Welcome to Saturday's Potluck - 9-17-2022

“Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist.”
Pablo Picasso

This week one of my projects was determining what to do with the growing number of mushrooms appearing amongst the coppiced black locust grove I started a few years ago for firewood and fence posts.

SOE prince b.JPG

After checking with Audubon Guide to North American Mushrooms and Mushrooms Demystified it appears they are Prince mushrooms. Double checked a few youtube videos for additional pictures and a spore print. Never too careful with mushrooms. Taste test successful. Another flavorful perennial added to the landscape.

SOE Prince.JPG

Slowly the year around the food sources are taking place. This next week a few frost sensitive vegetables and herbs will be dug up for potting to add fresh flavor for meals cooked throughout the winter.

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The world is a changing.

‘Samarkand Spirit’ to be driven by ‘responsible powers’ Russia and China The Cradle by Pepe Escobar Sept 16, 2022

Fast forward to an Op-Ed by Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev published ahead of the SCO summit, where he stresses how Samarkand now “can become a platform that is able to unite and reconcile states with various foreign policy priorities.”

After all, historically, the world from the point of view of the Silk Road landmark has always been “perceived as one and indivisible, not divided. This is the essence of a unique phenomenon – the ‘Samarkand spirit’.”

And here Mirziyoyev ties the “Samarkand Spirit” to the original SCO “Shanghai Spirit” established in early 2001, a few months before the events of September 11, when the world was forced into strife and endless war, almost overnight.

All these years, the culture of the SCO has been evolving in a distinctive Chinese way. Initially, the Shanghai Five were focused on fighting terrorism – months before the US war of terror (italics mine) metastasized from Afghanistan to Iraq and beyond.

Over the years, the initial “three no’s” – no alliance, no confrontation, no targeting any third party – ended up equipping a fast, hybrid vehicle whose ‘four wheels’ are ‘politics, security, economy, and humanities,’ complete with a Global Development Initiative, all of which contrast sharply with the priorities of a hegemonic, confrontational west.

Arguably the biggest takeaway of this week’s Samarkand summit is that Chinese President Xi Jinping presented China and Russia, together, as “responsible global powers” bent on securing the emergence of multipolarity, and refusing the arbitrary “order” imposed by the United States and its unipolar worldview.
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The increasing Russia-China-Iran interpolation – the three top drivers of Eurasia integration – scares the hell out of the usual suspects, who may be starting to grasp how the SCO represents, in the long run, a serious challenge to their geoeconomic game. So, as every grain of sand in every Heartland desert is already aware, the geopolitical pressure against the trio will increase exponentially.
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Putin’s bilateral with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi could not have been more cordial – on a “very special friendship” register – with Modi calling for serious solutions to the food and fuel crises, actually addressing the west. Meanwhile, the State Bank of India will be opening special rupee accounts to handle Russia-related trade.
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Samarkand also gave an extra impulse to integration along the Russian-conceptualized Greater Eurasia Partnership – which includes the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) – and that, just two weeks after the game-changing Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) held in Vladivostok, on Russia’s strategic Pacific coast.

Moscow’s priority at the EAEU is to implement a union-state with Belarus (which looks bound to become a new SCO member before 2024), side-by-side with closer integration with the BRI. Serbia, Singapore and Iran have trade agreements with the EAEU too.
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Successes are already notable: from Russia and Iran introducing direct settlements in rubles and rials, to Russia and China increasing their trade in rubles and yuan to 20 percent – and counting. An Eastern Commodity Exchange may be soon established in Vladivostok to facilitate trade in futures and derivatives with the Asia-Pacific.
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Russia, even more than China, knows that the usual suspects are going for broke. In 2022 alone, there was a failed coup in Kazakhstan in January; troubles in Badakhshan, in Tajikistan, in May; troubles in Karakalpakstan in Uzbekistan in June; the non-stop border clashes between Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan (both presidents, in Samarkand, at least agreed on a ceasefire and to remove troops from their borders).

And then there is recently-liberated Afghanistan – with no less than 11 provinces crisscrossed by ISIS-Khorasan and its Tajik and Uzbek associates. Thousands of would-be Heartland jihadis have made the trip to Idlib in Syria and then back to Afghanistan – ‘encouraged’ by the usual suspects, who will use every trick under the sun to harass and ‘isolate’ Russia from Central Asia.

So Russia and China should be ready to be involved in a sort of immensely complex, rolling Great Game 2.0 on steroids, with the US/NATO fighting united Eurasia and Turkiye in the middle.

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Is Australia becoming a major defensive position for the United States?

Australia wants B-21 stealth bombers to check China Asia Times Sept 12, 2012

In a seeming prelude to basing strategic bombers in Australia, this July the US deployed B-2 bombers as a part of “enhanced air cooperation through the rotational deployment of US aircraft of all types in Australia and appropriate aircraft training and exercises,” the Australian Department of Defense said to leading defense publication Janes.

The US move may reflect the capability gap caused by its decision to end its continuous bomber presence on Guam, with the US Air Force noting in April 2020 that it will no longer base strategic bombers outside the continental US.

The US Air Force decided to change its bomber force posture in favor of a “dynamic force employment” model that allows its bombers to operate from a “broader array of overseas locations”, as noted by the Air and Space Magazine.

However, a more plausible concern is that Guam has already become too vulnerable to Chinese and North Korean missile threats, which puts US strategic bombers on the island at risk.
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The US may thus be looking at Australia as an alternative basing area for its bombers. By selling extra B-21s to Australia, the US can also lower production costs for the aircraft, notes senior defense analyst Peter Suciu in an article for 1945.

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Always interested in the opinions formed by others from various backgrounds regarding China. It is a complex situation with extreme input by the United States over the past decades.

Avoiding conflict and begging for peace will lead to Taiwan Strait war Taiwan News by Shih Ming-te Sept 15, 2022
Shih Ming-te (施明德) was born in 1941. He served as the Democratic Progressive Party Chairman from 1994-1996.

China’s claims are just as absurd and ridiculous.

A little bit of reading about Taiwan’s history will show that the first countries to occupy and exercise sovereignty over Taiwan were the Netherlands and Spain, not China. Where does this idea that Taiwan has belonged to China since ancient times and is an “indivisible” part of China come from?

The tragedy of Taiwan is that for nearly 400 years, it has been continuously occupied by the Netherlands, Spain, the Ming Dynasty-pirate Koxinga, the Qing Empire, the Japanese Empire, and the government of the Republic of China, which have all established regimes on this beautiful island.

It was not until Taiwanese activists made the nation a democracy more than 30 years ago that nearly four hundred years of foreign colonial rule came to an end.

The Republic of China has undergone quantitative and qualitative changes that took root in Taiwan. Taiwan belongs only to the current 23 million Taiwanese, with no distinction of personal wealth or regard as to who came first.

Taiwan has not been a part of China since ancient times, let alone a part of the People’s Republic of China, which has never ruled Taiwan for even a minute or a second! To be more specific: China is only a part of Taiwan's history, and China is only one of many foreign colonial powers.
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Thus, Taiwan should form a new branch of the military: the police force. This force would be ten times larger than the regular military.

By turning a police station into a company during a battle, one precinct would become a battalion.

These police officers should receive various levels of training, including officer training. Let them be both part of the police and military, so they can also enjoy the benefits of being a soldier.

Wartime militias should be well organized and trained in peacetime. This would let China know: Bring it on!
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I am a rebel who has fought against dictatorship and foreign invasion at all costs throughout my life. My life has proven this—I'm not just repeating a slogan.

I am a staunch pacifist and an advocate for reconciliation. People like me cannot tolerate dictatorships and violent invasions.

May the Chinese think deeply.

May the Taiwanese have resolve.

I always get the sense from this author China should just comply without complaint the demands of the collective West.

Why China can’t let go of Taiwan Asia Times by Francesco Sisci Sept 1, 2022
Francesco Sisci is an Italian sineologist living in Beijing.

That identity arises at the intersection of imperial legacies, Western territorial ambitions and conceptions, and unarticulated practical considerations about the country’s security.

From Beijing’s perspective, the argument is as follows. Han people make up some 95% of the Chinese population. However, about half of China’s present territory used to belong to minorities: Mongols, Tibetans, and Uighurs (although now Han are the majority even there).

If Taiwan, claimed by China and with a Han majority, is allowed independence, why can’t Mongols, Tibetans and Uighurs have their independence? There are no easy answers.

That is, giving up on Taiwan would push Beijing into a corner. Either it should grant massive concessions at home, or it would have to redefine what is “China”, which is also very complicated.
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Still, realistically, foreigners are fed up with China and being entangled in its real or alleged presumptuous and unfathomable difficulties. Therefore, they’ll go for shortcuts.

Knowing the difficulties and with vested interests in keeping its present borders and claims, China will argue for the status quo and against the “adventurism” of foreign-suggested shortcuts.

Foreigners will then be torn between shortcuts and passive acceptance of the Chinese position. The possible answer is what is arguably happening now – the drifting of Western policies away from China’s standpoint (as is happening with Taiwan). This drift is almost parallel to Chinese drifting “expansion” on Hong Kong and the South China Sea.
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In the meantime, besides geography, the political economy knocks at the door. China has a relatively closed economic and internal political system. It can sell and invest relatively freely abroad but foreigners are not free to do the same in China.

Of course, this difference creates imbalances that grow with the size of the trade. Also, because of a drastic contraction of its domestic consumption, China may end this year with a whopping US$1 trillion trade surplus. This money comes basically all from G7 countries.

There is then a situation similar to the times before the Opium Wars, exactly 200 years ago, when China was a massive exporter and a minimal importer. Such a situation can be tolerated for a short time; it’s unsustainable for a long time.

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For the next few weeks until the end of irrigation and harvest season my time and energy is limited. The table is set with the main dish - salads and deserts are up to C99 members - have fun.

What is on your mind today?

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Comments

QMS's picture

Regarding the mushroom piece .. a new type of leather is being made.

Mushroom leather: How fungi became fashionable

So, the term “mushroom leather” is actually a misnomer. Mushrooms are the fleshy body of a fungus—the cap, stalk, and gills—that pops above ground. But when it comes to leather imitations, it’s the roots that matter.

For years now, researchers have been touting mycelium as a miracle material. The thread-like filaments that form the root structure of fungi can be engineered to replace styrofoam, plastic, home insulation, and other substrates choking the planet.

https://qz.com/mushroom-leather-how-fungi-became-fashionable-1849446383

~

Regarding China manufacturing .. China and the Lore of American Manufacturing

Tim-Ryan-China.jpg

In the Ohio Senate race, Democrat Tim Ryan released a campaign ad blaming “Communist China” for job losses and the decline of the state’s middle class.

And who sent those jobs to China? Now they are the enemy Wink

https://www.newyorker.com/news/dispatch/china-and-the-lore-of-american-m...

~

US Senate picks up where Pelosi left off on Taiwan

Taiwan Policy Act of 2022 is latest provocation that if passed would bring US and China one step closer to a disastrous conflict

In addition to providing Taiwan with US$4.5 billion in security assistance over the next four years, the bill would “establish a comprehensive training program with the Government of Taiwan.”

Another military based diplomatic reaction.

https://asiatimes.com/2022/09/us-senate-picks-up-where-pelosi-left-off-o...

Thanks for the potluck. I'll take pot stickers for $200. Wink

Enjoy your day!

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question everything

Granma's picture

Finally giving you clean air?
Congratulations on the volunteer mushrooms. That's a nice kind of surprise.
How are all your critters doing?

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snoopydawg's picture

Burning Man's Blackrock city seen from space

Awesome photos from days before and after the event including the huge sandstorms that hit it. While I have no interest in going to the event I check in with it yearly just to see what happened.

Lots of people flew in on tiny planes and I’m not sure I’d feel comfortable flying out after the sandstorms.

Sam either learned to speak Martian or she just remembered that she likes getting my socks for me. Never a dull moment with her that’s for sure.

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The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists.
~Hannah Arendt

trading partner. There is a significant Chinese ex-pat or work visa Chinese population in Australia.
Is there anything the Aussies won't do to show their obedience to the US?

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

I once ate mushrooms constantly. Then, all at once, I just lost my taste for them. It is a fact our taste buds change every 7 years or so.
Glad you survived the taste test!
I have pals who set up a hydroponic system inside their spare bedroom. They mostly grow lettuce, several varieties, snap off leaves and head to the kitchen to prepare their daily salads.
We are going to figure something out with gardening. No amount of watering can compensate for the brutal heat of the sun.
My attempt to grow peaches was a roaring success, until it just went to shit. Year after year, the trees would be covered with blooms. Then, March winds would blow every bloom off the tree. After 3 straight years of 2 large trees bearing no fruit, or maybe one peach, I cut them down, planted something else.
I hope your irrigation is going according to Hoyle, and that you plan on preparing a steak, adding oil, butter, red wine, and mushrooms, for a marvelous entree'. Your very special treat!

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

soryang's picture

There is then a situation similar to the times before the Opium Wars, exactly 200 years ago, when China was a massive exporter and a minimal importer. Such a situation can be tolerated for a short time; it’s unsustainable for a long time.

What is the west going to do? Sell them dope and force foreign concessions on China? I'm sick of the patent "gunboat diplomacy" and grand chessboard divide and conquer scheming by the Anglo-Americans. US, UK and Japan want Taiwan within their sphere of influence; they can't accept the status quo which is too ambiguous. "You wit us or agin us," as the New American Century outlook goes. I don't agree that Chinese industrial and trade prowess is unstainable. It is simply that the west in its arrogance can't accept its relatively declining power.

How's that AUKUS thing going?

AUKUS submarines: A burden too big for overloaded U.S. shipyards
Rear admiral says more work would be 'detrimental' to overstretched industry

TOKYO -- A senior U.S. Navy official has expressed concern that assisting Australia in acquiring nuclear-powered submarines may be too much of a burden for America's overstretched nuclear shipyards.

During a webinar at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies last week, U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Scott Pappano, program executive officer for strategic submarines, was asked if an arrangement under AUKUS to help Canberra acquire nuclear submarines could chip away at or pose a risk to America's own submarine plans.

"If you are asking my opinion, if we were going to add additional submarine construction to our industrial base, that would be detrimental to us right now, without significant investment to provide additional capacity, capability to do that," Pappano replied. He said the same goes for the U.K.

https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics/International-relations/Indo-Pacific/AU...

S. Korean president invites Xi to Seoul amid power game over who's visiting whom

President Yoon Suk-yeol on Friday invited Chinese President Xi Jinping to South Korea during his meeting with Li Zhanshu, China's third-most-powerful official and chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, in what appears to be a tug-of-war between the two countries' leaders over who will visit whom first.

According to the presidential office, Yoon had a meeting with Li, who arrived in Seoul on Thursday for a three-day visit, and told the chairman that "President Xi's visit (to South Korea) will be a cornerstone for the next 30 years of South Korea-China relations."

Li responded that he would pass on the invitation to Xi, but added he expects "President Yoon to visit China at his time of convenience."

https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2022/09/120_336189.html

This is another putdown of Pelosi while Yoon's foreign policy advisors try to steer a middle course. Will the US allow it?

China and South Korea had already agreed to establish a committee to mitigate adverse trade consequences of public health quarantines and US attempts (Chips 4 and IRA legislation) to circumscribe the high tech supply chains. South Korea and China both would like to avoid trade and supply chain disruptions.

See- S. Korea, China decide to establish supply chain council
Posted August. 29, 2022 Donga Ilbo English translation (AI)
https://www.donga.com/en/article/all/20220829/3602017/1

(The translation is better than Google translate, but still not good enough)

On a lighter note: I went to Taiwan once long ago, and had the good fortune to visit the National Museum there where all the artifacts Chiang stole from the mainland were. I was fascinated with the "oracle bones." The oldest were about 3500 years old. These bones have a role in Korean history, as well, or the custom does, as prominent Korean families, nobility, were known as "sacred bone" or "true bone." Life events like marriages, births, and deaths would be recorded on these turtle shells or cow scapulae commemorating associated ceremonies or rituals. In any case, there is a computer scientist/linguist I heard about somehow. He has what he claims is the most extensive data base of Chinese etymology. Anyone can use it. I know some people don't like this guy, "Uncle Hanzi," but he's obviously some kind of genius.

South Koreans use a lot of Chinese related vocabulary. Sometimes I like or need to translate a four character Chinese aphorism the Koreans use once in a while to understand the speaker's message. If I can't find the meaning in endic.naver.com, I could go to Uncle Hanzi's data base to find out the meaning.

There is a picture of an oracle bone there:
https://hanziyuan.net/#home

Love the OST theme from Empress Ki, perhaps the most dazzling Korean historical drama series ever made. A young girl shipped off as tribute to the Yuan dynasty emperor, becomes Empress of China.

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語必忠信 行必正直

This pretty well sums up the situation in Ukraine.

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I would love to have a crop of mushrooms. They are good for you (the non-poisonous ones Smile )

Here are some their health benefits:

1. Decrease the risk of cancer
A review of 17 cancer studies from 1966 to 2020 shows that eating just 18 grams of mushrooms (equal to about a 1/8-cup or two medium mushrooms) a day may lower your risk of cancer by as much as 45%. Mushrooms are a powerful source of ergothioneine, an amino acid and antioxidant that prevents or slows cellular damage.

Some mushroom varieties (such as shiitake, oyster, maitake and king oyster) have higher amounts of ergothioneine. But researchers found that incorporating any variety of mushrooms into your daily diet will lower your risk of cancer.

2. Lower sodium intake
Sodium and high blood pressure often go hand in hand. Sodium causes the body to retain excess fluid, which can increase blood pressure. To decrease your sodium intake, consider adding mushrooms to your meals.

Mushrooms are naturally low in sodium – an entire cup of white button mushrooms has just five milligrams of sodium. They offer savory flavor that reduces the need for added salt to keep your blood pressure low. A study from the Culinary Institute of American and UC Davis shows that swapping half of the meat for mushrooms in a traditional ground beef recipe can maintain flavor while reducing sodium intake by 25%.

3. Promote lower cholesterol
Mushrooms make an excellent substitute for red meat while minimizing calories, fat and cholesterol. Research shows that shiitake mushrooms, in particular, help to keep cholesterol levels low. They contain compounds that inhibit the production of cholesterol, block cholesterol from being absorbed and lower the overall amount of cholesterol in your blood.

4. Protect brain health
Researchers continue to study the effects of eating mushrooms on mild cognitive impairment (MCI). MCI causes memory and language difficulties and is often a precursor to Alzheimer’s disease.

In a study in Singapore, participants who ate more than two cups of mushrooms a week had a 50% lower risk of developing MCI. Even those who ate only one cup saw some benefit. The mushrooms eaten by participants included golden, oyster, shiitake and white button mushrooms.

5. Provide a source of vitamin D
Vitamin D helps your body absorb calcium to maintain and build strong bones. Many people rely on supplements or sunshine to get vitamin D, but if you’re looking to get this nutrient through your diet, mushrooms may be the answer. They are the only type of produce that is a source of vitamin D.

Like humans, certain mushrooms exposed to UV light or sunlight can increase their vitamin D amounts. White button, portabella and cremini mushrooms provide the most vitamin D after exposure to UV light or sunlight. To get the recommended daily amount, slice three mushrooms (or one portabella), expose them to sunlight for at least 15 minutes and enjoy. Eating a little more than one cup of maitake mushrooms achieves the same goal without the need for sun exposure.

6. Stimulate a healthier gut
The microbiome in your gut is home to organisms and bacteria that play a large role in your health and mood. One way to keep your gut healthy is to stimulate the growth of healthy bacteria in that space with the use of prebiotics, such as mushrooms.

Research shows that mushroom polysaccharides, their most abundant carbohydrate, stimulate the growth of healthy bacteria. While many foods break down with stomach acid, the polysaccharides found in mushrooms pass through the stomach unchanged and can reach the colon to encourage bacteria growth there.

7. Support a healthy immune system
Mushrooms contain macronutrients that support a healthy immune system. According to the Mushroom Council, your immune system will benefit from mushrooms whose nutrients include:

Selenium, which helps your body make antioxidant enzymes to prevent cell damage. Choose cremini or portabella mushrooms for the most benefit.
Vitamin D, which assists with cell growth, boosts immune function and reduces inflammation. Maitake mushrooms offer an easy way to add vitamin D to your diet.
Vitamin B6, which helps your body form red blood cells, proteins and DNA. Shiitake mushrooms are the best choice for vitamin B6.

https://connect.uclahealth.org/2022/01/24/7-health-benefits-of-mushrooms/

Thanks for the OT

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enhydra lutris's picture

about the whole Taiwan has never been part of china thing is that Chiang Kai-shek's dictatorship was technically "Chinese" and when he died, things loosened up a bit, but the place was pretty much still run by the KMT, which is "Chinese". As recently as 2008, the biggest and most powerful party in Taiwan was the KMT, which has been Chinese since Sun Yat Sen founded it in the 1890s.

be well and have a good one

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

dystopian's picture

Hi all, Hey SoE! Hope all are well!

Congrats on the shrooms. You are braver than I. Lots of people are really good at ID'ing them. Not me, I know just enough to be scared. My wee understanding is that spore prints rule. Wink Good work! I have heard they are great detoxifiers, besides all the other benefits. I eat the store ones all the time. Did grow some a long long time ago, the feed your head type, that got rave 5-star reviews. Wink

I have some cheap (penny) old stamps that are from 'Formosa'. They have lots of endemism when it comes to their natural history. The Formosan Blue Magpie some say is one of the prettiest birds in the world when seen in the sun. Around 30 sps. of endemic birds, which is a bit higher than the mid-20's of each Jamaica, Puerto Rico, and Cuba. It has major firefly diversity, 60+ species, one of the top spots in the world! On a little island! It has an endemic Fir tree too. I used to get cultured zoanthid polyps (a soft coral) from there, they were stunning beautiful.

I hope they can sort their stuff out there at the table, said the pacifist and optimist.

Thanks for the OT SoE,

Take care all!

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We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein

my 3 sins: Wisteria, Morning Glories, Mexican Petunias. I bought the petunias from a store just starting in business, wanted to help my friend. We had a spectacular wisteria in down town when I was a child. Sigh...I had planted Morning Glories at my parents house to show off a brick wall aside their driveway. None of the sinful flowers stayed where they were planted. Initially, they simply spread where I had not intended. Over time, they choked out other growth. I started my penance by yanking up the petunias by the roots, had gotten them in a good place. Then, the wisterias started showing up everywhere! I have clipped, yanked, dug, and have made progress.
Now, here we go with the damn Morning Glories. I had been warned by Dear One they would choke out other flowers, or flowing bushes. Pshaw, I declared! Well, in all these years of being harmless, so far, they almost bent over a 6 ft. high Esperanza, and almost smothered an entire bed of salvias.
I am lashing myself with Morning Glories, although Dear One rubbing it in that he was right, I was way, way wrong, is punishment enough.
China: I loved China. However, I am not "in love" with China. I do agree with their position on Taiwan, do not agree with their surveillance and social credit system, any more than I agree with ours.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

implemented.

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Visiting Armenia and Georgia, I figured WWIII would start in Georgia. I think I will stand corrected as things shake out. Irony: Armenia is the first Christian nation ever.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981