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Sunday, December 7, 2025

Angie Dickson Opens Up About Ricky Nelson Behavior on Set

Rick Nelson Merry Christmas Baby - Honky Tonk Woman Live 1983

China Is Impressive But Not Invincible

I came across a fascinating article last night. It was an interview with Jensen Huang. He started his work life working at a Denny's Restaurant. He took a giant risk and started NVIDIA. It is one of the giants in the technology industry. He quipped jokingly that China could build a data center in a weekend, whereas it often took three years to build the same data center in the US: Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA, recently highlighted stark differences in infrastructure development speeds between the US and China as a potential risk to America's lead in the AI race. In a late November 2025 speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), he stated: "If you want to build a data center here in the United States, from breaking ground to standing up an AI supercomputer is probably about three years." He contrasted this with China's rapid pace, adding: "They can build a hospital in a weekend." Key Context and Implications The Comparison: Huang used the hospital example to illustrate China's manufacturing and construction efficiency, driven by lighter regulations, cheaper energy, and a centralized approach to scaling infrastructure. While he didn't explicitly say China builds data centers in a weekend, the analogy underscores how quickly China could deploy AI-enabling facilities compared to the US's multi-year timelines, which are bogged down by permitting, environmental reviews, and supply chain issues. Energy Factor: Huang pointed out that China generates twice as much electricity as the US—despite America's larger economy—and its capacity continues to expand rapidly, while US output has remained relatively flat. This gives China an edge in powering energy-intensive AI data centers. Broader AI Race Concerns: Despite NVIDIA's "generations ahead" lead in AI chip technology, Huang warned that fragmented US regulations and infrastructure delays could allow China to close the gap. He emphasized the need for policy reforms to streamline energy and construction processes. Other tech leaders, like Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai and investor Kevin O'Leary, have echoed these worries, calling for reduced "red tape" to maintain US competitiveness. This statement aligns with ongoing discussions about geopolitical tech tensions, where China's state-backed investments in AI hardware and infrastructure are accelerating, even as US export controls on advanced chips (like those from NVIDIA) aim to slow its progress. Numerous readers have approached me, warning about the great advances that China is making. I agree with them. They even warn that China wants to destroy the US. I am going to take a risk this morning and take a contrarian position. What Chairman Xi would love to have is an agreement with the US whereby we acknowledge China as our peer and equal. We start working with them to influence the whole world. This would never happen with President Trump. If J.D. Vance or one of several serious Democratic candidates became president, this would be a serious possibility. I have also pointed out to these concerned readers some historical parallels as follows: 1) In the early 1970s, the prestigious Hudson Institute predicted that the Soviet Union would overtake the U.S. to become the world's most powerful economy. People took them seriously. Many started to see this as being inevitable. What happened in reality is that the Soviet Union collapsed in 1989. What is left is Russia. It has an economy the size of Italy's and is described as "A gas station with nuclear weapons." 2) In the 1980s, Japan was seen as rising to be the number one economy in the world. People in the US began to dread Japan eclipsing the US to become the most powerful country in the world. The famous fiction author Tom Clancy wrote a best-selling book on this subject. Japan's ascension fizzled out. Today, Japan and the US state of California are often tied for the position of number 4 economy in the world. 3) In the 1300s-the early 1400s, China had the most powerful military machine on earth. It had warships displacing 50,000 tons with weapons technology far ahead of the West. China controlled a lot of the world. We barely missed a situation where China colonized California before Europeans did. Then there was an internal political collapse in China that stopped their progress.

12 More Banned Movies Too Shocking for 1970s Audiences You Can Watch Now

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Minnesota Welfare Fraud And Ties To Terrorism

Minnesota Welfare Fraud and Alleged Ties to Terrorism The Minnesota welfare fraud scandals, primarily involving members of the Somali-American community, have involved schemes totaling over $1 billion in stolen taxpayer funds since around 2019. These include the high-profile Feeding Our Future case (at least $250 million in federal child nutrition funds defrauded during the COVID-19 pandemic, with 78 people charged and 59 convicted as of late 2025), explosive growth in autism services fraud (claims rising from $3 million in 2018 to $399 million in 2023), and the Housing Stabilization Services (HSS) program (costs ballooning from an estimated $2.6 million annually pre-2020 to $104 million in 2023, with U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson stating the "vast majority" was fraudulent). At least 28 such scandals have been uncovered under Gov. Tim Walz's administration, per federal prosecutors. Alleged Links to Al-Shabaab There is no confirmed or charged amount of fraud proceeds directly funding Al-Shabaab (a U.S.-designated terrorist group affiliated with al Qaeda). Claims stem from investigative reporting and anonymous law enforcement sources, but federal and state probes (including a 2019 Minnesota Legislative Auditor report) have not substantiated direct ties, and no terrorism financing charges have been filed despite dozens of fraud convictions. Key allegations include: Indirect Funding via Remittances: Fraudsters allegedly sent millions back to Somalia through informal hawala networks (unregulated money transfer systems). Al-Shabaab is said to tax these transfers, benefiting the group regardless of intent. A retired Seattle Police detective (Glenn Kerns) traced $20 million routed abroad in a single year via hawala, with sources claiming the group takes a cut on "every cent" sent from Minnesota's Somali community. A former Minneapolis Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) official echoed this, calling Minnesota taxpayers "the largest funder of Al-Shabaab" through these channels. No Specific Figure: Reports describe "millions" overall but provide no precise dollar amount reaching terrorists. Proceeds were often spent on U.S. luxuries (e.g., luxury cars, real estate) rather than overseas transfers, and Somalia's lack of formal banking complicates tracking. Investigation Status Federal prosecutors in Minnesota have pursued fraud aggressively but found no ideological motive—defendants were "looking to get rich," per former U.S. Attorney Andy Luger. On December 1, 2025, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced a new probe into potential Al-Shabaab links, citing the scandals and ordering a review of Biden/Walz-era oversight. This overlaps with ongoing DOJ work, drawing criticism as duplicative. Conservative outlets (e.g., City Journal by Christopher Rufo and Ryan G. Thorpe) amplified the claims, prompting political attacks on Walz, but outlets like the Minnesota Reformer label them "sloppy" and unsubstantiated. Many victims of these schemes are Somali immigrants themselves, and experts emphasize root causes like program vulnerabilities during COVID rather than community-wide issues. For updates, monitor the U.S. Attorney's Office for Minnesota or Treasury announcements. If you need details on specific cases, let me know!2.5s