Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

Google Translate


Google’s service, offered free of charge, instantly translates words, phrases, and web pages between English and over 100 other languages.

Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

“杀猪盘”电诈园区如何骗遍全球?东南亚跨国诈骗产业的真相与法律风险深度解析|PN环球律所


近年来,一个以东南亚为中心、以强迫劳动和跨境洗钱为基础的“电诈产业链”正在快速扩张。 无论是美国、欧洲,还是中国、印度等亚洲国家,都已成为该类犯罪的重灾区。 根据美国财政部的最新评估: 这一跨国电诈产业已导致美国民众损失超过 166 亿美元,全球每年的黑色利润更是高达至少 640 …

Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

Who Is Liam Neeson’s Ex-Wife? Natasha Richardson’s Tragic Death


Actor Natasha Richardson died from a brain injury suffered in a 2009 skiing accident. Here’s how the tragedy affected then-husband Liam Neeson and their family.

Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

Atlas® Garage Pro 8000 Service/Parking 4 Post Lift 8,000 lbs


All Atlas® portable four post lifts (8,000 lb. capacity) are designed and built for use by Mr. Homeowner or restoration shop. These lifts are not designed to work in commercial repair shops that raise and lower a lift several times per day.

Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

How to open Device Manager as admin? – Super User


Run CMD as Elevated If your company windows allows you to run some programs as elevated, try this: Type CMD on the windows search Right-click the command prompt and click Open File Location On the folder that opens, right click the Command Prompt shorcut and click Run Elevated This isn’t admin, but it gives you some rights, such as opening the device manager to try to update some drivers. I …

Categories
Sites

Dispatch


Some believe the phrase has been our undoing. Others will say it’s the one thing that has carried us through all these years of darkness. Whatever one’s opinion of it, there are moments in daily conversations in Georgia, moments of uncertainty, moments of doom, when you just can’t help it. The phrase – “ragatsa ikneba” (რაღაცა იქნება)- simply pronounces itself. It announces itself.

The most literal translation of ragatsa ikneba is “there will be something.” There are versions of closer, prettier English translations: “something will turn up,” or “it will be all right,” or “we’ll manage,” or “it will be fine,” or “we’ll be fine.” But one must be careful with these: each smallest deviation from the original meaning, or original meaninglessness, each small certainty the translation brings, every pronoun it adds, every action it invokes, and every bit of new hope it introduces is enough to compromise the mystery, or even mysticism, the universal phrase carries.

We know there will be something, but we don’t know what that something will be. Is it something “good,” or simply something not too bad? Does “someone” bring that something, or is it meant to unfold on its own? Do we look outside, look up, or look inside to find that something? We can only guess. And yet, every word comes with its imagery. So what do we see when we say something?


This is Nini and the Dispatch newsletter, writing from Georgia’s protracted political crisis in search of that “something” that could deliver us from this ordeal.


Something Divine

It could be God. Quite often, the phrase “there will be something” is automatically followed by the mention of the Lord: “God will not abandon us,” it goes, as a joke or in all seriousness. There is no hope, nothing seems to work in our favor, but we’ve been through worse, and yet here we are. God must have helped us then, and God will help us now.

But we speak about God not abandoning us in moments when we feel most abandoned by God. We remember times we were saved precisely because there were many times when we weren’t. It’s hard to say why God won’t do anything about it. Probably because he, or she, is no fan of explicit divine interventions. You want peace and rapture, wait for the afterlife. This world is for tests and suffering. Or God may simply be busy attending to other global events, in places where people might be more desperate or more extreme in getting heaven’s attention. Or God may be angry with us, giving us all these chances only to watch us waste them over and over again.

But what if God actually wants to save us one last time? It’s not a Greek theater – no one will be descending from above through a deus ex machina to save the day. To save us, God would still need some kind of medium, some earthly event to grant our desperate wish. Something worldly, something global.

Something Foreign

Something big must happen internationally for things to radically change in Georgia, you’ll sometimes hear the argument. Those always looking outside have a point. Look at history: none of the country’s breakthroughs, whether gaining or regaining independence, came as isolated events. They all coincided with greater shifts in the world, the collapse of empires. The war in Ukraine must end, Russia must fall, the West must reassert itself, and the U.S. must use its brazen dominance for good deeds. You see something happened in Syria, something happened in Venezuela, and something is happening in Iran. Something will happen here, too.

It is for a reason that every time things shake internationally, we find ourselves in a frenzy. But it may be nothing more than an outdated instinct. Not so long ago, Western pressure did work magic in Georgia in terms of a democratic push. But the past months and years have proved that this is no longer the case, and Georgians have become increasingly self-critical and wary of constantly looking for external help that is not coming. Worse, that foreign “something” may well work against us, should it end up re-legitimizing the logic of spheres of influence. 

Something Domestic

No help is coming until we take matters into our own hands. Indeed, this can’t go on like this forever. For over a year, the country has been stuck in a circle of repression and resistance. It looks like a frozen conflict, but with new victims every day. Something radical will, at some point, happen inside the country. It must shift to one side or another; either the regime crushes the resistance, or the resistance wins. But for that, something must happen. Someone must think of something.

Someone indeed thought of something for October 4, 2025. But it was apparently not a good something, and not many wanted to take part in that something, whatever it was. We want something different, something purer, something more legitimate – peaceful, risk-free, but also effective enough to force a government that doesn’t really care about peaceful pressure to back down. Hitting the streets again in the hundreds of thousands would be something, but would it be enough? What is that something that would bring back faith and fighting spirit to the masses?

Someone must do something. Someone must snap. Who’s that someone?

Something Inside

Maybe that someone is you. When we say “there will be something,” we may simply be looking inwards, looking for something inside ourselves to move, to ignite, looking for some new courage or, even better, new ideas. After all, Georgia is a country of heroes, of individual sacrifice. That’s what we’ve been told, at least. There is no shortage of remarkable examples of individual courage these days, either. If others could find that fire, so can you. 

But will that change anything? What if we have many heroes simply because we’ve had so few victories? The country’s record of successful revolts is not rich, and the tales of heroes could be merely the consolation prizes for battles we could not win. The bravery of one only confirms the cowardice of the masses. And there is, again, no consensus of what that one-person act must look like, what’s the right balance of risk and consequences: when, recently, news broke that one prominent politician tried (and failed) to do “something” like that, to set the court chancellery on fire, some refused to sympathize, while others refused to believe he was actually plotting it, despite the suspect’s confession. 

There is no beating desperation by desperation, apparently.

Something is Everything

But if one person’s acts may not be enough, they can still inspire larger groups. If larger groups continue their struggle and do so consistently, it may or may not push a larger “something” to happen, but may at least contain worse from happening. It can delay the doom before help arrives, before things change internationally, and, if God is willing, those things change in our favor.

“Something” does not have to be a one-time event that upends the status quo. It can be everything and everyone at the same time, many people doing many small things over longer periods of time. It could be collective labor, countless variables constantly moving and interacting, before somehow, even if through a random sequence of events, a change appears. “There will be something” is thus not an excuse for the lazy who sit and do nothing and wait for change to come on its own. It can be the readiness to embrace the complexity of the battle as you continue to fight your share, and expect others to do the same.

Something is Nothing

Or it can be nothing. 

We often say “there will be something” when we have nothing else to say. When we meet a friend who is as worried about the fate of the country as we are. When we tell them how bad everything is, and they also tell us how truly bad everything is. And then we tell them how there is no hope, and they, too, tell us how nothing makes sense anymore. But we are at a rally, and we need to come back here tomorrow, so we can’t go on forever in these mutual affirmations of doom.

You need an exit – not good enough to promise salvation, but good enough to bring you back to the same spot at the same time the next day. Good enough to continue your Sisyphean, possibly an absurd battle, even if nothing suggests you will ever win it, or that a “victory” as such exists in a life that has no happy ending, precisely because it imminently ends.

And then you say: “There will be something” – and come back tomorrow to say it over and over again.

The post Dispatch – January 12: Something first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.


Categories
Sites

Thousands left without heating as Russia bombards Ukraine’s energy grid


Thousands in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv were still without heating on Sunday (January 11) following a devastating Russian attack early on Friday (January 9), local authorities said. Elderly residents are finding ways to cope with temperatures plunging below zero, but the country’s energy system is struggling under constant attacks. Sean Hogan has more.

The post Thousands left without heating as Russia bombards Ukraine’s energy grid first appeared on October Surprise 2016 – octobersurprise2016.org.


Categories
Sites

Equestrian Federation awards top athletes and coaches


An event dedicated to summarizing the results of 2025 was held at the Azerbaijan Equestrian Federation (ARAF), Azernews reports, citing the Ministry of Youth and Sports.

The post Equestrian Federation awards top athletes and coaches first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.


Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

Top 100 Haircuts for Men of All Hair Types and Textures


You’ve come to the right place if you’re looking for the latest and most popular men’s haircuts. The MensHaircuts team keeps its finger on the pulse of trends, carefully and meticulously selecting only the top hairstyles from the works of barbers in the USA, Canada, and Europe.

Categories
News Review from The World Web Times

¿Cómo calcular las horas extras? Actualizado 2026 – Bitákora


Te explicaremos cuáles son los porcentajes de incremento que deben pagarse en cada caso y los requisitos actualizados para su reconocimiento, según la Reforma Laboral, incluyendo la obligación de registrar diariamente el trabajo suplementario de cada trabajador.