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The world spins while the United States sucks on it’s pacifier and goes goo-goo gaa-gaa

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You know guys, I constantly talk about all the new construction that is going on in China, but you all just don’t quite get it. I could show you pictures of new buildings, and new bridges and all the rest. You all have no idea.

Here’s a picture that I took of my dash map in my car today. Look at all those construction icons. China is building everywhere!

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2022 11 06 18 21

Of course, you will never really get the actual feel for what is going on unless you come here. And it’s really hard to get any information out to the West. It’s just one anti-China narrative after the other…

The western democracy fears the truth. It’s best to simply censor the truth.

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main qimg 1919f989259562f4d3dfebeeee96ea3a lq

Anyways, I’ve long questioned why some so-called China “experts” who (supposedly) live inside of China say some of the oddest things… such as…

  • There hasn’t been any changes in China since Coronavirus.
  • Wearing face masks isn’t all that popular. China is just like the United States in that regard.
  • “I rarely use public transportation.”
  • I never go to the malls or the parks, or any public spaces.

It’s like saying that you live in the United States but don’t eat cheeseburgers or pizza, and you don’t drive a car. Well, sure it’s possible

But, it’s very unlikely.

So, I approached one of these “experts” who claimed to live in China since 2014, and  has been saying oddball things about China. A decent enough mix. Some very nice things, and some very bad things. He claimed to live in Shenzhen. So I told him that I would meet him at Mix-C and buy him a coffee at Starbucks.

Dead Silence.

Crickets.

Yeah. I thought so.

Further investigation listed him as living in Hong Kong (as a professor / teacher) during the Trump-inspired “pro-Democracy” protests, and since then returned back to the UK.

If something feels wrong, it’s because it probably is.

Let’s continue in today’s installment.

When I was ten years old, I went on vacation with my grandparents. Now, a couple things you have to understand about my grandpa is that:

1. He was a trucker for 30 years
2. He grew up very poor.

Somehow, this manifested into him being all about gas station food and also insisting on eating every last bite of food he purchased for himself or anybody else. You waste nothing—ever.

Anyway.

We pull up to some random gas station in the middle of nowhere. I’m starving to death and see that on their menu they have BLTs, but not just any BLT, but THE MONSTER BLT. Being a stupid kid, I didn’t even read the description. I like bacon. So why not?

So I said, “Hey Gramps, will you buy me this BLT?”

In his rugged accent he says “I buy it, you eat it.”

I swear to God he sounds just like Clint Eastwood.

So I think well yeah I’m going to eat it. Why wouldn’t I eat it?

So a few minutes later, the gas station lady pushes something that looks like this across the counter toward me:

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main qimg 5cv88a5bcfbabf501 lq

My palms got sweaty. But I was up for the challenge. I actually believed my 60 lb. self could handle a sandwich of this magnitude.

About a quarter of the way into it, I was trying to think of ways to get rid of the thing. Maybe there was a dog somewhere? Maybe I could knock it in the floor. Surely my grandpa wouldn’t make me eat a BLT off a gas station floor…would he? Across the table from me, my grandpa sipped his coffee, eyeing my every movement. I had no choice but to eat on.

Finally, I swallowed the last morsel. And, to my amazement I didn’t barf.

I looked at my grandpa expecting some sort of congratulations.

He smirked and asked, “Got room for dessert?”

Today, my grandpa has Alzheimer’s, but this is one story he can recall on command.

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image 43

https://youtu.be/jLKNCkavhJ8

This Tsunami Of Tech Layoffs Could Soon Be The Largest We Have Ever Seen

AH. But I thought that the "CHIPS Act" will reverse this trend? - MM

This is starting to look like 2008 all over again.  For years, the tech industry was the strongest part of the U.S. economy by a wide margin.  The largest tech firms were raking in billions upon billions of dollars in revenue and their stock prices soared to unprecedented levels.  But now the tech industry has suddenly fallen on difficult times.  Many large tech companies are laying off huge numbers of workers, and we are being warned that even more layoffs are ahead.  If the most prosperous sector of our economy is experiencing this much trouble already, what is the outlook for the rest of the economy as we head into 2023?

As I write this article, the layoffs that Elon Musk is conducting at Twitter are making headlines all over the planet.  It is being reported that approximately half of all Twitter workers could lose their jobs, and the widespread layoffs are apparently happening “in departments across the company”

Twitter on Friday laid off employees in departments across the company, in a severe round of cost cutting that could potentially upend how one of the world’s most influential platforms operates one week after it was acquired by billionaire Elon Musk.

Numerous Twitter employees began posting on the platform Thursday night and Friday morning that they had already been locked out of their company email accounts ahead of the planned layoff notification. Some also shared blue hearts and salute emojis indicating they were out at the company.

Needless to say, a lot of these former employees do not plan to go quietly.

In fact, some of them have already slapped Twitter with a federal lawsuit

Twitter has been sued by multiple staff members over an alleged violation of federal law, with workers claiming they were not given enough notice regarding planned layoffs.

Employees who had worked at Twitter’s offices in San Francisco, California, and Cambridge, Massachusetts filed a class-action lawsuit in the U.S. District Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco) on Thursday.

Sadly, Twitter is not alone.

Lots of other large tech companies are conducting mass layoffs, and in each case the current economic climate is being blamed.

For example, Lyft has announced that it will be laying off 13 percent of its workforce…

Lyft Inc. said it is cutting 13% of staff, or nearly 700 jobs, the latest technology company to say it needed to reduce costs ahead of choppy economic conditions.

Confirming an earlier report by The Wall Street Journal, Lyft co-founders John Zimmer and Logan Green announced the cuts to staff Thursday. “There are several challenges playing out across the economy. We’re facing a probable recession sometime in the next year and ride-share insurance costs are going up,” they wrote in the memo viewed by the Journal.

And it is being reported that Chime will be letting 12 percent of their workers go…

Chime is one of the latest private tech firms to announce layoffs amid a worsening economic outlook and a recent wave of cuts from both public and private companies.

A company spokesperson told CNBC that the so-called challenger bank – a fintech firm that exclusively offers banking services through websites and smartphone apps – is cutting 12% of its 1,300-person workforce, adding that while they are eliminating approximately 160 employees, they are still hiring for select positions and “remain very well capitalized.”

Not to be outdone, 18 percent of Opendoor’s workforce is about to get the axe…

Opendoor Technologies Inc. is laying off about 550 employees after higher mortgage rates cratered US housing demand.

The layoffs will reduce Opendoor’s headcount by about 18%, according to a company blog post. The cuts come after an abrupt shift in prices forced the company to sell homes for less than it paid for them.

In other cases, we are seeing companies that seemed to be doing really well let workers go.  As I discussed yesterday, Stripe has decided to “let go of 14% of its staff”

Silicon Valley payments giant Stripe announced that it has let go of 14% of its staff. Citing global economic challenges including inflation, higher interest rates and “sparse startup funding,” cofounder and CEO Patrick Collison said in an email to employees that Stripe needs to cut costs.

I guess Stripe isn’t doing quite as well as we all thought.

Meanwhile, we have also just learned that Dapper Labs will be reducing the size of their workforce by 22 percent

One of the biggest names in the non-fungible token (NFT) industry is dramatically reducing headcount as the crypto bear market continues to take a toll on Web3 companies.

Dapper Labs, which created the NFT marketplace NBA Top Shot, is laying off 22% of its staff, citing the “macroeconomic environment.”

But the economy is doing just fine, right?

Isn’t that what the federal government keeps telling us?

Well, if the economy is in such good shape, why does the tech industry keep laying off so many workers?

Even before this latest round of layoff announcements, the tech industry had already laid off over 52,000 workers so far this year…

After a banner year for tech, layoffs are here. In fact, as of late October, more than 52,000 workers in the U.S. tech sector have been laid off in mass job cuts so far in 2022, according to a Crunchbase News tally.

Tech companies as big as Netflix have slashed jobs this year, with some citing the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and others pointing to overhiring during periods of rapid growth. Robinhood, Glossier and Better are just a few of the tech companies that have notably trimmed their headcount in 2022.

Of course it isn’t just the tech industry that is letting people go.

According to Reuters, Morgan Stanley is gearing up for “a fresh round of layoffs”…

Wall Street major Morgan Stanley is expected to start a fresh round of layoffs globally in the coming weeks, three people with knowledge of the plan said, as dealmaking business takes a hit due to rising inflation and an economic downturn.

So please don’t listen to any politician that tries to tell you that everything is going to be okay.

Everything is definitely not okay.  According to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, the number of layoff announcements in the United States is far higher than it was last year at this time…

The job placement agency Challenger, Gray & Christmas released a report on Nov. 3, which revealed that American-based firms announced 33,843 job cuts last month, up from 29,989 in September.

This is higher than the same month last year, when 22,822 employees were laid off.

Hopefully your job is safe, because I believe that we will eventually see millions of Americans lose their jobs during this new economic downturn.

We are truly moving into unprecedented territory, but unfortunately most Americans simply do not understand what is ahead.

A lot of people seem to think that we will have some sort of a mild recession and then things will get back to normal.

I wish that was true.

Unfortunately, a day of reckoning is now upon us, and countless numbers of our fellow Americans are about to have their lives completely turned upside down.

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Cheboksary is the capital of Chuvashia Republic, a port on the Volga, longest river in Europe if you count Russia as Europe at your own peril.

Population last counted not correctly of course in 2010 was more or less 453,721. What transpired in terms of fertility and death rates in the last 12 years is anyone’s guesstimate. My guess, which is as good as yours – nothing positive.

Ethnic composition is mainly Chuvash, Turkic ethnic group. If you look for bride I advise Chuvashi and hurry up while their boyfriends are in Ukraine.

She cook good. Family is important. When I was child most of my street friends were Turkic – Chuvashi and Tartar because first there were many and second, their character dignified, not servile.

Your bride’s ancestor is Genghis Khan, the spiritual founder of Russian Empire, from the gene pool of intrepid warriors of Golden Horde with a tinge of Slavic blood via rape, who in 15th century were ultimately subdued by Vasily the Blind, grand prince of Moscovy, a pathetic imitator of Tatar-Mongol civilisation. The blind are still leading the blind if you know what I mean.

The region recently came into limelight when Chuvashi mobilised conscripts rioted in a training camp in Ulyanovsk (a city down the river where V.I. Lenin was born and educated at his father’s gymnasium – which means ‘school’ in Russian).

The head of the republic Oleg Nikolaev stole their one-time payments they were entitled to for getting off the couch. Brave Chuvashi warriors fight for money, not glory of Rusky Mir (Russian world).

Until 2020, the head of the republic was called “president” but Putin is terrified Turkic regions – Tatarstan, Bashkortostan and Chuvashia – wanna secede so took away title ‘president’ from them.

There is only one president and his name is Vladimir. That’s the beef Putin has for Zelensky, whose name is too Vladimir and he too president.

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main qimg f6a038a8c6559a0a0d52ff56b8068411 pjlq

Another claim to fame of Chuvashia is a new VIP lounge in the Cheboksary International Airport, an important transportation hub in the region where a third of the population in Russia resides.

I checked the schedule: five low-cost flights to Moscow, two low-cost flights to St. Petersburg, twice a week to Sochi and twice a week to Surgut.

Airport is Named in Honor of Cosmonaut A.G.Nikolaev who was forced to marry first woman in space Valentina Tereshkova (currently, a senator) because she couldn’t stop sleeping with first man in space Yuri Gagarin who was the boss of A.G.Nikolaev at the time and for whose womanising escapades he (Gagarin) was finally assassinated.

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main qimg 57b5547e50a0c249c78f37efac00175f lq

A new high-comfort lounge has been recently opened in Cheboksary ̶In̶t̶e̶r̶national Airport to wait comfortably for a flight in an administration building opposite the western terminal building. A nice Chuvashi woman awaits you in the reception. The price is 2,500 rubles.

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main qimg ca2fabb684fa3a832a38184ae2f3145f lq

A VIP passenger can sit in a soft vintage armchair.

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And have a cup of instant coffee with sweets.

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main qimg f8f6819ddf5ddb3b0f0bde34195808e5 lq

Umbrella rack has been thought through.

Brutalsky or Not?

This author’s appraisal: brutalsky


I encourage you to subscribe to Truth About Russia space and my account to receive notifs as answers get restricted due to ongoing troll attacks which goal to suppress any information that paints Putin’s war against Ukraine in bad light. You can also support Brutalsky on patreon/mishafirer from $1 where I publish articles and photo guided tours in Moscow and elsewhere in Motherland.

Spicy Thai Peanut Chicken Curry

“This is a spicy dish, but the heat can be adjusted by reducing the curry and sambal oelek. It is quick and easy and it is so good. Time to cook rice is not included in prep time or cook time. Also…I often use lite coconut milk, it reduces the fat content and is still wonderful, just a little less rich.”

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2022 11 06 09 04

Ingredients

Directions

  • In a medium saute pan saute peanut oil, red curry and sambal over med. heat for a few minutes.
  • Add the chicken and cook through.
  • Add coconut milk, fish sauce, brown sugar and peanut butter.
  • Simmer about 10 minutes.
  • Serve over steamed Jasmine rice.
  • Top with fresh lime juice and crushed peanuts.
  • Tip: If you are worried about the heat, just add half of the curry and sambal in the first step. Try it after everything has been added and if it’s not spicy enough you can then add more curry. If then you want it more spicy you can add more sambal, the sambal is more spicy than the curry.

Boudicca: The Celtic Queen Who Unleashed Fury on the Romans

We British are used to women commanders in war; I am descended from mighty men! But I am not fighting for my kingdom and wealth now. I am fighting as an ordinary person for my lost freedom, my bruised body, and my outraged daughters.... Consider how many of you are fighting — and why! Then you will win this battle, or perish. That is what I, a woman, plan to do!— let the men live in slavery if they will.

These are the words of Queen Boudicca, according to ancient historian Tacitus, as she summoned her people to unleash war upon the invading Romans in Britain.  Boudicca, sometimes written Boadicea, was queen of the Iceni tribe, a Celtic clan which united a number of British tribes in revolt against the occupying forces of the Roman Empire in 60-61 AD.

While she famously succeeded in defeating the Romans in three great battles, their victories would not last. The Romans rallied and eventually crushed the revolts, executing thousands of Iceni and taking the rest as slaves. Boudicca’s name has been remembered through history as the courageous warrior queen who fought for freedom from oppression, for herself, and all the Celtic tribes of Britain.

Boudicca’s Early Years

Little is known about Boudicca’s upbringing because the only information about her comes from Roman sources, in particular from Tacitus (56 – 117 AD), a senator and historian of the Roman Empire, and Cassius Dio (155 – 235 AD), a Roman consul and noted historian. However, it is believed that she was born into an elite family in the ancient town of Camulodunum (now Colchester) in around 30 AD, and may have been named after the Celtic goddess of victory, Boudiga.

As an adolescent, Boudicca would have been sent away to another aristocratic family to be trained in the history and customs of the tribe, as well as learning how to fight in battle. Ancient Celtic women served as both warriors and rulers, and girls could be trained to fight with swords and other weapons, just as the boys were.

Celtic women were distinct in the ancient world for the liberty and rights they enjoyed and the position they held in society. Compared to their counterparts in Greek, Roman, and other ancient societies, they were allowed much more freedom of activity and protection under the law.

Life Under Roman Rule

In 43 AD, before the time that Boudicca reached adulthood, the Romans invaded Britain, and most of the Celtic tribes were forced to submit. However, the Romans allowed two Celtic kings to retain some of their traditional power as it was normal Roman practice to allow kingdoms their independence for the lifetime of their current king, who would then agree to leave his kingdom to Rome in his will.

One of these kings was Prasutagus, whom Boudicca went on to marry at the age of 18. Their wedding was celebrated for a day and a night and during this time they also gave offerings to the Celtic gods. Together they had two daughters, called Isolda and Siora.

However, it was not a time of harmony for Boudicca and Prasutagus. The Roman occupation brought increased settlement, military presence and attempts to suppress Celtic religious culture. There were major economic changes, including heavy taxes and money lending.

In 60 AD life changed dramatically for Boudicca, with the death of her husband. As Prasutagus had ruled as a nominally independent, but forced ‘ally’ of Rome, he left his kingdom jointly to his wife and daughters and to the Roman emperor. However, Roman law only allowed inheritance through the male line, so when Prasutagus died, his attempts to preserve his line were ignored and his kingdom was annexed as if it had been conquered.

“Kingdom and household alike were plundered like prizes of war.... The Chieftains of the Iceni were deprived of their family estates as if the whole country had been handed over to the Romans. The king's own relatives were treated like slaves.” — Tacitus 

Boudicca Seeks Vengeance

To humiliate the former rulers, the Romans confiscated Prasutagus’s land and property, took the nobles as slaves, publicly flogged Boudicca, and raped their two daughters. This would prove to be the catalyst which would see Boudicca demanding revenge against the brutal invaders of her lands. Tacitus records the words spoken by Boudicca as she vowed to avenge the actions of the Roman invaders :

“Nothing is safe from Roman pride and arrogance. They will deface the sacred and will deflower our virgins. Win the battle or perish, that is what I, a woman, will do.” 

And so Boudicca began her campaign to summon the Britons to fight against the Romans , proving that ‘hell hath no fury like a woman scorned’.

On The Verge Of The Worst Homelessness Crisis In The Entire History Of The United States

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If you live in a major urban area, you may have noticed that “tent cities” are starting to pop up all around you.  The worst inflation crisis in decades has combined with the worst drug crisis that we have ever seen to create an unprecedented homelessness crisis.  Every night, even more Americans join the rapidly growing “unsanctioned encampments” that are taking up more and more real estate in our largest cities.  If things are this bad now, how many of our fellow citizens will be sleeping in the streets when economic conditions are much worse a year or two from today?  We are supposed to be the greatest nation on the planet, but with each passing day even more tent cities are established.  Our system is failing, and the widespread economic suffering that we are witnessing right now is truly difficult to comprehend.

Just look at what is happening in Sacramento.  It is the capital of the California, and tent cities are being established all over the place.

In fact, it is being reported that the number of homeless people in Sacramento has risen by nearly 70 percent just since 2019…

During the pandemic, the unhoused population has soared all over California, but the increase in Sacramento has been particularly stunning.

The region has seen an almost 70% rise in homelessness since 2019, now counting more unhoused people than San Francisco.

Needless to say, absurd housing prices are one of the main reasons why so many people are being forced out into the cold streets…

The primary force behind the dramatic rise, according to the 2022 point-in-time count, is the high cost of housing. The median home price in the county has surpassed $500,000 and the median monthly rent is $2,774, up more than 5% from last year. Some studios downtown rent for $2,000 a month, said Crystal Sanchez, the president of the Sacramento Homeless Union, while thousands of people sleep outside.

Most middle class families can barely afford to pay $2,000 or more for housing each month.

And those that are poor don’t stand a chance.

Conditions are very similar up in Portland, Oregon.  Housing prices have soared to insane levels, and homelessness is spreading like wildfire.

At this point, Mayor Ted Wheeler says that there are “nearly 800 unsanctioned encampments” spread throughout the city…

“Nearly 800 unsanctioned encampments spread out over the 146 square miles of the City of Portland,” Wheeler said. “Something needs to change.”

But many Portlanders have lost faith in city leaders.

In a recent poll conducted by The Oregonian, nearly 75 percent of Portland voters said the city is “on the wrong track.”

At this stage, it has pretty much gotten to a point where you simply cannot avoid the tent cities.

Things are so bad right now that there is a possibility that the state of Oregon could actually elect a Republican governor in November…

The race for the governorship remains a tossup, with a new poll showing a narrow lead for the Republican candidate in a state that hasn’t elected a Republican governor since 1982.

Republican Christine Drazan leads Democrat Tina Kotek in the race, 44 to 41 per cent, according to a new Nelson Research poll, KOIN reported.

That gives Drazan a 2-point lead in the RealClearPolitics polling average, having narrowly led in every poll this fall.

I thought that we would never see another Republican governor in that state.

It looks like I might have been wrong about that.

Washington D.C. doesn’t have as many “unsanctioned encampments” as Portland does, but the New York Post is reporting that the number of tent cities in the capital of our nation has now grown to 120

In the past two years, homeless encampments have exploded in Washington D.C., as both the city and federal governments lifted enforcement measures during the COVID-19 pandemic — and made it a no-brainer for itinerants to lay down roots by providing for their every need.

A tour by The Post of the district’s major tourist areas this week found at least 35 vagrants in residence at a National Park Service site two blocks from the White House; more than 20 in the green spaces surrounding the State Department complex; and five across the street from the infamous Watergate Hotel.

And these sites accounted for less than 5 percent of the estimated 120 tent cities in Washington D.C.

Over a decade ago, I worked in the heart of Washington.

And during my entire time there, I didn’t see a single homeless person living in a tent.

But now tent cities are all over the place.

Of course a rise in crime often comes along with an explosion in homelessness.

In New York City, the rape of a female jogger by a homeless man with 25 prior arrests is making a lot of headlines this week

Police said the victim was out by Pier 45, near West and Christopher Streets in the West Village, at around 5:30am, when the man, Carl Phanor, 29, grabbed her from behind and choked her until she passed out, the New York Post reports.

Phanor, who has 25 priors and who is wanted for at least two other sex crimes, then removed her clothes, raped her, and then fled the scene on a Citi Bike with her headphones, cell phone and wallet.

The shaken victim was spotted by a fellow jogger, and first responders took her to a nearby hospital.

Sadly, the homeless population just continues to rise in New York City with each passing day.

In fact, the problem has gotten so severe that the National Guard has now been called in to deal with the crisis…

New York City has called in the National Guard to deal with the rising migrant crisis that is overwhelming homeless shelters and facilities as staff are unable to cope with the surge.

National Guard reservists are being deployed to help with day-to-day operations at many shelters, including managing the capacity, distributing food and helping out with staff shortages.

There are over 62,000 people currently living in New York City’s homeless shelters – close to 13,000 of which are migrants, according to the Department of Homeless Services.

But this is just the beginning.

Over the next few years, I expect millions of Americans to lose their jobs.

And the truth is that it is already starting to happen.  Just today, we learned that Stripe will be laying off approximately 14 percent of their entire workforce

Online payments giant Stripe is laying off roughly 14% of its staff, CEO Patrick Collison wrote in a memo to staff Thursday.

In the memo, Collison said the cuts were necessary amid rising inflation, fears of a looming recession, higher interest rates, energy shocks, tighter investment budgets and sparser startup funding. Taken together, these factors signal “that 2022 represents the beginning of a different economic climate,” he said.

Yes, as I detail in my brand new book, a “different economic climate” is definitely ahead of us.

As economic conditions deteriorate, the number of tent cities will grow much larger.

So the cold, hard reality of the matter is that our homelessness crisis is only going to intensify from this point forward.

I know that may be difficult news to hear, but the truth is that these are difficult times.

This can only weaken the US and make its long-term position worse. China has the market and demand and as such, these chip restrictions can only force China to accelerate their tech independence. They are in a much better position to do so than we are in America and have been preparing for this years ago.

For example, we’ve been tracking China’s move towards 7nm and believed they were going to get there by 2025 or later. I was shocked to see that they had already hit 7nm.

China’s top chip maker said to reach tech level on par with global giants  SMIC took two years to achieve the leap from 14-nm to 7-nm, faster than TSMC and Samsung, TechInsights said.

I knew they could do it, and I believe western governments believed they could do it; but not this quickly.

When you look at their track record, forcing them to advance only helps them move even faster (see China’s space station) while we remain relatively stagnant.

If you are American and aren’t scared we’re going to lose this race, I don’t know what to tell you. I personally want a strong, competent America that is co-developing at pace with China. I want that because I have a personal stake in it. My family’s stakes are all in America and all I see is a future where that all crumbles away.

If we’re moving at pace with China, we’re also far less likely to start a war with them.

I don’t think anyone is really happy that this is happening, not even the Chinese. It puts them in a difficult position, but at least they have planned and are prepared for it. We’re making moves that seem to have no value for anyone, not even us.

Famous Last Words: “We Will Stay The Course Until The Job Is Done”

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The last time interest rates were this high, the U.S. economy plunged into “the Great Recession” and millions of Americans lost their jobs.  But the Federal Reserve is not going to stop here.  In fact, Fed Chair Jerome Powell is telling us that more rate increases are on the way and that officials at the Fed are determined to “stay the course until the job is done”.  If “the job” is to destroy the U.S. economy, they have already made a tremendous amount of progress toward that goal.  The housing market is completely and utterly imploding, and economic activity is steadily slowing down all around us.  But even though Powell can see the damage that is happening, he insists that the Fed will keep raising rates until the official rate of inflation returns to 2 percent.

But this isn’t the early 1980s.

Today, there are a whole host of factors that are working in unison to push prices up.

So the Fed can try to hammer demand as much as it wants, but getting inflation back under control is not going to be as easy as it was during the Volcker era.

And dramatically hiking interest rates at the beginning of a major economic downturn is literally suicidal.  Many of us have been pleading with the Fed to stop raising rates so rapidly, but we witnessed yet another 75 basis point rate hike on Wednesday

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday approved a fourth consecutive three-quarter point interest rate increase and signaled a potential change in how it will approach monetary policy to bring down inflation.

In a well-telegraphed move that markets had been expecting for weeks, the central bank raised its short-term borrowing rate by 0.75 percentage point to a target range of 3.75%-4%, the highest level since January 2008.

According to Fox Business, it was a unanimous vote, and this “marks the sixth consecutive rate increase this year”…

The three-quarter percentage point hikes in June, July, September and November underscore just how serious Fed officials are about tackling the inflation crisis after a string of alarming economic reports. Policymakers voted unanimously to approve the latest super-sized hike.

The widely expected move puts the key benchmark federal funds rate at a range of 3.75% to 4%, the highest since before the 2008 financial crisis, from near-zero in March. It marks the sixth consecutive rate increase this year and puts interest rates in firmly restrictive territory.

What we are watching is economic malpractice.

I don’t know how else to describe it.

Sadly, the Fed is telling us that “ongoing increases” will be needed until the overall rate of inflation is brought back down to 2 percent…

“The Committee anticipates that ongoing increases in the target range will be appropriate in order to attain a stance of monetary policy that is sufficiently restrictive to return inflation to 2 percent over time,” the Fed said in a new sentence added to its post-meeting statement.

So more rate hikes are on the way.

The good news, if you want to call it that, is that Powell told the media that future rate increases may be smaller in size

“I’ve said at the last two press conferences that at some point it will become appropriate to slow the pace of increases,” Chairman Jerome Powell told reporters during a press conference in Washington. “So that time is coming. And it may come as soon as the next meeting, or the one after that. No decision has been made.”

But of course rates are now clearly high enough to crash the economy.

The housing market is already coming apart at the seams, and we just keep getting data point after data point telling us that the economy is really slowing down.

There is no way in the world that the Fed should be raising rates, but Powell insists that the Fed “will stay the course until the job is done”

‘My colleagues and I are strongly committed to bring inflation down to our 2 percent goal… We will stay the course until the job is done.’

I truly believe that those words will come back to haunt him.

Look, I can understand why the Fed is so spooked about inflation.  We haven’t seen anything like this in decades, and one recent survey discovered that 50 percent of Americans are “feeling their health suffer as a result of the cost-of-living crisis”…

Research at Toluna, a consumer insights firm, found that 50 percent of those surveyed were feeling their health suffer as a result of the cost-of-living crisis, with inflation currently running above 8 percent according to the consumer price index.

Among them, 37 percent said they were feeling more stressed, 21 percent said they were eating less healthily, 16 percent said they were smoking more, and 13 percent were boozing more often.

And we have just learned that approximately 29 million U.S. households “have been unable to pay their energy bills this past year” due to rapidly rising energy costs…

Some 29 million households have been unable to pay their energy bills this past year, according to a survey that says the cold winter weather and rising utility costs will only worsen the crisis.

Data from the US Census Bureau show that many more American families — 43 million households — have cut back spending on groceries, medicine and doctors’ visits, so they could settle an energy bill.

So I definitely agree that inflation is a major problem.

But killing the economy is not the answer.

If you doubt the severity of the crisis that we are heading into, just take a look at what is happening at Wells Fargo right now

Mortgage volumes at Wells Fargo slowed further in recent weeks, leaving some workers idle and sparking concerns the lender will need to cut more employees as the U.S. housing slump deepens.

The bank had about 18,000 loans in its retail origination pipeline in the early weeks of the fourth quarter, according to people with knowledge of the company’s figures. That is down as much as 90% from a year earlier, when the Covid pandemic-fueled housing boom was in full swing, said the people, who declined to be identified speaking about internal matters.

If Wells Fargo is already facing a 90 percent decline, what will happen as the Fed hikes rates even higher?

Sadly, the “housing recession” that we are now experiencing could quickly become a “housing depression”.

In my brand new book entitled “End Times”, I explain that the U.S. economy has been going through a housing market crash every 14 years.

There was a crash in 1980, there was a crash in 1994, there was a crash in 2008, and now a new crash has begun in 2022.

But if the Federal Reserve was not being so foolish, we could have likely avoided a severe crash this time around.

Unfortunately, our leaders never seem to learn from history, and the months ahead promise to be exceedingly painful.

Ouch! Germany is facing the reality.

I have actually written a book on this topic. Managing horse manure was the subject of great debate at the end of the 19th Century; in fact, it was called The Great Manure Crisis.

In 1898 there was the first urban convention of civic engineers and architects, held in NYC. It brought people from all over the world. The topics were to be the value of open spaces and the value of architecture in great cities but the meeting never moved beyond the manure crisis. The meeting ended with not much accomplished.

In the late 1800s there were over 300,000 horses in NYC alone, generating 2 million pounds of manure and 60,000 gallons of horse urine every single day. Every. Single Day. Times Square was originally called “Longacre” and it was a massive field owned by John Astor where he sold horses; not soon after the meeting, Astor sold it to the New York Times and it became Times Square. (He later died on the Titanic.) There were even entire city blocks where manure was piled nearly 100 feet high because the city could not deal with it. When it rained, the cities filled with a disgusting mud of manure and filth. Urchins were paid by pedestrians to make a path before them as they walked. In some streets, the manure came up beyond the ankles; it was one reason there were steps up to the front doors of homes and the “mud room” was the place where people removed their boots before entering the house to not track in filth. The NY Times reported that 3 billion flies were bred in the filth every day.

In earlier times, manure was sold by the city for a profit to farmers who carried it to their farms in dung carts; most of Brooklyn was still open field in the mid 1800s. Then it was barged up north on the rivers to the farms. But as the city grew, the amount of manure increased beyond management and by 10AM it was no longer good for manure because so much filth was mixed with the manure that it was unusable as fertilizer. To make matters worse, the sanitation department was controlled by the Tamanny Organization, the biggest organized crime ring in America, and used for “no show” patronage jobs. Streets could be cleaned by extortion only. Richer city dwellers had to pay off the sanitation department to clean the streets, twice a week. And the cacophony of horses clopping was maddening. The rich paid to have their streets strewn with straw to cut down on the noise. The situation became so bad that the city paved some streets in wood, cut in wide blocks and laid with the grain up, to cut down on the noise – but the wood absorbed horse urine and stunk even more, and it rotted away within five years while sett blocks would last virtually forever. However, set blocks were uneven and people and horses would easily trip. A lame horse would be shot and left to rot for up to three months because there were no machines to haul away such heavy carcasses.

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The situation was so bad, that in conjunction with the gas plants and the giant phosphate plants and the oil refinery and slaughterhouses and glue factories that NYC published a “Stench Map” that showed where the prevailing winds would blow the stink. It was untenable.

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Teddy Roosevelt, before he became Commissoner of Police, hired to clean up the corruption in the police department, which had even fought a deadly civil war between competing departments, was first offered the job of cleaning the streets. He turned it down. “No one can clean up that mess,” he declared.

Even though it was illegal, the city pushed the manure into the harbor or onto barges and had it dumped at sea where it washed up on the beaches of Long Island, making the residents irate. The situation was so bad that bars of manure formed in the river that capsized ships and halted navigation requiring constant dredging. It was an absolute disaster.

The problem was solved in stages but it was actually the electric subway car and the invention of automobiles that saved the city, and cities worldwide, though in Europe, earnest efforts at sanitation had gotten the problem in hand long before the US. The automobile was in its infancy in 1898 with only a handful of electric, steam and gas cars but by 1908, half of all the horses in NYC had been replaced by cars. In fact, the impact on the horse market was so intense that people were frantically selling their horses for any price to the glue factories just to get rid of them. The last horse-drawn fire engine was retired in NYC in 1922 in a great ceremony where the last engine was called on a ceremonial fire call from a box, and they raced from the station for the last time, chased by their Dalmations, to a non-existent fire where the horses were relieved of their jobs, but preserved to live out their lives in a pasture as a reward for their service.

The automobile and a man named Colonel Waring saved NYC. Waring was given absolute dictatorial control over the clean up of the city and fired the Tammany no-shows and had his men dress in white uniforms as they shoveled the manure away, day and night. He even made it a patriotic duty to clean the streets and put in waste baskets and organized trash removal. He was so hailed by the city for his success that a ticker tape parade was held in his honor. But ultimately, it was the automobile that saved the city.

George E. Waring Jr. – Wikipedia
George E. Waring Jr. in 1883 Born ( 1833-07-04 ) July 4, 1833 Died October 29, 1898 (1898-10-29) (aged 65) Monuments Woodland Cemetery, Stamford Connecticut [Cenotaph memorial] Occupation Sanitary engineer , civic reformer Years active 1865–1898 Known for Advocate of sewer systems that keep domestic sewage separate from storm runoff George E. Waring Jr. (July 4, 1833 [1] – October 29, 1898) was an American sanitary engineer and civic reformer. He was an early American designer and advocate of sewer systems that keep domestic sewage separate from storm runoff. Early life [ edit ] Waring was born in Pound Ridge, New York , the son of George E. Waring Sr., a wealthy stove manufacturer. Trained in agricultural chemistry , he began to lecture on agricultural science [ where? ] . In 1855, he took charge of Horace Greeley ‘s farm at Chappaqua, New York . [2] Draining Central Park [ edit ] In 1857, Waring was appointed agricultural and drainage engineer for the construction of New York City ‘s Central Park . [2] This effort was considered to be the largest drainage project of its time. Prior to this time, much of the area of the proposed park was a wetland . He designed and supervised construction of the drainage system that created the scenic lakes and ponds of the park. [3] An enthusiastic equestrian, he and his horse “Vixen” would often use the park’s construction as jumping obstacles. [4] Civil War Service [ edit ] At the beginning of the American Civil War , Waring resigned from the Central Park project to accept a military commission as major. He departed New York in the early summer, and drilled for a month in Washington DC, occasionally meeting President Lincoln as he reviewed the troops. Waring departed Washington DC on July 4, 1862, and fought at Battle of Blackburn’s Ford . [4] He then joined John C. Frémont and headed to St. Louis, where he commanded the Fremont Hussars. His beloved mare Vixen died on campaign in November 1862, near Jefferson City . Waring acquired a new charger, Ruby, a chestnut described as “a picture of the most abject misery; his hind legs drawn under him; the immense muscles of his hips lying flabby, like a cart-horse’s; his head hanging to the level of his knees, and his under-lip drooping; his eyes half shut, and his long ears falling out sidewise like a sleepy mule’s.” [4] Despite appearances, Ruby was an uncommonly good jumper. He raised six companies of cavalry for the Union side in the State of Missouri . These units were eventually consolidated as the 4th Missouri Cavalry under Waring, who was promoted to the rank of Colonel in January 1862. He commanded this regiment throughout the war, principally in the Southwest . [2] Ogden Farm [ edit ] During the 18th century, Newport, Rhode Island ‘s wealthy merchants developed country agricultural estates in the outlying towns. Following the Civil War, with a romanticizing of rural, country and farm life by Andrew Jackson Downing and others, estate farms for the Newpor

Waring went on to die of Yellow Fever in Cuba but he had saved the city from manure.

TL:DR

For those who don’t like to read, skip this part.

It was much, much worse than I wrote about. In the late 19th Century NYC was a huge open air sewer. Houses on hills dumped their sewage onto the roofs of houses below and only rain moved it off. It was horrible. We still see the impact today – Standard Oil dumped so much oil into the soil that you can still pump it out of the ground today and oil sludge collapses subway tunnels.

The invention of actual indoor plumbing had a huge impact on the city, as well as other factors. The slaughter houses dumped the blood from their killings right into the streets and it traveled in rivulets for three blocks before it ran into the river. And tenements backed right up to the slaughterhouses. The cows were fed in the dark in breweries on brewery waste that led to the “Swill Milk Scandal” because the milk was so awful that plaster had to be added to make it look “white”.

NYC grew far faster than the supporting infrastructure. NYC was the last city to let pigs run wild in the streets where they bred fast on the filth and were impossible to control. Police were still finding live pigs living in the city and in people’s apartments until the early 1900s. Steer were run through the streets in massive cattle drives with cowboys on horses with pistols until the 1930s, from the train yards to the slaughter houses. Traffic had to be stopped to let them run. It was a mess, a real mess. Part of the High Line that still exists today was made to get the cattle off the streets and directly into the slaughterhouses.

Getting clean water was a challenge until the Croton Aqueduct in 1840 and even then, there was no piping it into the homes. It had to be carried by bucket or wagon. Chase Manhattan Bank got its start as a water carrier for the rich. The rich put 600 gallon cisterns on their roof, filled by rain or bucket brigade and had to be skimmed to get the dead squirrels, rats and birds out of the water that fell in and drowned. The cuffs of men’s pants and the hem’s of women’s skirts were always ringed by shit. Women carried parasols to keep off the piss that was thrown from the windows from the commode pans. People shit and pissed in the alleys. There was even pamphlet with etiquette on how to address people you knew and met in the alley pissing or shitting. Women didn’t wear panties until 1920 and just squatted in their dressed and pissed in the alleys. You can still see architectural elements, such as cones of concrete, built into the corners of buildings to discourage people from pissing there. Buildings were made with aprons to direct piss onto the pisser to discourage them from pissing there. There were still 100,000 public outhouses in NYC in 1940, all of which had to be mucked out weekly by “night soil men” who reported dead animals and people dumped into the sewage cisterns below them. People even put the dead out in the trash when they couldn’t afford to bury them. Everything smelled, it was god-awful and made worse by the steam locomotives that belched smoke and ash all over everything in sight. It was a horrible way to live.

Another man who helped clean up the city was William Phelps Eno, who became the world’s first “traffic engineer”. He was the man who invented the center line on roads, made traffic always ride on the right hand side of the road, invented one way streets and many other traffic inventions. He also was responsible for getting horses off the streets, having a law passed that horses couldn’t be parked on the street after dark but had to be liveried. Horses in the city died of neglect, bad water and overwork, having a life span of just 3 years while in the country they lived 25 years. One of the main reasons the ASPCA was founded was because of the absolute horrible conditions for horses in NYC.

Because they’re incredibly hard to make and it wasn’t possible. The bicycle is clearly the greatest invention. No other invention has enhanced the capabilities of a human being the way the bike has. It’s the most efficient for of movement on earth. That’s why there’s a billion of them today.

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Here’s a chart showing the efficiency, nothing comes close. Now, you’re basically asking why they weren’t invented earlier.

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This is an early modern wheel. It weighs more than a modern bike. You’re really not going to be able to move two of them with the power of a person. But that’s not all, have you ever seen a bike chain up close? They require very accurate machining as do the gears and sprockets. These were really hard to make. Infact the early “bicycles” were called velocipedes and looked like this.

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This was invented in the early 1800s and it was quite popular but it wasn’t super efficient. Originally they didn’t have pedals at all and you’d just sit on it and run kind of like Fred flint stone in his car. To get more mechanical advantage they started making the front wheel with the pedals bigger and bigger making the commonly known penny farthing style bike appraoching the turn of the last century you’re probably familiar with. The chain driven bike that you’re familiar with finally became available in the 1890s after it was invented but they weren’t cheap this was high tech stuff. Each piece of the. Chain needs to be perfect and to exact tolerance which simply wasn’t possible before. People had tried shaft drives before this but it never really worked too well and it’s been the chain drive ever since. Part of the reason you think that the bike should have been invented earlier is a testimony to its brilliance. It just looks so easy to do and so intuitive you wonder why it wasn’t done earlier but that simplicity is really just perfect design that people rarely look deep enough to notice.

The Japanese have been producing wood for 700 years without cutting down trees. In the 16th century the extraordinary Daisugi technique was born in Japan. The Daisugi, in fact, predict that these trees are planted for future generations and not cut down but pruned like giant bonsai; applying this technique to Cedars, so the wood can be obtained uniformly, straight and without di, pretty much perfect for construction. An art pruning that allows the tree to grow and sprout using its own wood, without ever cutting it down.

Amazing technique.

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From the old grouch…

Love this guy... -MM

I got into a heated argument with her last Summer  when she was wanting me to load up the riding lawnmower she finally allowed me to get.

Come to find out the only reason she relented in the first place after I had been wanting one for five fucking years was so that I could drag the thing on a seventy mile round trip to go mow her Dad’s giant lawn. I told her these fucking ramps are dangerous, right after one of them tried kicking sideways on me, right in front of her.

I sent her this so she just maybe will get a fucking clue that I’m not talking shit when I say they are dangerous.

I drilled holes in the end of mine and matching holes in the tailgate. Then I drop a bolt into the holes so the damn ramps can’t spit back out like that. I also ALWAYS back up into the bed of the truck.

You gotta know that little ride fucked that old man up.

Lucky for him, the neighbor behind was watching, along with whoever was filming it, so they could drag him out from under the damn thing and call an Ambulance.

Axe-Wounded Visby Warrior Brought to Life Over 600 Years Later

From HERE

Visby warrior
Visby warrior

A medieval warrior’s skull, recovered from a mass grave outside Visby, a city on the Swedish island of Gotland, has been brought to life by a digital artist. Killed in the 1361 AD Battle of Visby, in which 2,500 Danish warriors, mostly heavily-armed mercenaries, massacred 1,800 peasant farmers wielding farming tools, the warriors brutally broken face reveals the horrors of what is regarded as one of the most violent battles in European history.

Scientists took the 3D scans of the skull revealing that his eye and cheek bones had been smashed with a pole weapon just before his mouth and nose was split open with an axe. Using these 3D scans, and genetic statistical data, a digital artist has now brought this warrior back from the dead by recreating his heavily-wounded head and face.

excavation 27
excavation 27

The first excavation of the mass graves from the Battle of Visby in 1361, led by Oscar Wilhelm Wennersten in 1905. (Julius Jääskeläinen / CC BY 2.0 )

Darkness Unfolding On the Fields of Gotland

On 22 July, 1361 AD, almost 2,000 residents of the Swedish town of Visby on the island of Gotland were slaughtered by 2,500 invading Danish troops. King Valdemar Atterdag of Denmark had just conquered the neighboring territories of Skåne and Öland, and he was greedy to subjugate Gotland.

A Gutnish yeomen army of peasant farmers and their families came head to head on July 27 with the Danish warriors outside Visby’s town walls, and around 1,800 peasant farmers wielding farming tools were quickly slaughtered. Historians often equate this event with the 1356 AD Battle of Poitiers, when a similar number of French were brutally killed by an Anglo-Gascon force commanded by Edward, the Black Prince, during the Hundred Years’ War .

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reconstruction 25

The digital facial reconstruction of the Visby warrior really brings the Visby massacre to life. ( Cicero Moraes )

A Third of the Visby Defenders Were Young and Elderly

Since 1905, five mass graves have been identified outside Visby’s medieval town walls. Most recently, archaeological excavations at one of these mass graves revealed the horrors of the slaughter when it was determined that “at least a third of the 1,800 poorly armed militia of farmers were children and elderly.”

Now, Brazilian digital artist Cicero Moraes has brought one of the Visby defenders back to life. Moraes built his reconstruction using a three-dimensional model of the skull which was given to him by the Swedish History Museum in Stockholm . His creation was published in the 3D computer graphics journal OrtogOnLineMag.

Charting Ancient War Wounds

It is thought that shattered bones above the warrior’s left eye and on his left cheek bone were most probably inflicted by a heavy pole weapon. Furthermore, the man’s mouth and nose were smashed by an axe. Once these bone wounds had been charted by digital scans, Moraes set “soft tissue thickness markers” across the entire skull. These pins determined the position of the warrior’s muscles and skin.

While the warrior’s skull forms the frame of the digital recreation, the sizes of his mouth, nose and eyes are approximations based on the averages given by statistical data. Moraes said that once the man’s face was defined, “approximations generated the most scientifically accurate image” in shades of gray, with eyes closed and without hair.

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facial 1

The facial reconstruction of the Visby warrior unearthed within a mass grave outside on the Swedish island of Gotland. ( Cicero Moraes )

The Townsfolk Gave Everything to Avoid Getting Axed

Attempting to stop the massacre, after the main Battle of Visby the militia of farmers and their families surrendered to the Danish warriors. To save their city from being sacked the Gotlanders they handed over a large amount of their wealth to the invading King Valdemar. However, Valdemar appointed sheriffs and one year later added King of Gotland to his list of titles.

According to John Keegan’s 1976 book The Face of Battle, about 2,000 of the bodies of these city defenders were “unusually, buried in their armor.” The author concluded that “hot weather and the great number of dead (2,000) inspired the Danish to strip them before decomposition began.” The site of the excavation, according to Keegan, has yielded “one of the most fearsome revelations of a medieval battle known to archaeologists.” Moraes’ facial reconstruction of an axe-wounded warrior brings this event to life.

By Ashley Cowie

Thai Spicy Basil Beef

“My version of Thai Beef Basil I usually get from take-out. If you can find Thai Basil and Thai Chilies that would be great. Otherwise, I’ve used regular basil and serrano or jalapeno chilies instead. I freeze the beef for 10 minutes to make it easier to thinly slice.”

2022 11 06 09 02
2022 11 06 09 02

Ingredients

Directions

  • Heat wok with oil, add garlic and chiles.
  • Add beef and stir fry for 1 minute.
  • Add onions and basil, stir for 1 minute.
  • Add remaining sauce: oyster sauce, fish sauce, sugar, and white pepper.
  • Stir fry until cooked, garnish with cilantro.
  • Server immediately with steamed rice.

What. The. Fuck?

The Twitter Massacre

I am amusing myself with watching the panic some people express over Elon Musk’s cleanup of Twitter.

Yesterday 3,700 of its 7,500 workers were fired. That is not good, but the company was losing money and making money is at the core of the capitalist game.

Of interest is what functions were eliminated. The Guardian provides this list:

From news reports and terminated employees’ announcements, here’s what we know so far about the teams that have been hit by the layoffs of thousands of Twitter employees:

  • The human rights team has been laid off, according to a now former employee, Shannon Raj Singh, who said the team worked to protect those at risk in global conflicts, including in Ukraine, Afghanistan and Ethiopia.
  • The ML (machine learning) Ethics, Transparency and Accountability team is gone, according to a tweet of a laid-off manager.
  • The “internet technology team”, which helps keep the site running, has been cut to “a skeleton crew”, two sources told the Times.
  • An accessibly experience engineering team has been cut, according to a laid-off engineering manager.
  • The curation team, responsible for the Moments feature on Twitter, has also been cut, former employees reported.
  • Twitter’s communications department is almost entirely gone, according to the Verge.
  • Other areas that have been heavily impacted, the Verge reported, include product trust and safety, policy, research and social good.

What were these teams actually doing?

The human rights team leader gave some hints:

Shannon Raj Singh @ShannonRSingh - 17:58 UTC · Nov 4, 2022

Yesterday was my last day at Twitter: the entire Human Rights team has been cut from the company. 

I am enormously proud of the work we did to implement the UN Guiding Principles on Business & Human Rights, to protect those at-risk in global conflicts & crises including Ethiopia, Afghanistan, and Ukraine, and to defend the needs of those particularly at risk of human rights abuse by virtue of their social media presence, such as journalists & human rights defenders.

The human rights team was the ‘regime change’ force on Twitter. It intervened in conflicts where the U.S. preferred a certain side.

Jerri ☮️ @JerusWorld - 20:42 UTC · Nov 4, 2022
Replying to @ShannonRSingh

So you are the one that was censoring pro-Ethiopian and Eritrean voices in order to help the rebel group from Tigray. May Karma pay you back for thousands of lives perished in US/West proxy war.

Shannon Raj Singh had previously meddled in Afghan and other countries’ cultures:

Shannon Raj Singh is a Legal Counsel for SAHR, advising a Kabul-based team on sexual violence litigation in Afghanistan, which aims to end the invasive and discriminatory practice of female virginity testing.

She is an international criminal law attorney focused on victim-centered responses to mass atrocities. Currently based in The Hague, she has experience working with the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, and a number of human rights NGOs in sub-Saharan Africa. She has also practiced as a litigator in the United States, appearing in both state and federal courts and assisting with overseas corruption investigations under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

The machine learning ethics, transparency and accountability team was also fired. Machine learning, also glorified as ‘artificial intelligence’, is essentially an (often lousy) pattern recognition system. It can be trained with categorized data and, after that, can categorized other data it gets presented. All one needs to know about its ethics, transparency and accountability is is the old IT wisdom ‘garbage in garbage out’. If one trains the system with faulty categorized data it will fail to correctly categorize data. It does not need an extra team to learn that.

I do not know what the ‘Internet technology team’ was doing but the function obviously still exists. It was merely downsized.

The accessibly experience engineering team included at least five members. There task was to modify the Twitter app so it could be used better by people with disabilities. I find it weird that Twitter had a whole team for that. To teach designers to use colors that can be differentiated by color blind people takes about 90 minutes max. All other accessibility issues I can think of (fontsize, button size etc.) are an issue for the device and operation system, not for an application like Twitter that runs on top of those. Besides that, how big is the market of people with disabilities for a company like Twitter?

The ‘curation team’ ran the Twitter moments feature. It allows for blog posts about specific tweets. The feature never took off. I know of no one who has ever used it.

Many journalists are hostile to Musk’s takeover of their favorite hang out. The communications department was there to talk to the press. Why bother?

And the other functions? Product trust and safety, policy, research and social good? What were they actually doing? How has the ‘social good’ team helped the company to be successful?

The Washington Post laments that Twitter fired some people who were doing ‘election information’:

The mass layoffs Friday gutted teams devoted to combating election misinformation, adding context to misleading tweets and communicating with journalists, public officials and campaign staff.

The layoffs included a number of people who were scheduled to be on call this weekend and early next week to monitor for signs of foreign disinformation, spam and other problematic content around the election, one former employee told The Washington Post.

‘Foreign meddling’ is certainly an issue in U.S. elections as foreign money funneled through lobbyists can influence the votes. But ‘foreign meddling’ on social media is simply a myth promoted by Democrats as part of their great ‘Russiagate’ fake.

Twitter’s downfall into a ‘regime change’ outlet came in 2009 when it moved a maintenance window to help U.S. ‘regime change’ efforts in Iran:

The Obama administration says it has tried to avoid words or deeds that could be portrayed as American meddling in Iran’s presidential election and its tumultuous aftermath.

Yet on Monday afternoon, a 27-year-old State Department official, Jared Cohen, e-mailed the social-networking site Twitter with an unusual request: delay scheduled maintenance of its global network, which would have cut off service while Iranians were using Twitter to swap information and inform the outside world about the mushrooming protests around Tehran.

The request, made to a Twitter co-founder, Jack Dorsey, is yet another new-media milestone: the recognition by the United States government that an Internet blogging service that did not exist four years ago has the potential to change history in an ancient Islamic country. 

...

Twitter complied with the request, saying in a blog post on Monday that it put off the upgrade until late Tuesday afternoon — 1:30 a.m. Wednesday in Tehran — because its partners recognized “the role Twitter is currently playing as an important communication tool in Iran.”

That was an expensive mistake. Shortly thereafter Twitter lost access to the Iranian market.

Back to ‘regime change’ assistant Shannon Raj Singh:

chinahand @chinahand - 18:55 UTC · Nov 4, 2022 
Quoting @ShannonRSingh

Somebody should publish the pre Elon org chart. Judging by this twitter walked talked and quacked like an NGO which made it subject to banning in half the world

Twitter had become a ‘woke’ company that was mostly in the hands of the Democratic Party. By being ‘woke’ and by supporting ‘regime change’ efforts Twitter killed its own access to at least half of its potential market.

It Musk manages to make it a more neutral service, nationally and internationally, while keeping its original function alive, I am all for it.

Unfortunately that is unlikely to happen.

Posted by b on November 5, 2022 at 17:05 UTC | Permalink

See that Smile of Xi Jinging!!!!

That Smile is the ENORMOUS FACE China gained when Olaf Scholz was forced to Visit China

The Face that Xi Jinging lost when Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan.

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The Fact is Germanys Business Community have told Olaf Scholz rather literally that the German Industry was being ripped apart – piece by piece in this Insane Sanctions War

The Business Community – that is responsible for all those shiny euros that Scholz keeps sending to Ukraine – told Scholz in no uncertain terms to ensure Germany didnt follow the Lunatic Von Der Leyen and end up decoupling with both Russia and China.

The Fact that Scholz travels right after Costco got a 25% Stake in Hamburg Port and right before the Mid Terms in US – sends a very strong signal that Scholz is finally growing a backbone

Might be too late for Olaf and i predict he wont last 3 more months or 6 at the most before they topple him with a tamer version of US Lackey (Maybe Habeck!!!)


What did Scholz Mean?

Simple.

He means – Business as Usual

He means – Taiwan will not become the source of any Business dispute. That Taiwan is Chinese and One China Policy rocks.

He means – Xi jingping should negotiate a Ceasefire in Ukraine by “talking with Putin”

Of course most of these Statements are for Public Consumption – to satisfy the Business Community that China and its money is there and to satisfy the Green Nutcases that Scholz is still toeing the EU line about not being fully dependent on China.

Everything else is wishful thinking – especially the Ukraine Part. Putin wont listen to Xi and Xi wont advise Putin.


Yet there may be another Reason for Scholzs Visit

The Bank of China holds almost $ 256.2 Billion of Euro Debt

China has been making a lot of noise about Alternate Currencies for sometime now

Dumping 257 Billion Dollars of Euro Debt at such a time – with the main Debt underwritten by German Banks (146 Billion) – could lead to Catastrophic Collapse of Germany and Europe.

So Olaf may have gone to request Xi Jingping not to hastily make decisions

Maybe this was behind the 25% Stake at Hamburg Port for a Chinese Company


And of course the Diesel and Petrol and LNG Sales

Germany wants continued supplies and maybe Scholz negotiated the same with Xi Jingping

They Won’t Be Able To Deny The Cold, Hard Reality Of What Is Happening To The U.S. Economy Much Longer

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They are trying really hard to convince all of us that everything is just fine.  But close to one-fifth of the U.S. population is skipping meals because food prices are too high.  And nearly 40 percent of our small businesses couldn’t pay rent in October.  Our leaders are trying to put a positive spin on things, but the truth is that we are witnessing a tremendous amount of economic suffering all over the United States right now.  The core consumer price index just surged to “the highest level since 1982”, and this is putting an enormous amount of financial stress on American families and businesses.

This week, I was stunned to learn that a survey that was just released found that 37 percent of all small businesses in the United States could not pay rent last month…

The survey of 4,789 randomly selected small business owners saw more than half of respondents say their rent is at least 10 percent higher than six months ago.

If you go back seven months, the majority said their rents had increased by at least 20 percent.

Moreover, the study found that roughly 37 percent of small businesses – almost half of all Americans working in the private sector – were left unable to pay rent in October.

Prior to getting this news, if someone had asked me to guess the percentage of small businesses that are currently unable to pay rent, I would have responded with a figure that was far lower.

So often, things turn out to be even worse than I thought they were.

If those small businesses continue to be unable to pay rent, they will eventually be forced to shut down.

So what will our communities look like if millions of small businesses suddenly close up shop on a permanent basis?

Meanwhile, a different survey has discovered that 18 percent of Americans are now skipping meals because food prices have become so crazy…

Over the last 12 months, nearly two in five American households (40%) received food or goods from a food bank (22% for Millennials), and the same amount (17%) stopped buying healthier foods (organic or high-priced healthy foods).

Nearly one in five Americans (18%) say they skipped meals or didn’t buy groceries due to high inflation (including 28% of Gen Z and 23% of millennials).

Skipping meals can be a positive thing, because fasting is actually really good for your health.

But most of these Americans are not skipping meals for the health benefits.

In addition, the same survey found that many Americans are not taking medications or seeing their doctors because prices have gone up so much

Many have cancelled or postponed plans in the past 12 months to see a specialist (14%), take a prescribed medication (10%) or get an annual physical (11%) due to high inflation.

If things are this bad already, what will those numbers look like next year at this time when economic conditions are significantly worse?

The American people are going to become increasingly frustrated as our standard of living continues to plunge.

All of us have to eat, and so many of the products that so many of us buy on a regular basis have gone up dramatically in price

A year ago, a bag of potato chips at the grocery store cost an average of $5.05. These days, that bag costs $6.05. A dozen eggs that could have been picked up for $1.83 now average $2.90. A two-liter bottle of soda that cost $1.78 will now set you back $2.17.

Sadly, this is just the beginning.

Even though the Federal Reserve has declared war on inflation, food prices are going to continue to rise for a variety of reasons.

And as the cost of living keeps becoming more oppressive, more American families are going to struggle to make it from month to month.

Even now, nearly two-thirds of the entire country is currently living paycheck to paycheck

As rising prices continue to outpace wage gains, families are finding less cushion in their monthly budget.

As of September, 63% of Americans were living paycheck to paycheck, according to a recent LendingClub report — near the 64% historic high hit in March. A year ago, the number of adults who felt strained was closer to 57%.

“Consumers are not able to keep up with the pace that inflation is increasing,” said Anuj Nayar, LendingClub’s financial health officer.

The worse things get, the more we will see people clamoring for the federal government to help them.

In fact, one recent survey actually discovered that 63 percent of all U.S. voters are in favor of “inflation stimulus payments”

A recent poll found that almost two-thirds of Americans are proponents of the federal government sending out inflation stimulus payments.

About 63% of eligible U.S. voters expressed some degree of support for federal inflation relief checks being distributed, the Newsweek poll conducted by Redfield & Wilton Strategies showed. Of those who agreed the federal government should do so, 42% indicated they “strongly agree” while 21% said “agree,” according to the poll.

Sadly, most voters don’t seem to understand that sending out more stimulus checks would create even more inflation.

There is always a cost when the government gives out “free money”.

If our politicians would have exercised discipline over the past several years, we would not be in the mess that we are in today.

But now years of very bad decisions are catching up with us in a major way, and economic conditions are rapidly deteriorating.

At this point, the vast majority of the U.S. population can see this.  According to one recent Gallup survey, a whopping two-thirds of all Americans believe that economic conditions in this nation are getting worse.

So many people are talking about the possibility of a recession in 2023.

If all we have is a recession next year, we would be extremely fortunate.

Because right now the economy is starting to crack and crumble all around us, and the outlook for the months ahead is exceedingly bleak indeed.

Eerie. Just like today.

A homework from the UK. Imagine if it was a Chinese school doing this for the US or UK. Twitter China experts would have a field day and many writers on Quora would write “Xi is distracting people from internal problems.” This is what brainwashing looks like. Global Times is a joke compared to this.

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My dad raised my sister and I after our mother passed away in an accident when I was 6 and she was 8. Dad never spoke very much unless you asked him a question. He did not date he just went to work and came home and took care of us. I know my dad loved us and he always smiled but getting him to talk was like pulling teeth.

In HS I was a linebacker at our little HS and dad never missed a game. My sister played the flute in school and he went to all her concerts. All the other kids had outgoing parents and my dad was 5:10 140 pounds of quiet average and I used to really envy the laughter and camraderie the other guys had with their dads and mine was just smiling and so silent.

On weekends he went fishing and took us with him if we wanted to go. We were always welcome and though I know he loved us he never had anything to say. Trying to talk to dad was just a lot of 1–2 word answers and then “glad we had this talk son.”

After college I moved away to Nashville about 4 hours from dad and then after a number of years he was in his 70s and got sick and passed away. At the funeral there were few people in attendance just some guys from his work, my sister and I and our families and an Army General in full uniform who formerly saluted my father and then sat in the back and said some prayers and got up to leave.

At the door I introduced myself and asked him if he knew my dad? He said that he had been a Captain in France and your dad was my specialty sergeant and he stopped a German advance in its tracks and destroyed 2 gun emplacements and was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. We lost 8 men that day but 25 of us survived that day because your dad was the bravest SOB I ever saw or knew.

Needless to say I was in shock. In a shoebox at home buried in a closet was the medal of honor and the duplicate they give you for ceremonies, the rosette, the citation signed by Truman in 1945, a silver star and the croix de guerre with palm from France.

God I wish I could have heard all this from Dad. Does he know how proud I am of him?

Me crying for my Obi as he enjoys the sun for the last time.

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Maria holding Obi for the last time too.

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Obi with his grave goods. Buried next to his friends. Skink and Sophie to the left and Gris to the right. They are on the North side of our backyard garden path. Obi is sleeping on my red plaid flannel shirt.

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He has well used cat toys with him. Fresh catnip from the garden. Flowers and a monarch butterfly wing by his ear. I found that wing while picking the marigolds. Some money for cat treats. A bowl that I threw on the wheel filled with his favorite cat food. Also a can of special cat food. There is a Nixie tube from my hobby included. All the cats got to sniff him and say goodby. Obi was a very special laidback quiet cat, he will be missed terribly.

https://youtu.be/6R7uRnhSIsk

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Robert

On This Tsunami Of Tech Layoffs Could Soon Be The Largest We Have Ever Seen, widespread layoffs are also happening in Europe, but all governments are fudging the stats, manipulating the numbers any which way they can think of. This is getting really ugly.

DSKlausler

Fantastic image of the Cheetah and young.

In other news: “THE SKY IS FALLING, THE SKY IS FALLING!”

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

All lies, and all are in on the façade. EVERYWHERE.

MM, do you remember this one: “Help Mr. Wizard, I don’t wanna be a [fill in the blank] anymore.”? Tutor the Turtle.

frannya

Above: “China leads the world in the booming business of manufacturing of torture equipment”

Reminds me of an article I read in the 80s about a factory in Ohio, I believe, making torture equipment for the US to use in So. America as well as training their military how to use it. Back when the US was heavily interfering there.

Vile and cringe worthy stuff. Pot / Kettle.

dzr

RE: Education in the UK

Just like other Anglosphere and European countries, the British have a supreme talent for shedding crocodile tears about “human rights” in enemy countries like China, even as they engage in political repression within their own borders.

This is the same “democratic Britain” that is imprisoning Julian Assange in Britain’s Guantanamo Bay, Belmarsh Prison, on trumped up pretexts of “espionage” (i.e. exposing American and British war crimes in Iraq and beyond).

This is also the same Britain that was arresting peaceful protestors who committed the thought crime of protesting the parasitic British Royal Family during all the propaganda surrounding Queen Elizabeth’s demise.

Anti-royal protesters are being arrested in the U.K. as the ‘Not My King’ tag grows
https://www.npr.org/2022/09/12/1122379162/uk-anti-royal-arrests