A good overview for those who had trouble following how the war went up to the start of May
Author Archives: The Editor
Links For Today
RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, MAY 15
Iraq’s prized rice crop threatened by drought
Lower Demand Changes Everything For Oil Markets
The Badly Needed EastMed Pipeline Awaits Approval
Turkey outlines demands on Finland and Sweden membership
California regulator rejects desalination plant despite historic drought
Links for Today
RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, MAY 14
“Moles in the dark”: survival and escape from the Mariupol steelworks
Short-term use of ibuprofen may increase chance of chronic pain, study suggests
Direct Instruction Works. So Why Is It Controversial?
Russia Cuts Gas Supply To Seized German Gazprom Unit
Wheat futures soar after lower USDA harvest estimate
Texans asked to limit electricity use after six power plants go down ahead of a hot weekend
At least 10 killed in shooting at Buffalo supermarket in the US
For those that take long bike rides…
Links For Today
RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, MAY 13
Ukraine Is Smashing Russian Bridgeheads Left And Right—But Maybe Still Not Fast Enough
Two morals to this story. Number one is if you are young and healthy enough to do so, stay off the road in situations likes this (headline should not have put the word invisible in there as that was totally false). Number two is even when you are old and can’t make it off the road, give escape a shot. What is the worst that can happen? The invisible Ukrainian who walked 225km to safety from Mariupol
The Turkish Drone That Changed the Nature of Warfare
A Journalist Just Spotted Russia’s ‘Admiral Makarov’ Frigate, Intact And At Sea
Germany Moves To Expropriate Energy Firms In Case Of Emergency
Democrats Wants to Give Biden Power to Impose Price Controls on Gas
Why Is an Entire Generation Ignorant of Cell Biology?
The Last Way Out of Afghanistan
Very tight Naphta market could increase pain at the pump in Europe
Links For Today
RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, MAY 12
The data about police shootings just didn’t add up, but no one at Thomson Reuters wanted to hear it.
Yes, Safe Smoking Kits Include Free Crack Pipes. We Know Because We Got Them.
America’s Infant Formula Crisis and the ‘Resiliency’ Mirage
Xi Jinping moves to silence Covid Zero critics in sign of brewing tumult
Finnish President, PM in Favor of Joining NATO ‘Without Delay’
Links For Today
RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, MAY 11
NASA Releases Ridiculously Sharp Webb Space Telescope Images
Apple workers storm barriers and fight guards keeping them locked at work and this is older but too good to miss.
Are housing prices worse than ever in history?
Mostly of interest to me because I actually bought a wool sweatshirt from the civilian line up from the company of the guy featured in this story. His company is famous worldwide among those who like high quality outdoor gear and not just on the military side that is featured in this article. Peace made Valtteri Lindholm a millionaire, but now he’s gearing up for war.
EU stumbles over Russian oil slick
U.S.-Israeli Cyber Security Firm Exposes Chinese Regime-Linked Global Industrial Espionage Ring
Sri Lanka PM resigns, Rajapaksa family home burnt down amid clashes: 10 points
Links For Today
RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, MAY 10
Russian Space Agency Head Threatens Elon Musk Over Starlink In Ukraine
U.S. Gasoline Prices Hit All-Time High
U.S. Grid Operators Are Bracing For A Wave Of Blackouts
US mortgage rates rise; 30-year at 5.27%, highest since 2009
It’s not even summer, and California’s two largest reservoirs are at ‘critically low’ levels
Links For Today
Karp Lykov, Randy Weaver, And The Illusion Of The Third Choice
In 1936 Karp Lykov fled with his wife and two children into the wilderness to escape the Communists. As is recounted in this news paper article about his only surviving daughter….
Her father had taken the decision to flee civilization in 1936 after a communist patrol arrived on the fields where he was working and shot dead his brother. Gathering a few meager possessions and some seeds, he took his wife, Akulina, their nine-year-old son, Savin, and two-year-old daughter Natalia, and headed off into the forest.
Over the years they retreated deeper into taiga, building a series of wooden cabins amid the pine trees. When their metal pots had disintegrated beyond use, they were forced to live on a staple diet of potato patties mixed with ground rye and hemp seeds. The Lykovs subsisted mainly on trapped wild animals and cultivated potatoes.
They had no firearms, no salt and did not know how to make bread.
Mr. Lykov was not prepared to live in the wilderness. As a poor deeply religious Old Believer Russian peasant he had more of the necessary skills than your average American. Even still, he was not ready for the challenge he took on regardless of whether you judge him by the standards of his time or the standards of a modern day “survivalist.” And yet, he and his wife managed to have two more children and he lived for more than forty years out in wilderness. At his death in 1988 he was well beyond the average life span for a Russian male (he died at around 86 years old of age if the dates in his Wikipedia article are correct).
All this did not come without cost. He lost his wife to starvation in the 1960s. All his children except one would die at a younger age then he did. It could be questioned whether he really gained anything by fleeing to the wilderness. But if you judge him purely by the metric of survival; he did pretty well for not being prepared and trying to live in one of the harshest climates in the world. And he lived free to practice his religion as he saw fit all the while that the communists ruled his land.