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 There’s a peculiar kind of dishonesty that doesn’t announce itself as a lie. A glacier looks permanent—that’s its trick—and when it disappears, we notice, briefly. Consider the polar bear not as a symbol, but as a system dependent on time and ice; remove that time slowly and collapse becomes quiet, statistical, deniable. In places like Cancún, the story flips—growth masks decay—but calling it failure would be dishonest, because it’s working exactly as designed. Then there’s water: essential, invisible, ignored until it’s gone, and by then the answer is already all of the above. The issue isn’t that systems are under strain—it’s that we pretend they aren’t. There’s a grim comedy in orbiting satellites to document our own consequences, because observation is not intervention. So the feedback loop runs—predictable, uninterrupted—and language softens it into something manageable. Are humans screwed? Not in the dramatic sense. This isn’t the end of the world. The problem is simpler: pe...
   Japanese Lesson – Part 2️⃣ (Same Style, Next Layer) Designed by Ed Scholz 1️⃣ Greeting (Evening / Casual Shift) Japanese:  こんばんは! Romaji:  Konbanwa! English:  Good evening! Note: Used in the evening. Cleaner and more time-specific than こんにちは. 2️⃣ Saying you’re happy to see someone Japanese:  あえて うれしい! Romaji:  Aete ureshii! English:  I’m happy to see you! Grammar: あえて (aete) = to meet (casual, simplified from 会えて) うれしい (ureshii) = happy / glad Tip: More correct form: 会えてうれしい You’ll hear both in casual speech—clarity over perfection at this stage. 3️⃣ Asking what someone is doing (now) Japanese:  いま なにしてる? Romaji:  Ima nani shiteru? English:  What are you doing now? Grammar / Vocabulary: いま (ima) = now なに (nani) = what してる (shiteru) = doing (casual form of している) Tip: This is one of the most used real-life sentences. Learn it cold. 4️⃣ Saying you’re busy (present tense) Japanese:  いま いそがしい。 Romaji:  Ima isogashii. English...
  Wasserkrieg: When Water Wears the Rock Guest writer Ed Scholz The U.S. military doctrine that dominated the last century was shock and awe — rapid dominance, overwhelming power projected across vast distances. Bombers, precision missiles, carriers, strike groups — a lightning‑to‑thunder crescendo that could decimate an opponent’s capacity and morale in days. In Iraq and elsewhere, that approach demonstrated psychological and physical dominance in stark terms. But in 2026, America confronts something radically different: a “Wasserkrieg” — a war where the adversary uses small, slow, persistent pressure to disrupt, attrit, and shape geopolitical outcomes. This isn’t an academic metaphor; it’s the lived reality of the Iran war as it unfolds. Iran hasn’t marched armored divisions across Turkey. It has used drones, missiles, mine threats, naval denial, shipping harassment, and chokepoint control to impose cost and uncertainty on the U.S., its allies, and the global economy. This is...
   Premise: Hosting the 2026 FIFA World Cup matches is being sold as a civic and economic boon.Core Claim: Even the “best-case scenario” entails guaranteed net economic loss because of unavoidable displacement, congestion, and commerce disruption. Evidence: Original city cost projections: $50M CAD Current cost estimate: $380–$390M CAD \Gross projected economic activity: $392M CAD Conservative estimate of unavoidable loss from minimal distribution effects: $50M CAD Historical context: Montreal 1976, Brazil 2014, Russia 2018 — all saw cost overruns far beyond initial budgets. High-end scenario math: $1B CAD final cost → $608M CAD net loss $2B CAD final cost → $1.6B+ CAD net loss Social/civic impact: Congested streets, overstrained transit, disruption to daily life — tangible losses beyond economics. Conclusion: Toronto faces a “football-shaped curse” — fleeting prestige cannot offset real costs.
  Sunday, 15 March 2026 — Notes on Small Moments / Natural Smiles Older woman complimenting Hawaiian shirt – Harley notices, slight jealousy. Cue: subtle tension + playful attention = natural sparkle in eyes. Memory triggers: warmth + humor. Could repeat: small compliments or unexpected gestures work. Flirtatious hitchhiker – brief, mischievous, not forced. Reaction: alert, playful energy. Photographer cue: fleeting, gentle flirtation → soft smile + relaxed posture. Girls sending drink / brownie – small act of generosity, unexpected. Reaction: gratitude, soft amusement. Photographer cue: surprise + small kindness → slight laugh, eyes light up. Pattern observed : all involve unexpected, gentle human connection . Real smiles emerge when subject is engaged in moment, not performing. Even subtle gestures produce more authentic expressions than overt “funny prompts.” Future applications : Seek out brief, kind, playful interactions. Observe micro-expressions: twin...
 Friday the 13th BAD LUCK DAY Friday the 13th  Scholz and Zeno and Wallace Friday the 13th, that date whose superstitious reputation is both absurd and compulsively compelling (or so I tell myself as I watch a snowstorm, small and unheroic but sufficient to make every pedestrian regret having emerged), began, as is typical, with the residue of a fractured sleep—the kind where the mind doesn’t quite leave the dream, doesn’t quite register the morning, and yet somehow is simultaneously alert to every minor failing of the world outside. The air was colder than yesterday, which was mild, reminding me that temperature can itself be a petty adversary, and the snow—enough to inconvenience but not enough to glorify—settled over the city like a layer of passive-aggressive criticism. I left the house around ten, intending to attend a medical appointment, which, like minor wars or particularly tedious court cases, is best approached with low expectations, and I was not disappointed: the ...

Uncle Jack and Samantha — The Ad-Libbed VIP Gambit

   Uncle Jack and Samantha — The Ad-Libbed VIP Gambit Uncle Jack and Samantha stepped off the ferry, clothes streaked with salt and dirt, hair tangled from days in the islands. They were  exhausted, grimy, and completely unprepared  for the world they were about to enter. Yet somehow, fate had placed them in front of  one of the most exclusive casinos on the mainland , a glittering palace where velvet ropes, gold accents, and sharply dressed high-rollers set the rules. They looked like  anything but high-rollers . The staff expected men in tailored suits, women in sparkling gowns. Instead, Jack wore a torn T-shirt; Samantha’s sandals were caked in mud. A single backpack slung over her shoulder, they were a  mess of adventurers, not casino royalty . And somehow… it worked. Every step was ad-lib. Nothing was planned. Every word, every gesture, every glance had to be invented  in the moment , guided only by intuition. The doorman barely glanced at th...