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An elderly man walked unsteadily acrossthe road, and a delivery courier carried himon his back to get across safely.#Heartwarming##Caring# for the Elderly#Food# Delivery Rider
🇨🇳 Over 2,000 people in China joined a challenge where they had to finish a bowl of food in a fake classroom without getting caught by “teachers” within 10 minutes. Finally a use for all those years of practice.
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Beautiful and tasty, totally tempting! 色香味俱全,太诱人啦! #DeliciousFood# #Yummy# #TastyBites# #FoodieFun# #reels#
I've been on a wild travel journey in China for several weeks, with only a backpack, making new friends and meeting & getting to know people from all walks of life. I've been truly humbled and inspired by everyone's kindness. Next, I'm hopping over to Taiwan (first time for me) to hang out with Jensen, attend Computex, eat a bunch of street food, and just have fun talking to all kinds of folks around the city & beyond. After that, no plans, anything goes. As always, please give travel suggestions or fill out coffee form if you want to hang out in Taiwain or anywhere else in the world. Love you all! ❤️
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High cortisol is the real reason you wake up at 3-4 AM. It also shaves 5 years off your life — tanks testosterone, locks belly fat, literally shrinks your brain. If I wanted to fix it without medication, here are 8 things I'd do every day: 1. No food 3 hours before bed.
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Thailand’s food delivery market led Southeast Asia in growth in 2025, partly because its weak economy encouraged people to eat at home, with food delivery tending to be less expensive than dining out, according to delivery operator Line Man's CEO.
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In Qianjiang, Hubei Province—China's crawfish capital—robots are now doing the peeling. They twist and dehead precisely and keep the yellow fat perfectly intact. Just one more question: does food taste different when no human hands are involved?
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Interview from 2009. June Sarpong talks to Dr Stanley Monteith about poison in foods, and depopulation.
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I recently spent 2 weeks in China. 6 cities: Shanghai, Beijing, Xi’an, Zhangjiajie, Chongqing and Chengdu. I went there with curiosity. Like many Indians, I had heard a lot about China through media, social media and conversations. I expected to see progress, maybe discover some business ideas, and understand what the country is actually building. I came back with a very uncomfortable feeling. Not because I found a business idea for myself. But because I saw 100 things that governments can do when infrastructure, tourism, transport, urban planning and civic systems are treated seriously. I travelled within China by flights, trains, cars and local transport. The infrastructure was honestly stunning. Clean cities. Smooth roads. High-speed trains. Well-managed traffic. Public spaces that actually feel designed for people. Tourist destinations that are built, maintained and promoted like national assets. And then I kept thinking about India. We keep comparing ourselves to China. Our media keeps telling us how India is catching up, how China is restrictive, how we are better in so many ways. After spending time there and speaking to people, I realised how much of that narrative is just comfort food. China is not perfect. No country is. But on infrastructure, execution, tourism, civic discipline and quality of urban life, they are not 5 years ahead of us. They are decades ahead. The saddest part for me was the currency. Everything felt expensive. Not because China was insanely expensive, but because the rupee has weakened so much that even normal spending starts feeling heavy. As an Indian taxpayer, that genuinely hurt. We pay taxes. We work hard. We talk about becoming a global power. But where is the quality of life? Where is the civic sense? Where is the infrastructure that makes daily life easier? Where is the tourism vision beyond religious tourism? I met travellers from other countries who were excited to visit China because they wanted to see its progress. When I asked about India, many had no real desire to visit. Not out of hate. India simply was not on their aspirational travel list. That should bother us. Even the so-called “closed internet” surprised me. We are told people there are missing out because they don’t use Google, Instagram, WhatsApp or Facebook. But China has built its own digital ecosystem. Payments, maps, transport, messaging, shopping, everything works inside their own infrastructure. People did not seem to feel deprived. They seemed adapted. Again, this is not a hate post. I love India. That is exactly why this trip bothered me. Patriotism cannot only be about saying we are great. Real patriotism is having the courage to admit where we are falling behind. China made me realise one thing very clearly: India’s potential is not the problem. Execution is. And unless we stop comforting ourselves with comparisons and start demanding better infrastructure, better governance, better tourism, cleaner cities and a higher quality of life, we will keep celebrating the idea of progress instead of actually living it.
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Combining several types of cholesterol-lowering foods can have a big effect in reducing it. We explain how