About depleted uranium: The main danger in DU is not it's radioactivity. The main problem is similar to heavy metals like lead, but much worse. It's inhaling the depleted uranium dust in to your lungs and digesting DU dust after it get absorbed by agricultural products or ends up lying in urban areas that makes DU extremely toxic. Heavy metals do much more to your body than "make you feel sick" they destroy the brain blood barrier and cause massive damage to the brain. They ruin the DNA of unborn fetuses which results in generation-wide genetic defects in society, they cause damage to many other parts and stay in the body forever. And heavy metals do not "degrade" they stay in the environment virtually forever, circulating and causing damage until quaranteed, like nuclear-power-plant waste (which is what DU is) is being stored. Posted by: A200 | May 15 2023 18:25 utc | 26
Man oh man! The geopolitical situation is truly in flux.
And make no mistake, it is in Chinese favor.
Ah, meanwhile a “stealth war” is going on, but is not being reported at all. Instead it is being reported as something else…
UPDATED 4:01 PM EDT — M6.8 Quake off South Africa — Antipode is Cascadia Subduction Zone
A strong Magnitude 6.8 earthquake has just taken place 1528.1km southeast of East London, South Africa. It took place at a shallow depth of only 10km. Problem is, this is the approximate “Antipode” for the Cascadia Subduction Zone off Vancouver, Seattle, and much of northern California.
There is a school of thought that holds when a major earthquake takes place on one side of the world, it directly affects its “antipode” which is the precise location on the exact opposite side of the planet.
According to the Antipode map, A Quake in this area off South Africa has its Antipode around Vancouver, BC, CANADA. Since the antipode effect can vary from precise, the entire Cascadia Subduction Zone is now in the crosshairs:
Quite often, a major earthquake on one side of the planet causes another one, afterwards, very near the exact opposite side of the planet. If that holds true, the Cascadia Subduction Zone of the US West Coast, could be in for quite a ride.
UPDATE 4:01 PM EDT —
A Magnitude 5.6 earthquake has just taken place in the area of the Cascadia Subduction Zone, as mentioned possible in the story above!
Classic Texas Sheet Cake
Classic Texas Sheet Cake is a recipe that is passed down from generation to generation—for good reason!
Ingredients
Cake
2 cups Gold Medal® all-purpose flour
2 cups granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup butter
1 cup water
3 tablespoons unsweetened baking cocoa
1/2 cup buttermilk
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 eggs, slightly beaten
Frosting
1/2 cup butter
3 tablespoons unsweetened baking cocoa
6 tablespoons milk
2 1/2 cups powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup chopped pecans
Instructions
Heat oven to 325 degrees F. Spray a 15 x 10 x 1-inch baking pan with cooking spray.
In large bowl, stir together flour, granulated sugar and salt; set aside.
In 2-quart saucepan, heat 1 cup butter, the water and 3 tablespoons baking cocoa to boiling. Remove from heat. Pour over flour mixture in bowl; stir until well mixed.
Add buttermilk, baking soda, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract and the eggs; stir until well lended.
Pour into pan, spreading evenly.
Bake 22 to 25 minutes or until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean.
Meanwhile, in another 2-quart saucepan, heat 1/2 cup butter, 3 tablespoons baking cocoa and the milk to simmering. Remove from heat.
Beat in powdered sugar and 1 teaspoon vanilla extract with whisk until smooth.
Stir in pecans.
Pour frosting over hot cake. Cool completely before cutting, about 1 hour.
What can I do for 10 minutes every day that will change my life?
Talk to random people.
- Fellow passenger in public transport
- Daily vendors
- Store owners
- Watchman
- Peon of your office
- Taxi drivers
- Anyone you meet.
Remember, do not talk about yourself. Ask about them. And listen. I do that everyday and knowing people is amazing.
Here are some examples/ lessons I learned:
1. Got job offer from a real estate company owner
2. Made a friend during my journey home. I didn’t have return ticket but luckily I met the same guy again and we shared the railway berth.
3. Met a taxi driver whose wife works in some MNC (i guess it was GOOGLE, as a developer). After talking to him, my chauvinism went to drain.
EDIT: This conversation happened 3years ago in Hyderabad, and I don't remember what company exactly it was. But I do remember that while mentioning this, he pointed to some IT park where Google was written in bold.
4. Peon of my office gives me a distinct respect
5. Once a door to door vegetable daily vendor brought back my wallet which I dropped by mistake.
6. Some underprivileged children – whom I used to teach during my college send me “happy teachers day” card every year. And that is the most beautiful day my year.
7. I stay in Bangalore. The moment you approach a rickshaw either they will ask for 2times the meter or 20/ 30 extra over meter. But because I was listening to one of the rickshaw driver all my journey he kind of liked me, and he charged me as per meter. The meter was 74 and he took only 70 in spite Of my insisting.
8. Once in a restaurant a couple was struggling with their toddler. They were unable to eat. I was waiting for my meal so I started playing with the kid. The couple had meal in peace. By the time I left the restaurant it started raining cats and dogs. So the same couple saw waiting outside the restaurant under a shade and offered me a ride to the bus depot. During the ride we had great conversation and they decided to drop me till home.
9. I was waiting for my bus stop near the front door of the bus. So I started talking to the driver. For 20 mins we talked about topics ranging from girls empowerment to spirituality. And the drivers knowledge was surprising. His thoughts about “girl child” made me believe India is changing.
There are thousands of such conversations I can share. I learned that everyone is struggling with a fight which no one has ever fought, sometimes these conversations gives me hope, confidence, another perspectives to the different problems of life, when I am depressed it helps me feel privileged that I have such good life, parents and friends. It’s overwhelming to talk to people.
Most importantly the smile you get after listening to these people is just priceless. The life has become fast, and all one need is some ears.
Edit:
A lot of people have a question of “How to start a conversation?” Everyone can have there own way, but following is my two pence,
I have some pre-set ice breakers –
1. With Cab drivers (Ola/ Taxii for sure etc.) – “Is this your own, or you are hired?” Or “Don’t you feel frustrated with the traffic?”
2. Public Transport – Offer your seat to a lady/ old aged man. Ask when will your stop come? (even though you know when to get down). If someone is reading book – start talking about that book.
3. Coffee shop/ restaurants – Help (like I helped that couple). Or ask help in choosing dishes (this works during foreign trips).
4. If you see underprivileged child – ask if they go to school.
5. With your subordinates – Have lunch with them.
6. With roadside vendors – “How much business you make daily?” Or “do you pay some rent of this space” or “does xyz take some bribe for letting you stand here”
All in all the mantra is be observant. Understand what problem the other might have. Start talking about their problems/ situations/ likings etc.
Moving to Vietnam |BEAUTIFUL, CHEAP AND BOOMING|
This Is A Tiny Hamster Rides Her Own Personal Subway Train
In 2009, Brooklyn photographer Victoria Belanger took Edie, her tiny hamster for a ride on her own personal subway train. Little Edie wandered throughout the car, checked out the distinctive orange and yellow seats and even had a chance to peek outside before having to “stand clear of the closing doors”.
“This train is really slow.” Edie rides the model subway. Fall 2009.
More: Victoria Belanger, Flickr h/t: laughingsquid
Safeguarding Your Mental Health from the Harmful Effects of Western War
Propaganda – Ten Top Tips
By Geoffrey Roberts FRHistS, MRIA
Emeritus Professor of History
University College Cork
- Beg, borrow, or buy a copy of Robert H. Thoules’s Straight and Crooked
Thinking. Pay particular attention to the sections on the manipulative use of
emotive language (’Russia’s unprovoked, criminal, aggressive and genocidal
war on Ukraine’), diversionary arguments (‘you can’t negotiate peace with an
indicted war criminal’) and drumbeat repetition (‘Ukraine has won, is winning
and will win the war’). - Beware bait and switch articles. Promising pieces with headlines like ‘in
reality, the Ukrainian are losing’ or ‘West exaggerates Russian losses’ often
turn out to be Neocon op–eds arguing for all–out western military support for
Ukraine whilst blandly asserting that Putin would be crazy to escalate the war. - Get into the habit of scanning articles about the war before reading them. If
you espy the words ‘Hitler’, ‘appeasement’, ‘Munich’ in the same piece – bin
it, unless it is written by a trustworthy historian with the initials GR. - Unsourced casualty claims from the Pentagon or the British MoD are a no–
brainer: simply divide those for Russia by 10 and multiply those for Ukraine
by the same factor. - Keep to hand a stack of old Ritter and MacGregor interviews predicting that a
storm of Russian armoured steel will soon sweep all before it and bring the
war to a rapid conclusion. - When things are going badly for the Russkies, mute the sound on reports from
Weeb Union and the Military Summary Channel. Then close your eyes and re–
imagine the meaning of all those little arrows flickering across the screen. - When things are going really badly, restrict your YouTube viewing to
Alexander Mercouris’’s nightly vlog. Nothing is more reassuring than
Alexander’s dulcet tones reminding us for the umpteenth time that he is not a
military man before launching into a lengthy explanation as to why a 50–metre
advance by the remnants of the Azov Brigade may not be as strategically
significant as some panic–mongering Russian bloggers would have us believe. - Goebbels was wrong. The Big Lie is not the most effective propaganda: it is
the cumulative effect of little lies, evasions, distortions and misdirection. The
best antidote is a daily dose of Responsible Statecraft supplemented by a
generous dollop of Naked Capitalism, Moon of Alabama and Antiwar.com. - If you don’t read Russian, invest in a machine–translation programme that will
enable you to follow Strana.UA’s sane and sensible coverage of the war. - Subscribe to a curated list of links that – at no cost to you – filters out the most
mentally damaging western war propaganda.
What’s Happening In Haiti Is Absolutely Beyond Belief!
Amazing!
Ukraine SitRep: Explosion in Khmelnytsky – Bakhmut Evacuation – Longer Range Missiles
In the early morning of last Saturday two large explosions (video) destroyed a large ammunition depot near the city of Khmelnytsky in west Ukraine.
biggerThis picture shows the depot before the strike:
biggerThe explosion destroyed the whole depot:
biggerThe depot sat at a rail line some 5,000 meter west from the city center. It is likely that the explosion destroyed not only a large amount of ammunition but also a large number of windows in the city and caused some casualties.
The city of Khmelnytsky, which has a population of 270.000, is named after a famous Cossack hetman (elected military leader) who in 1648 rose up against the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth that controlled the west of Ukraine.
While military operations continued inconclusively, and because Tatar support proved undependable at crucial moments, Khmelnytsky began to search for other allies.
He found those allies in Moscow:
Khmelnytsky secured the military protection of the Tsardom of Russia in exchange for allegiance to the Tsar. An oath of allegiance to the Russian monarch from the leadership of the Cossack Hetmanate was taken, shortly thereafter followed by other officials, the clergy and the inhabitants of the Hetmanate swearing allegiance. The exact nature of the relationship stipulated by the agreement between the Hetmanate and Russia is a matter of scholarly controversy. The council of Pereiaslav was followed by an exchange of official documents: the March Articles (from the Cossack Hetmanate) and the Tsar’s Declaration (from Muscovy).The council was attended by a delegation from Moscow headed by Vasiliy Buturlin. The event was soon thereafter followed by the adoption in Moscow of the so-called March Articles that stipulated an autonomous status of the Hetmanate within the Russian state. The agreement precipitated the Russo-Polish War (1654–67). The definitive legal settlement was effected under the Eternal Peace Treaty of 1686 concluded by Russia and Poland that re-affirmed Russia’s sovereignty over the lands of Zaporozhian Sich and left-bank Ukraine, as well as the city of Kiev.
The city is some 200 kilometer from the Polish boarder. The depot has likely held ammunition that was coming from the ‘West’ to go to the front line in east Ukraine. There are rumors that the depot held British ammunition for Challenger main battle tanks. The ammunition is filled with depleted Uranium. Some charts are circulating which claim to show a gamma ray spike in the area.
biggerHowever the relevant map does not load for me and I have no way to verify it. The chart seem to show an increase in Gamma radiation but that increase happened during May 11/12, not in the early morning of May 13 when the explosion happened. The increase is also very small and the total is normal and not dangerous. Flying in a commercial airplane will typically expose you to some 2,000 nano-Sievert per hour [nSi/h]. Small background radiation variances happen all the time so the chart does not really tell us anything.
In other news the Ukrainian army seems to abandon whatever is left of Bakhmut city.
In today’s clobber report the Russian Defense Ministry reported the intercept by air defense of a British Storm Shadow cruise missile. This confirms that these are not some new wonder weapons. (The recent two Storm Shadow impacts in Luhansk city were against undefended targets and also accompanied by a U.S. delivered electronic warfare missile which probably can confuse air defense radar.)
Also taken down yesterday were seven U.S. HARM anti-radar missiles and ten HIMARS missiles.
The use of so many HARM missiles is unusual and points to a new campaign in preparation of the much hyped counteroffensive.
Posted by b on May 15, 2023 at 17:23 UTC | Permalink
Report said India, US, Saudi Arabia and UAE are to develop joint railway infrastructure that connects Gulf and Arab countries. How do you see this move?
Is it the US’s containment of China’s Belt and Road Initiative?
The US is proposing a railway project to connect Gulf and Arab countries. But can it win favor from Middle Eastern countries?
Hmmm… doubt it…
What NOT to Eat in Vietnam, Why Banh Mi is so Famous? | Vietnam Culture Series: Eating
UN Operation in Mali Is a Scam. Just Watch the Germans Run From Wagner Troops
By Martin Jay
May 8, 2023
What the hell is going on in Mali? Many will be asking this question as to the future of the UN’s mission there, after Germany just announced that intends to withdraw its troops from the mission
What the hell is going on in Mali? Many will be asking this question as to the future of the UN’s mission there, after Germany just announced that intends to withdraw its troops from the mission
According to newswire reports, the German government said on May 3rd it had decided to end its participation in the UN mission in Mali
by next May over problems, it claims, with the ruling junta.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s cabinet said Berlin would pull its 1,110 troops in the UN mission MINUSMA out of the West African country over the next year and pivot towards more humanitarian and development aid for the region.
“Whether we want it to or not, what happens in the Sahel affects us,” Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said in a statement.
“We are reorganising our engagement in the region and will let our participation in MINUSMA run out in a structured fashion over the next 12 months.”
But is it really true given Germany’s track record for its bare faced lies on the international circuit led by its odious chancellor Scholz who can’t even own up to Berlin’s role or knowledge of the blowing up of the Nord Stream pipeline? Is there another reason for Berlin getting out of Mali?
What was it doing there in the first place is also a good question. The truth is really not much to do with fighting terrorists in the Sahel but more about supporting France’s delusional ideas about its hegemony in Africa. Britain also sent 300 soldiers there initially to support Macron and his two-faced game in Mali of pretending to fight terrorism while really only interested in supporting French companies there and protecting French expats.
The UK pulled out those troops just months after France withdrew its soldiers in the summer of last year. Germany, it seems, is a little slow on the uptake of how shit happens in Africa and so its cumbersome political beast – a coalition of hypocrites, turncoats and dropouts – finally smelt the coffee and realised that its troops were a little isolated in a country they didn’t understand run by a junta which was aligned to Russia. Is it possible that Scholz suddenly woke up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat and realised that his entire collation government would collapse if Wagner troops got a bit bored one day in Mali and decided to massacre the Germans as a way of sending a message that Russia is displeased with the commitment of Berlin to Zelensky?
It begs the question again in Mali, what are they European contingents doing now in Mali if none of them can get the junta there to stand in line and succumb to western elites’ needs and aspirations? Scholz clearly did the maths and realised that Mali is a ticking time bomb and his own troops were vulnerable to attack in the event of the Ukraine war stakes being raised this year.
And so the louche western media narrative is that Germany can’t get on with the military leadership in Bamako, which for anyone with an IQ more than 60 and who knows anything about how the world works, is of course nonsense. The heart of the problem for the regime in Mali is that they see no point of the Germans being there. If the Germans can’t get any results on the battlefield with the Islamic terrorists – and believe me, we would hear about it if they did – then the only other purpose for them would be to add a security later to the military leadership itself, politically.
If Germany is really there in Mali to fight the terrorists – which could/would take power in Mali if they could overpower the junta – then the thinking is why can’t they protect the elite there in any other way. The answer is because they are not there to neither fight terrorists nor prevent them from taking power in Mali. They were there to support Macron but now he and his boys have been kicked out it makes the Germans look like stupid teenage boys at the school disco all looking at each other with no girls in sight when the last dance begins. Uselessness is a word we should be comfortable with when talking about Germany and its army especially when it is lead by Scholz who is a buffoon on his best day and has led his own country into a direct conflict with Russia.
Misjudged military fuckwittery is actually a German speciality which keeps on repeating itself in history. Who could, after all, forget the initial jubilance of operation Barbarossa at the beginning of World War II which led to the German army being slaughtered when the soviets got their act together and took the battle to the next level? If the Germans themselves can’t explain to their own people what their troops are doing in West Africa, then it is hardly surprising they’re having troubles dealing with the military junta in Bamako who are proving to be “difficult”. Does anyone believe any of this bullshit from the UN press machine which recently went excrementally shite when it thundered that the UN chief was concerned about the fate of young women in Afghanistan and pledges to save them? This is the same UN chief who can’t even save his own UN staff from rape and sexual harassment on a grand scale in UN buildings?
10 INCREDIBLE Reasons Why You Should Move to Vietnam RIGHT NOW!
Do you believe that sanctions on Russia and countermeasures against China could help alleviate some of the economic risks brought by this crisis?
What about shifting these $100s of billions spending countering Russia and China to take care your own citizens and economies back home?
Hundreds of billions, eventually a trillion dollars spend on playing geopolitics, that money could be used to build infrastructures, factories, lower energy cost, free housing, free education, feed the poor. Instead all wasted on geopolitics.
~3,000 Turn Out in Sydney AGAINST NATO – Pro-Russia
Video below shows about three thousand Australians turning-out in Sydney today, to protest NATO and show their support for Russia! The large group was peaceful and determined to let their country know their position: NATO is wrong, Russia is right, and the war in Ukraine must stop.
Here’s brief video:
HAL TURNER EDITORIAL OPINION
Do you see how peaceful, calm, and orderly this is? THIS is what should be taking place here in the United States and over in Europe. Every day.
Here’s why:
What our governments are doing with the Ukraine situation is slow-walking ALL OF US into literal nuclear war with Russia.
The Russians are right; they have been provoked for years by more and more NATO bases, in country after country, surrounding Russia, and pointing missiles at Russia. They were also provoked when the West funded, incited, and facilitated the forcible, violent overthrow of Ukraine’s democratically-elected President, Viktor Yanukovich back in the year 2014.
Yanukovich had been previously contacted by the US and by the European Union (EU) about moving out of Russia’s sphere of influence, and becoming part of Europe. Yanukovich thought about it. He consulted his government, his top business leaders, and his people.
When the time came for Yanukovich to decide yes or no to the US/EU offer, he politely told them “Thanks, but no thanks. Ukraine will remain with Russia.”
That was an answer the US/EU was NOT going to accept.
They began funding and facilitating protests and riots in Ukraine. They paid almost a million dollars a day out of the US Embassy in Kiev, to keep the trouble going.
As the problems got worse and worse, there were shootings. Government buildings were being attacked and burned down. It got completely out of hand.
Yanukovich had to flee the country, and Ukraine’s government collapsed. When that happened, the US/EU was right there to fund a new, puppet government, favorable to the West.
When the new Kiev regime took over, Crimea, which had previously been part of Russia for over 300 years, but which had been “given” to Ukraine, by then-Soviet Union General Secretary Nikita Krushchev about fifty years ago, decided to have a referendum to secede from Ukraine and return to Russia. They held that referendum and the vote was overwhelming; Crimea wanted to go home to Russia.
Of course, Russia, which had a naval base on Crimea, supported this effort, and was lambasted by the West for “illegally annexing” Crimea. It was no annexation, Crimea voted!
When two other predominantly Russian oblasts (states) — Luhansk and Donetsk — wanted to also vote to secede, Ukraine sent its army to the border of those states and started lobbing artillery shells and mortars into the civilian areas to put down the move to secede.
Luhansk and Donetsk formed militias to fight-off the Ukrainians. But they needed help. Suddenly, “Little Green Men” started appearing in Luhansk and Donetsk. Fully kitted-out soldiers, in green military uniforms, but with no patches. No flags. They were, of course, Russian troops. They were clearly sent by Russia, to support Luhansk and Donetsk, whose people were being bombed by the Ukrainian army.
All this trouble, which really kicked-off from 2012, stopped dead in its tracks when Donald Trump won the US Presidency. There was relative peace in Luhansk and Donetsk for four years, until Biden stole the US Presidency.
Within literally days of Biden taking office in January 2021, all the trouble in Luhansk and Donetsk started again.
By December, 2021, Ukraine had massed about 80,000 troops, over 1,000 tanks, multiple launch rocket systems, fighter jets and the like, all along the borders of Luhansk and Donetsk. Ukraine was going to enter Luhansk and Donetsk and slaughter the civilians who wanted to secede.
Russia had no choice. They HAD to protect the civilians in Luhansk and Donetsk. In fact, under the United Nations (UN) Charter, Russia had a DUTY to protect!
The LIE Which Caused this Whole Thing
All this trouble and all this NATO effort with Ukraine is being done despite the fact that then-US Secretary of State, James Baker, assured then Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev and then-Foreign Minister Eduard Shevrednadze that if Russia allowed East and West Germany to re-unite, “NATO will not move one inch eastward.”
Of course, NATO did not honor that promise, and began expanding eastward, right up to Russia’s border.
Country after country joined NATO, and got NATO missiles to aim at Russia. Many countries established NATO bases to rotate NATO troops in and out . . . . all with their eye on Russia.
When the same began with Ukraine, Russia made very clear to the west, Ukraine joining NATO is a red line for Russia. They also explained why:
From Ukraine, NATO missiles, would have about a five minute flight time to Moscow. They would also have a seven to ten minute flight time to Russia’s strategic nuclear missile silos.
While NATO claims these missiles are “defensive” with conventional warheads, missile technology has progressed so much that the warheads on these missiles can be “swapped-out.” They can be changed from “defensive” (conventional) warheads, to OFFENSIVE, NUCLEAR warheads. The swap takes about an hour.
So Russia would really have no way of knowing if the missiles being aimed at them were defensive or offensive.
And with a five minute flight time, Russia would have almost no viable defense. They would never know peace or security. This was completely unacceptable to them.
Russia tried to use Diplomacy, offering a Treaty to NATO which would provide Iron-Clad, legally enforceable, security guarantees to Russia. They offered this in December of 2021. NATO laughed at it; basically throwing the proposal in the trash.
About a week later, in January, 2022, Russia submitted the Treaty proposal again, only this time, they sent it via Diplomatic Courier, to the leaders of all NATO countries at their official residences (White House, #10 Downing Street, The Elysee Palace in France, and so on)
In this re-submitted proposal, Russia made clear, IN WRITING, if they cannot obtain iron-clad, legally enforceable security guarantees via Diplomatic means, they will obtain them by military or military-technical means.
So they TOLD EVERYONE this was going to become a military conflict!
NATO sat on this proposal for about two weeks, then rejected it again.
On February 23, 2022, Russia contacted Ukraine and gave them an Ultimatum: You have five hours to agree to not join NATO and that Crimea, which had seceded, was now permanently part of Russia, or Russia would take action.
Ukraine President Zelensky called the British Foreign Office and the US State Department. Both told him to “ignore the ultimatum” which he did.
After the five hours expired, Russia waited another two hours and with no movement by Ukraine, they sent the Russian Army across the Ukraine Border.
We Were ALL Warned
Russia had previously told everyone — the whole world — that this situation was going to become military. The world laughed.
They aren’t laughing now.
You see, when Russia speaks, they say what they mean, and they actually mean what they say.
It isn’t that way in the West. Here in the West, we are caught in this phony “virtue signaling” where we say things that sound oh so good and nice, but we never actually DO.
Russia doesn’t operate that way. If they say it, they mean it.
Which brings me back to the protests in Sydney, Australia, at the top of this story.
As the conflict with Ukraine has gotten uglier, NATO has been shipping billions of dollars worth of military gear to Ukraine. More and more gear. Better and better gear.
Along the way, Russia has REPEATEDLY warned they will use nuclear weapons to defend Russia.
As should be clear to even the most childlike intellect right now, when Russia says something, they mean it. They have proven this over and over again!
Despite Russia’s warnings, the West continues to up-the-ante and, as you read this right this minute, the West had given a green light to providing Ukraine with fourth generation F-16 fighter jets.
Russia announced publicly THIS MORNING, they will shoot down any F-16’s they find in Ukrainian air space.
They also publicly accused the United States of trying to escalate the Ukraine conflict into a world war. In this regard, it seems to me personally, Russia hit the nail right on the head. The US __is__ trying to start World War 3, and it is our American government, and its’; NATO vassals, that are slow-walking you and me to our death via nuclear Armageddon.
Unless people in Europe and the United States, take to the streets PEACEFULLY, RESPECTFULLY, and in a DIGNIFIED MANNER, I personally believe we are going to get nuked. I say, this war in Ukraine must be halted NOW. Right now. Before it goes any farther.
If we fail to step-up and make known that this war must stop, then I believe we will be nuked. Soon.
Moving to Uruguay |ONE OF THE BEST LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES!|
Russian Bombers Airborne; Explosions Now in Odessa
Russian strategic aviation voice and morse net on frequencies 4397 USB and 5620 CW, indicate Russian Bomber Activity 3:30 PM EDT —
3 Tu-22 bombers airborne, possibly strikes in the coming hours.
3:51 PM EDT — More: 3 Russian Tu-95Ms strategic bombers have taken off.
Unidentified Object noted Airborne over the Odesa Region of Southern Ukraine; Air Defenses are reportedly Active.
Multiple Large Explosions heard across the City of Odessa; reports of a possible ongoing Shahed-136 Drone Attack.
3:54 PM EDT — It appears Russia has switched to radio silence mode. A massive rocket strike expected in Ukraine tonight.
4:04 PM EDT — Explosions reported in Zaporozhye region and Odessa
Tu-95MS are moving to the area of the Caspian Sea, to the missile launch site.
Inaccurate intel struck-thru
4:30 PM EDT — There is information circulating on the Internet that the Ukrainian military has just shot down a Russian Su-35S fighter over the Black Sea
4:40 PM — Ukrainian Sources are reporting that the Russian Pilot of the Su-35 was Killed in the Crash.
4:45 PM EDT — Explosions in the Dnepropetrovsk region In eastern Ukraine, an air raid continues, related to the work of Russian UAVs.
5:00 PM EDT — Officials of the Kherson Defense Forces confirmed the downing of a Su-35 of the Russian Air Forces over the Black Sea.
— Sirens in Kyiv, Gerans are headed its way.
— Mass MISSILE arrivals at Zatoka and Sergeevka to the coastal facilities of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (there are camps for recruits and trainees)
— At least 7 Tu-22M3 Strategic Bombers and 4 Russian Naval Ships are reported to be currently approaching their “Launch Zones” over the Black Sea; these Aircraft and Ship are Armed with roughly 50 3M54-1 Kalibr Cruise Missiles.
— It is reported that at least 7 hits were made at AFU facilities in Odessa Region. There are also reports that a missile strike destroyed the bridge in Zatoka, through which the AFU was delivering reserves, fuel and equipment from Romania to Kherson and Nikolaev.
Ukraine confirms two Kalibr cruise missiles hits at Odessa port… western equipment hit in Odessa region
FROM RUSSIAN MINISTRY OF DEFENSE:
A Ukrainian S-300 surface-to-air missile system has been obliterated near Zheltoye (Donetsk People’s Republic).
The command post of the 102nd Territorial Defence Brigade has been hit near Poltavka (Zaporozhye region).
Air defence forces have intercepted fifteen HIMARS, Uragan MLRS projectiles, and Storm Shadow long-range cruise missiles during the day.
In addition, nine Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles were obliterated in the areas of Lozovoye, Terny, Vodyanoye, Novoandreyevka (Donetsk People’s Republic), Chervonaya Dibrova (Lugansk People’s Republic), and Energodar (Zaporozhye region).
6:03 PM EDT — At least 7 Tu-95MS Strategic Bombers are noted to have taken-off from Engels Air Force Base in the Saratov Region of Russia heading towards their “Launch Zones” over the Caspian Sea; a Missile Attack against Ukraine appears to be Imminent once again.
CRIMEA HIT?
A Bright Light and Explosion were seen in the City of Sevastopol in Crimea, after which electricity went out:
6 things I WISH i knew BEFORE moving to VIETNAM…
This Guy Makes 3D Printed Helmets For His Cat
Thanks to 3D printers going mainstream, more and more awesome things are popping up around the internet. We already featured T-Rex arms for chickens, now it’s time to meet Rémy Vicarini who likes to make tiny helmets for his cat.
More: Instagram h/t: sadanduseless
MAJOR NEWS!!! TOP UKRAINE GENERAL “IN HOSPITAL”, Tactical NUKES ON F-16s? BELARUS Border Alert WW3
The damage isn’t just a general but key support staff. This was a decisive hit
Why has Europeans stopped traveling to the USA?
Okay, I’m not European, but I think I may offer a tiny perspective as someone who spent most of last summer travelling all over Europe and who spent time in many, many European cities I’ve never been to.
I feel I really got into the lifestyle in Europe.
Sitting outside to eat on summer nights.
Walking and taking transit everywhere.
Seeing people outside everywhere just partaking in the city.
Enjoying the historic charm that is in abundance, feeling safe everywhere at all hours (Maybe with the exception of Marseilles and parts of London), etc.
I feel like the US in comparison is just… underwhelming.
I lived in Nashville for over a year and most of my life have lived in Los Angeles. I want to move to a new city but really don’t like any city in the US enough to be excited about going there. And it seems the only places in America that might give you a slice of that European lifestyle are prohibitively expensive, like San Francisco or NYC.
I feel like most American cities are bland, built around cars, have terrible transit, and are unsafe.
A few years ago I was walking through downtown Atlanta on a weekend in the afternoon, and was stunned that there were no people walking other than me. It was like the entire city had been essentially abandoned.
I could not imagine the center of an European city being completely empty of pedestrians. There is more vibrancy in an European city of 200,000 than in an American city of two million.
After the architectural splendor of Prague and Edinburgh, the Mediterranean charm of old town Nice, eating in the medieval alleyways of Croatia, I come back to America and feel kind of depressed at the same old landscape of strip malls, drive-thru Starbucks, urban blight, sprawling suburbs with cookie cutter houses and no sidewalks or pedestrians in sight.
Maybe one little historic “old town” street downtown that you have to drive into and that’s full of souvenir shops and chain restaurants.
I guess I’m just ranting and experiencing post-vacation blues, but I’m missing the European lifestyle so much it hurts and I’m having difficulty adjusting to America.
I liked just about every European city I visited. There are very few American cities I’d bother visiting unless I had a specific reason to go there.
On the plus side, the variety of natural scenery in the US, particularly the western US rivals anything in Europe and maybe surpasses it. And increasingly I’d rather rent a cabin in some place like the Smoky Mountains or Sierras in California than visit the bland American cities.
Russia and China
Last thing both of them Care about now is the Dollar as Reserve Currency
The Two Nations now know they are on the Gunsights of the West and they also know luckily they were ignored for a bit too long a time and have become stronger than the West conceived possible while the West has been weakened
In 2008 – this wouldnt even have been a contest
Many things on Russia – China Agenda including:-
- Technology Cooperation
- Military Alliance – Russia and China need a Military Alliance especially a Nuclear Alliance
- Economic Alliance – BRICS to be strengthened with Argentina being added
- Resource Stability and Supply – China to ensure sufficient OIl and Gas and Coal from Russia
- Yuan Transactions – Yuan to replace USD and Euro by 2035 as per Nabullianas Calculations as Russias Major Reserve Currency
- Payment System – Global Payment System that can Rival SWIFT
- Consumer Goods – To Replace Western Chains
Why is China hiding the real state of their economy?
You know you can go to China, right?
“NO! SLEEP! TIL 葫芦岛市!!!”
I went back in 2007 and it was a great trip. Really opened my eyes to some of the BS you hear in the states. My hotel was reasonably priced, brand new, and in the same block as the Beijing Lamborghini and Ferrari Dealership.
You can go there right now.
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You can rent a car, drive around, talk to folks. no problem.
The point is, it would be really, really damn hard for them to lie about their economy. You would see it in the streets.
20 Best reasons NOT to retire to Vietnam! Don’t live in Vietnam.
Chili Queen Chili
This is, according to the legend, one of San Antonio chili queen’s original recipes.
Ingredients
- 2 pounds beef, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
- 1 pound pork, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
- 1/4 cup suet
- 1/4 cup pork fat
- 3 medium onions, chopped
- 6 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 quart water
- 4 ancho chiles, seeds and stems removed, chopped fine
- 1 serrano chile, seeds and stems removed, chopped fine
- 6 dried red New Mexican chiles, seeds and stems removed, chopped fine
- 1 tablespoon cumin seeds, freshly ground
- 2 tablespoons Mexican oregano
- Salt, to taste
Instructions
- Lightly flour the beef and pork cubes. Quickly cook in the suet and pork fat, stirring often.
- Add onions and garlic and sauté until they are tender and limp.
- Remove all pieces of fat.
- Add the water to the mixture and simmer for 1 hour.
- Grind the chiles in a blender or molcajete. Add to the meat mixture.
- Add remaining ingredients and simmer for an additional 2 hours.
- Skim off any fat that rises, then serve.
From Citizens to Serfs: How the Middle Class is Eroding in America
https://youtu.be/Ya0bG4_xRQg
With G7 “leadership” mired in a sticky swamp of intellectual shallowness, predictably the only agenda in colonized Japan was more sanctions on Russia.
Let’s start with a graphic depiction of where the Global North and the Global South really stand.
1. Xian, former imperial capital, and key hub of the Ancient Silk Roads: Xi Jinping hosts the China-Central Asia summit, attended by all Heartland “stans” (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgzystan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan).
The final statement stresses economic cooperation and “a resolute stand” against Hegemon-concocted color revolutions.
That expands what the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) are already implementing. In practice, the summit seals that the Russia-China strategic partnership will be protecting the Heartland.
2. Kazan: the Russia-Islamic World forum unites not only religious leaders but top businessmen of no less than 85 nations. Multipolar Russia proceeded in parallel to the Arab League Summit in Jeddah, which welcomed back Syria to the “Arab family”. Arab nations unanimously pledged to end “foreign interference” for good.
3. Hiroshima: the ever-shrinking G7, actually G9 (adding two unelected EU bureaucrats), imposes a single agenda of more sanctions on Russia; more weapons to black void Ukraine; and more lecturing of China.
4. Lisbon: the annual Bilderberg meeting – a NATO/Atlanticist fest – takes place in a not so secret hotel completely locked down. Top item in the agenda; war – hybrid and otherwise – on the “RICs” in BRICS (Russia, India, China).
I could have been in Xian, or most likely Kazan. Instead, honoring a previous commitment, I was in Ibiza, and then scraped the idea of flying to Lisbon as a waste of time.
Allow me to share with you the reason why: call it a little tale from the Baleares, breaking the trademark pledge that what happens in swinging, sweaty deep house Ibiza stays in Ibiza.
I was a guest at a top business gathering – mostly Spanish but also featuring Portuguese, Germans, Brits and Scandinavians: ultra high-level executives – in real estate, asset management, investment banking.
Our panel was titled “Global Geopolitical Shifts and Their Consequences”. Before the panel, participants were invited to vote on what worried them most when it comes to the future of their business. Number one was inflation and interest rates. Number two was geopolitics. That prefigured a very lively debate ahead.
When a EU hagiographer goes berserk
Little did I – and the audience – know that would turn into a wild ride.
The first presentation came from the director of a “Center for European Politics” in Copenhagen. She bills herself as a political science professor, and is an adviser to EU Chief Gardener Borrell.
Well, I adopted a Cheshire cat stance after the tsunami of clichés spewed out about “European values” and evil Russkies, as well as her being “frightened” by the future of Europe.
At least immediate relief was provided by the impeccably diplomatic Lanxin Xiang, an adorable character, always with a cheerful smile on his face, and one of the very few leading experts on China who actually knows what he’s talking about, in fluent English.
Lanxin Xiang, among other accomplishments, is Emeritus Professor of the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva; director of the Institute of Security Policy at the China National Institute for SCO International Exchange; and executive director of the Washington Foundation for European Studies.
This is a column I wrote about him and his work, published in October 2020.
Professor Xiang offered a masterly exposition on the American obsession to fabricate a “Taiwan problem” and how Europe, already squeezed by the U.S. proxy war against Russia, must be very careful when it comes to lecturing China.
When it was my turn, I went for the kill, dismissing all those EU press release platitudes as absolute nonsense, and stressing how Europe is already being eaten alive by the proverbial “American interests”.
As briefly as possible I explained the whole geopolitical background of the war in Ukraine.
Well, this was all delivered to top business people who consume The Economist, Financial Times and Bloomberg as their prime sources of information.
Their reaction would speak volumes.
Predictably, the EU-paid bureaucrat completely freaked out, and shrieking with outrage, went full pre-ordained script, from threatening to abandon the stage to accusing me of being “paid by the Kremlin”.
I asked her, point blank, to “contradict me, with facts”.
No facts were provided.
Just fear and bewilderment, mixed with intimations of cancel culture.
To his great merit the vastly experienced moderator, Struan Robertson from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, kept things civil, giving more time for Lanxin Xiang to explain the Chinese mindset and opening the floor for a sequence of very good questions.
In the end, the audience loved it.
Many came to personally thank me for information they will never have access to in El Pais, Le Monde or The Economist.
A minority in the room was simply stunned – but our debate at least must have left them musing over a lot of preconceived notions.
It’s the total merit of the key organizers, Jose Maria Pons and head of the program Cristina Garcia-Peri, to host such a debate in fabulous Ibiza, in Spain, prime NATOstan territory.
In the current situation, this would be absolutely impossible in France or Germany, not to mention Scandinavia or those demented Baltics.
There’s no way to counter-act the fabricated narratives parroted by EU-paid hacks and bureaucrats except for ridiculing them – in their faces.
They become livid and barely manage to stutter when their lies are exposed.
For instance, one of the questions from the floor, by a top of the line German businessman, enumerated a litany of dark facts about Ukrainian “democracy” that are absolutely verbotten by EUrocracy.
The G-Less Than Zero freaks out
What happened in Ibiza dovetails with what happened in U.S.-nuclear bombed Hiroshima – Hegemons don’t do apologies – and in that locked down Lisbon hotel.
With the G7 “leadership” mired in a sticky swamp of intellectual shallowness, predictably the only agenda in colonized Japan was more sanctions on Russia – imposed over third countries and on companies in the energy and military-industrial sectors; more weapons to the Ukrainian black void; and a ridiculous counter-productive new obsession of piling up on China “containment” for alleged “economic coercion.”
In the photo ops, by the way, it’s not a shrinking G7 that shows up: but a warmongering G9, artificially augmented by that pathetic couple of unelected EUrocrats, Charles Michel and Pustula von der Lugen.
As far as the real Global Majority – or Global South – is concerned, this looks more like a G-Less Than Zero. The more the senseless, illegal Sanctions Wars are “expanded”, the more the absolute majority of the Global South moves away from the collective West, diplomatically, geopolitically and geoeconomically.
And that’s why the top Bilderberg agenda at the hijacked Lisbon hotel was to revamp NATO/Atlanticist coordination in a war – hybrid and otherwise – against the driving force in BRICS; the RICs (Russia, India, China).
There were other items on the menu – from AI to the acute banking crisis, from “energy transition” to “fiscal challenges”, not to mention proverbial “U.S. leadership”.
But when you get in the same room people like NATO’s Stoltenberg; director of U.S. intel Avril Haines; senior director for Strategic Planning at the National Security Council Thomas Wright; Goldman Sachs president John Waldron; Chief Gardener Borrell (whose minion was in Ibiza); vice chair of Brookfield Asset Management, Mark Carney (one of their executives also in Ibiza); Supreme Allied Commander Europe, Christopher Cavoli; and Canadian Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, among other Atlanticist shills, the plot is self-evident:
It’s a war against the multipolar world.
At least we can dance it away in Ibiza.
US Comes To Africa To Steal Natural Resources & Finish Off The Continent
What are some useful features that are not found in American homes but common in other countries?
Another one that every Finnish house has but at least judging by sitcoms US houses don’t: draught lobby.
No matter how small the house, there’s a draught lobby in Finnish houses.
It helps keep the warm air inside the house and cold outside.
In many houses (including ours) it is very small but it does its job working like an air lock of kinds (open first door, enter, close, open second door).
This is a typical draught lobby:
5-Year-Old Says He Is a WOMAN Reborn As a Boy – The Ghost Inside My Child (S1 Flashback) | LMN
What do top Chinese generals think about possible US invasion? Do they think “boys, we’ll be cooked in a second!” or “boys, we’ll own every inch of their a Ass!”?
Chinese generals are a very SERIOUS sort.
In general, they will always look at the worst case scenarios. All of them. They will envision themselves losing, and all the terror, and horrors that will result from them. They will plan, and then plan, and then plan some more.
What we, as casual spectators, can see is that the United States is planning to attack China. This is obvious.
- The excuse will be “Chinese invasion of Taiwan”, whether it happens or not.
- Funding for this effort is well in progress.
- Local supply depots and nation alignment is almost complete.
- The United States in in process to turn Taiwan into a Pacific “Ukraine”.
If we can see this, so can the Chinese generals.
The Chinese leadership have two primary roles for it’s military.
- Defensive in a tactical sense.
- Offensive in a strategic sense.
As long as the United States does not cross any Chinese “red lines”, the Strategic offensive deterrent is working. But the “red lines” have been crossed, and once “red lines” are crossed, then that deterrence has failed.
And now, we know what the Chinese generals think.
…
You can be assured that the Chinese generals will eviscerate all invasion forces to China. (And yes. Taiwan is a province of China.) The tactical situation strongly favors China.
The real issue is the strategic nature of war.
…
China cannot engage in a war that has no outcomes.
A tactical war alone, is simply defensive only.
To end a war; any war, strategic forces and systems MUST be applied.
…
China has only ONE kind of strategic military system. (It is not like the United States with multiple strategic systems MAC, SAC, etc.)
China has invested and developed but only one strategic system…
- Nuclear weapons mounted on hypersonic ICBM glide vehicles.
Let that sink in.
If a war occurs between the USA and China, then it must not, and can not, be tactical alone.
It must have a strategic component.
And no matter what pronouncements about never using nuclear weapons are, and treaties signed. The fact is that for China to survive a war with the US, it MUST use strategic weapons systems.
This means that strategic forces will plummet the mainland United States. Though there is some debate on where Chinese “clean” enhanced radiation nukes will be used, it should be well understood that a war with China will intimately affect the lives and quality of life of Americans.
To fight China is to fight to the death.
…
Chinese generals know this.
Why High Paid Americans Are Actually BROKE!
Zombie Apocalypse is REAL
Many inner cities across the country have now been turned into wastelands:
Having worked, lived and travelled extensively across the world, I have never seen anything remotely closed to what is happening in the United States.
What is worst is that people who populate these places are essentially Zombies
It does not only affect poor blacks but also some of the richest and most powerful families. This included Hunter Biden, son of the current American President.
The United States could afford a military budget of over $800b and over 800 overseas bases which it uses to rain death and destruction on others but it cannot look after the welfare needs of its people.
Really SAD!!!!
China Just Found a MASSIVE Loophole to Survive US Sanctions!
Midwestern Pork Tenderloin Sandwiches
Midwestern Pork Tenderloin Sandwiches are extremely popular in Illinois and through the Midwest.
Yield: 4 sandwiches
Ingredients
- 1 pound boneless pork loin (or boneless pork chops)
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup yellow cornmeal
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 4 large sandwich buns
Instructions
- Cut 4 (1 inch) slices of pork. Trim any exterior fat from edges and butterfly each slice by cutting horizontally through the middle almost to the edge so that the halves are connected by only a thick piece of meat. Put each butterflied slice between pieces of plastic wrap. Using a wooden meat mallet, or the side of a cleaver, pound vigorously until the slice is about 10 inches across.
- Mix together flour, cornmeal, salt and black pepper.
- Heat 1/2 inch of oil in a deep, wide skillet to 365 degrees F. Dip each slice of pork in water, then in flour mixture. Fry tenderloin, turning once, until golden brown on both sides, about 5 minutes total. Drain on paper towels and season to taste with salt and pepper.
- Serve on buns with desired condiments (mustard, mayonnaise, dill pickle chips, ketchup, sliced onion, lettuce).
The Ghost Inside My Child: 5-Year-Old Claims to Have DIED on the Titanic
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Why Chinese Democracy is Better than Western Democracy According to Tsinghua Prof. Yan Yilong
"Let the light of Chinese democracy shine even brighter, so that China can ... contribute to the building of a better, higher quality [form of] democracy for humanity in the 21st century."
Dear Everyone,
Democracy is yet another field in which Beijing is competing with Washington and, more generally, with the West. China’s aim may not be to convince others to adopt its political system per se, but it certainly appears intent on demonstrating that Chinese “democracy” is superior to what the West has to offer.
This was once again evident at an event organised by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) in March, just days before U.S. President Joe Biden co-hosted his second virtual “Summit for Democracy” alongside the governments of Costa Rica, the Netherlands, the Republic of Korea and Zambia. The Beijing-based event, entitled “The Second International Forum on Democracy: Shared Human Values”, was attended by Li Shulei (李书磊), a politburo member and the current head of China’s Central Propaganda Department, and featured keynote speeches by a number of Chinese and foreign politicians and academics. Tsinghua University’s Yan Yilong (鄢一龙 ) was one of those taking part in this forum. His address is the focus of today’s post.
A big thank you to Daniel Crain for his parsing and translation of Yan’s speech.
SUMMARY
- Although the West will not admit it, China’s “whole-process people’s democracy” is not only true democracy at play, but is also a more functional type of democracy than that practised in Western countries.
- Chinese democracy outclasses Western democratic electoral systems because of the complex processes it has developed which have allowed it “to move closer towards ‘the people being the masters of their own house’.” Unlike in China, procedural rather than substantive democracy best defines what is now practised in the West.
- Chinese democracy recognises the existence of “the people” in its holistic sense. Only by doing so can one ensure the people’s “overall, long-term and fundamental interests”.
- Chinese democracy belongs to the majority, not to a minority as in the West. Unlike in America, China is not “owned by the 1%, governed by the 1% and for the benefit of the 1%”. Low voter turnout in election-based political systems is another reason why, unlike in China, electoral democracies are not able to represent the people as a whole.
- Western elections have become a “talent show”, where people vote for the best performer rather than for those who are best suited to govern.
- The general population does not have the specialist knowledge nor the long-term perspective required to elect competent representatives who have their nation’s best interests at heart.
- Chinese leaders are “tested through practice, not through votes”. Democracy in China thus ensures that “political amateurs with no experience or qualifications” cannot become its leaders.
- Unlike in the West, China’s political system allows democracy to be practised “at both the input and output levels.” It is a system in which people are able to “participate fully” and one in which officials serve the people and actually get things done.
- Western democracy encourages competition, confrontation and the fragmentation of interests, which leads to constant political bickering and deadlocks. Chinese democracy, in contrast, is a “consensus-finding process” that ensures that policymaking is always moving forwards with the country’s core objectives firmly in sight.
- Yan concludes: “Let the flower of democracy in China bloom even more colourfully, let the light of Chinese democracy shine even brighter, so that China can help mankind transcend its narrow, superficial and inferior view of democracy and contribute to the building of a better, higher quality [form of] democracy for humanity in the 21st century.”
CHINA AND THE WEST HAVE PROVIDED DIFFERENT ANSWERS TO THESE SIX QUESTIONS ON ‘DEMOCRACY’
Yan Yilong (鄢一龙 )
March 2023
“Democracy is the common pursuit of all humanity. As such, [it holds] a rightful significance in modern politics. Modern democracy does not adhere to a single standard. It is not a single unique flower. It takes multiple forms, [like] a hundred blooming flowers competing for attention [百花争艳]. The West has representative democracies centred on competitive elections, while China has a whole-process people’s democracy. These two types of democracy provide different answers to the [following] six questions on democracy.”
What is Democracy?
“The first question is: what is democracy? [Should we emphasise] its outward appearance [表相] or its substance [本体]? Aristotle once said that when one is trapped in a problem, it is as if one were bound by a rope and unable to move. In fact, a person trapped in narrow ideas can similarly be as unable to move as if they had been tied up with a rope. On the question of how to view democracy, what constrains the perception of many people in the world today is the view that representative democracy, centred on competitive elections, is the only form [表相] and only standard of modern democracy, when in fact it is but one of democracy’s [many possible] appearances [表相].”
“To understand what democracy is, we can use a concept from traditional Chinese philosophy —‘tixiangyong’ [体相用]: substance [本体], appearance [表相] and function [用途] [Note: Yan is referring to an idea found in the Confucian Analects and in Buddhist thought]. For example, the substance [本体] of a car implies that it must be a means of transport with a propulsion unit, a directional unit etc. At the same time, it comes in various shapes and sizes [表相], with different brand names and engine sizes. Its function [用途] is that it can carry people or goods, etc.”
“‘Tixiangyong [体相用]’ also applies to democracy. In terms of the substance [本体] of democracy, we have to go back to the original meaning of democracy, which is that the people are the masters of their own house [人民当家作主]. In other words, power should be in the hands of the people and, at the same time, should serve the people. The appearance [表相] of democracy refers to its various manifestations: democracy by lottery [i.e. sortition], democracy by election, democracy by consultation, direct democracy, indirect democracy and so on. In terms of its function [用途], democracy can be applied in different ways and is implemented by countries in order to improve the way they are governed.”
“Modern Western-style democracy is just one of the appearances [表相] that democracy can take on. Judging by democracy’s historical development, it [i.e. Western-style democracy] has departed far from its original meaning [本意] and substance [本体]. The Western concept of democracy has degenerated from ‘direct democracy [直接民主]’, to substantive democracy [实质民主], and finally to procedural democracy [程序民主]. Meanwhile, since the 1980s, there has been what the recently deceased Taiwanese political scientist Chu Yunhan labelled the problem of democratic deterioration [民主劣质化问题]. To see this narrow, superficial and inferior form of democracy as a beacon of democracy [民主灯塔] is like viewing a rattling old car [老爷车] that is in disrepair as the benchmark for the modern car, while regarding all other makes and models as not [even real] cars.”
“China’s ‘whole-process people’s democracy’ [全过程人民民主] has two qualifiers. The first one is ‘people’, which refers to the substance [本体] of democracy. ‘People’s democracy’ appears to be a tautology [同意反复]. In [the word] democracy, [the root demos] already signifies the people’ [人民], so why do we add the word ‘people’s’ [to people’s democracy] as a qualifier? It is precisely this qualifier that establishes the ontological [本体属性] nature of democracy: [it is something] which belongs to the people, to the majority, not to the minority. We [in China] guarantee this in our state system [国体], in our political system, and in the mechanisms we use to run our democracy [民主运行机制].”
“The second qualifier is ‘whole-process.’ Whole-process is defined based on the levels of appearance [相] and function [用]. Whole-process people’s democracy is a kind of complete chain consisting of multiple channels [多渠道], multiple levels [多层] and multiple settings [多场景]. Democratic [features] are implemented throughout this complete chain — from selecting and employing people, to decision-making, to management, to supervision. ‘Multi-channel’ refers to the Party’s mass line [群众路线], representation in the National People’s Congress [NPC], democratic decision-making in government, democratic management, consultation via the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference [CPPCC] and various other channels. ‘Multi-level’ refers to the central government level, local government level, grassroots democracy [基层民主], and so on. [Democracy] also comes in different forms [形式], elections being just one of these. Consultation, deliberation and selection [of talents] are all forms of democracy. ‘Multi-setting’ means applying [democracy] to different settings. There are major settings such as national-level governance and decision-making. There are also smaller-scale settings such as community governance, mediation of civil disputes and rural poverty alleviation [乡村扶贫].”
“Why does whole-process people’s democracy [全过程人民民主] seem so much more complex than competitive elections? This is because all [democratic] methods, forms and channels have their own limitations. [Employing] so many forms and methods maximises [our ability] to move closer towards ‘the people being the masters of their own house [人民当家作主]’ – the substance [本体] [of democracy].”
Who Does Democracy Belong to?
“The second question is: who does democracy belong to? Is it democracy for the majority or for the minority? Since Athens, the Western view of democracy has been that democracy does not belong to the majority. According to estimates, [Athenian] citizens [i.e. those who could vote], were probably only about one tenth of the total population. Women, foreigners and slaves were not considered citizens. In modern times, the push for universal suffrage in the West has been a long process. Although most countries today have achieved universal suffrage, this does not mean that democracy belongs to the majority: the people are essentially nothing more than voters. As [Giovanni] Sartori argues, from the perspective of modern Western democracy, the people are just specific individuals [who form] a majority [either] according to the principle of an absolute majority [绝大多数原则] or according to the principle of a limited majority [有限多数原则].”
“At the same time, one of the manifestations of Western democracy’s deterioration is declining voter turnout. Voter participation has been declining in presidential, parliamentary, and other types of elections. Statistics show that in 77 countries where a majority system was being used in the 1990s, voter turnout was only 60.4%. According to the simple majority-rule principle, a candidate can [therefore] be elected with just over 30% of the vote. This means that being elected does not equate to actually representing the [the will of] majority.”
“More importantly, although the people have the right to universal suffrage, voters are not familiar with the politicians themselves, but only with their personas as packaged by the media. [Furthermore,] voters have very little systematic understanding of specialist public policies, as they are more concerned with their [own] short-term interests. Such factors make it difficult for voters to make rational decisions. Since the general public has little say in public policy, the groups benefiting most from it remain a minority. That is why Joseph Stiglitz stated that America today is no longer owned by the people, governed by the people and for the benefit of the people. It is owned [he says] by the 1%, governed by the 1% and for the benefit of the 1%.”
“‘Whole-process people’s democracy’ [全过程人民民主] is a democracy that belongs to all the people. At the same time, the [word] ‘people [人民]’ contains several important meanings:”
- “First, [the concept of ‘the people’ points to] the individual. When we talk about the development of people’s livelihoods, solving people’s urgent needs and worries and guaranteeing people’s right to vote, we are referring to ‘the people’ in the sense of individuals.”
- “Second, [the concept of ‘the people’ points to] the vast majority of people [绝大多数人]. When we talk about this concept, we are always referring to this vast majority and we always have to be on the side of this majority. As the concept of ‘the people,’ has evolved, this category has come to include almost everyone. In legal interpretations, only counter-revolutionaries [反革命] and criminal offenders have been excluded from this category.”
- “Third, [the concept of ‘the people’ points to] the people as a whole [整体意义]. Western-style democracy does not recognise ‘the people’ in a holistic sense. However, it is only when we recognise the existence of the people as a whole that we can ensure their overall, long-term and fundamental interests. High-speed rail is one such example. China and the United States had the dream of high-speed rail at about the same time. In 2011, President Obama ambitiously proposed that its coverage should reach 80% of the population. Today, the US only has a few hundred kilometres of high-speed rail, while China has built 42,000 kilometres. This is a case where the interests of the people as a whole [人民整体] are reflected effectively. If [China] were like the US [and had to deal with the] fragmented interests of different political parties, different states, different businesses, different interest groups and different individuals, thereby disregarding the interests [of the people] as a whole, it would be very difficult to be effective in the development of public infrastructure [projects] that have highly [positive] externalities and [thus] reflect the interests of all.”
- “Fourth, [the concept of ‘the people’ points to] the middle and lower classes. This is related to the Communist Party of China’s primary purpose, whose core members [基本群众] are the working and peasant classes. [As such, the CPC’s] policies are tilted towards taking care of the lower and middle classes. We have just accomplished an impressive feat in the history of human poverty reduction by lifting nearly 100 million rural people out of poverty within a decade, [thereby] achieving an overall eradication of poverty among our rural population. Our next step is to continue to promote unremittingly common prosperity [共同富裕].”
Choosing Competent Leaders
“The third question is whether democracy chooses talents who are good at governing [治国人才] or talents who are good at putting on a show [作秀人才]? Western-style democracy, in which the leader of a country is elected primarily through competitive elections, poses the problem that certain businessmen, actors and other political amateurs with no experience or qualifications can become president. This is inconsistent with the basic logic of modern-day professional development. Almost all modern professions require a step-by-step process of advancement based on qualifications, competence, and performance. And yet, [Western-style democracy] assumes that a job of the utmost importance like the presidency can be achieved in one single step [一步登天] without climbing up the career ladder.”
“Another hypothesis, of course, is that the best people can be selected through the election process. However, the problem remains that those who are good at running for office may not be good at governing the country. There is a saying in the United States that politicians ‘campaign in poetry, but they govern in prose’. However, these two [skills] are not compatible. In these times where attention is king, one of the manifestations of democracy’s deterioration is that elections have become [like] a talent show; electoral competence has become the ability to perform in such a show [选举能力变成选秀能力]. Being good at raising money, setting issues, putting on a show, stirring up emotions and attracting attention is not the same as being good at governing a country.”
“Another indicator of democracy’s deterioration is the continued prevalence of party spoils [政党分赃] and rewards in politics [酬庸政治]. In the past, the US’s competitive electoral system had a party spoils system [政党分赃制]. Although this problem was subsequently addressed through various reforms of its civil service, in reality a [successful] election today still creates such spoils [战利品] that the winner then has the right to distribute. The US President has the authority to appoint around 7,000 government officials, of which only around 500 require the Senate’s approval. Overall, the appointment process is quite arbitrary. One can reward one’s friends, relatives or those who helped out during the election process. Trump frequently alerted officials on Twitter that they were fired. But, in fact, other presidents have also done the same thing. It is just that Trump brought this [practice] into the open.”
“‘The prime minister must first be a provincial official and renowned generals must rise up the ranks [宰相必起于州部,猛将必发于卒伍]’ [Note: Yan is quoting, Han Feizi, the 3rd century BC Warring States Period Legalist. The quote has been used on a number of occasions by Xi Jinping]. Officials in China’s ‘whole-process people’s democracy’ are mainly chosen through competitive selection [竞争性选拔]. In our country, many of our provinces have populations in the tens of millions or hundreds of millions, equivalent in size to the population of the world’s biggest countries. Ruling a province is thus equivalent to ruling a country. Before [being able] to join the Politburo Standing Committee, one has to familiarise oneself with local conditions first, followed by [China’s] national conditions. President Xi Jinping governed a village for 6 years, a county for 3 years, three cities for 11 years and three provinces for another 11 years. He was also trained in the party system, the administrative system, the National People’s Congress system and the military system, then moved on to the central government where he gained [an extra] five years of experience before finally becoming the country’s top leader.”
“[China’s] competitive selection system ensures that government officials have a wealth of practical experience. More importantly, [they] are tested through practice, not through votes. [They must go through] multiple layers of practice, testing, and selection before [they can] become leaders of our country. China’s competitive selection system is a way of picking a team of capable and professional national administrators.”
Combining the Input with the Output
“The fourth question is: is democracy a one-way or two-way street? Political democracy is essentially a discussion on the relationship between the people and their government. Democracy should be reflected both in the inputs of public opinion and in the outputs of government, which is at the service of the people. Western democracy, whether Athenian, classical or modern procedural democracy, emphasises the input side of democracy. [This is where] democracy allows the people to draw lots (i.e. sortition), vote and participate. Whether or not the government actually does things for the common people is outside the scope of [Western] democratic theory. This is due to [its emphasis on] the polity in its line of thought. Otherwise, it would not be able to distinguish democracy adequately from monarchy or aristocracy. In terms of democratic practice, this one-sided way of thinking about democracy can lead to an enormous error in our search for democracy. It allows for the election of a government that may completely deviate from the will of the people or simply that does not do anything substantial for them.”
“Chinese style democracy is a [type of] democracy that combines the input side with the output side. A very important aspect of traditional Chinese political philosophy is its people-centredness, the idea that government policies must be for the benefit of the people. In effect, this means understanding democracy from the output side. Today, the Communist Party of China’s philosophy of democracy comes up from the masses and goes back out to the masses [从群众中来到群众中去]. It comes from the people [来自人民], depends on the people [依靠人民] and is for the people [为了人民]. It means practising democracy at both the input and output levels. While emphasising that the people participate fully, it also stresses that government officials take the initiative in serving the people and doing things for them. For example, during the process of [rural] poverty reduction, we have seen countless party cadres going to live with the people in their villages and working with them to find solutions to their real-life problems. This is democracy in its most realistic form.”
Procedural vs Substantive Democracy
“The fifth question is: is democracy procedural or substantive? The classical theorists of Western democracy once put forward the theory of substantive democracy [实质民主]. However, today Western democracy is what Schumpeter called ‘modern procedural democracy [现代程序民主]’, where politicians compete for popular consent to rule through a specific electoral process. But even if this process is perfectly legal, it may result in a situation that is substantively pointless or even at odds [with its original aim]. For example, one indicator of the poor quality of American democracy is that the people have almost no influence on policy and that competitive elections are little more than a psychological placebo [心理上的安慰剂]. Another indicator is the prevalence of short-term and superficial politics, where politicians focus on short-term issues and the democratic system fails to address long-term, fundamental problems, such as poor infrastructure, massive income and wealth inequality, growing levels of government debt, shootings, racial conflict and other problems that limit America’s long-term development.”
“Chinese democracy is precisely the unification of procedural and substantive democracy, with procedural democracy placed in service of substantive democracy. The form in which popular sovereignty is realised is not through an empty social contract [虚拟的社会契约] that transforms power from a divine mandate [神授] to the people’s will [人民授予], but through an intermediary that acts as a stand-in for the people — the Communist Party of China. The CPC has become the highest form of organisation of the Chinese people and the highest expression of their will. Self-rule by the people through the intermediary of a stand-in [i.e. the party] is based on a subject-object dialectic relationship [主客辩证关系] between the party and the people. The two are both subject and object of the other. First of all, the people are the masters of the house [主人翁], while the party is the instrument for realising the people’s will [人民意志的工具]. The party’s policies must [therefore] come from the people and reflect the will and ideas of the people.”
“Next, the Party is the highest form of political leadership in China. It is the backbone of the people, while the people are its followers. The dialectical relationship between the people and the Party is the essence of China’s people’s democracy. The realisation of popular sovereignty [in China] lies precisely in this constant and close interaction between the people and the Party. Chinese style democracy is a closed tripartite cycle of public opinion [民意], democracy [民主] and the people’s livelihood [民生]. It is similar to the process of making [Chinese] hot pot. Public opinion is like the various condiments thrown into the hot pot. The democratic process is the process of cooking the hot pot. And finally, since democracy must solve the problems associated with people’s livelihoods [民生问题], this hot pot must be brought out and served for everyone to enjoy. This is true democracy. Major policies in China, including [those from] the recently-concluded two sessions, comprise a large number of issues relating to people’s livelihoods. And when we go out to various places to conduct research and investigate, we see that every year the government has a list of practical matters relating to people’s livelihoods that needs to be dealt with.”
Stoking Divisions vs Consensus-building
“The sixth question is: does democracy seek to build consensus or stoke divisions? Western-style democracy was originally a mechanism to find a compromise [between divergent] interests and ideas. Competitive elections provided a mechanism for temporary compromise between different competing factions. At the same time, many coordination mechanisms were put in place, based on a system of the separation of powers and of checks and balances. However, one manifestation of the deterioration of [Western] democracy that we have observed in recent years has been the increasing difficulty for it to bridge such divides [弥合分裂]. The first indicator of this is the prevalence of veto politics, where decision-making processes are riddled with veto points and [politicians] veto simply for the sake of vetoing, engage in fruitless discussions, make decisions without implementing them, argue endlessly over a single policy issue, and often find themselves stuck in a political deadlock.”
“The second indicator of this is the polarisation of party ideologies. Previously, it was thought that the two-party system would converge towards the centre and would strive to win over median voters. But political developments in the US in recent years have shown that polarising ideological struggles and conflicts between the two parties are becoming increasingly pronounced.”
“The third indicator is the problem of policy flip-flopping [政策翻烧饼] when different political parties take power. As [George] Washington pointed out in his day, party politics is merely the temporary domination of one faction over another. It is a dictatorship taken in turns [轮流的专政]. Today, this problem is even more pronounced. Change in political parties [at the top] has resulted in policies constantly shifting back and forth between left and right. When George Bush Jr. pursued his ABC (anything but Clinton) policy, this meant doing anything but what Bill Clinton had been doing. After Trump [took office], he completely reversed Obama’s policies. Biden has [likewise] reversed most of Trump’s policies.”
“Chinese democratic politics is a consensus-finding process. Although China’s 1.4 billion people have diverse interests and ideas, [they are] unanimous about the general direction of pursuing national rejuvenation and people’s happiness. The relationship between the Communist Party of China and [China’s] democratic parties is not a competitive or confrontational one. Rather, it is a collaborative relationship, in which different actors take part and provide their opinions in the policy-making process, but do not act as veto players. The goal is not to restrain, but to make policies better. Through democratic discussions and consultations, different groups [seek to] find the greatest common divisor and sketch out concentric circles [同心圆]. A change of leadership is not about flip-flopping [翻烧饼], but about the passing of a relay baton [接力棒]. One after the other, successive governments continue to run forward and get things done. This has enabled us to persist in advancing the goal of socialist modernisation throughout our 100-year history.”
Conclusion
“‘A single flower does not make spring, while one hundred flowers in full bloom bring spring to the garden [一花独放不是春,百花齐放春满园].’ (Note: Xi Jinping has used this Ming Dynasty aphorism in several of his speeches.) In [humanity’s] search for democracy, different nations and ethnic groups will provide their own answers. They do not need to copy the so-called standard answer from the West. By comparing [democratic systems] with one another, [we] are certainly not trying to show that China’s whole-process people’s democracy is perfect. Chinese-style democracy still faces numerous challenges and has many shortcomings. However, we must start by strengthening our confidence in our system. As Marx said in his day, ‘Here is the rose, here dance!’. At the same time, we must continuously advance the construction of [our] whole-process people’s democracy. We must unceasingly raise our level of democracy and its quality. Let the flower of democracy in China bloom even more colourfully, let the light of Chinese democracy shine even brighter, so that China can help mankind transcend its narrow, superficial and inferior view of democracy and contribute to the building of a better, higher quality [form of] democracy for humanity in the 21st century.”
Biden’s historic geopolitical mistake
The US can easily print another $ 300T and then distribute each American $ 100k to spend so that the US GDP can increase by 50%. Why does the US keep taking about the fake US debt issues to fool the world?
Don’t bet against it. America will print and prints and print it will create money without basis and backed by only word of the mouth trust. US dollar is a fake and a fiat currency. The U.S. debt is a time bomb that cast a long shadow on the real America.
To me the US economy is a dud and it is one humongous Ponzi scheme. From 2012–2022 a mere decade the U.S. debt increased from 10 trillion to 31.4 trillion today. Bush, Clinton, Obama Trump and Biden has released close to 20 trillion dollars into their economy of basically Monopoly money. That is haunting them with high inflation now.
China shocked me in Chongqing!
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