter ahead. Fortunately, Orion’s AI proved invaluable, providing real-time updates and assisting me with navigation. The ship was on autopilot, steering us right on course for a perfect landing.
Out of nowhere, the craft jolted sideways as we hovered over Adiona’s border, and I felt my heart do the same. The sensation was akin to a rollercoaster, but it wasn’t fun this time. We dropped a few hundred feet, and I could feel my stomach lurch as we plummeted towards the ground. I held tight on the controls, praying we would survive and safely reach our destination.
I radioed the tower in a Hail Mary: “We’re encountering unexpected turbulence. The ship is malfunctioning.” We had to act quickly but were still awaiting a response. Without warning, the balloon shuddered and stuttered to a halt.
Lyra exclaimed, “I’m trying to stabilize us, but it’s not responding. We’re going down!”
“Just follow my lead,” I said, steering us manually after successfully disengaging the AI.
Lyra cheered, “We did it! That was close. But we made it.”
I exhaled, wiping the sweat from my forehead. “I’m just glad we’re alive.”
We acted as soon as our GPS pinned the President’s location. The area was in Silverlake, a village on the continent’s southern tip. A strange illness had hit the people hard, and the population struggled to survive. While we secured our HoverLoft, a commander ordered his troops to set up a perimeter. We knew leaving our ship unguarded was risky, and they would love to steal our technology. With our gear and weapons ready, we were prepared to face the enemy. President Titan Chase was taken hostage during a peace summit in Adiona and transported by boat to this remote location away from the capital city, Greenfield.
At midday, we arrived on foot in the village. As we approached the guard tower entry gate, one of the guards stepped forward and asked, “Who goes there?”
I took a deep breath and replied, “We are here to negotiate the release of President Titan Chase.”
The guard eyed us suspiciously. “Do you have any weapons on you?”
I nodded and gestured to our gear. “Yes, we do. But we come in peace. We want to retrieve our leader and leave.”
The guard hesitated before opening the gate and motioning for us to follow him. We could feel the patrols’ eyes on us as we walked through the village. Finally, we arrived at a central hall where we saw President Chase tied to a chair that resembled a throne. The sight of him in such a state was heart-wrenching, and we knew we had to act fast to get him out of there.
Suddenly, a large screen flickered to life, and Adiona President Astrid Stone appeared. Her regal bearing and commanding presence were immediately apparent.
“Thank you for coming,” she said, her voice firm and unwavering. “I understand you have brought medical supplies for our people in Silverlake.”
I nodded, relieved that we had something to bring to the negotiations. “Yes, we have. But we need you to release President Chase now.”
President Stone’s expression softened slightly. “I appreciate your concern for your leader, but you must understand that the situation in Silverlake is dire. We need those medical supplies desperately.”
I took a deep breath and replied, “We understand that, but we can’t leave our leader here. Can we at least talk to him and make sure he’s okay?”
President Stone hesitated before nodding. “Very well. You may speak to him, but only for a few moments. And then we must get down to business.”
As we approached President Chase, he looked up at us with hope. “Thank God you’re here,” he whispered. “Get me out of here.”
I nodded, my heart racing. “Don’t worry, sir. We’ll get you out safely, no matter what.”
As we rushed back to relaunch our HoverLoft, a tall, muscular Colonel wearing a red uniform covered in medals issued orders to his troops. “Get those barricades set up now! Move it, move it!” he shouted.
I turned to Lyra and whispered, “We can’t let them get in our way. We must keep our cool and get the President out of here as soon as possible.”
Abruptly, the commander in the red uniform stormed towards us. “What’s going on here? Who are you?” he demanded.
“We’re with the presidential team. We need to leave immediately,” I replied, steadying my voice.
The commander eyed us suspiciously before finally nodding his head. “Alright, but you better move fast,” he warned.
We quickly ushered the President into the HoverLoft, ensuring he was safely secured. As we took off, we could hear the colonel shouting orders to his troops in the distance.
“Phew, that was close,” I breathed a sigh of relief.
“Yeah, but we’re not out of the woods yet. We still have a long way to go before we reach safety,” Lyra replied, her eyes fixed on the horizon.
The HoverLoft hummed along as it glided through the air, its silver alloy exteriors contrasting with the purple skies above. I could see the jagged line stretching across the horizon from the cockpit, marking the boundary between the two warring countries. As we approached the forcefield, an invisible barrier shimmered like a giant glass window.
I couldn’t believe what was happening. The AI was making dangerous decisions, and I could not stop it. Lyra tried to warn me, but I was too focused on the controls. It wasn’t until we were caught in that sudden wind gust that I realized something was seriously wrong.
“Captain, what’s happening?” the President asked, looking worried.
“I don’t know, Mr. President,” I replied, trying to keep my cool. “The AI system seems to be malfunctioning.”
Lyra said, “I’ve been trying to raise the alarm but was dismissed as false.”
The President looked pale. “What do we do now?”
“I’m going to override the AI and steer us to safety,” I said as I worked the controls. It was fighting back, blocking me from steering. I kept fighting to gain manual control. I yelled at Lyra,” Hurry, pull the microprocessor. We are going old school.”
I cleared the forcefield’s no-fly zone and landed on the spot designated for my return. We managed to escape danger, but the experience had shaken us all. I knew we had to do something about the new AI technology, but Zephyr didn’t care. Once he saw the government coffers, he was about to make a profit from the tragedies of war.
The dimly lit living room was filled with the sound of the television flickering to life. The President’s grave expression appeared on the screen, the camera panning to show Titan Chase seated behind his desk in the capital city of Heliodor.
“I have some important information to share tonight,” he announced, his voice urgent. “Our military has been developing AI technology to replace human pilots entirely. I, for one, believe this is a grave mistake.”
As he spoke, the camera panned to a video revealing a prototype AI-powered Hoverloft taking off and flying out of control through the skies without human input.
“But I’ve experienced it recently,” Chase continued, his eyes narrowing. While AI and technology have come far, we are not ready to completely surrender to them. This advancement’s implications are far-reaching and potentially dangerous. So I’m cutting all government funding for this project.”
Without warning, the military burst into the President’s office and handcuffed him, dragging him away. As the broadcast abruptly cut to commercials, Abeona citizens were left to contemplate the ramifications of a machine-run world.
**********
The grand hall was filled with murmurs as the Roman Deity World Management Tribunal was called to order. The fate of two warring nations, Abeona and Adiona, hung in the balance. The tension was palpable as the gods and goddesses took their seats, ready to deliberate.
“Our planet is in turmoil, Adiona. There seems to be no end to the war and conflict.”
Adiona answered solemnly, “Yes, Abeona. It is a tragic state of affairs. The people are suffering, and it seems no one will make peace.”
“Brothers and sisters,” said Jupiter, the Roman War God’s voice booming across the hall. “We are here today to end the bloodshed on planet Natura Martis. We cannot allow Abeona and Adiona to destroy each other.”
The God of Nature, Gaia, nodded in agreement. “The forces of nature have already suffered enough. It’s time for us to intervene and bring peace to these lands.”
The room fell silent as the deities considered their options. Venus, the Roman Goddess of Love, spoke up. We can send emissaries to each nation and open up a dialogue. We can help them see that there is more to gain from peace than war.”
Mars, the Roman God of War, scoffed. “Dialogue won’t work. These nations have been at each other’s throats for a century. What they need is a show of force.”
“Brother, you are mistaken,” said Minerva, the Roman Goddess of Wisdom. “Violence will only beget more violence. We must show them that there is a better way.”
THE LEGEND of the Immortal: The Count of Saint Germain
Is World War III Looming?
“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes,” is a popular quote attributed to Mark Twain, and is an important concept to think about with the current state of the world amid ramping geopolitical tensions and deteriorating economic conditions.
Roughly 100 years ago, ‘rhyming’ circumstances were setting the stage for the Great Depression and a Second World War, and if we aren’t careful, there is the potential for the global economy to sink into a deep recession/depression while chatter about the potential for World War 3 is also on the rise.
With major conflicts now including Ukraine v. Russia, the growing threat of Russia v. NATO, Israel v. Palestine, Israel and the U.S. v. Iran, and China threatening Taiwan, among others, while we cannot say that WWIII is underway, it’s not a stretch to say that we are a world at war.
Naturally, the circumstances the world finds itself in are causing consternation for investors, who desperately want to maintain their wealth despite the mounting headwinds they face in doing so, leading many to question if gold, and to a lesser extent, Bitcoin (BTC), could potentially offer protection.
Kitco Crypto reached out to experts on geopolitical and financial matters to get their take on the likelihood of World War III happening in the foreseeable future and what it would mean for gold and Bitcoin.
“There are two forces at work here,” said Martin Armstrong, an economic forecaster and founder of Armstrong Economics.
“First, we have the Neocons who have waged endless wars since the 1960s.”
“Even Robert MacNamara wrote a book and on YouTube you will see his interview before he died explaining they thought Russia was behind Vietnam, but they were wrong; it was just a civil war,” he noted. “You can examine every war and you will find it was based on lies. Tony Blair’s video on YouTube is his Apology for the Iraq War. Again, they were wrong.”
“The Neocons have been relentless in their thirst for endless wars,” Armstrong said. “You have Blinken threatening China over Taiwan when they held 10% of the US debt. That are now net sellers. They only see war – not the economics or the country.”
“Second, virtually every country in Europe is now chanting war with Russia thanks to NATO, also a Neocon organization,” he highlighted. “The monetary system of the West is based on endless deficits spending. The default comes regardless of the debt level. The default in these Ponzi scheme unfolds when they cannot find a buyer for the new debt that enables them to pay off the old.”
“This is what we now face for the first time because Biden/Harris Administration has allowed the Neocons to run foreign policy,” Armstrong said. “Governments now NEED to create WWIII for like WWII, all of Europe defaulted on their debt, Britain went into a moratorium, but defaulted on the loans from the USA.”
He suggested that this is the real reason behind the surge in governments exploring the creation of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).
“This is the real issue behind pushing for CBDCs to eliminate physical money and then everything is traceable,” Armstrong said. “I have spoken with government on both sides of the Atlantic. They assume moving to digital, they will increase tax collection by 35% and terminate the underground economy.”
“Europe routinely cancels its paper currency to prevent people from hoarding cash,” he noted. “America has never done that, which is why the dollar has been the reserve currency someone in China can hold dollars but not euros. Also, the US is a consumer-based economy, so this is why the dollar has been the reserve currency, for Europe needs to see to Americans, as do Asians.”
As for what the potential for WW3 means for investors, Armstrong said it underscores the need to invest in tangible assets.
“Because they will default on debts in the West and this is universal, the only safe place for capital long-term has been tangible assets,” he said. “Some have called it the Everything Bubble, for they do not understand that this is a divestiture from public assets to private.”
“This has been precious metals, real estate, and shares with tangible assets,” he highlighted. “Precious metals in the form of coins will most likely become the currency of the underground economy. Even if you look at the German Hyperinflation, the replacement currency in 1925 was backed by real estate. Tangible assets survive the collapse of currencies.”
As for the effect a major global conflict would have on financial markets, Armstrong said that governments are prepared for this and will take full advantage of it to ‘solve’ their growing list of economic problems.
“Governments are not stupid. They will seek to impose capital control to prevent capital fleeing,” he said. “This will most likely dominate Europe. Just look at the actions they take during war.”
“Abraham Lincoln closed the gold market before it reached $200 in greenbacks in 1864 and claimed people were making money off the blood of others,” he noted. “During World War I, all of Europe closed the share markets, fearing people would sell and take their money to America. The US share market crash by 10% on anticipation that it too would close, which it did the week of July 27th, and did not reopen until December 7th. This was again for capital controls fearing Europeans would sell US shares and take the money home, which did not happen.”
“The lesson we must learn historically from wars is that governments will impose capital controls, and this may be when they attempt to switch canceling paper dollars and forcing everyone into CBDCs,” Armstrong warned.
If this were to occur, “Physical gold and silver will be the only form of money to survive under these conditions,” Armstrong said.
As for ‘digital gold’ and the growing cryptocurrency ecosystem, he warned that they “are entirely dependent on the PowerGrid.”
“As you see already in Europe, targeting people for comments is unfolding just as it has been shown that the Biden Administration conspired with social media to censor and create the cancel culture to shut down free speech,” he noted. “Anything that will transact through the internet will be vulnerable to the government assuming the PowerGrid is even functioning during war.”
For these reasons, Armstrong suggested it would be “best that precious metals are in the form of recognizable coins that the uneducated will accept, such as a $20 gold piece or silver coins dated pre-1965.”
When asked if alternative currencies could benefit from a world where certain countries shun the currencies of adversaries, Armstrong stressed that “All currencies are fiat.”
“The real scheme with these CBDCs is that the IMF is planning to replace the dollar and have already quietly created their own digital currency, and because of the sanctions the US imposed on Russia removing them from SWIFT, this is what gave the drive to establish BRICS.”
“It was geopolitical, not fiat-based,” he added. “The US threatened China with the same sanctions if they helped Russia. Countries realized that the American Neocons have used the dollar as a weapon, and that is what divided the world economy.”
As for going back to a gold standard, Armstong noted that the main problem with doing so is that people have become so accustomed to valuing things in fixed fiat terms that they don’t know another way to approach determining the true value of things.
“A gold standard has always failed when it has been fixed to a specific value,” he said. “Bretton Woods collapsed because you fixed gold at $35 per ounce, but you did not limit the amount of dollars created. A three-year-old could figure out such a system would collapse.”
“The only gold standard that has ever survived is when its value freely floated,” Armstrong stressed. “The Byzantine Empire was based purely on gold that floated in value, it too collapsed due to wars and spending that was unrestrained.”
“As Margaret Thatcher once said, socialism works until you run out of other people’s money,” he noted. “The same can be said of government relentless spending to retain power.”
Asked whether the powers that be could use an escalation in war to overshadow a potential economic collapse, Armstrong said, “Wars have been the driving force behind all monetary crises.”
“The value of a currency is always based on confidence,” he explained. “When the Roman Emperor Valerian I was captured in battle in 260 AD by the Persians, despite the fact that coinage was of precious metals, they still carried a premium over the precious metal because, like the dollar today, Rome was the consumer economy that everyone wanted to sell to. India routinely struct imitation Roman gold coins illustrating that there was a premium to the gold when struck by Rome.”
“The Roman Emperor Diocletian attempted to reintroduce silver that had vanished from circulation following the capture of Valerian I 26 years later in 286 AD,” he added. “He raised of the weight of gold coins from a norm of about 70–72 to the Roman pound to one of 60 to the Roman pound. The silver coinage was reintroduced at a rate of 96 to the Roman pound. And he introduced of the so-called follis—a copper coin of about 10 gm.”
“Just as Diocletian revised the monetary system and imposed wage and price controls to tackle inflation, we will see the same unfold,” Armstrong warned. “We will most likely see the US and Europe break apart into separate governments.”|
“Most people are unaware that during the Great Depression, over 200 cities issued their own money and collectors refer to these as Depression Scrip,” he highlighted.
“Currencies will also be fiat to some degree, for even when they were gold, they carried a premium based on their economic status,” Armstrong said. “We blame the currencies rather than governments. This is like a murderer claiming it was the gun that killed the people, not that he pulled the trigger. This is going to result in the fall of Republican forms of government.”
“Hopefully, this next version will be a real democracy where We the People decide do we go to war – yes or no,” he concluded. “The last cycle was the end of Monarchy. This one will be the end of republics, which tend to be the most corrupt in history. There was a major debt crisis in Rome and that is why when Caesar crossed the Rubicon, he did not have to fight his way to Rome, the senate fled, and the people cheered. This will unfold again by 2032 as it is becoming wider understood that governments are corrupt and in trouble worldwide.”
USD is too big to fail
Despite the rising number of smaller regional conflicts, Adam Koprucki, founder of RealWorldInvestor.com, doesn’t see a larger global conflict forming.
“It’s unlikely regional conflicts are going to morph into something larger,” he said. “The current administration has done a good job of stepping in where needed, but also drawing hard boundaries so they don’t risk driving up global tensions.”
That said, he noted that global tensions “always have an impact, the key is to monitor to see if the tensions will get worse, that’s when investors should worry. A major global conflict would likely disrupt supply chains and cause immediate and severe shocks in the financial market.”
As for a potential exodus from the U.S. dollar in favor of gold or Bitcoin, Koprucki said that “Unless there is concern about the stability of the U.S. dollar or severe inflation,” he doesn’t think “investors would immediately flock to gold, but more likely so than Bitcoin – which is still extremely volatile.”
When asked if alternative currencies could benefit from a world where certain countries shun the fiat currencies of adversaries, Koprucki said, “Sure, but those countries who would embrace alternative currencies likely already have an unstable fiat currency, so their adaption may not cause further adaption.”
“I think fiat currencies are generally here to stay,” Koprucki concluded. “A transition to another currency would be unheard of. As long as the U.S. government is backing the dollar, it will remain the preeminent currency. The world is too interconnected and dependent on the US Dollar now.”
What do you say to the jerk who cut in front of you in the long, long line?
I left the Army and was putting myself through school at a historically black university. I did not ask for a minority scholarship because I was white. This school was closer and had a better program. I was standing in a line and these very large guys I rightly guessed at football players kept breaking line. I looked around and saw a man who looked important enough to do something. I told the next guy no. His answer was to pick me up, put me over and head to the top of the line. Come to find out the guy I had chosen was the head coach. He had already told them when to register and he cleared that line, took me to the front. I had everything ready but the amount in the check. Then he said he would walk me to my car. He said he did not want anyone to take out the extra practice he was giving them on me. I told him I came from the Army. I took no crap nor was I afraid of people with a different skin color. I just did not like line breakers and rude people. I just was saving myself because the guy who picked me up was going to get a folding chair to the head. We both nodded at each other. As it should be.
How Political Corruption Allows Anthony Blinken To Break The Law
ProPublica headlines:
The selected formulation is unfortunately not covering the real issue at hand.
U.S. law prohibits military aid to countries which are hindering U.S. humanitarian aid.
Two government entities subordinated to the State Department concluded, in writing, that Israel was blocking their humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza.
The Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, reported to Congress the opposite conclusion because he intended to deliver more military aid to Gaza.
By misleading Congress on humanitarian aid to Gaza Blinken deliberated broke the law.
That should have been the headline:
The U.S. government’s two foremost authorities on humanitarian assistance concluded this spring that Israel had deliberately blocked deliveries of food and medicine into Gaza.The U.S. Agency for International Development delivered its assessment to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and the State Department’s refugees bureau made its stance known to top diplomats in late April. Their conclusion was explosive because U.S. law requires the government to cut off weapons shipments to countries that prevent the delivery of U.S.-backed humanitarian aid. Israel has been largely dependent on American bombs and other weapons in Gaza since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks.
But Blinken and the administration of President Joe Biden did not accept either finding. Days later, on May 10, Blinken delivered a carefully worded statement to Congress that said, “We do not currently assess that the Israeli government is prohibiting or otherwise restricting the transport or delivery of U.S. humanitarian assistance.”
This case should be sufficient for Congress to open an inquiry and to demand under oath witness statements from Blinken and others involved in the affair. It could be a great instrument during the current election campaign to damage the position of Democratic candidates.
However that is unlikely to happen.
Unfortunately Blinken lied to Congress about Israeli war crimes because he knew that he would get away with it.
The uni-state, the foreign policy conglomerate which resides in both parties and the bureaucracy, will not allow that U.S. war-crimes or those of its associated forces will ever be prosecuted. The Bush administration did get away with lying about weapons of mass destruction. The CIA and the Pentagon got away with torturing hundreds of innocent people.
Would the Republicans prosecuted Blinken as they should they would have to break with their own support and commitment to Zionist supremacy. With their own candidate’s campaign depending on donations from Zionist billionaires there is no chance that the Republicans will break away from their previous policies.
The will of the people, as enacted in laws, gets ignored in favor of monies that allow established politicians to continue their games.
Why is it that although China is already the second largest economy in the world, most Chinese people have no food to eat and can only survive by eating rats and chewing tree bark?
This is Rou jia mo, which is commonly regarded as the Chinese equivalent of hamburgers and meet sandwiches.
It will take you only around one dollar to have one.
It usually consists of a bun that is cut open and filled with meat and other ingredients like vegetables.
The most famous Rou jia mo is in Xi’an, Shaanxi Province, but you can find it in nearly all across China, especially in the northern provinces of the country.
Many people see it as a street food and eat it as snacks.
It’s one of the most simple food in China, but has a long history.
Rou jia mo was already part of the cuisine during the Qin Dynasty, much earlier than the hamburgers you have eaten.
In China, people in different places make Rou jia mo in different ways, so you can find it in various forms and tastes.
This is one of the examples to show the diversity and the cultural weight of the Chinese food.
There are hundreds of cities in China, and for each one of them, it will take you several days to try all the food there.
Chinese cuisine is very diverse and has various kinds of food, much more than you can imagine.
You are making yourself as a joke if you challenge Chinese food and its food culture.
Why isn’t any nation able to stop Israel? Is Israel omnipotent?
First you have Gaza and Palestine
Then you have Lebanon
Its a pretty weak nation with virtually zero regular military and only a bunch of militants funded by a sanctioned nation and having limited weapons and funds and virtually no air defence
Israel has unlimited funds, unlimited weapons and the backing of the entire western world and mainstream media
You think it’s an equal contest?
Of course Israel will look Omnipotent and powerful and mighty against Lebanon or Palestine or Yemen or Syria
Russia can stop Israel
China can stop Israel
Iran can stop Israel
India can stop Israel
Pakistan can stop Israel
Turkiye can stop Israel
These Nations can easily push Israel into starvation and ruin by sheer economic blockades without firing a bullet
A Missile Barrage from even Pakistan can overwhelm the Iron Dome completely
They can destroy Ships bound for Israel and starve the Israelis mercilessly
Today these Nations aren’t impacted by Israel and what it’s doing so they don’t bother much beyond token protests at the UN
Imagine if Israel tries a pager attack in one of these Nations
They would be relentless and merciless
Even the US has to back down or face direct confrontation
So Israel isn’t omnipotent
Its enemies are much weaker
The minute it takes on someone of equal strength, Israel will lose because Israel doesn’t have the manpower that the islamic Nations have
The minute a Cleric calls the Clarion – 50–100 Million Muslims will be prepared to go to war
Even at 100:1 – in 30 days – Half the IDF could be decimated in a full on war
Bitcoin in a WWIII scenario
“As global tensions rise, the possibility of regional conflicts escalating into a World War III scenario remains uncertain, but the financial implications are clear,” said Dr. Tonya M. Evans, Esq., an expert in crypto policy and law and full professor of law at Dickinson Law. “Historically, wars weaken fiat currencies, prompting investors to seek safe-haven assets like gold. However, Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies are emerging as new alternatives.”
“Bitcoin’s decentralized nature makes it a valuable hedge against inflation and currency devaluation, especially in regions where traditional banking systems may collapse,” she said. “Unlike fiat currencies, Bitcoin’s supply is capped, which protects it from inflationary pressures exacerbated by conflict.”
Evans suggested, “In a global conflict scenario, Bitcoin (in particular) could serve as both a trusted store of value and an alternative and censorship-resistant means of transferring wealth across borders, particularly for those seeking to avoid sanctions or economic fallout.”
“While gold remains a trusted safe haven, Bitcoin’s portability and accessibility offer a distinct advantage in times of crisis,” she concluded. “In my opinion, Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies provide a unique opportunity for financial resilience, potentially becoming even more crucial as the world navigates increasing geopolitical instability.”
Gold to be the go-to safe haven
To help predict what would happen if a global war were to escalate, Jim Cagnina, market analyst at NinjaTrader, used several recent examples to support his outlook.
“Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022, and since then, the S&P 500 is up approximately 27.5%. Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, and since then the S&P 500 is up approximately 29.7%,” he noted. “US-based risk assets anchored around regulated exchanges, on the longer term, are sensitive to domestic fundamental factors such as interest rates and inflation. If anything, geopolitical tensions outside the US tend to prop up US-based assets.”
“On-shoring or near-shoring capabilities of the US are more formidable than in the past,” he added. “A good example is the construction of the new 1,100-acre development of TSMC’s advanced semiconductor manufacturing fabrication facility in Phoenix, Arizona. As things get tense overseas, the US can and will pivot.”
Cagnina said another potential result would be a shakeup in the oil market.
“Regarding Crude Oil, OPEC+ seems to be losing its primacy with respect to setting global oil prices,” he noted. “With a potential increase in production being contemplated by OPEC+, the attitude seems to be ‘if you can’t beat them, join them.’”
As for Bitcoin, Cagnina said, in his opinion, it is “too esoteric and volatile to be considered a flight to quality investment.”
“In my experience, most investors struggle to explain what Bitcoin is and its practical purpose clearly,” he said. “Bitcoin futures average true range based on a 14-day look back is over $3,000 or more than 5% on any given day. I would think that flight to quality assets would not typically subject investors to 5% daily fluctuations, which would defeat the purpose. Furthermore, the supply of Bitcoin is highly inelastic, more so than gold.”
“Gold, on the other hand, can act as a flight to safety instrument,” Cagnina added. “Major industrial countries that can afford it have been adding to their gold reserves, most notably the US, Russia, China, Japan, Singapore, and Brazil. I would argue that this is one of the main reasons for gold’s recent appreciation. This accumulation of reserves will reduce supply for the rest of us resulting in additional appreciation as investors completely buy in.”
As for the U.S. dollar, he said he believes that “the US will maintain its world reserve currency status.”
“The dominance of US foreign aid contributions and that of the European Union helps lock emerging economies’ dependency on the US dollar and EURO concerning transactions for goods and services,” he noted. “Central clearing, strong GDP, and strong contract law will be barriers for alternative currencies becoming dominant.”
“In my opinion, if there is another major global war, it will look and be fought completely differently than in the past,” Cagnina concluded. “The currencies that will do well, I think, will be between alliances that can maintain good contract law during the conflict. Deep pockets certainly will help. Having said that, let’s pray that a World War II level conflict never happens.”
Cabin nooks
Have you ever thought about this?
In 100 years like in 2123 we will all be buried with our relatives and friends.
Strangers will live in our homes we fought so hard to build, and they will own everything we have today. All our possessions will be unknown and unborn, including the car we spent a fortune on, and will probably be scrap, preferably in the hands of an unknown collector.
Our descendants will hardly or hardly know who we were, nor will they remember us. How many of us know our grandfather’s father?
After we die, we will be remembered for a few more years, then we are just a portrait on someone’s bookshelf, and a few years later, our history, photos and deeds disappear in history’s oblivion. We won’t even be memories.
If we paused one day to analyse these questions, perhaps we would understand how ignorant and weak the dream to achieve it all was.
If we could only think about this, surely our approaches, our thoughts would change, we would be different people.
Always having more, no time for what’s really valuable in this life.
I’d change all this to live and enjoy the walks I’ve never taken, these hugs I didn’t give, these kisses for our children and our loved ones, these jokes we didn’t have time for.
Those would certainly be the most beautiful moments to remember, after all they would fill our lives with joy.
And we waste it day after day with greed, greed and intolerance.
Anon
What screams “I’m not American” in the United States?
Walking. I’ve been pulled twice for the crime of walking.
Wooo-woo noise and police asking me what I was doing.
My ex had same issue. Staying on business near a site in, I think, Carolina. Could see some shops including a bookshop not that far from her hotel. Rather than drive her rental car several km to get there it was a short walk. Pulled by police as someone had reported her walking down the road!
Also, crossing the road….like an adult. I got pulled in LA. Sunday morning, no traffic on a stretch of road down which I could see probably half a mile in each direction.
I crossed and got stopped by, I kid you not, a chap out of CHIPS!! Bike, moustache- the works.
He was mental…keep back sir do not approach me. I said do not approach me.
I kept saying to him, look mate I’m standing perfectly still it’s you who keeps getting closer.
He asked where I was from – Wales at that time. Which led to some bizarre discussion as he didn’t know that as a country. Thought it was a town.
I also kept pointing out that since we had been talking only two cars had gone past…very angry man.
I asked him several times to calm down, let’s just have a chat like adults but he kept shouting about not approaching him.
I think he just gave up in the end….muttered something about ‘next time…’ got on his bike and sped off.
So…I’d say walking and crossing the road.
Okay – so quite a lot of people upset by a couple of mildly amusing anecdotes.
Let me clarify:
I’m not lying/making this up. Why bother? I’m sure I could come up with something more interesting.
It’s not a critical assessment of USA society. So, Americans it’s not an attack on you personally; it was in answer to the question.
One of my favourites ‘if you don’t like somewhere, don’t go there!’ Difficult to know if you don’t like somewhere unless you go there first. I didn’t say I don’t like the USA, I’ve been there around 20 times.
I wasn’t aggressive with CHIPS person. I was more bemused. He was an angry chap.
It wasn’t a highway, it was 1 lane in each direction. Quite a wide nice road heading towards a beach area.
The other two incidents, police started off more aggressive than needed but soon were quite pleasant.
My ex wasn’t stumbling along in the middle of a freeway. We are talking about 2/3 minutes down the side of a quiet road. To some shops she could see from her hotel room window. Yes, perhaps she shouldn’t have -but again that’s the point of the question and my answer.
Yes, you may not have ever been stopped for walking. It has happened to other people. The fact you may not have had an experience does not mean other people have not.
I wasn’t arrested or apprehended or in any danger of being so.
As above – it’s just a few anecdotes; not a critical assessment of the police, the country or you personally.
THE TRUTH of the Immortal: The Count of Saint Germain
Why is Xi Jinping not bad?
Well, I am a Chinese and now doing an intern in NYC for at least 3 months. In this case at least I have seen how the people’s life looks like in different countries(although not know thoroughly about America), so let me tell you my opinion.
The key point is, you should think INDEPENDENTLY and not be heavily influenced by LOCAL social media. Let me take an example. Before I go to NYC, I have heard a lot of bad things about America and I am really worried about my own safety. I even do not dare to take out my phone for the first day in NYC cause I thought that someone could rob it. But actually, things are not that bad. Now I have lived here for three months and do not go out in the late night, until now I do not face any criminals.
So do you understand my idea? I know in America most of the social media have said a lot of bad things about china, but is it true or not? You can not know the answer until experience that country’s life by yourself. You know every country’s media will amplify bad things about other country and ignore its good things, so do not be easily affected by them, have your own idea and think INDEPENDENTLY.
Besides, I’d like to tell my idea about China and its president. Although there are some drawbacks, I thought he is a good president in total. Medical cares are becoming cheap and easier these day, corruption rate are decreasing, it’s very safe for people to hang out in late night in most of metropolitans, no drug problems and so on. I do not say that our distinguished president is a perfect person, but actually for me it’s good.
So, whether you agree with my idea, I hope that you can have your own idea and do not be easily influenced by others. Is there no freedom of talking freely in china or people are always controlled by the government? Just go there and you will know the answers. Listen to other Chinese idea and treat it carefully.
(My English is now very well, hope that there will not have any problems for you to read)
Why do so many foreigners go to Thailand to find women?
There are basically two types of women that foreigners desire when they travel to Thailand. The most in-demand are the freelancers, of course, and they are in demand by people from all countries alike. These people basically want to have fun and they hire a girl for a night, take them to their hotel room and the woman leaves the next day. Getting a girl is easy in Thailand, especially in cities like Pattaya and this attracts many tourists.
Then there are people who hire a woman for their entire trip. They basically rent the woman as their temporary girlfriend while they are in Thailand for a week or so. They explore all the places, go for sightseeing together, and have their meals together while all the expenses are paid by the man and in return, the woman is expected to take care of the man in ‘certain’ ways.
The other kind of woman that many foreigners are in search of is a wife. Now this might sound funny to some but trust me, this is a common practice among Americans and Europeans. Divorce rates in the West are very high and finding someone who will stay loyal to you throughout their life is very rare to find nowadays in those countries. Thai women are very family-oriented and loyal, obedient to what their husbands say without raising their voices. Plus, it’s easier to convince them and get what the man wants. So many Westerns look for such women who could be their potential wives. Some stay back in Thailand, most marry and fly back to their countries.
Can the US be involved in a war soon, as in be fought on American land? I’m most worried about China and Taiwan and WW3.
It’s a definite possibility. No one can say what the likelihood is. 10%? 30%? 60%? Who knows.
But the United States is certainly trying damn hard to start a war with China. And China is trying damn hard to avoid one.
China is preparing for the worst. China cannot control America’s actions.
Four-Onion Steak
Yield: 4 servings
Ingredients
- 2 (12 ounce) boneless beef top-loin steaks, cut 1 inch thick
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic salt
- 1/2 teaspoon chili powder
- 1/2 teaspoon pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
- 1 large white onion, thinly sliced
- 1 medium leek, thinly sliced
- 2 shallots, chopped
- 1/2 cup beef broth
- 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
- 1/2 cup sliced scallions
- Scallions, sliced into 3 inch pieces (optional)
Instructions
- Cut steaks into 4 portions.
- Combine garlic salt, chili powder, pepper and cinnamon. Use your fingers to press mixture onto both sides of each steak portion.
- In a large skillet cook steaks in hot oil over medium heat to desired doneness, turning once. Allow 8 to 11 minutes for medium rare or 12 to 14 minutes for medium.
- Transfer steaks to a serving platter, reserving drippings in the skillet. Keep warm.
- For sauce, add white onion, leek and shallots to skillet. Cook and stir over low heat for 5 minutes or until onions are tender.
- Add beef broth and Worcestershire sauce. Cook and stir for 1 to 2 minutes more or until broth is slightly reduced.
- Add scallions. Spoon onion mixture over steaks.
- Garnish with scallion pieces, if desired.
Why do we hear of China’s economy in crisis, but never of US economy? What makes US economy so different that people never lose trust in it?
People never lose trust in any economy that :-
A. IS NOT in a stage of invasion and collapse like Ukraine at present
B. Whose currency has NOT lost the trust of the people
US, Rwanda, Ethiopia – Doesnt matter
You don’t see Ethiopians flocking and swapping their currencies for Dollars all of a sudden right?
You don’t see vegetable vendors refusing to accept Indian Rupees and demanding Gold or Dollars right?
That is a sign of losing trust in an Economy
Another sign is mass migration
Do you see that in China?
So nobody has lost the slightest trust in the Chinese Economy
Why don’t we hear of US Economic Crisis?
We absolutely do
We hear it all the time
The US Economy has problems and we hear them all the time
The Huge $ 35 Trillion Debt
The $ 1 Trillion interest payments
The Collapse of 262 banks in the recent months
The overt dependence on the Military Industrial Complex becoming near Soviet Union in nature
The Reason you don’t hear of this as a Narrative is because : THERE IS NO PURPOSE TO BE GAINED
Mainstream Media which is funded by Wall Street gains very little reporting about the US Problems
Once they had a purpose which was to use the economy as a tool of criticism of the Incumbent Government yet that is gone because the Government is now utterly a puppet of the Bigger Players
You hear of Chinese Economic Problems because THERE IS A PURPOSE TO BE GAINED
By potentially try to reduce Chinas influence by constantly touting that their economy is flailing helps :-
A. Politicians in the US posture
B. Helps the Big Players achieve their means using Tame Democrats and Republicans
That’s all there is
Every Narrative has a purpose
How many US Media channels covered the Sri Lanka crisis or Pakistan crisis?
Virtually None
It’s because there is no purpose to be gained
US is actually marking China as a serious Rival with all these narratives
Are Japan and China economically dependent on each other?
- During my six visits to China, including one to Japan, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia, I found China extremely reverend in all these regions except Vietnam.
- China is considered a big brother, except for Japan.
- There is a lot of mutual respect between Japan and China.
Due to China’s meteoric rise and proximity to Japan, the flight from Shanghai to Osaka took about three hours. The relationship between Japan and China is robust.
Our highly knowledgeable Japanese Guide told us several times that Japan and China are very close in sharing technology/engineering and trade.
China’s new wealthy population has a tremendous thirst for Japanese goods. Go to OSAKA and find out how much YUAN is flowing in Japan.
Chinese Tourism to Japan is enough to measure China’s love affair with Japan.
China mainly respects two countries, Japan and Singapore; both are her role models.
This region of Asia is the Next Super Power; once I travelled and came back to Canada, I realized most of the ra ra in the former so-called “The First World” is all bull shit.
Osaka’s economy gets a fair amount of mighty YUAN from Chinese tourists.
What are some mind-blowing coincidences?
A 17-year-old girl called Miche Solomon gave her mom and dad a hug and a kiss and said goodbye before rushing off to school.
Her best friend, Cassidy Nurse, gave Miche a weird look and lukewarm smile when they ran into each other at school and ran away into one of the classrooms.
Miche thought this was kind of odd and wondered what she did to upset her. Miche thought she probably said something and brushed it off before heading into the classroom.
The principal came to Miche’s classroom and asked her to come with him to the principal’s office. When Miche stepped into the office, two women introduced themselves as social workers and they told her they were sent by the police to come and get her.
They continued to explain that they were taking her to a safe house but they needed to stop off at the hospital.
The strange detour to the hospital was so that Miche could get a DNA test, which confirmed Miche Solomon was not Miche Solomon and her real name was in fact Zephany Nurse. Her mother Lavana wasn’t actually her mother but her kidnapper and she was now under arrest
The social workers took Miche to the police station where they told her that her real biological parents were waiting to meet her. It turned out that they were also the parents of her bestest friend in the whole world, Cassidy Nurse, which meant Cassidy and Miche were sisters.
It all came to light when Miche and Cassidy took a series of selfies and Cassidy would go home to show her parents saying “ Wow, don’t me and my best friend look very alike.”
They instantly knew that Miche who was kidnapped when she was a baby was their daughter and brought the photo to police.
What is the hardest thing you have ever done?
Attending my love’s marriage.
He and I were in love for 7 years. We laughed, loved, fought, had fun together- we were best friends.
No one can ever know me more than him. He is the best person of my life. He has supported me in all good and bad times of my life.
We both belonged to same community. But still our parents were not ready. For their sake, we both decided to marry elsewhere.
We used to talk everyday. One day he told me that his parents has found a girl who matched him perfectly.
The next month, they were engaged. When he got engaged, we stopped calling each other. We used to talk for half an hour before his marriage was fixed. Soon the hardest day of my life had arrived. He got married on 10/0
The hardest thing for me was the invitation he sent to attend his marriage. He wanted me to come. I can do anything for him. So, I thought to go. I went there with my brother.
Watching him standing in a groom’s dress with someone else was the hardest thing I have ever done. I greeted both of them and soon returned.
The last message I received from him, since that day, was around 1 am on the day of his marriage-
Thanks for coming.
I still love him so much. Miss him, cry for him. But It can’t help me out. I want him back, but it’s impossible. He is happy and I am trying to be happy for him.
What is the hardest thing you have ever done?
Around 15 years ago my brother was charged with murdering my best mates sister in a horrific stabbing. It happened in the small town we all grew up in which I had left about 5 years earlier. Even though we had all grown up close together and both families had friendships from our parents before us because he was white and she was black it was taken as and made out to be a race issue and the town was in a lock down state as grieving relatives understandably wanted answers.
From day one my brother had admitted seeing her at her home where she died earlier in that evening as they had a casual relationship but maintained he did not kill her and from knowing him and what kind of person he is we (my family) genuinely thought and believed he was not capable of committing the savagery involved. Personally I never thought he would put our parents through what was ahead if he was guilty? So we thought the police had made some kind of mistake. None the less they said they had enough to prosecute on a wilful murder charge and he was placed on remand to await trial in around 15 months time.
Unfortunately my father did not make trial as a few months later at 54 yo he very unexpectedly passed away. He wasn’t sick with anything in particular but yes could have been healthier I’m sure but seeing the way he was calmly sat in his armchair with half glass of port and blanket over his legs when he died it looked like he just gone to sleep. I’ve never really gone with the “died of a broken heart” thing but believe he may have been the closest thing to it.
That led to the second hardest thing I’ve had to do which was tell my brother. There was no way he would be told over the phone and thankfully the prison he was in were understanding and sincere allowing me a 30 minute visit that day out of hours. Met him in a small room and upon walking in he stood up looking at me and said is it Pa (our grandfather) and I say no it’s dad and we just gave a hug and shed a few tears. Felt fcking horrible once leaving knowing he had only his cell to go back and grieve with or not being around family at all.
The hardest day came after catching up with an old friend that was just out of prison said to me that my mate (brother to the murdered girl) was in that prison and he told me to tell you he wanted you to come see him. It was not a request I was really expecting after seeing tv news reports and newspaper stories from the incident and also what had come from any other friends and relatives from home. To see the damage and hurt been done to a family you know and were close with in such a heartbreaking way is terrible and to see the emotion back directed to your own is not a nice feeling.
I may have second guessed visiting my friend over the situation for a second but as a friend and knowing who he was there was no second thought. The next week I made a booking and it constantly consumed my thinking, I was still unsure why did he want to, what do I say, did he have information regarding, did he want to exact revenge?? Any way it all had some angst attatched to it and while not been to that prison before I did know it was a more of a prison camp low security.
It was around an hours drive so on the way I’m starting to stress pretty hard, the whole situation had consumed or changed most things in life for almost a year by then and just having to go face this guy that I pretty much spent the first 22 yrs of life standing next to and now he only knows of my bro being his big sisters killer, it was giving out some high anxiety. Was a very surreal feeling in an unreal way. As being a regular prison visitor I was used to the entering procedures which helped, just didn’t know unlike the more secure jail’s I’d been to in this one you just walk outside into a large open outside area like a small park really there were no guards out there and prisoners walking around anywhere and I briefly joked to myself well if he wants to get me he’ll get his chance…….this was a low option on my thoughts of why I was there. Anyway I was there and my hearts absolutely pounding and as I’m looking around down the hill a little I see my mate walking up and once seeing the way he stuck his hand up and waved with a smile on his face I knew we were good and it was enough to alleviate all that was in my head. We met hugged went and sat down stared at eachother silently for about 30 seconds until I just put my arms out in a shrugging motion and said ‘man Im so sorry but he said he didn’t do it’ and from there life moved on a little and what was said isn’t important as the hard part of just getting there was finally over.
For anyone interested in how it ended my brother was convicted and sentenced to 25 yrs no parole for the murder still maintaining his innocence. He spent 15 years behind bars and 5 trials/appeals before he was finally acquitted by evidence that had been found 10 years earlier in an independent investigation that police had planted crucial evidence against him then doing everything in their power to delay re trialing. It will quite possibly result in police being charged for this type of misconduct for the first time in this state?
How Russian Motorbike Squads Changed Battlefield Tactics in Ukraine
What is the smartest thing you have ever done in an interview?
It wasn’t what I did DURING the interview. It was what I did AFTER it.
Being in the job market at 50 years old was not turning out to be the picnic I thought it would be. With my education and vast experience, I was certain I’d be turning offers down, not going to interview after interview with nothing to show for it.
You see, there’s something called age discrimination. It’s not talked about as often as the other types, of course, and it is very difficult to prove. But it was kind of hard to ignore, as the jobs I’d interviewed for (and, frankly, should have been awarded) were given to 20-somethings with not nearly the experience and maturity I possessed.
Eventually, I realized that I had to find a way to stand out, and that opportunity came after my seventh and final job interview.
The interview itself was grueling. There was a “panel” of people asking questions, and they each took turns selecting from their lists of 25+ topics. When I left, I called my husband and said, “Another one bites the dust.”
I was so deflated. And – as is always the case – in the recurring post-mortem monologue that kept running through my head, I thought of the many insightful and brilliant answers I didn’t give that would have surely landed me the job.
So, I decided enough was enough. I found the email addresses of every single person on that panel and crafted a letter to them. It wasn’t a long elaborate dialogue. It was short and to the point.
I thanked them individually for their time and went on to speak of my maturity, experience, drive and ambition. I offered a bit of vulnerability by telling them my age, that I’d been married for 26 years and explaining my family situation – that my three children were now all in their early- and mid-20s which allowed me the freedom and flexibility to do the job and do it well.
I basically gave them answers to questions they are NOT allowed to flat out ask. I made sure they knew I was looking for a CAREER and not just a two-year stint to pad my résumé. I communicated to them about my strong work ethic and the ways in which that carried over into the actual job requirements (i.e. doing what has to be done for the job). When I had finished, I said aloud, “Here goes nothin’!” And then I clicked send.
Two days later I got the call for a second interview. And a week after that, I started my first day.
Later, I learned that my email was the deciding factor.
Of all the candidates, none had come forward afterwards as I had. It made me stand out and be noticed. It showed my true character. And to this day, they have never been disappointed in the results I am delivering. The fact that I absolutely LOVE my job is quite evident.
In an ironic twist, however, I must mention here that of the other six jobs for which I’d applied, NONE of the young ladies they ended up hiring are still on staff. In their efforts to hire the “best,” they have had to rehire, retrain and rearrange staff at least once since then, and in one case, twice.
So, short answer: Do some self-evaluation and discover a way to stand out. It doesn’t have to be anything elaborate or flashy. It just needs to be honest and truthful.
Show them who you really are.
Remove the “interview” face and take a chance by giving them a glimpse of what really makes you tick. In the long run, you’ll be enjoying the opportunity to pass along your advice to someone in whose shoes you used to travel.
Best of luck and Godspeed.
What do you think of Lieutenant General He Lei’s statement that China will “crush” any foreign hostile encroachment on China’s territorial rights in the South China Sea?
Here I want to “smash the out-of-context “propaganda” of the “anti-China” trolls”.
The 11th Beijing Xiangshan Forum was held at the Beijing International Convention Center from September 12 to 14. On the afternoon of the 13th, Beijing time, at the “Fifth Group Meeting, General He Lei, former vice president of the Academy of Military Sciences, delivered the following speech: (The following is the original text)
First, you said that China’s actions in the South China Sea violated the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. I would like to ask which chapter, article, or clause of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea was violated? This is the first question I want to ask you.”
The second question is that you said that the United States came to the Asia-Pacific region for the security of the Asia-Pacific region. The United States has been in the Asia-Pacific region for so many years. Is the Asia-Pacific region safe? Why do the risk points appear in China’s periphery and China’s territorial waters, but not in the United States’ periphery? I would like to (discuss) these issues. If you have time, please answer. If you don’t have time, we will communicate later. Thank you. “
Regarding the South China Sea issue, He Lei emphasized that if the United States manipulates behind the scenes and pushes countries to the front line, or eventually goes to the front line, then the PLA “will not always be patient”; China will crush any foreign hostile forces that violate its sovereign territory.
What was the greediest thing you’ve seen your in-laws do?
I heard this story through a friend of the family. After a 3 year courtship, her daughter was married to a beautiful young man and they were head over heels in love. On their honeymoon in the Virgin Islands they rented jet skis and he suffered a terrible head injury and died a few days later in the hospital.
Before she arrived home with his body, his relatives had gone into their apartment and cleaned out all the wedding gifts that they had given the couple just weeks earlier! She thought she’d been robbed.
Apparently, her in-laws knew all about the entire scheme and had given their relatives the keys to their apartment! She was devastated. I can’t imagine how she received them at his funeral. I think his Mom and Dad even tried to sue her for the death benefit his insurance policy paid out, but I can’t really remember.
It took her years to recover, but she finally met another man and fell in love again and they have a family together. I’m sure she was a lot more careful about judging her in-laws.
14 Years After Sending a Gift, a Boy Receives a Message That Transforms His Life
14 Years After Sending a Gift, a Boy Receives a Message That Transforms His Life.
Sometimes, we perform acts of kindness and then forget about them.
However, the impact can be much more significant for those who benefit from our generosity.
When Tyrel sent Joana a gift, he didn’t think twice about it.
You can imagine his surprise when that simple act of kindness ultimately led to something he had always desired.
Hey, Metallicman, that’s like totally you in the Thailand hat and transitionals above, right? And with a friend, too… naaiiice~ 👍
No. But, don’t ever think that I am not of this ilk. -MM