old people really need to learn how to text accurately to the mood they’re trying to represent like my boss texted me wondering when my semester is over so she can start scheduling me more hours and i was like my finals are done the 15th! And she texts back “Yay for you….” how the fuck am i supposed to interpret that besides passive aggressive
Someone needs to do a linguistic study on people over 50 and how they use the ellipsis. It’s FASCINATING. I never know the mood they’re trying to convey.
My AUNT OH MY GOD. She’s also that one childless, loaded aunt but a bit of a kook (the ‘anti-vaxxers/pro-disease idiots are onto something, your penicillin for your bad gum infection is secretly making you sick and instant noodles is literally plastic’ kind) so 1) it pays to be on her good side and 2) there is actually a solid chance she’s being passive-aggressive about some lifestyle choice of yours. That woman will live to 150, I swear, but the way she texts sometimes makes my blood pressure hit 150/100.
Recently I’ve noticed some posts circulating around the interwebs debating the role different nations played in World War II. Often those posts make assertions that one nation contributed the most to the war effort while others contributed not enough, often leading to heated debates, scholarly discussions, name calling, and offensive memes. In these discussions I’m often disappointed to see that one exceptional Allied Power is never mentioned. It’s not just internet posts that are lacking, but history books, documentaries, and public knowledge in general. What’s most surprising is that this Allied Power had a massive role in the war, with millions of men art arms involved in exceptionally bloody and savage combat, suffering millions of casualties, all while fighting battles that are comparable in size and scale to battles such as Stalingrad, Leningrad, and Kursk. China’s involvement in World War II was certainly exceptional and definitely deserves more attention in the West than it currently receives.
The most amazing thing about China during World War II was that it was fighting World War II long before World War II even began. By 1930 a very tumultuous period in Chinese history was coming to a close. During the 1920′s after the ousting of the last emperor China broke apart into a number of small independent territories ruled by former generals who become military warlords. After years of civil war the Chinese Nationalist government managed to reunite China, but the country was greatly weakened by the conflict. In stepped the Japanese, an expanding empire who looked toward China for territorial gains. In 1931 Japan invaded and annexed the territory of Manchuria from China, however due to China’s weakened state there was little it could do about it. Over the next six years tensions between China and Japan grew, leading to some limited military conflicts. In 1937 a small border skirmish lead to all out war with the Japanese conducting a full scale invasion of the China.
At the beginning of the Sino-Japanese War the Chinese military did not fair well, suffering heavy losses while Japan successfully occupied a large portion of Eastern China. The Chinese military lacked the training and equipment necessary to fight back the invasion while Chinese industry could not compare to the might of industrial Japan In August through November of 1937 one of the largest battles of the Pacific occurred when the Japanese laid siege to Shanghai. The battle involved over 700,000 Chinese soldiers and 300,000 Japanese. The resulting casualties numbered around 300,000, with the Chinese suffering 250,000 dead. An even larger battle occurred in 1938 at the city of Wuhan, involving 1 million Chinese, 350,000 Japanese, and resulting in 400,000 Chinese and 140,000 Japanese casualties. Note that these battles occurred before World War II officially began, but I personally find it hard to separate World War II from the Sino-Japanese War, as the events of the later would lead up to the events of the former.
Throughout the war, the Chinese suffered a number of atrocities at the hands of the Japanese invaders. When the Japanese occupied Nanking in December of 1938, what followed was a period of several weeks of looting, mass rape, and mass executions resulting in the death of up to 300,000 civilians. During the war the Japanese resorted to the use of chemical and biological weapons despite them being illegal under the rules of war. One Japanese organization infamous for committing war crimes was Unit 731, which during the war conducted medical research on prisoners of war and Chinese civilians. Such experiments included infecting prisoners with diseases, testing chemical weapons, starvation, amputation, mutilation, vivisection, torture, inducing of hypothermia and frostbite, and conventional weapons testing.
By 1938 the Japanese invasion began to slow, and eventually grind to a halt. First Japanese supply lines began to overextend, and the Japanese had to devote more men and resources into holding and policing captured territory. The rise of resistance groups all over China made controlling occupied parts of the country much more difficult and hindered the Japanese war effort. To eliminate resistance, the Japanese adopted the “Three Alls Policy”; kill all, burn all, loot all. In other words resistance was met with bloody retaliation involving the mass destruction and slaughter of cities where resistance actions occurred.
Second, the Chinese military adopted news tactics such as flanking attacks, encirclement maneuvers, and ambushes, allowing them to win a number of key battles and inflict heavy losses on the Japanese Army which turned the tide of the war. Finally, foreign powers began to intervene. In the early years of the war China’s first major ally was actually Germany, hence why Chinese soldiers early in the war were equipped with stahlhelm type helmets and wore Prussian style uniforms. However in 1938 Germany withdrew all support, instead making an alliance with Japan. In Germany’s place came the Soviet Union, who supplied rifles, machine guns, planes, and tanks. Later in 1942, after the United States joined World War II, China would receive $1.6 billion worth weapons and equipment from the United States under the Lend Lease Act. In fact China was the 4th largest recipient of Lend Lease Aid, surpassed by the UK, Soviet Union, and France. Britain also became a major supplier of arms to China. The Americans, British, and Australians would also send troops and thousands of advisers to train the Chinese Army.
In 1941 the United States enacted an oil embargo on Japan, forcing Japan to look to other conquests in order to gain access to oil resources. This would bring Japan into conflict with Western powers such as the United States, Britain, and the Netherlands while drawing Japanese men and resources away from China. Japan expanding the Second Sino Japanese War into World War II couldn’t have come at a worse time, as during the 1940′s, bolstered by foreign aid, the Chinese Army rapidly expanded and conducted larger and fiercer counterattacks. By 1945, the final year of the war, the Chinese Nationalist Army had grown to 5.7 million men, while Communist forces under Mao Zedong (also an enemy of the Japanese) had grown to 1 million. As American and British forces closed in from all directions, the Japanese had to peel off more and more resources away from other fronts to bolster the front in China. By 1945, 1.3 million Japanese troops and 900,000 collaborators were needed to stabilize the front in China. That’s 1.3 million troops absent from battles in the Pacific, New Guinea, India, and Southeast Asia. Around 500,000 – 700,000 Japanese soldiers would die in China.
The war in China was devastating. China suffered around 3-5 million military casualties, however another 15-20 million civilians were killed due to combat actions, massacres, famine, and disease. Another 100 million became homeless refugees as whole cities across the country had been utterly destroyed and reduced to rubble.
FUCKING FINALLY. As an Chinese Singaporean I am SO GLAD that mainland Chinese participation in WW2 is being recognised by someone other than the Chinese themselves.
In addition, Chinese immigrants overseas both participated in and got dragged through hell during WW2. In Singapore, a number of men returned to China to join the fight against the Japanese, while the women might sell things like matchboxes to raise funds for the war. The Japanese, when they conquered Singapore and Malaysia (after all of two days of fighting to conquer Singapore – thanks, Britain) weren’t too pleased to say the least.
Two words: Sook Ching. Nowhere near as bad as the Rape of Nanjing, but it wasn’t a slap on the wrist either. Depending on who’s telling it, the death toll was either less than 5,000 (official statement from the Japanese government) to around 70,000 Chinese men (Singapore’s first Prime Minister, though it must be said that he himself barely escaped so he’d have been justifiably pissed). The women, well, the mums got into the habit of dressing their girls up as messy young boys and swearing blind that they only had sons, for obvious reasons once you consider that the news of Nanjing had almost certainly reached them by then.
With how Eurocentric the media tends to be, it’s often very easy to forget that Europe wasn’t the only theatre of war at the time. China, with the assistance of the Chinese diaspora, had been fighting for years before the invasion of Poland that sparked WW2. And goddamn did they stick it out.
// ahhh, it’s not a fancy one. I got it from a pop up Halloween store bc everything was 50% off! @cuilpantielthesleepyscribe
(Cuilpantielthesleepyscribe here, this is just my personal sideblog) Beware the Corset Story/365/Queen/Deal/AU/Wholesale/UK ones, they’re rather infamous for being overpriced at best, uncomfortable much of the time, and outright painful at worst due to bad patterning. Though if it’s 50% off, unless the original price was like $150+ it shouldn’t be that bad.
Oreo the 3 year old black-coloured maltipoo, and absolutely the most useless little shit to ever bear the title of ‘dog’. She’s a poop machine, thinly diguised as a ball of fluff, whose only job is to be cute, steal footrests, and accidentally blend into the black colour couch – god I love that baby.
I can confirm firsthand that it absolutely happened in Singapore and Malaysia at least. Evvvvvvverybody did this. It was a miracle if you actually found cookies in there.
Friendly October reminder not to put Spock or other Jewish characters in costumes with horns
to clarify: it is an antisemitic idea that Jews have horns (dating to a mistranslation of karan (shone) v keren (horns) ) which was perpetuated in art by the likes of Michelangelo. this is not a thing of the past–some gentiles still believe that jewish people have horns, and putting jewish characters in costumes/aus with horns is insensitive at best and also really fuckin gross
also do not depict Jewish characters as demons there is a very long history of Jews being seen as demons and that being used to kill us
please do not dress Jewish characters in costumes that are priest outfit or nun outfit or with crosses
Just to give y’all an idea of how modern the horn issue is: My dad, when he went to college in the early 1980’s, was asked by someone who had never met a Jew before where his horns were. In the 1980’s. My dad was asked where his horns were. This was only 30 years ago. I have been lucky not to deal with that particular stereotype in my lifetime, but that was less than a decade before I was born. And I know other Jews in areas where Jews are scarce have dealt with this much more recently than the 80’s.
Yup. When my mom went to college, her freshman year roommate woke up the first Sunday and started getting dressed for church. My mom was still in bed, so the roommate came over and woke her up.
Roommate: Did you want to come to church with me, or do you have your own church you’re going to?
Mom: Well, I don’t really go to religious services, but if I did I would go to a synagogue, not a church, because I’m Jewish.
(Long silence. My mom opens one eye to see her roommate staring in shock.)
Roommate: You … you don’t look Jewish.
Mom: (Who looks VERY Jewish) What do you mean?
Roommate: Well, my pastor always told me that Jews have horns and a tail.
Long story short: they didn’t end up getting along very well.
Men do this all the time they love insecure woman so they can control you. Im so happy she didnt fall for it never let a man neg you EVER
Smart woman here! Very smart.
My ex said it made him feel bad when I put myself down and to please stop doing it. THAT is the kind of guy you want, and also why I wish him all the best, ask after his new girlfriends, and I’m still friends with him.
yh but if you look outside your own personal reasons for using this, laziness, it actually looks a really great and practical way to put on your socks if you have a disability that hinders you from otherwise being able so without someone there to help you
you do realise that there are people out there who literally have to travel door to door helping elderly people, disabled people and people with chronic illnesses to put on their socks? people are paid to help put on pressure socks to help with oedema? don’t you realise that if these people could have one of these tools, these caregivers could be doing something else and that this therefore is an incredible tool designed to cater for some of the most healthcare dependent people in our society? do you guys even realise there are other people living other lives?
i really wish i had this when my spine was broken and i had to wear a medical metal corset which made bending down impossible. i had to ask my mom to help me with socks and it was kinda humiliating.
My dad spends an hour in the morning getting dressed because he has no one to help him to get his socks on because his ankle is fused. If he had this it would literally save him an hour.
“Oh but people are so lazy!”
fuck off you ableist pieces of shit
Honestly I don’t even get how you could look at this and think “lazy”. This looks like more work for an otherwise able-bodied person than just putting their sock on the regular way. It’s pretty obvious this is meant for people who have trouble bending over, like come on.
You know how people go straight to “lazy” on this? Because we’re trained to think of most accessibility modifications as lazy. The disabled = lazy message is deeply embedded in our culture.
Does anyone know what this is called/where I could get it? My mom has incesingly bad arthritis and the process of bending to put her socks on is getting harder for her. My dad could totally put the socks on it for her at night and then in the morning she could just slip them on.
It appears to be the Pratiflex PR001. They claim that the Pratiflex PR002 is more versatile, though. They’re Brazilian products, and my Portuguese is not so hot (nor is Google Translate’s). However, the website is here and you can apparently order them online for the equivalent of approximately US$20 (not including shipping, etc.) for the PR001 or US$34 for the PR002.
The site says that they’re widely used in the States and Europe, but that they’re finally making them available in Brazil, so presumably you could find similar products from different companies elsewhere. A search for “sock applicator” turned up this Amazon.com category with several similar products, for example. From that page, this appears to be a good product, available for shipping in the U.S., for about $30.
So this is a teeny bit off topic, but there’s a group called the Tetra Society of North America, and if someone needs an assistive device and it isn’t commercially available yet, they have volunteers that are retired engineers and other design/handy types that will work together on solving a challenge you may have. They help make all kinds of things from adapted Wii remotes to specialized coffee pot handles to medical product adaptations. They are SO cool. This is their website: http://www.tetrasociety.org/
That’s not off-topic at all; I thought of this discussion immediately when I saw you post the link elsewhere.
This is also relevant to some of the discussions on your blog overnight, pardonmewhileipanic.
thank you because i saw this and laughed because i would never need it but after i was asking my grandmother if it would help her out. she has to wear compression stockings and they’re not the easiest to put on. alas, this would not help her. but still. don’t be an abelist piece of shit.
You don’t even have to be disabled to find this useful tbh? Corset-wearers (ranging from those who wear for body modification to those who use corsets to help with medical conditions or disabilities) do have serious trouble putting on shoes and socks when laced up – there’s actually a rule of thumb most people learn pretty early on: Shoes, THEN corset. I learned ‘socks, then corset, then slip-on sneakers’.
So, basically, OP forgot to account for literally any life experience that isn’t theirs.