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Online Journal / Re: On Va pie's friend me.
« Last post by shadowball on May 09, 2026, 08:21:56 PM »
https://youtube.com/shorts/c6Jf-me9I48?is=Tm-tSlGkDlKliRfQ
Real robot spirit.
Pie's horn demon's robot spirit in Nevada State.
Near 400 trillion miles per speed. 100% accurate.
2016 year robot is deployed on earth.
Eight to nine months and any Chinese viper dragon dies from the robot's holy ray God technologies.
内华达州(Pie's)角恶魔的机器人灵魂。
每速行驶近 400 万亿英里。 100%准确。
2016年机器人部署在地球上。
八到九个月后,任何中国蝰蛇龙都会死于机器人的圣光神技术。
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General Discussion / Re: Did not know Jet Li is a member like me
« Last post by Prude on May 09, 2026, 10:46:32 AM »
How does Costco have anything to do with his
F14 simulator name?
3
General Discussion / Re: Trump and MAGA is helping China
« Last post by Prude on May 09, 2026, 10:43:29 AM »
Will China accept immigrants and refugees now?
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So, will any settlement on the negotiations be complete if Israel doesn't sign off on it?
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General Discussion / Re: Can you do a confession with a robot Priest?
« Last post by Prude on May 09, 2026, 09:18:19 AM »
Confession is something you do in
the Christian faith, not in Buddhism.

Christianity does not have humanoids yet.
6
What marriage taught me that dating never could
Dating teaches you how to impress someone. Marriage teaches you how to truly know them.

There’s a version of love that exists in dating that feels clear, exciting, and full of possibility. It’s where you learn how to attract someone, how to keep things interesting, and how to build a connection. But it’s also controlled. You see each other at your best, in planned moments, with space in between. But marriage removes that space. It replaces intensity with consistency, and in doing that, it reveals things that dating never really touches. Connection was never the hard part; consistency was
In the dating scene, showing up felt easy. Plan something, bring your best energy, and the night takes care of itself. Even in serious relationships, there was always a reset built in. Marriage doesn’t work like that. There’s no reset button at the end of the night. You wake up in the same environment, with the same person, and whatever energy you bring carries over.

I had to learn that being a good partner is about being steady on the days that don’t feel like anything. Staying patient when I’m tired. Not letting a bad day at work set the tone at home. That kind of consistency didn’t really exist for me until marriage.

I stopped trying to win arguments and started trying to finish them
I could let things go or circle back when it felt right when I was dating. And if something didn’t get fully resolved, it usually faded. That doesn’t happen in marriage. The same issue keeps showing up, sometimes louder. I had to learn how to stay in conversations longer than I wanted to.

What worked was learning to come back to the conversation, lower the tone, and focus on reaching a place where we both understood each other. It’s not always clean, and I still get it wrong sometimes. But the shift from reacting to resolving changed everything.

Compromise stopped feeling like a loss
Early in my dating life, my life still revolved around my own routine. I’d adjust when needed, but most decisions were mine. Marriage forced a different mindset. Money isn’t just mine, time isn’t just mine, and even small decisions affect someone else in a real way.

I remember realizing this in simple situations, like how we spent our money, how we planned weekends, and how we handled busy weeks when both of us were stretched. Once I stopped looking at compromise as losing something and started seeing it as building something shared, the relationship became stronger and far more rewarding for both of us.

Most of the relationship happens in the unremarkable parts
Dating highlights the best parts of nights out, trips, and big moments. But marriage is mostly everything in between. It’s bills, errands, routines. It’s figuring out dinner after a long day, dealing with unexpected expenses, and keeping things running when neither of you has much energy left. It's the little things you don't think mean so much that keep a long-term marriage going.

That’s where I started to understand what the relationship actually was. Not in the big moments, but in how we handled the normal ones. Some of the strongest moments don’t look like much. It's covering for each other when one of us is overwhelmed and taking care of something without making it a big deal. That kind of support adds up over time.

Stress stopped being individual
When I was dating, I could keep stress to myself if I wanted to. I didn’t have to bring everything into the relationship. Marriage doesn’t really give you that option. If I’m off, it affects the whole dynamic. The same goes the other way. I had to become more aware of how I carry things.

Not just what I’m dealing with, but how I show up because of it. And I had to learn how to be steady when the other person is the one under pressure. You don't always have to say the perfect thing. Just be more reliable when things aren’t easy.

We didn’t always grow at the same pace
One thing I didn’t expect was how often we’d be in slightly different places at the same time and how to learn to adjust to what that meant. Different priorities, different energy, and different focus. In dating, that kind of misalignment is easier to ignore. In marriage, you feel it everywhere.

There were times when it created tension, but it also forced us to adjust. We had to learn to give each other space without disconnecting and check in and recalibrate when things felt off. And that process doesn’t stop; it’s part of keeping things aligned over time.
7
...port:

Quote
Americans who owe significant child support will have their U.S. passports revoked
The U.S. State Department will begin revoking the U.S. passports of thousands of parents who owe a significant amount of unpaid child support.

The department told The Associated Press on Thursday that the revocations would begin Friday and be focused on those who owe $100,000 or more. That would apply to about 2,700 American passport holders, according to figures supplied to the State Department by the Department of Health and Human Services.

The revocation program, plans for which were first reported by the AP in February, soon will be greatly expanded to cover parents who owe more than $2,500 in unpaid child support — the threshold set by a little-enforced 1996 law, the State Department said.

It was not clear on Thursday how many passport holders owe more than $2,500 because HHS is still collecting data from state agencies that track the figures, but it could encompass many more thousands of people, officials said.

Until this week, only those who applied to renew their passports were subject to the penalty. Under the new policy, HHS will inform the State Department of all past-due payments of more than $2,500 and parents in that group with passports will have their documents revoked, the department said.

"We are expanding a commonsense practice that has been proven effective at getting those who owe child support to pay their debt," Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Mora Namdar said. "Once these parents resolve their debts, they can once again enjoy the privilege of a U.S. passport."

Since the AP reported the expansion of the program on Feb. 10, the department said it had "seen data that hundreds of parents took action and resolved their arrears with state authorities since news broke that the State Department would start proactively revoking passports."

"While we can't confirm the causation in all of those cases, we are taking this action precisely to impel these parents to do the right thing by their children and by U.S. law," the department said.

Even before the policy was expanded, the department said the program had been a "powerful tool" to get parents to pay what they owed. It said that since it began in earnest in 1998, states had collected some $657 million in arrears, including more than $156 million in over 24,000 individual lump-sum payments over the past five years.

Those whose passports are revoked under the program will be notified that they will not be able to use their documents for travel and will have to apply for a new passport once their arrears are confirmed as paid.

A passport holder who is abroad at the time of revocation will need to visit a U.S. embassy or consulate to obtain an emergency travel document that allows them to return to the United States.
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General Discussion / Can you do a confession with a robot Priest?
« Last post by theking on May 08, 2026, 10:20:58 PM »
Sure it's Monk but it could easily be a Priest too... ???

Quote
A humanoid robot becomes Buddhist monk in South Korea ahead of Buddha’s birthday
A humanoid robot in South Korea joined the Buddhist faith on Wednesday, during an ordination ceremony at Jogye Temple, located in central Seoul. The robot received the dharma name ‘Gabi,’ and made an official debut ahead of Buddha’s birthday and is expected to serve as an honorary monk for celebratory season surrounding the occasion.
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Marriage & Family Life / Perhaps she has a nice insurance policy on him??
« Last post by theking on May 08, 2026, 10:18:44 PM »
My dad’s wife put doughnuts in his mouth after he had a stroke instead of calling 911 — now I’m trying to mourn him without anger
DEAR ABBY: My brothers and I loved our father. He was an alcoholic until he was 37. After he stopped drinking, we became the best of friends. He was both mother and father to me, and I was so proud of him.

Dad remarried 33 years later to a woman I can only describe as diabolical. At first, “Selma” was full of compliments and smiles toward us. After they married, my father’s glow and his relationships with us turned cold and clinical. He could call us only from his car when he was alone. Holiday celebrations stopped, and Sunday family dinners stopped, too.

When Dad had a serious stroke, instead of calling 911, Selma went to a neighbor’s house to ask what she should do. Then she grabbed two doughnuts and put them in his mouth. Dad survived. After he returned from rehabilitation, my brother and I had arranged to have a chairlift installed because of the number of steps in his home. Selma went ballistic! She threatened Dad that if he allowed us to visit or have the lift installed, she would leave him.

Three weeks later, Dad had a catastrophic stroke and was flown to a new hospital. We weren’t informed until a day later. Gratefully, we did get to spend a few days with Dad before he passed.

I now feel enraged because of her years of lies, manipulation and cruelty to my father and us as a family. The second I think of her, her face, her words and our last interactions come flooding back, and all I feel is hatred. I want to be free and able to mourn without anger.
10
Elon Musk Critic Brian Krassenstein Buys a Cybertruck, Loses 6,000 Followers, Then Trades It In After Backlash
A longtime critic of Elon Musk, Brian Krassenstein, shocked social media this week after revealing that he had purchased a Tesla Cybertruck — only to later announce that he had traded it in following intense backlash from followers.

The situation quickly turned into a viral debate about politics, consumer choices, environmental messaging, and whether people can separate products from the personalities behind them.

Krassenstein, who has publicly clashed with Musk for years online, said his original decision had nothing to do with politics and everything to do with safety and practicality for his family.

Krassenstein Said Safety Data Led Him to the Cybertruck
In his first post, Krassenstein acknowledged that the purchase would likely anger some people who follow him.

“I might get hate for this too but I bought a Cybertruck,” he wrote.

He explained that having a young family played a major role in the decision.

“With a young family, safety was important and so is not polluting the atmosphere with $5 a gallon gasoline.”

Supporters of Tesla quickly pointed out that the Cybertruck currently holds both an IIHS Top Safety Pick+ award and a 5-star NHTSA safety rating, making it one of the most highly rated pickup trucks in the United States in terms of crash safety.

For many Musk supporters, the moment represented something bigger than just one purchase. They argued it showed that even critics are being pulled toward Tesla products because of performance, safety data, and technology.
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