Young Dad attempts to intimidate son's first boyfriend (unsuccessfully)

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Today's Document

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Young Dad attempts to intimidate son's first boyfriend (unsuccessfully)
Will say “I love you” so you know. No more watching from afar, letting chances go.
materialist-scumbag
THE TICK THAT DREW THE MAP OF THE WEST June 28, 2026
So the longhorn was a garbage animal. Stringy, mean, half-feral, descended from Spanish cattle that had gone loose in the brush country for a couple centuries and bred for survival rather than meat. In Texas after the war it was worth maybe three or four dollars a head, because there were millions of them and nobody to eat them. The local market was Texans, and Texas was broke. Up in Chicago or New York the same animal was worth thirty, forty dollars, because the Union had spent four years eating its way through the eastern cattle supply and the cities were short on beef.
That spread is the whole engine of the cattle drive. You don't need a tick to explain why a man would walk a cow a thousand miles to multiply its value by ten. The arithmetic does it.
What the tick explains is the SHAPE.
Because the thing about the longhorn nobody in the romance mentions is that it was a carrier. Centuries in the brush had given it a shaky immune truce with Babesia bigemina, a protozoan that lived in its blood and rode around on a tick that dropped off into the grass wherever the herd went.
The longhorn itself looked fine. Walked fine, sold fine, butchered fine. But the cattle it walked past, the fat improved Midwestern stock that had never met the parasite, those animals would start pissing blood and die at a rate that touched nine in ten. The Texans, reasonably, refused to believe their healthy-looking cattle were doing it. They took it to the Supreme Court in 1877 and won, on the entirely correct observation that their cows weren't sick. The cows weren't sick. The cows were Typhoid Mary.
(The disease disappeared every winter, too, north of a certain latitude, which baffled everybody for thirty years until somebody worked out that the tick just froze to death up there, no vector, no disease, the whole thing seasonal in a way that made it look like a moral judgment on Texas cattle specifically. It wasn't anybody's leading hypothesis that an insect was committing the murders. The leading hypothesis for a while was that the longhorns were poisoning the grass.)
So now run the two facts together. The cow is worth ten times more up north. The cow kills every other cow it passes on the way up north. What do you get?
You get a line.
You get a bunch of lines, actually. Quarantine lines, drawn and redrawn by Missouri and Kansas legislatures and eventually by the federal government, declaring that Texas cattle could not cross at all, or could only cross in winter when the tick was dead, or could only cross by rail if they were going straight to slaughter and never touched dirt that a local cow might later stand on. Missouri shut its border. Farmers formed Vigilance Committees (which is a polite nineteenth-century way of saying armed men) and turned the herds back at gunpoint. Kansas banned Texas cattle outright in 1885. And every one of those legal and shotgun-enforced lines was a wall the drive had to find a gate in.
The gate was the railhead.
This is the part that rewires the map. The famous cattle town (Abilene, Dodge City, Wichita, Ellsworth, the whole gunfighter pantheon) is not a town that grew up around ranching or water or gold or a river crossing. It's a point where the trail coming up out of the quarantine zone touched a railroad that could take the cow east to the slaughterhouse without it walking through anybody's protected pasture.
Abilene gets invented basically from scratch in 1867 by a man named Joseph McCoy who looked at the map, found a spot on the Kansas Pacific that was far enough WEST that the trail in from Texas could swing around the settled farm country and its quarantine, and built stockyards there. The town is a loading dock. The cowboy at the end of the trail, in the saloon, shooting the place up: he is a longshoreman who has just finished a shift, and the shift was getting the cargo to the one point where it could legally change from hooves to wheels.
And the cargo had to keep moving west precisely because the tick kept the settled east closed. As Kansas farmers spread and the quarantine line marched west with them, the railhead had to march west too. Abilene to Ellsworth to Wichita to Dodge, each town flaring up and dying back as the line of legal infection-free transfer slid across the state. The towns weren't competing on amenities. They were competing on being the current solvent point in a chemistry problem about where a tick could and couldn't survive the trip.
(Dodge City lasts longest because it's furthest out, last to get caught by the advancing farms, sitting out where the quarantine couldn't reach it yet. Its whole mythological career (Wyatt Earp, Boot Hill, the Long Branch) is a few years long and happens because of an agricultural-settlement frontier creeping toward it at the speed of homesteading. When the farms arrive, the party's over. The party was always a function of the farms not having arrived.)
So the geography of the Wild West, which towns exist and why they're where they are and why they boom for five years and empty out and why the trail bends where it bends, is not topography and not destiny and not the romance of open range.
It's the intersection of a price differential and a quarantine map. The price differential said go north. The quarantine map, drawn by the tick, said you may only go north HERE, and HERE, and now not there anymore, here. The cow drew the route and the parasite drew the borders and the men with the guns were just enforcing a public-health regime they didn't know was a public-health regime.
And it all gets zeroed out, eventually, the same way these things always do, not by a hero but by a logistics upgrade. They build the Kansas City stockyards and the packing plants, and then the rail net gets dense enough that the cow doesn't have to walk to the train at all, the train comes to the cow. Refrigerated cars mean you slaughter in Chicago and ship the meat instead of the animal. The long drive, the trail town, the whole apparatus that existed only to get a tick-bearing animal across a quarantine line to a loading point, it just stops being necessary, and the gunfighter towns settle down into being ordinary Kansas, dry and flat and law-abiding, within about a decade of their own legend.
The cattle tick itself they finally beat in 1943, dipping every cow in the South in arsenic for forty years to break the lifecycle. Nobody made a movie about the dipping vats.
Same as it ever was.
Nothing to see here... 🤫
Their dual reaction was so funny.
genuinely wild to me when I go to someone's house and we watch TV or listen to music or something and there are ads. I haven't seen an ad in my home since 2005. what do you mean you haven't set up multiple layers of digital infrastructure to banish corporate messaging to oblivion before it manifests? listen, this is important. this is the 21st century version of carving sigils on the wall to deny entry to demons or wearing bells to ward off the Unseelie. come on give me your router admin password and I'll show you how to cast a protective spell of Get Thee Tae Fuck, Capital
Share the knowledge
Okay, here we go! I'm gonna try and put this in order from least to most technical knowledge required. I'm not responsible if you accidentally create SkyNet etc.
Level 1: browser extensions
This one is basically impossible to get wrong, or at least to get wrong badly enough that it causes any problems.
Get Firefox, or a Firefox fork like Waterfox. If you use a fork, make sure it's one that will let you use add-ons. On a PC, pretty much any Firefox fork will take add-ons, but on mobile devices, many don't. Iceraven is one that does.
Get the add-ons uBlock Origin, YouTube Sponsorblock (if you use YouTube), and FBCleaner (if you use Facebook).
uBlock Origin comes with a built-in list of filters to block ads and trackers, but you can add your own filters to block any specific element of a website you don't like. You know those goddamn floating frames on fandom.com sites that block half the screen? Now you can zap 'em.
Sponsorblock uses crowdsourced timestamps to automatically skip sponsor spots and self-promotion in YouTube videos. Never listen to anyone say "hit like and subscribe" or "Raid Shadow Legends" again.
FBCleaner hides all content from your feed except posts from people, groups, and pages you've actually chosen to follow.
Level 2: leaving enshittified services
The software that's become standard over the years in a lot of fields is steadily selling more of your data, showing you more ads, and pushing you to buy more expensive subscriptions. Time to tell them to get fucked.
Dump Adobe apps for Affinity or Krita. Drop Microsoft for LibreOffice. Change your default search engine from Google to DuckDuckGo or Qwant. Use OpenStreetMaps instead of Google or Apple Maps.
Level 3: network-level DNS fuckery
DNS, or Domain Name Service, is the thing that tells your computer where www.website.com is actually located. By hacking your network's DNS you can force it to tell your devices that ad-hosting domains don't exist at all. Some of the steps on this one can get pretty technical, but because you're doing all the difficult stuff on a dedicated device, you can't really fuck up anything that seriously.
Get yourself a Raspberry Pi (a cheap older one like a model 3B will work just fine for this purpose), and follow a guide like this one to get it set up running AdGuard Home. AdGuard, like uBlock, has built-in filter lists, but you can also add your own if there are specific domains you want to block.
Once it's up and running, you'll need to change the DNS settings on your router to point to your AdGuard service. This is different for every router but will always start with logging into the admin panel with a password printed on a little sticker somewhere on the router.
With that done, every time a device on your home network looks for ads.website.com, it'll get back a message that says "sorry, can't find it", so it won't be able to load any ads.
Level 4: Android-specific DNS fuckery
Because AdGuard runs on your home network, it can't block ads on your phone when you're away from home - and what's worse, your phone will sometimes remember the addresses it got when you were out and about, and ads will get past your AdGuard wall even when you're home.
To avoid this, get AdAway for DNS-based ad-blocking directly on your phone. The easy, but less seamless, way of using AdAway is the "local VPN mode", which doesn't require you to do any mucking about with your phone's operating system.
Level 5: automated media piracy
The best way to stop seeing ads on all your streaming services is to stop using streaming services. There are loads of ways to do this, but the best ones involve setting up what's called an "arr stack" (Google that for setup guides) along with nzbget and a usenet account. Most of the time you'll want to set this stuff up on a dedicated device - an old laptop gathering dust in the closet is a great option, or you can grab something used from a charity shop or a local electronics recycler.
The great thing about usenet is that unlike with torrents, you don't have to do any sharing from your computer, so you're in a lot less legal jeopardy - legally speaking, distributing pirated content is waaayyy more serious than accessing it. I pay about £3 a month for a secure, high-bandwidth usenet service.
Once you start getting your own collection of media on your own computer, use the open-source media library manager Jellyfin to browse and play things from basically any device.
Oh, and don't be a dick. Pirate all you want from big corporations, but please pay independent small-time creators for their work.
Level 6: fucking with Android
Android phones are a lot more locked-down than they used to be, but depending on the device you own you can still do a lot of messing around under the hood. Note that if you get something wrong while doing this, there is always the possibility that it will turn your device into a paperweight.
Before you buy a device, check where it sits on the Bootloader Unlock Wall of Shame. Once you've bought it, check the xda-developer forums for guides on how to unlock it and "root" it (gain admin access) with Magisk.
Once Magisk is installed, you can add modules to do all sorts of cool stuff, including using AdAway in "root mode" which makes it basically invisible.
You can also install YouTube ReVanced, which will do all the ad- and sponsor blocking stuff we took care of in your Windows browser a few paragraphs ago. Be careful: there are a lot of fake sites out there pretending they're associated with the ReVanced project which might be injecting malware into their downloads. This Reddit post has the official instructions and links.
Also, try out the modded version of Facebook from APKmoddone, which will block most of the same shit as the FBcleaner add-on from earlier. There's always a possibility that modified apps like this are doing something dodgy, but I've never had any issues with this one personally.
Level 7: fucking with Windows
This one is scary because it can seriously fuck up your shit if something goes wrong, but some really cool people have actually made it very simple to strip all the bloat, ads, and spyware out of Windows. The tool I use is ReviOS. Start reading at https://www.revi.cc/docs. Basically, you'll need to download a tool called AME Wizard and the ReviOS "playbook" that tells AME what to do. Read the documentation before you do any of this.
Level 8: switching to Linux
I'm not going to pretend this is an option for everyone. Half the software I use on a weekly basis isn't available on Linux. But if you can switch? Do it. These days, Ubuntu - one of the most popular flavours of Linux - is built with people switching from Windows in mind, and a lot of things will be pretty intuitive. It also has great documentation and a huge community you can go to for help if you're confused about stuff.
And that, friends, is a comprehensive approach to banishing the demons of capitalism from your home!
Something I want to add:
You don't even need a pihole for it anymore. You can throw "dns.adguard-dns.com" into your android phone under Network (or Connections) > Private DNS > Private DNS Provider Hostname in your Settings app. You can also set your router up to use it via the IPs:
94.140.14.14
94.140.14.15
Link to to source for that:
Create your ad-blocking DNS server that will protect your personal data, prevent tracking and allow you to control access to specific conten
That will depend on your router, just search "How to set up custom DNS for (router name & model)". You can usually find that info on a sticker on the router itself. The model name is often nonsense like CM1000.
For switching to Linux:
If you're worried about software not working, and the software isn't something with work-related requirements attached, you can usually find alternatives. Alternativeto.net is a good place to start with that.
AlternativeTo lets you find apps and software for Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, iPad, Android, Android Tablets, Web Apps, Online, Windows Tab
If you're a gamer, protondb.com will let you see how well your specific game runs on Linux. Ranks are from:
Borked - Does Not Work At All, or works so poorly that you cannot play the game at all
Bronze - Sort of works, but with glitches that don't exist on Windows that affect gameplay
Silver - Works, but requires tinkering, and has glitches that don't affect gameplay, or requires heavy tinkering to get running
Gold - Works, requires mild tinkering (usually just selecting another proton version from the drop down)
Platinum - Works out of the box
Native - Is made for Linux
Other common alternatives:
Spotify: I've heard good things about Tidal, but haven't personally used it (I use a cloud storage service and local files for music)
Google drive: Nextcloud. You can find free servers on their website
Google office: OnlyOffice has a desktop/mobile app, and most of the features
Gmail: Free providers aren't common, but disroot is one of them. They also offer quite a few services. Personally I use mailbox.org, but they do cost $36 a year minimum
Google search: Disroot has a searx instance, startpage.com exists, and you'd be surprised at how far you can get by setting your default search engine to Wikipedia. Marginalia's also good, but selective about what they index (mostly indieweb stuff)
I, admittedly, run almost everything through Emacs nowadays, so there may be better alternatives now.
(Directed generally) Also remember that in most cases the problems are Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, and Microsoft. If you find a small project that isn't perfect, remember that those five companies are probably worse in every way imaginable. Look for an alternative, but for the love of whatever you hold dear, Google is *not* a better alternative.
No one understands how important it is to me that Mok initiates affection in the first episode of Peach and Me
The kiss in the office, running up the stairs to sleep next to Rome, all of it
Mok spent all of Me and Thee running away from his feelings and pushing Rome away, and now he’s actively showing all that love he used to keep bottled up?
Life changing, actually
Peach, Thee and the family they've built together
PEACH AND ME | EP1
Cnetizens: The wisdom of the working people
Making Cantonese-style zongzi (粽子; sticky rice dumplings) for Dragon Boat Festival (which is on June 19th for 2026). The glutinous rice has red beans added to it, and the filling consists of mung bean, pork, and egg yolk. They are wrapped with bamboo leaves into tetrahedons and then cooked.
As usual, the comments under the video are arguing if sweet (preferred by northerners) or savoury (preferred by southerners) zongzi are better.
Cracking the Dawn: How to Topple a Monarchy and Seduce a Prince in 1932
Historical Background & Political Tension in The Edge of Horizon
Prince Thinnakon was right there using his sparkle-starry eyes to convince his dad to send Phob to the UK with him! If they had just kept it in their pants until Phob passed the test, they could have been happily "studying" each other overseas without a care in the world. But hey, I guess we wouldn't have our angsty, childhood-friends-to-lovers romance in Siam if they knew how to wait, right?
Historical Context: Siamese Elites & UK Education (Late 19th - Early 20th Century)
For Siam's upper echelon, studying in the UK became an important cultural and political trend by the late 19th and early 20th century. King Vajiravudh (reigned 1910–1925) was a prime example of this generation, inheriting a court where the royal family and elite had already spent decades establishing educational links with Europe.
Key motivations behind this tradition included:
Modernization: Sourcing Western-trained expertise to fill crucial roles in administration, law, medicine, engineering, military affairs, and diplomacy.
Political Survival: Countering British and French imperial pressure. By adopting selected European institutions and statecraft, Siam's elite sought to strengthen and centralize the country to preserve its independence.
Prestige & Networking: The UK became one of the most prestigious destinations because Britain was the dominant regional imperial power bordering Siam (via British Burma and British Malaya), although elite Siamese students also studied in other European countries.
Consequently, an English education became a major marker of status and influence, while helping establish personal and diplomatic connections between Siamese elites and European society.
A famous historical example is King Vajiravudh himself, who studied in Britain and later became known for his literary work, nationalism, and administrative and educational reforms.
King Vajiravudh
Educated in Britain, Vajiravudh attended the University of Oxford, where he studied history and law, and also received military training at Sandhurst. He spent time attached to British military institutions before returning to Siam. Named heir apparent in 1895, he returned permanently to Siam in 1902 and succeeded his father, King Chulalongkorn, in 1910.
Though his administrative and political reforms were not as sweeping as his father’s, he still introduced major social and cultural changes. During his reign, Siam formally adopted the Gregorian calendar for official use, expanded public health measures including vaccination campaigns, supported the growth of the Thai Red Cross, and enacted the Surname Act requiring citizens to adopt family names. His educational legacy is equally significant: Chulalongkorn University was formally established in 1917 under his reign, and in 1921 he enacted the Compulsory Primary Education Act.
However, his domestic policies weren't entirely smooth; efforts to regulate gambling and opium consumption faced resistance and practical limitations.
Ultimately, Vajiravudh's extensive overseas education contributed to criticism that he was more comfortable with elite and intellectual circles than with broader society, although historians debate how much this reflected reality versus later political narratives. His admiration for aspects of British culture appeared in projects such as the Wild Tiger Corps, a royal paramilitary and civic organization under his direct patronage that existed alongside the regular armed forces. Resentment among some military officers, combined with frustration over royal authority and political stagnation, contributed to the failed Palace Revolt of 1912.
Throughout his reign, he drew criticism from multiple directions: conservatives viewed some reforms as disruptive to established traditions, while reform-minded groups and some officials were frustrated by his refusal to move toward constitutional government and his continued commitment to absolute monarchy.
In foreign policy, however, Vajiravudh achieved notable diplomatic gains. By entering World War I on the side of the Allies in 1917 and joining the postwar international order, Siam improved its international standing and strengthened its position in negotiations to revise unequal treaties and gradually end extraterritorial privileges held by Western powers.
Privately, he remained a prolific writer and cultural figure, helping introduce and popularize Western-style spoken drama in Thai literature. Writing under numerous pseudonyms, he produced original plays, adaptations, essays, and translations, including works inspired by Shakespeare.
King Vajiravudh wasn't the only royal looking West; a whole generation of Siamese princes was sent to study across Europe, especially in Britain, Germany, and France¹.
NOTE:
¹France was a massive deal for Siam in the 1920s, mostly because French Indochina was sitting right on their doorstep acting like a constant colonial threat. The supreme irony here is that while the Siamese elite sent young intellectuals to Paris to learn how to defend the kingdom's borders, the students ended up bringing home a completely different kind of danger. Paris in the '20s was packed with radical ideas about liberty and democracy. While studying law and artillery under the French system, a handful of Siamese commoners realized they didn't want a king anymore, meaning the palace literally funded the exact education that sparked the 1932 Revolution.
To make sense of the world in The Edge of Horizon, you have to look at 1932 as the boiling point of forty years of modernization, military tension, and political friction.
The revolution didn't happen overnight; it was the direct result of generations of shifting tides.
Part I. Siam before the Revolution
At the beginning of the 20th century, Siam was still an absolute monarchy, where the king possessed ultimate authority over the government, military, law, taxation, and foreign policy. Unlike constitutional systems in Britain or Japan, there was no parliament elected by citizens.
The Chakri kings (most notably King Chulalongkorn) had modernized the country extensively by abolishing slavery, reorganizing the bureaucracy, building railways, and sending elite students abroad. Ironically, it was these very reforms that created a new class of highly educated civil servants and military officers who would eventually demand political participation, rather than just modernization.
Part II. Rama VI (1910–1925): The First Serious Opposition
When Rama V passed away, his son Vajiravudh took the throne. He was heavily Western-educated (spending years studying in Britain, including time at Oxford and Sandhurst) and pushed for a lot of cultural modernization. The problem? He also had a habit of spending excessively on massive royal ceremonies, straining the state budget, and he created the Wild Tiger Corps, a royal volunteer corps that answered directly to him and served as a counterweight to the regular army.
To make matters worse, he kept promoting his favorite palace insiders over actual, professional army officers. The career military guys were understandably furious, looking at the palace thinking, "We trained professionally for this, but the King's favorites get all the promotions." That exact institutional bitterness became the seed for Siam’s very first attempted coup.
Part III. The Palace Revolt of 1912
The Palace Revolt of 1912 was actually the very first modern attempt to take down the absolute monarchy in Siam. It involved about 91 young officers, led by Captain Khun Thuayhanpitak and a group of junior military ranks.
The most interesting part? These weren't starving peasants rebelling. They were the kingdom's own educated elite: military academy graduates and sharp young officers who had been reading up on constitutional governments overseas and wanted that exact political evolution for Siam.
Interestingly, they weren't actually all hardcore republicans. The group was kind of a mess ideologically: some wanted a constitutional monarchy, some wanted a parliamentary system, some wanted a full-on republic, and others literally just wanted to swap Rama VI out for a different prince. Because they never actually agreed on a common goal, their plans were completely inconsistent.
So, why did it flop so fast? One of the conspirators cracked and confessed right before the launch date, giving the king enough time to arrest almost everyone before they could even move. A few officers were sentenced to death, but Rama VI actually ended up commuting most of the sentences later on. In the end, the whole revolt just quietly collapsed without any major fighting.
Even though the 1912 plot failed, the moment itself was a massive turning point. It marked the first time professional military officers openly looked at the system and realized the absolute monarchy could actually be challenged. The ripple effect was huge. It didn't directly cause the 1932 Revolution, but it proved that even elite career officers were willing to turn against the crown, establishing a massive historical precedent for the revolutionaries who came next.
Part IV. Rama VII (1925–1935)
When Rama VI passed away without a son, the crown went to his younger brother, Prajadhipok. To say he inherited a nightmare is an understatement. The country was already dealing with serious financial problems, and then the 1929 Great Depression hit.
Suddenly, global rice prices collapsed, and government revenue completely tanked. The royal government responded by slashing civil servant salaries, cutting the military budget, and laying off officials left and right.
This didn't go over well. The massive cuts left army officers even more furious and dissatisfied with royal rule, providing one of the biggest catalysts for the upcoming coup.
You had all these highly educated officials coming back from Europe asking the obvious question: "If Japan gets a constitution and Britain has a Parliament, why is Siam still stuck without one?"
Interestingly, the King actually seemed open to gradual constitutional reform, but he wanted to introduce it slowly, and powerful conservative princes around him resisted rapid change. That tug-of-war created a massive political deadlock.
Part V. The Birth of the People's Party
In 1927, seven Siamese students gathered in Paris for a meeting that would completely change Thai history. They founded the Khana Ratsadon (The People's Party), bringing together a mix of civilian and military guys who were all studying in Europe.
The two biggest names you need to know are:
Pridi Banomyong: The intellectual civilian. He studied law in France and was the brains behind the operation, firmly believing in a constitutional government, the rule of law, and actual political freedom for the people.
Plaek Phibunsongkhram (Phibun): The muscle. A young artillery officer also studying in France, he was incredibly good at organizing and building networks inside the military. He’d eventually go on to become Thailand’s long-standing military dictator and Prime Minister.
This core group slowly and secretly recruited their closest friends. By 1931, they had scaled up to about a hundred members, perfectly split into civilian and military branches just waiting for the right moment to strike.
Part VI. The Senior Military Leaders
The young revolutionaries knew they couldn't pull this off alone. They needed respected senior officers to give the coup actual legitimacy. Enter the "Four Musketeers" of the military wing:
Phraya Phahon: He stepped up as the public face of the revolution and eventually became Prime Minister.
Phraya Songsuradet: The brains of the operation who drew up the actual tactical blueprints.
Phraya Ritthi Akhaney: The muscle who controlled the crucial army units needed to secure the city.
Phra Phrasasphithayayut: The logistics expert who coordinated all the complex troop movements.
Having these high-ranking veterans on board is exactly what kept the younger planners from being immediately arrested for treason.
Part VII. Why did they act in 1932?
They believed three things had perfectly aligned:
An economic crisis had left the government incredibly weak.
They had enough military backing that many key officers actively supported reform.
Strategic absence: the king was currently away from Bangkok.
It was, without a doubt, their ideal opportunity.
Part VIII. The Revolution
June 24, 1932. At the break of dawn¹, rebel army units quietly moved into position, seizing ministries, military headquarters, communication centers, and key intersections across the capital. The strategy was brilliant in its deception: most of the soldiers on the ground honestly thought they were just executing routine military drills.
Because of this stealth approach, the historic shift happened with almost no bloodshed. The revolutionaries immediately locked down the city by arresting senior princes before a resistance could even form. Their top-priority target? Prince Paribatra Sukhumbandhu. After the King, he was effectively the most powerful man in Siam, controlling key branches of defense and state administration. To the revolutionaries, he was the ultimate face of the old absolute monarchy. By detaining him along with several other key royals, the old regime was neutralized in a single morning.
Part IX. The King's Decision
While everything was going down in Bangkok, King Rama VII was actually away at Hua Hin. The People's Party gave him a brutal ultimatum: either accept a constitution, or risk a full-blown civil war. Instead of fighting back, the King chose negotiation over armed resistance. Because of that choice, the entire absolute monarchy was overturned with incredibly little violence.
Part X. What changed?
With the end of the absolute monarchy, Siam transitioned into a constitutional system. This monumental shift introduced a formal constitution and established a national parliament for the first time in the country’s history. Under this new framework, government ministers no longer answered solely to the King under the new constitutional system. While the monarchy itself endured as a vital institution, its era of absolute rule had officially drawn to a close.
NOTE:
¹Did you know the Thai title for The Edge of Horizon is อรุณรุ่ง (Arun Rung)? It literally means "dawn" or "daybreak," and for a story set during the 1932 Siamese Revolution, that symbolism is doing some heavy lifting.
First, it's a literal historical reference. The 1932 revolution actually started in pitch darkness around 4:00 a.m. on June 24th, when the Khana Ratsadon (People's Party) quietly seized control of Bangkok while everyone was sleeping. In fact, the famous original revolutionary plaque at the Royal Plaza explicitly states the event happened at ย่ำรุ่ง (yam rung), which translates to "at dawn." The inscription literally opens with: "ณ ที่นี้ 24 มิถุนายน 2475 เวลาย่ำรุ่ง..." ("At this place, on 24 June 1932, at dawn...").
But the title also works beautifully on a thematic level:
1. A Political/Social Dawn: 1932 was the absolute end of the absolute monarchy and the beginning of a constitutional era. It challenged the old world order. Since the romance is a massive class-gap trope between a prince and a commoner-turned-soldier, their relationship mirrors the country breaking down old social barriers.
2. A Personal Dawn: As Siam awakens into a new political reality, the two main characters are forced into their own ideological and emotional awakenings when they reunite.
Even the English title, The Edge of Horizon, fits this perfectly. Standing at the horizon right before the sun comes up means you're standing on the exact edge of dawn, that tense, breathtaking threshold right before everything changes forever.
Setting up a new yurt for friends to live in during the summer in Inner Mongolia, China. OP has noted in comments that a yurt costs around RMB¥20K.
*Khatas are traditional, ceremonial scarves. Mongolian khatas are usually blue, symbolising the sky.
[eng by me]
Chinese netizens found that the Yangsigang Yangtze River Bridge looks just like a portal to another dimension during heavy rains.
OP ran into an elderly grandpa selling cherries at the wet market. He was wearing a super sturdy suoyi蓑衣 that he’d woven by himself. a traditional rain cape woven from palm leaves or rice straw, widely used by Chinese farmers in the past to shield from rain.
Chinese netizens also shared the suoyi they have. (cr搬砖弟,愿为云和雨)
How to Make a Complete Set of Miao Silver Headdress by 山白
OP: How to wrap perfectly standard triangular bipyramid zongzi (cr丁丁美食)