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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 445.60-10.1%Jan 30 4:00 PM EST

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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (213652)4/18/2025 10:20:58 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) of 219928
 
re <<orders to buy>> am having 'uge difficulty keeping up with the buy-ables on offer, am messaged

remaining agnostic even as we vortex into and perhaps through 2026, to come into view of 2032

nothing about plastic flowers and Xinjiang-cotton t-shirts

I support the Trump to try best, per professed mission w/r to destiny
oh whoa
geewhizbang
AI, translation, reading, machine reading
turn on a dime
yikes
getting ready for whatever, for the next 7,000 years
"appointment of hundred years" is title
that day shall soon be, get ready, liberation
closure of the issues to do with ROC and PRC, whichever side takes all, as long as one side takes everything, okay
mattering only to whether the cislunar space on out uses traditional or simplifies characters, all 50,000+ of them (only 1,000 absolutely necessary, especially if for AI)
noting that the subject of the song, and the general's descendants in question still populate PRC and ROC schools as instructors
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yue_Fei
Yue Fei ( Chinese: ??; March 24, 1103 – January 28, 1142), [1] courtesy namePengju (??), was a Chinese military general of the Song dynasty and is remembered as a patriotic national hero, known for leading its forces in the wars in the 12th century between Southern Song and the Jurchen-led Jin dynasty in northern China. Because of his warlike stance, he was put to death by the Southern Song government in 1142 under a frameup, after a negotiated peace was achieved with the Jin dynasty. [2] Yue Fei is depicted in the Wu Shuang Pu by Jin Guliang.

Yue Fei's ancestral home was in Xiaoti, Yonghe Village, Tangyin, Xiangzhou, Henan (in present-day Tangyin County, Anyang, Henan). He was granted the posthumous name Wumu (??) by Emperor Xiaozong in 1169, and later granted the noble title King of E (??) posthumously by the Emperor Ningzongin 1211. Since his death and after the fall of the Song dynasty in 1279, Yue Fei is widely seen as a culture hero in China; he has evolved into a paragon of loyalty in Chinese culture.
...
Among Yue Fei's descendants was Yue Shenglong (???) and his son the Qing dynasty official Yue Zhongqi, [83] who served as Minister of Defence and Governor-General of Shaanxi and Gansu provinces during the reign of the Yongzheng Emperor. Yue Zhongqi conquered Tibet for the Qing during the Dzungar–Qing War and attacked the Dzungars at Ürümqi in Xinjiang. [84] [85] The Oirats were battled against by Yue Zhongqi. [86] Yue Zhongqi lived at the Ji Xiaolan Residence.

Another notable descendant of Yue Fei was Yue Yiqin, a flying ace of the Republic of China during the Second Sino-Japanese War. [87]

In 2011, two Yue descendants, Yue Jun and Yue Haijun, with six members of their clan, protested Jiangning Imperial Silk Manufacturing Museum's Qin Hui statue, which indicates that even after centuries, the Yue family still hates Qin Hui and his conspirators for their ancestor's plight. It has been reported that male members of the Yue family were not allowed to marry anyone whose surname was Qin until 1949, and genealogical records attest that this rule was rarely broken prior to its nullification. [88] In 2017, it was reported that were 1.81 million descendants of Yue Fei in China, and the number of Yue Fei's descendants in Anhui alone has grown to more than 1,003,000. [89]

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