I like to travel, learn and tell stories.

Travel podcast here: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/bit-of-a-rambler--6571124 and also everywhere else with podcasts.

Q&A community: https://crazypeople.online/c/bitofarambler

  • 3 Posts
  • 93 Comments
Joined 8 days ago
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Cake day: March 31st, 2025

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  • correct.

    there’s also the maybe more important scientific literature ban that is forcing scientists like those who make sure crops grow correctly in the US out of their jobs because they aren’t able to talk about the gender of the seeds they are breeding.

    or the physicists who can’t talk about the “status” of the material they’re using, because that word is banned.

    countries don’t want to buy American military equipment anymore because they rightly cannot trust the US, which is a huge loss of revenue.

    the disastrously policies already enacted are going to economically and socially hobble the country for decades.

    the scientist who goes to another country rather than the US to practice physics, agriculture, anthropology, anything, that’s an entire career of innovation and scientific benefit lost to the US.

    and those scientists are already avoiding the us, that’s already happening.

    the market numbers are the tip of the iceberg here.








  • not for a while, since the US has stockpiles and other outside sources and domestic resources, plus the defense and military arms of the US government will be the last industry to be affected by these import sanctions.

    If these Chinese sanctions remain in place for any amount of time however, they will affect US corporate bottom lines much more rapidly and significantly than they affect the DoD, which is no small thing.

    Corporate policy is argued to have determined the outcome of the '24 US presidential election, so the ramifications of further industries-wide vast US corporate loss in addition to the 11 trillion already lost are likely to lead to further policy change like the blocking of presidential tariff authority underway now.


  • the policy decisions of the Chinese government are extremely separated from the everyday lives of the people.

    the CCP may refuse to sell expensive minerals to the us, but the Chinese population will buy the cheapest, freshest produce full stop. which is usually the local farmers.

    I don’t think I’ve ever seen American produce in China, come to think of it.

    during the last trade war, there wasn’t any anti-us purchasing sentiment from Chinese people themselves because everything they want is produced by China anyway.

    the Chinese population, in effect, is and has been boycotting every other country all the time for decades because so many of their basic needs are met by domestic production.






  • I see what you mean now.

    I thought you were mainly concerned about shipping things from the US, which neither I nor anyone I’ve known has had intercepted or interfered with en route to dozens of countries, frequently containing valuables. It must happen, but it seems very rare.

    The other way though, if you’re sending packages to the US from other countries, you could have that problem occasionally, which I have experienced twice and heard of from other travelers shipping things to the US.

    As far as I know, that’s a one-way problem, US-tagged packages seem to slip through sticky fingers.






  • I make my own DIY huaraches like this:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1FrEgeP9jI

    extremely comfortable, you can make it with any old slipper lying around and some paracord, lasts for 6 months to a year, depending on the quality of the sandal base.

    adjust it to exactly your size that fits perfectly and then you can sew the knots so that all the dimensions stay the same.

    takes me maybe 5 minutes to make each pair, and then 5 minutes for the sewing of the knots so I never have to readjust them, costs nearly nothing.