Lol, yeah, I was trying to find a source for the average home age, and an article in English cited this as the official government statistics, which i thought would be more responsible to cite, even if I couldn't understand it. I did auto-translate it to double check, though.
evasive_chimpanzee
Japanese houses in particular are basically a consumable. They are designed for a very short lifetime compared to pretty much any other developed country.
If you had a territory where you could sort mostly the wealthy people into one "country" and mostly the poor people into another "country", you could make one really happy and one really sad country.
The district as a whole voted republican, but the attendees are just whoever showed up to the town hall to air grievances, which sounds like it was not republicans.
There's two broad categories of ways that concrete can get messed up: things that apparently ruin a batch on the spot, and things that compromise the resulting structural integrity in ways that might not be readily apparent.
The biggest things I can think of for the first category are water and time. More water means more "workability", so it flows better, but it means the overall strength goes down. You basically want to use a minimal amount of water you can get away with. More water also means more time to set, so concrete workers will add water to the mix in the truck to slow it down if they need to. You can always add more water, but you can never take water out (or add more cement/aggregate on site). Concrete trucks have a water tank on board to add water, and also clean off equipment after pours because job sites often don't have water. If enough water is added to the concrete in the truck, the batch is ruined. I'm sure there are compounds that could ruin a batch, but the water is right there.
Time also hurts because there is a ticking clock for getting the mix out of the truck once it has been made, particularly if the batch plant is far from the work site, and weather is hot. If the site is not completely prepped and ready to go when the truck gets there, enough delays will force the whole batch to be scapped before it ruins the truck. A lot of work goes into getting forms set properly and squared, and the underlying gravel compacted, so that is all delicate before the truck gets there.
The second category, things that compromise the integrity over time has a lot of potential, but there is no guarantee that strength will be compromised enough to cause failure, and there's a lot of potential for collateral damage if it's in a bridge, building, or something people could be on/in. The first things that come to mind here are stuff that will decay over time resulting in voids, like woodchips. I know there's been research into woodchips as an intentional additive, but I'm sure there's more science that goes into that than just tossing it it. Something that causes oxide jacking would also really increase failure rates. This is when a material like steel rusts and expands, splitting concrete apart. This happens often if rebar is not fully encased in concrete. This does happen eventually to any reinforced concrete, which is why modern concrete structures have design lifetimes unlike Roman concrete which lasts indefinitely, but has to be much more massive. Adding a bunch of nails or something like that to concrete would probably speed up the process, but enough nails/woodchips to make a difference would most likely be noticed by the people doing the pour (which could actually be a benefit).
If you wanted it to be unnoticeable, you would probably want to get a roll of rebar tying wire, and figure out a way to get it placed in the prepped site in such a way that it would be exposed to the elements after the final pour without being easily noticeable by the people doing the pour. Bonus points if the effort is focused on areas of stress concentration like corners or joints in the concrete.
You can get the angles to match up pretty well by hand? I guess you could probably practice on random twigs.
How hard is that to cut with a normal knife?
I don't think he himself is necessarily doing it as part of a strategy; i think it's really the people around him. He's basically a loose cannon with a bunch of idiots dancing around with matches trying to light the fuse while it's pointed where they want to hit.
Plenty of federal facilities have garbage reception. I think it's probably due to the bureaucracy involved in telecoms installing their hardware on sensitive property. The White House in particular probably has lots of thick walls/armor attenuating signals, too.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scorched_rice
Personally, I really like the version from Iran. They (and I'm sure there is regional variation in it) mix some yogurt into the rice, which seems similar to the dish you had.
Plain, white rice will brown a little where it contacts the pan. Adding a fat like oil or butter will conduct heat better so you get a thicker layer of browning. It's basically frying. The addition of an acid increases the rate of caramelization, so yogurt helps with that.
It's not really confusing. His whole strategy, as we saw during his first term, is to do and say so much outrageous stuff that no particular scandal can stick with him. He also thinks being a bully is being a good businessman.
I doubt he would actually want to annex anywhere, but it's easy ragebait that he can keep bringing up to keep news on that and off of his crimes.
In the US, the concentration of tomato paste and tomato puree is legally defined. 8%<puree<24%<paste. "Sauce" is not defined the same way, and commonly has other stuff added to it like salt, oregano, basil, or other herbs.
My guess is the recipe has to be paste, otherwise that's barely anything.