WUHAN, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) One story of building constructed in four days: Find out how skyscraper building machines in China work.Produced by Xinhua Global Ser
i m not a highly introspective person and i dealt with covid the way i do with most challenges, making the best of the situation, taking care of my family, exploring new opportunities. i jumped at the chance presented by having more flow time to make sense of the pandemic by writing a book about it and its consequences. the writing was a kind of theraphy for me, but then in the midst of the pandemic my mother died around 8,000 miles away in india, and that was a brutal reminder that however much you might try to deal with life by constantly doing, moving, acting, sometimes the key is not what you do in the external realm but how you feel within. i recall once when i was very young hearing an indian philosopher, a guru-type, explain that the western europe world had spent accept industries focused on how to solve problems by controlling the external world, taking nature, building machines, organizing activities. the eastern tradition, he not,
also an excellent guest host and a brilliant writer, but how did he perform when put to the test on final exam? he did it against pete hegseth and had to answer questions from record-setting jeopardy contestants to exotic birds blocking runways. here s what happened. tucker: question one is a multiple-choice. you have to wait until the buzzer.. scientists have moved beyond creating useful robots and now are building machines that you completely useless things. a robot in japan has been trying to do something related to sports. is it a, hit half-court ice skate. tucker: is it ice skate? has the robot been trying ice skate? you went with your canadian bias.
program. also an excellent guest host and a brilliant writer but how did he perform one part of the test final exam? he did it against pete hegseth and how to answer questions from record-setting jeopardy contestants to exotic birds blocking runways. here s what happened. tucker: question one is a multiple-choice. you have to wait until the buzzer. it scientist moved beyond creating useful robots and now are building machines that you completely useless things. a robot on the other japan has been trying to do something related to sports. is it a, headache half-court shot, b, pricing, or c, throw a curveball? mark steyn. ice skate. tucker: is it i skate? has the robot been trying ice skate?