These Interesting Times
The Blog of Peter Forsythe in Hong Kong
Saturday, 8 November 2025
Mamdani Just Revealed His Plan & Trump Sends CLEAR Message After NYC Election! | Elon Musk
Friday, 7 November 2025
Xi's thoughts on the election of Zohran Mamdani. (not *that* Xi....)
Xi Van Fleet is a genuine refugee from Chinese communism of the days when it war real communism.... in the late 1960s.
Because of her experience, she's a lioness against the spread of communism in her adopted and beloved country: the United States of America.
She talks of the link between Islamism, Marxism and Globalism. Thinking of the win of the Islamist-Communist Zohran Mamdani as the new NYC mayor.
Understanding the relationship among the three is crucial:
Marxism and Islamism serve as instruments of Globalism.
The enemy is totalitarian GLOBALISM.
Thursday, 6 November 2025
DSA: Cuckoos in the Democrats’ nest
Wednesday, 5 November 2025
Foreign Money funding U.S. political movements
Tuesday, 4 November 2025
Tucker Carlson, Nick Fuentes and Candace Owens are vile Jew haters
Monday, 3 November 2025
Grave and worrying issues on the American Right | Yehuda Teitelbaum on X
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“We can’t stay on Earth forever” | Elon Musk
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Sunday, 2 November 2025
Saturday, 1 November 2025
New York Rent Freezes. Redux…
Friday, 31 October 2025
"Magnus Carlsen's Mind-Blowing Memory!" | David Howell
Magnus once played ten lawyers at Harvard simultaneously, blindfolded.
After the match he was talking to one of the attorneys, who said he regretted not taking notes of the moves, now being unable to show his game to his friends at the Bar and the library. Magnus then proceeded to tell the guy all the moves that were made in their game...
Pretty soon we'll get back to our own pretty Samurai Chess Set. After all, what I'm doing here is just me and the Preen's Gambit...
And Happy Halloween. (does one say that??...).
Thursday, 30 October 2025
The Story of a Samurai Chess Set. Part 5. La Casa Colonica
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| Our "Casa Colonica", in Falcone, Frascati, Rome |
From yesterday: At some stage there will be more about the Chess Set. Promise. It's just that for me, wandering down this alleyway of memories is just unavoidable. I'm there. It's 70 years ago. They were the Sweet Times. Though the wine was Dry.
There is it, above. I found it. Our place, we lived in from 1954 to 1958.
ADDED: As soon as we'd arrived in Rome, we were put into the Hotel Imperiale, on Via Veneto, built in 1895 and still going strong today 130 years later. Not suitable for our family, says Mutti today, so we moved... to...
A "Casa Colonica", a Farmer's House, just south of Rome, in the district of Frascati, in the village of Falcone, where we grew -- and where they still grow, as they have since Roman times -- the Cesare Red Wine grapes.
I'm supposed to be talking about the Samurai Chess Set. Though I seem still to be sidetracked. And will be again. It's not a Zugzwang. Oh no. It's just a side-track.
The place above is where we lived, our little family, Pa, Mutti, Anne and me, for five full years, 1953 to 1958.
This is a Casa Colonica, or Farmer's designs found in the Agro Romano south of Frascati. Built for small land-owning or tenant-farming families.
We, the Australian government on behalf of our Diplomat Dad, rented it from the owners, that happened to include a "nice Australian lady" as Mutti calls her, married to a local Italian farmer. It was the only place our Third Secretary Father in the Embassy could afford, as digs in the Via Veneto were out of reach even then.
ADDED: Mutti says the "nice Australian lady" was "Frau Tosolini", though I suspect she means "Signora". I find no Tosolinis in the region, just in NE Italy and one now in Melbourne, Australia, who, you never know, might be a relative of those Tosolinis in Frascati. After all, she was an Aussie....
These Case Coloniche were pretty much standard in the Castelli Romani countryside after the 1951–53 land-reform parcels were distributed.
What I remember: above there's the Olive tree, smack bang in the middle and a lovely shade tree for us in the summer. It was old even then.
To the left of it, round the side of the house, was the Pollaio or chicken coop. An early and for me unforgottable memory is of our Mutti, having chopped the head off a chicken, watching it as it ran around, on the remains of its nerves, headless, till it collapsed. And her then calmly and casually picking it up, walking inside to hand it to our daily help, La Domestica...
In every Casa Colonica, every kitchen, every vineyard row in the Castelli Romani in the 1950s, there was a Maria. She was the one who stirred the polenta, plucked the chicken, knew exactly how much wood made the fire just right. She was part of the house, not just in it.
And now, seventy years later, I say her name, and she steps right back into the room.
And she would call me. "Pietro, vieni qua".
Pietro, vieni qua. I hear it. Even if I can’t smell the warm cotton, the faint soap, the steam rising off the pasta water, or feel the soft folds of her dress against a small boy’s cheek, I feel the weight of the memory. That moment: her hands busy at the sink or stove, voice low and kind, pulling me in like I belonged right there, safe in the heart of the house. Maria wasn’t just the maid....
She was the quiet keeper of the kitchen, the one who made the world steady while everything else (new country, new language, new life) spun around us.\
I stand in the doorway of that memory, my Italian childhood memories.
Wednesday, 29 October 2025
The Story of a Samurai Chess Set. Part 4: Wine Squeezing. Wine Smelling. Wine Tasting
| Me, at school, in Falcone, Frascati, Rome. 1957. (I know it's 1957 from the two stripes on my arm, second class, age 7) |
I'm posting this photo above of the lady stomping grapes is that it happens to be the same year, in the same place, where we were, in 1957. We, as kids, did the same. We also stomped the grapes, though in much larger vats, and outside, right there in the middle of the vineyard.
Tuesday, 28 October 2025
The Story of a Sumarai Chess Set. Part 3: Talking to Mutti about where we were in the 1950s
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| Via Appia. The Via Appia Antica is 2,300 y.o. The Appia Nuova 250 years old. We drove on Appia Nuova to get to our house in the 1950s |
And so, I now move back a bit, before I go forward again to my first confrontation with the Samurai Chess Set, my first marvelling at it, my first grapplings with the rudiments of the ancient game that my father began to teach me three quarters of a century ago, in our house, just off the Appian Way.
I spoke to Mutti yesterday, my mother, my sister's mother, our children's grandmother, my grandson's great-grandmother.
She's now 104, still totally with it. Though she cheerily admits that she forgets what she had for dinner last night. But can remember where we lived 70 years ago in Rome. Or just outside Rome, to be precise.
When she and our father arrived for a posting by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs, to the Australian Embassy in Rome, they were told they had to find their own accommodation.
The budget was so tight that they had to find a place outside the centre of Rome. The Roma Centrale was then as unaffordable as Manhattan today. So they went to the countryside.
Where they ended up, with the help of Charles Amato, the local Embassy fixer, was in a town 25km or half an hour from Rome, and just five km west of this beautiful place below: The Castel Gandolfo, Summer Residence of the Pope, since the 17th Century. The Pope being at the time Pope Pius XII, who we met.
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| Castel Gandolfo on Lake Albano |
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| Pope Pius XII, the Vatican, 1956. Anne, my sister, in white dress, me on her left. Pa behind Anne, w. glasses |
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| Our peasant house, just off the Via Appia Nuova. Falcone, in the Lazio region, part of the Metropolitan City of Rome, Municipality of Frascati |
Monday, 27 October 2025
The Story of a Samurai Chess Set, Part 2: Introducing the Set
Camera pan: to the village of Falcognana, in Frascati county, just south of central Rome.
The year is: 1957. The time in Rome is La Dolce Vita. The time of the Sweet Life.
The place is a two-story house in the middle of a vineyard. In the distance, about a football field away is another house, similar. One, ours, is a peasants house, but a touch fancy, the other, theirs, Mimmo and Lola's is a peasant house too, just slightly cruder. The house of contadinas.
Come inside. We see me, lying on the floor. Dad has just come home and is having his first of the evening. Chatting to our Mutti.
He suggests to me, a 7 year old, that we have a game of chess. He'll teach me, he says.
"What's that?" I hear myself ask. How could I have known what "chess" was, or what a chess set was, when I was struggling to keep up in my local class in Italian? We hadn't got to "chess", and would not, ever get to it.
Me, a birth baby of two of the Great Generation, who fought against the actual, real, honest-to-God Nazis and defeated them. Who then ended up in Tokyo, as members of the Occupiers, mother from New Zealand, father Australian. Who did a "hardship post" in immediate post-war Tokyo. Got married there, had me, went home to Oz, had my sister.
And were duly rewarded by a posting to Italy at the beginning of the Dolce Vita, of the Sweet Life in the fifties of Italy. And bring along their son and new daughter.
Those early post-war days, the budget was tight. The Australian Embassy in Roma had only so much budget from the Aussie taxpayer. My parents found they could afford only a peasant house in a peasant vineyard, in the southern outskirts of the Eternal City.
That's where we were. Those are the first years of my conscious life. And that's where I was introduced to The Set.
"Would you like to try a game of chess, Pete?" says Pa.
To which, I guess, I'm, like, "si, papa, grazie". In Italian. I was already more comfortable in Italian than English and Dad spoke it just fine (as he did several other languages).
What he lays in front of me is this:
A box. Made of Sugi a fragrant Japanese cedar. It's corner joints dovetailed, with contrasting woods.
Inside: a purple velour cloth over wood with 32 notches made to fit the size of each individual piece of the set, and a white elastic over those to keep the pieces in place.
And inside the notches the pieces: which were of people and animals, all with a Japanese imperial theme. All made of ivory, in those days a perfectly acceptable luxury item.
The King, at 3 inches the tallest, but also the most useless of pieces, yet still the aim of the game... an elegant Japanese emperor, in imperial robes, clutching a scepter.
The Queen an Empress, wears a long, elegant kimono with subtle patterns, her hair styled in an elaborate Geisha, with a single large hairpin. She holds an open fan on her belly. Maybe she's pregnant? And hasn't told her emperor yet?
The Bishops are monk-like men, bald, with long, flowing traditional robes to their feet, fulsome men, well fed, they stand with calm expressions. Calm they may appear, but they're the secret samurai's able to kill at a diagonal distance.
The Knights are horses standing to attention, with warriors -- the Samurai? -- at the ready, mounted. With their forwards, backwards, sideways, up and over movements they're the surprise merchants of the chess board.
The Castles, the Rooks, are stone towers, pagodas, with the stones etched in, the tops like Longhorns. The protectors of the long lanes.
The Pawns are almost the best of these. Warriors, with conical hats, Chinese style, kneeling and holding rifles aimed at the opponents. One of these, in each of Black and White side has a flower carved in the bottom, a chrysanthemum, the mark of the artist.
That's me meeting the set, at age 7, lying on the floor of our peasant house, waiting for Pa to sit down with me and explain what's what about chess.
Sunday, 26 October 2025
The Story of a Samurai Chess Set, Part 1
For the next xx number of posts -- I don't know how many -- I'm going to tell the story of a 75 year-old hand-made Japanese chess set that we owned.
That's past tense. "Owned". Because we no longer do. And therein the story.
This is a story that's been on my mind, in my heart, for going on seventy years now.
It's been a painful story in our family.
We've not been able to talk about it within the family for decades.
But there's a happy ending. Maybe...
That's what I want to tell the story about.
And as I do that, I'm going to give up talking of anything political, no matter how crazy, fascinating, shocking, wonderful or terrible.
It'll just be "The Story of a Samurai Chess Set, Part xx".
“Nobody got laid to protest at the No Kings Rallies” | Whoopi Goldberg
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Saturday, 25 October 2025
Delusions on the Left | Michael Shellenberger and Zuby
Michael Shellenberger and Zuby have a consequential and interesting discussion about issues of current political and cultural concern.
Random Fact quoted by Michael:
Friday, 24 October 2025
Liberal White Women being Racist
This is stomach turning.
From Affluent White Female Urban Liberals. AWFULs.
When Jen Psaki, and Tiffany Cross, the "Dotox Joe" (the Left are pushing her as their version of Joe Rogan), talks about the wife of the current Veep, Usha Vance, it's just so cringe.
As Megyn Kelly says, a 46-year old woman should not be using the term "Rizz". Even her daughter says it's gross.
What is quite amazing, though not so much to me, as I've been following this sort of stuff for ages, is how much these three women are in agreement that all the people they disagree with are horrid, that they're all racist, that they're all bigoted... but somehow, despite all that, how these women themselves, Jen and Tiffany and... are all wonderful, all so tolerant, all such kind and warm people. Amazing that!
From the video of Greg Foreman, the Black Conservative Perspective. So many Black conservatives these days, on YouTube and here and there, and all of them proud and not at all shy of fighting back against the Left view that if they're "People of Colour" then of course they should vote Dem. Oh, no, say these new crop of conservative people of colour. We know where we get the best treatment. We know where our views actually matter. And it ain't the Left.
DB Sunset
Thursday, 23 October 2025
El Patron, El Jefe
“These earnings calls always make me so optimistic”| Ale𝕏andra Merz on TSLA
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Q: What’s the difference between a Chick Pea and a Garbanzo bean?
A: Hunter Biden has never had a Garbanzo bean on him.
Heh!
H/t: Chicks on the Right
Also Chicks:
Q: What do you call a basement full of progressive Democrats?
A: A Whine Cellar…








