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The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. Mildly interesting

Mildly interesting

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
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  • RenaudaR Offline
    RenaudaR Offline
    Renauda
    wrote on last edited by Renauda
    #2854

    For the adventurous gourmet cooks here or those interested in a wholly different trip:

    Every year, doctors at a hospital in the Yunnan Province of China brace themselves for an influx of people with an unusual complaint. The patients come with a strikingly odd symptom: visions of pint-sized, elf-like figures – marching under doors, crawling up walls and clinging to furniture.

    The hospital treats hundreds of these cases every year. All share a common culprit: Lanmaoa asiatica, a type of mushroom that forms symbiotic relationships with pine trees in nearby forests and is a locally popular food, known for its savory, umami-packed flavor. In Yunnan, L. asiatica is sold in markets, it appears on restaurant menus and is served at home during peak mushroom season between June and August.

    One must be careful to cook it thoroughly, though, otherwise the hallucinations will set in.

    https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260121-the-mysterious-mushroom-that-makes-you-see-tiny-people

    RenaudaR 1 Reply Last reply
    • RenaudaR Renauda

      For the adventurous gourmet cooks here or those interested in a wholly different trip:

      Every year, doctors at a hospital in the Yunnan Province of China brace themselves for an influx of people with an unusual complaint. The patients come with a strikingly odd symptom: visions of pint-sized, elf-like figures – marching under doors, crawling up walls and clinging to furniture.

      The hospital treats hundreds of these cases every year. All share a common culprit: Lanmaoa asiatica, a type of mushroom that forms symbiotic relationships with pine trees in nearby forests and is a locally popular food, known for its savory, umami-packed flavor. In Yunnan, L. asiatica is sold in markets, it appears on restaurant menus and is served at home during peak mushroom season between June and August.

      One must be careful to cook it thoroughly, though, otherwise the hallucinations will set in.

      https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260121-the-mysterious-mushroom-that-makes-you-see-tiny-people

      RenaudaR Offline
      RenaudaR Offline
      Renauda
      wrote on last edited by
      #2855
      This post is deleted!
      1 Reply Last reply
      • jon-nycJ Offline
        jon-nycJ Offline
        jon-nyc
        wrote on last edited by
        #2856

        The whole reason we call them illegal aliens is because they’re subject to our laws.

        1 Reply Last reply
        • jon-nycJ Offline
          jon-nycJ Offline
          jon-nyc
          wrote on last edited by
          #2857

          The whole reason we call them illegal aliens is because they’re subject to our laws.

          1 Reply Last reply
          • A Online
            A Online
            AndyD
            wrote on last edited by
            #2858

            It's 100 years to the day in 1926 when John Logie Baird demonstrated the first working TV which he'd invented.
            It'll never catch on they said.

            And it's 90 years since the BBC started the worlds first regular public TV broadcasting service, in 1936.

            1 Reply Last reply
            • MikM Offline
              MikM Offline
              Mik
              wrote on last edited by
              #2859

              alt text

              Still the saddest goodbye in space exploration. On June 10, 2018, during a massive planet-wide dust storm, Opportunity sent its final data transmission — poetically translated by engineers as “My battery is low and it’s getting dark.” Designed for just 90 days, Oppy defied odds for nearly 15 years, traveling 45 km across Mars, discovering evidence of ancient water, and sending back breathtaking panoramas. The storm blocked sunlight for months, draining its batteries forever. No more signals came. Rest easy, Oppy — you explored farther and longer than anyone dreamed, turning a golf-cart-sized robot into a legend. Your spirit lives on in every rover that follows. Thank you for showing us Mars.

              "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

              AxtremusA 1 Reply Last reply
              • MikM Mik

                alt text

                Still the saddest goodbye in space exploration. On June 10, 2018, during a massive planet-wide dust storm, Opportunity sent its final data transmission — poetically translated by engineers as “My battery is low and it’s getting dark.” Designed for just 90 days, Oppy defied odds for nearly 15 years, traveling 45 km across Mars, discovering evidence of ancient water, and sending back breathtaking panoramas. The storm blocked sunlight for months, draining its batteries forever. No more signals came. Rest easy, Oppy — you explored farther and longer than anyone dreamed, turning a golf-cart-sized robot into a legend. Your spirit lives on in every rover that follows. Thank you for showing us Mars.

                AxtremusA Offline
                AxtremusA Offline
                Axtremus
                wrote on last edited by
                #2860

                @Mik said in Mildly interesting:

                poetically translated by engineers as “My battery is low and it’s getting dark.”

                Bah, they spoiled it with poetry.
                I want to read the original message, presumably in status codes, in binary if I have to, along with the relevant decoder keys.

                1 Reply Last reply
                • jon-nycJ Offline
                  jon-nycJ Offline
                  jon-nyc
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #2861

                  I want it in haiku.

                  Dust dims the sunlight
                  Batteries breathe their last charge
                  Night claims the red plains

                  The whole reason we call them illegal aliens is because they’re subject to our laws.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • AxtremusA Offline
                    AxtremusA Offline
                    Axtremus
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #2862

                    https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/29/opinion/prospera-honduras-trump-pardon.html?unlocked_article_code=1.IFA.BoS9.gIBQvKg5OOfZ

                    Interesting framing connecting the violent immigration crackdown in the U.S. to what happened in Honduras in recent years and the push for "startup cities" by certain Trump backers.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • jon-nycJ Offline
                      jon-nycJ Offline
                      jon-nyc
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #2863

                      Chickens are now the most populous terrestrial vertebrate. At any one time, about 26 billion chickens occupy the planet, as 65 billion are slaughtered annually and billions more hatch.

                      The whole reason we call them illegal aliens is because they’re subject to our laws.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • taiwan_girlT Offline
                        taiwan_girlT Offline
                        taiwan_girl
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #2864

                        Only one person has won both an Olympic medal and a Nobel Peace Prize

                        Philip Noel-Baker from UK
                        1920 Olympic - silver medal in 1500m race
                        1959 - Nobel Peace Prize for his work on disarmament

                        AxtremusA 1 Reply Last reply
                        • taiwan_girlT taiwan_girl

                          Only one person has won both an Olympic medal and a Nobel Peace Prize

                          Philip Noel-Baker from UK
                          1920 Olympic - silver medal in 1500m race
                          1959 - Nobel Peace Prize for his work on disarmament

                          AxtremusA Offline
                          AxtremusA Offline
                          Axtremus
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #2865

                          @taiwan_girl said in Mildly interesting:

                          Only one person has won both an Olympic medal and a Nobel Peace Prize

                          Philip Noel-Baker from UK
                          1920 Olympic - silver medal in 1500m race
                          1959 - Nobel Peace Prize for his work on disarmament

                          Words from the spiritual media are that Noel-Baker are trying to give both to Donald Trump.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • HoraceH Offline
                            HoraceH Offline
                            Horace
                            wrote last edited by
                            #2866

                            The pond is pretty today.

                            b3d7833f59155389d26bb879e862ac26.jpeg

                            Education is extremely important.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            👍
                            • jon-nycJ Offline
                              jon-nycJ Offline
                              jon-nyc
                              wrote last edited by
                              #2867

                              Nice.

                              The whole reason we call them illegal aliens is because they’re subject to our laws.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • HoraceH Offline
                                HoraceH Offline
                                Horace
                                wrote last edited by
                                #2868

                                True story.

                                Link to video

                                Education is extremely important.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • taiwan_girlT Offline
                                  taiwan_girlT Offline
                                  taiwan_girl
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #2869

                                  Sad. Very pretty girl. Looks like she has teeth problems which (I think) is probably due to drug use.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • MikM Offline
                                    MikM Offline
                                    Mik
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #2870

                                    Sultan Mohammed V was only 31 years old when the Nazis knocked on his door.

                                    To the French generals who controlled Morocco in 1940, he was nothing more than a young, powerless puppet of a figurehead. They thought he would follow their orders.

                                    They were very wrong.

                                    The pro-Nazi Vichy government had arrived in North Africa with a clear plan. They brought the same racial laws that were tearing apart Europe. They wanted to strip the 250,000 Jews of Morocco of their property, force them to wear yellow stars, and eventually feed them into the deportation pipeline toward the death camps.

                                    They ordered the Sultan to enforce the segregation.

                                    Mohammed V refused. As a devout Muslim and the "Commander of the Faithful," he viewed his Jewish subjects not as outsiders, but as a protected people under his spiritual care.

                                    He famously defied the Vichy commanders with a single sentence:
                                    "There are no Jews in Morocco. There are only Moroccan subjects."

                                    He didn't just use words, he used his throne to jam the gears of the Final Solution.

                                    When they demanded lists of Jews for a census, he rejected the order. When they tried to seize property, he stalled the decrees. And when they ordered that every Jew must wear the yellow Star of David, the Sultan blocked it.

                                    He refused to allow the badge of shame to be worn in his kingdom.

                                    In 1941, he staged a brilliant act of public rebellion. During the Feast of the Throne, with Nazi officials in attendance, the Sultan invited the leaders of the Jewish community to the palace. He seated the rabbis right next to the French generals and next to his own throne.

                                    The message was loud and clear. These people were under the King's protection, and an attack on them was an attack on the Crown itself.

                                    Because of his stubborn courage, the trains never came.

                                    While Jewish communities across the Mediterranean were being massacred, the Jews of Morocco remained safe.

                                    This history isn't just a blip on history’s radar. It’s the foundation of the headlines we see today.

                                    When Morocco and Israel renewed diplomatic ties in 2020, it wasn't just political. It was the rekindling of a bond forged in the darkest days of the 20th century.

                                    The man who oversaw that renewal, King Mohammed VI, is the grandson of the Sultan who saved his Jewish subjects.

                                    The Abraham Accords didn't create a new friendship in Morocco, they formalized an old one.

                                    It’s a relationship built on the memory of a Muslim king who proved that even under the boot of a fascist occupation, a leader’s most powerful weapon is his conscience.

                                    #History #Morocco #MohammedV #WWII #JewishHistory #AbrahamAccords
                                    image.png

                                    "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • MikM Offline
                                      MikM Offline
                                      Mik
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #2871

                                      image.png

                                      They called him the stupidest prisoner they'd ever seen. He was actually the most dangerous man in the camp.
                                      April 6, 1967. The USS Canberra unleashed its guns during a night bombardment in the Gulf of Tonkin. The blast from the ship's own massive cannons sent 20-year-old Seaman Douglas Hegdahl flying overboard into the dark waters of the South China Sea.
                                      The farm boy from South Dakota swam through the night. Twelve hours. No rescue boat found him. Instead, North Vietnamese fishermen pulled him from the water at dawn and turned him over to military authorities.
                                      Within days, Hegdahl found himself inside Hỏa Lò Prison, the notorious facility American POWs grimly called the Hanoi Hilton. Interrogators immediately began their work, demanding information about ship movements, military operations, classified details.
                                      But Hegdahl had a problem. And then he had an idea.
                                      He was a low-ranking enlisted sailor with no access to secrets. He knew nothing valuable. So he decided to become someone they would never take seriously. He would become invisible by being unforgettable for all the wrong reasons.
                                      He exaggerated his rural accent until it was nearly incomprehensible. He stared blankly when asked questions. He moved slowly, as if struggling to understand basic instructions. When interrogators shoved anti-American propaganda documents in front of him and demanded he sign, Hegdahl shook his head sadly.
                                      "I can't read," he said. "Never learned how."
                                      The guards were stunned. They didn't believe him at first. So they tried to teach him, convinced that proving his literacy would break his resistance. Day after day, they attempted to drill letters and words into his head.
                                      Hegdahl sat through every lesson looking confused and overwhelmed. He couldn't seem to remember the letter "A" from one day to the next. His tutors grew increasingly frustrated. After weeks of failure, they gave up entirely.
                                      They nicknamed him "The Incredibly Stupid One."
                                      And then they made their fatal mistake.
                                      Believing he was a harmless simpleton incapable of understanding anything, the guards gave him unprecedented freedom. They assigned him to sweep courtyards and common areas—privileges no other American prisoner possessed. While hardened officers remained locked in cells, enduring torture and isolation, this "stupid" farm boy wandered the compound with a broom.
                                      He wasn't sweeping. He was gathering intelligence.
                                      He sabotaged five North Vietnamese military trucks by pouring dirt into their gas tanks when guards weren't looking. He observed guard patterns, security weaknesses, and prison layouts. Most importantly, he became something extraordinary: a human database.
                                      Fellow prisoner Joe Crecca taught him a mnemonic technique. Set information to music, Crecca explained, and the mind never forgets. Hegdahl chose the simplest tune he knew: "Old MacDonald Had a Farm."
                                      Every single day while pushing his broom across prison courtyards, Hegdahl sang silently in his head. Each verse contained the name, rank, capture date, and personal details of another American POW. Captain Smith... E-I-E-I-O... Lieutenant Johnson... E-I-E-I-O.
                                      Two hundred fifty-six men. He memorized them all.
                                      In August 1969, the North Vietnamese decided to release three American prisoners as a propaganda gesture meant to show "humanitarian treatment." They deliberately chose men they believed would be useless to US intelligence operations.
                                      They chose Hegdahl because they were certain he was too stupid to tell anyone anything meaningful.
                                      Hegdahl didn't want to go. The POWs had an unbreakable code: nobody goes home until everyone goes home. But Lieutenant Commander Dick Stratton, the senior ranking prisoner, gave him a direct order.
                                      "You are the memory," Stratton told him. "You have to get the names out."
                                      When Hegdahl stepped off the plane onto American soil, he didn't just speak. He sang.
                                      He recited the names, ranks, and details of 256 American servicemen who the US government had listed as missing or presumed dead. Families who had spent years without information suddenly had confirmation their loved ones were alive. Military intelligence gained crucial data about who was imprisoned and where.
                                      But Hegdahl wasn't finished.
                                      He traveled to the Paris Peace Talks where American and North Vietnamese negotiators were attempting to end the war. He confronted the North Vietnamese delegation directly, providing detailed testimony about torture methods, prison conditions, and violations of the Geneva Conventions. His testimony was credible, specific, and impossible to dismiss.
                                      The "stupid" prisoner nobody had paid attention to became the witness who exposed their lies to the world.
                                      Douglas Hegdahl returned to the United States Navy as an instructor in the Navy's SERE program (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape). He taught generations of service members the most important lesson his story offered:
                                      The most dangerous person in the room isn't always the strongest or the loudest or the most obviously threatening.
                                      Sometimes it's the one everyone underestimates.
                                      The one nobody sees coming.

                                      "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      • taiwan_girlT Offline
                                        taiwan_girlT Offline
                                        taiwan_girl
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #2872

                                        @mik. Two very cool stories

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • jon-nycJ Offline
                                          jon-nycJ Offline
                                          jon-nyc
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #2873

                                          The whole reason we call them illegal aliens is because they’re subject to our laws.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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