"Oolong" versus blended black and green teas
A strikingly non-traditional tea term
Oolong - Wikipedia

The Chinese term wulong (oolong) was first used to describe a tea in the 1857 text Miscellaneous Notes on Fujian by Shi Hongbao.
That is much too recent to be traditional. The description of the tea leaves themselves suggests that some are common green tea leaves and some are black or oxidized tea leaves of the sort typically preferred by Englishmen.
The Chinese morality police are here again. Both the woman with "long" hair and her husband who's two meters "long" in bed need to get off the property, and whatever sort of tea it is, that's what it had better be labeled as.
China vows to crack down on chemicals used to make fentanyl entering the US
FBI Director Kash Patel joins ‘Sunday Morning Futures’ to discuss President Trump’s deal with China’s Xi Jinping to curb the flow of chemicals used in fentanyl production, the latest on the Arctic Frost probe and more.
So it's high time to get out of bed and quit the fentanyl habit.
