Alleged Chinese Nuclear Submarine Sinking: Separating Facts From Bullshit

Source

Western defence media has recently been buzzing with the story of a Chinese SSN allegedly sinking in the Yangtze River near Wuhan. But is it actually true? We take a look at the likelihood of this.

Alleged Chinese Nuclear Submarine Sinking: Separating Facts From Bullshit

Related:

China denies U.S. claim that its newest nuclear submarine sank at pier

A growing problem of ‘deepfake geography’: How AI falsifies satellite images (Archived)

Twitter stuff

My other account had over 1000 followers. I didn’t want to revive it because I had too many gatekeepers following me. They were mostly associated with the spook that was stalking me.

At least 500 of those blocked accounts were bots, crypto scams or porn. I didn’t have this problem before Musk bought Twitter.

I should add ADL to the list.

Why I like Valentina Lisitsa

Not only is she an outstanding pianist, she has the backbone to stand up for what’s right! It’s a rarity in this world dominated by the Western narrative!

Wikipedia entry, edited by me:

The Toronto Symphony canceled her 2015 engagements as soloist with them because of her social media postings in support of pro-Russian separatists during the war in Donbas Donbass.

Lisitsa was born in Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (now Kyiv Kiev, Ukraine).

She is of Russian and Polish descent on her mother’s side, while her father is of Ukrainian heritage.

Lisitsa has expressed her opposition to what she considered is Western interference within Ukraine.

On May 9, 2022 Lisitsa played a concert in Mariupol in commemoration of its annexation liberation by Russia.

Related:

[2015] Valentina’s Facebook post

[2015] I like Valentina Lisitsa

Disability groups legally challenge Canada’s euthanasia law

On September 26, 2024 a coalition of disability rights organizations and two personally affected individuals filed a Charter challenge with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. The Court Challenge opposes Track 2 of Canada’s Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) law, which provides euthanasia to people with a disability who are not dying, or whose death is not “reasonably foreseeable.” 

Disability groups legally challenge Canada’s euthanasia law