World News Thread & Breaking News!!

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
The Worm is more or less safe. He's not just playing up propaganda for abroad he's distracting the locals to, who are being made to see a confident Kim on there screens shooting hoops with a group of aging basketball players, and not the insecure Jr. Dictator who is sending hundreds to the labor camps and being put before firing squads using antiaircraft cannons (the most likely form of execution for Kim's uncle. Although it does lack the poetic flourish of wild dogs.)
Rodman is doing Kim a service he's playing the Beautiful scantily clad as Magician's assistant who's costumes neck line and bikini line keeps everyone's eyes so they don't notice that despite what it appears the person who the Astounding Kim Jung Un just chained, locked and then impaled in the magic box was infact someone completely different and who never actually escaped and is dying.
 

solarz

Brigadier
IMHO, Rodman is playing with fire.

He gets a lot of...shall we say...personal favors, when he is in North Korea.

But he is befriending a mad man who at any time might take slight to something Rodman says. At that point Rodman could well turn into the next meal for Kim Jon Un's dogs like Kim's uncle did.

Crazy...even Rodman's "team," beating the North Koreans could set him off.

A Chinese proverb comes to mind: "Being close to the Emperor is like being close to a tiger."

Kim is not crazy, but I agree with what you said. However, I'm sure the games would be pre-arranged to end in ties. Every time.
 

no_name

Colonel
A Chinese proverb comes to mind: "Being close to the Emperor is like being close to a tiger."

Kim is not crazy, but I agree with what you said. However, I'm sure the games would be pre-arranged to end in ties. Every time.

A lot of leaders are not crazy nor unpredictable, they just couldn't care less if they screwed someone up along the way.
 

shen

Senior Member
First, the big water fight between the Japanese and Taiwanese coast guard ships. Now China and Japan are in conflict over who is the real Voldemort. I nominate this is as the most childish border conflict in the world.
The video of the interview of ambassadors is worth watching.

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solarz

Brigadier
First, the big water fight between the Japanese and Taiwanese coast guard ships. Now China and Japan are in conflict over who is the real Voldemort. I nominate this is as the most childish border conflict in the world.
The video of the interview of ambassadors is worth watching.

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Talking about beating a metaphor to death.

Besides, Japanese militarism is nothing like Voldemort. Instead, it's like the One Ring, seducing the Japanese people with the promise of power and glory, and Abe is like Saruman.

Now where's Frodo when you need him?
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
First, the big water fight between the Japanese and Taiwanese coast guard ships. Now China and Japan are in conflict over who is the real Voldemort. I nominate this is as the most childish border conflict in the world.
The video of the interview of ambassadors is worth watching.

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I was quite impressed with the performance of the Chinese ambassador, who gave the impression of being very earnest, open and approachable, and presented China's case quite well.

The Japanese ambassador in contrast seemed extremely defensive, arrogant and even confrontational and at times it looked like he was looking past Jeremy and almost on the verge of called China's ambassador out for a fistfight or something.
 

shen

Senior Member
Now where's Frodo when you need him?

found him!
XzGHdjw.jpg
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Quite possibly the ancient Greeks were the first mobile grillers for picnics and possibly tailgaters. ;)

souvlaki-tray.jpg1389199173


mycenae-souvlaki.jpg1389199351


CHICAGO — The ancient Mycenaeans have a reputation as palace-builders and warriors, but they were also quite sophisticated cooks. More than 3,000 years ago, they used portable grill pits to make souvlaki and non-stick pans to make bread, new cooking experiments suggest.

The Mycenaean civilization, which was the backdrop for Homer's "Odyssey" and "Iliad," thrived in Greece during the late Bronze Age from around 1700 B.C. until the society mysteriously collapsed around 1200 B.C. The Mycenaeans left behind amazing palaces and gold-littered tombs at sites like Pylos and Mycenae, but in these places, archaeologists also have found less glamorous artifacts, such as souvlaki trays and griddles made from gritty clays.

It wasn't clear how these two types of pans were used, said Julie Hruby of Dartmouth College, presenting her research at the Archaeological Institute of America's annual meeting here on Saturday (Jan. 4). [The 7 Most Mysterious Archaeological Finds on Earth]

"We don't have any recipes," Hruby told LiveScience. "What we do have are tablets that talk about provisions for feasts, so we have some idea of what the ingredients might have been, but in terms of understanding how people cooked, the cooking pots are really our best bet."

The souvlaki trays were rectangular ceramic pans that sat underneath skewers of meat. Scientists weren't sure whether these trays would have been placed directly over a fire, catching fat drippings from the meat, or if the pans would have held hot coals like a portable barbeque pit. The round griddles, meanwhile, had one smooth side and one side covered with tiny holes, and archaeologists have debated which side would have been facing up during cooking.

To solve these culinary mysteries, Hruby and ceramicist Connie Podleski, of the Oregon College of Art and Craft, mixed American clays to mimic Mycenaean clay and created two griddles and two souvlaki trays in the ancient style. With their replica coarsewares, they tried to cook meat and bread.

Researchers tested two possible ways Mycenaean ceramic pans would have been used to cook meat. The o …
Hruby and Podleski found that the souvlaki trays were too thick to transfer heat when placed over a fire pit, resulting in a pretty raw meal; placing the coals inside the tray was a much more effective cooking method.

"We should probably envision these as portable cooking devices — perhaps used during Mycenaean picnics," Hruby said.

As for the griddles, bread was more likely to stick when it was cooked on the smooth side of the pan. The holes, however, seemed to be an ancient non-sticking technology, ensuring that oil spread quite evenly over the griddle.

Lowly cooking pots were often overlooked, or even thrown out, during early excavations at Mycenaean sites in the 20th century, but researchers are starting to pay more attention to these vessels to glean a full picture of ancient lifestyles.

As for who was using the souvlaki trays and griddles, Hruby says it was likely chefs cooking for the Mycenaean ruling class.

"They're coming from elite structures, but I doubt very much that the elites were doing their own cooking," Hruby told LiveScience. "There are cooks mentioned in the Linear B [a Mycenaean syllabic script] record who have that as a profession — that's their job — so we should envision professional cooks using these.

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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
IMO that's not news ^^^. Just a history lesson.

This is news..

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Schools and businesses closed, grocery stores sold out of bottled water, and legislators canceled business after a chemical spill in the Elk River in Charleston affected about 300,000 people and shut down much of the city and surrounding counties.

The federal government joined the state early Friday in declaring a disaster. In requesting the federal disaster declaration, state officials said about 100,000 customers, or roughly 300,000 people total, were affected.

After the Thursday spill, Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin ordered customers of West Virginia American Water not to drink, bathe, cook or wash clothes with tap water.

The state National Guard planned to distribute bottled drinking water to emergency services agencies in the nine affected counties.

The cause and extent of the spill remain unclear. Officials say the orders were issued as a precaution.
 
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