Angelina Visits Cambodia
Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
Way too much info.
It was a joke love.
Stop being a victim.
[/quote]
Stop being a piece of crap.
You push push push the button and when something ignites, you plead innocence.
And I'm not your fucking love either.
Once you've read the dictionary, every other book is just a remix.
Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
Thats a tad unfair. Breasts have featured quite prominently throughout history. Mammoth tusk carvings from the end of the last interstitial ice age often featured ample bosomed figurines. Jean Auel wrote an excellent series of books set in this period of time, btw (Earths Children... an epic story). But I digress, Boobs, breasts, jugs, the list is endless.
Cosmopilitan wrote an article called "Here are 99 different names for boobs"
And then there's boobs in art... oh boy, how those artists loved those boobs
"How The Representation Of Boobs Has Changed Through Art History"
So, here we are, in the 21st Century and men are still obsessed with boobs. Somethings never go out of fashion, and like the sun rising in the east, and given the history of mans fondness for boobies it might be an impossible task.
You could try to change what has always been and what will probably always be. But, you may have better luck trying to get men to put the toilet seat down than to change their thoughts on "boobs"
Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
It must be hard for you men to navigate the world.
Some tell you not to mention boobs while others declare themselves in charge by selling you their boobs on OnlyFans.
The world’s a mess
Some tell you not to mention boobs while others declare themselves in charge by selling you their boobs on OnlyFans.
The world’s a mess
Despite what angsta states, it’s clear from reading through his posts that angsta supports the free FreePalestine movement.
Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
Anyway back to Angelina (because that’s who the topic is about after all) there’s a great pic of her and some kid giving the fingers.
I’ll see if I can find it.
((Karens not invited)
I’ll see if I can find it.
((Karens not invited)
People of the world, spice up your life.
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Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
One Year Later, Angelina Jolie And Guerlain Continue To Fight For Global Bee Preservation
Rebecca SuhrawardiContributor
May 20, 2022,11:54am EDT
Last year, I broke the news that heritage French cosmetics house Guerlain would partner with Angelina Jolie and UNESCO’s Women for Bees Programme to help counter the dropping rates of the world honeybee population. Now, one year later, 11 women who have been educated as beekeepers have graduated and will go into beekeeping training programs with the help of Jolie and a second €1m donation made by Guerlain.
This stage of the efforts will see the launch of the Cambodian phase of the program. 12 of the new women beekeeper trainees who have been chosen by the UNESCO team in Phenom Pen along with Jolie’s charitable foundation in the region, the MJP Foundation, will enter into six months of training which has been officially inaugurated by Jolie.
The overarching objectives of the Guerlain x UNESCO Women For Bees Programme is twofold: to create entrepreneurship and employment opportunities for women while also working to repopulate dwindling bee populations, an insect which plays a critical role in pollination and, as a result, food security. According to IPBES Assessment Report on Pollinators, Pollination and Food Production, close to 75% of all cultivated plants and 90% of wild flowering plants depend on pollinators, which includes bees.
“In 2021, we joined forces with UNESCO and actress and philanthropist Angelina Jolie to launch the Women for Bees program with significant goals for 2025–2,500 hives installed in the heart of 25 UNESCO biosphere reserves, 125 million bees repopulated and 50 women trained and supported in establishing their own beekeeping operations,” says Cécile Lochard, Guerlain's Chief Sustainability Officer.
“Following the first training program in France and now this second one in Cambodia, the Women for Bees program will have trained 18 total beekeepers, all of which are well underway of creating their own beekeeping operations worldwide. And at the end of the first year of the program, we are on track to have repopulated nearly 25 million bees.”
https://www.forbes.com/sites/rebeccasuh ... servation/
Rebecca SuhrawardiContributor
May 20, 2022,11:54am EDT
Last year, I broke the news that heritage French cosmetics house Guerlain would partner with Angelina Jolie and UNESCO’s Women for Bees Programme to help counter the dropping rates of the world honeybee population. Now, one year later, 11 women who have been educated as beekeepers have graduated and will go into beekeeping training programs with the help of Jolie and a second €1m donation made by Guerlain.
This stage of the efforts will see the launch of the Cambodian phase of the program. 12 of the new women beekeeper trainees who have been chosen by the UNESCO team in Phenom Pen along with Jolie’s charitable foundation in the region, the MJP Foundation, will enter into six months of training which has been officially inaugurated by Jolie.
The overarching objectives of the Guerlain x UNESCO Women For Bees Programme is twofold: to create entrepreneurship and employment opportunities for women while also working to repopulate dwindling bee populations, an insect which plays a critical role in pollination and, as a result, food security. According to IPBES Assessment Report on Pollinators, Pollination and Food Production, close to 75% of all cultivated plants and 90% of wild flowering plants depend on pollinators, which includes bees.
“In 2021, we joined forces with UNESCO and actress and philanthropist Angelina Jolie to launch the Women for Bees program with significant goals for 2025–2,500 hives installed in the heart of 25 UNESCO biosphere reserves, 125 million bees repopulated and 50 women trained and supported in establishing their own beekeeping operations,” says Cécile Lochard, Guerlain's Chief Sustainability Officer.
“Following the first training program in France and now this second one in Cambodia, the Women for Bees program will have trained 18 total beekeepers, all of which are well underway of creating their own beekeeping operations worldwide. And at the end of the first year of the program, we are on track to have repopulated nearly 25 million bees.”
https://www.forbes.com/sites/rebeccasuh ... servation/
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Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
I wondered if this technology would be able to the new beekeepers?
Hive mind: Tunisia beekeepers abuzz over early warning system
Elias Chebbi inspected a beehive in a field in Tunisia, minutes after a buzz on his phone warned him of a potential problem.
The 39-year-old beekeeper opened a flap in the hive to reveal a low-cost, locally made sensor dedicated to measuring key environmental variables. An app on his phone then warns him if action needs to be taken.
"Thanks to this, I can relax," he said. "It tells me remotely everything that's happening."
Chebbi has two of the sensors, entirely produced in Tunisia by the only company of its kind in North Africa.
He periodically places one in each of the 100 or so hives he keeps, on a grassy hillside an hour's drive from the capital Tunis.
The devices, each costing under 300 Tunisian dinars (around 92 euros), send live updates on temperature, humidity and the weight of the hive to a central computer.
It then analyses the data and helps him react quickly to potential problems -- as well as selecting the most resilient, productive queens for breeding.
That is a major asset as bee colonies face multiple threats, including climate change and increasingly common collapses of entire hives.
- Key role of bees -
Chebbi remembers being stung by a sudden heatwave in 2013, before he started using the system, when he lost around a quarter of his hives.
"I had big losses, 26 hives, because of humidity and the sudden change in temperature," he said.
But since he started using the SmartBee system -- developed in 2020 by a group of young Tunisian engineering graduates -- his losses have dropped dramatically, to under 10 percent of his hives in a given year.
He has also boosted his honey production by 30-40 percent.
Today, Khaled Bouchoucha, 34-year-old CEO of manufacturer Beekeeper Tech, says the sensors gather "a huge amount of information on the bees' yield and the threats they face".
The gadgets "gather reliable data in real time, so beekeepers can make good decisions and avoid collapse of their hives", he said.
This data is then fed wirelessly to the company's cloud computing system, which analyses it to identify potential problems.
If it does, it sends a warning to the beekeeper to intervene -- by cooling overheating hives, adding insulation to those that are dangerously cold, or providing sugar solution to those whose weight shows that they have not produced enough honey to survive the winter.
Beekeeper Tech has sold over 1,000 of the systems, mostly in Tunisia and neighbouring countries.
Bouchoucha says customers are swarming to the app and the firm's workers are preparing another 1,500 orders for customers in Libya, Algeria, Saudi Arabia and even New Zealand.
- Boosting food security -
Bee populations around the world are facing disaster from overuse of pesticides, mites and temperature extremes due to climate change.
That also spells catastrophe for humans, as we depend on pollination by bees for over a quarter of all the food we consume.
According to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization, three quarters of the world's main crops depend on pollinators -- but the insects are in decline worldwide, mostly due to human activities.
Beekeeping itself is also a vital livelihood for many.
In Tunisia, with its population of 11 million, the sector employs some 13,000 people and produces some 2,800 tonnes of honey every year, according to its agricultural union.
The FAO marks a World Bee Day every year on May 20 to raise awareness about "the essential role bees and other pollinators play in keeping people and the planet healthy."
The SmartBee app offers more than an early warning system.
The data it collects also tells beekeepers about the health and productivity of each hive, its resistance to changes in climate.
Mnaouer Djemali, chief scientific officer at the National Agronomic Institute of Tunisia and a co-founder of Beekeeper Tech, said data from the hives "enables us to measure the profitability of each queen" and to select the best for breeding.
"That can help us boost our food security and sovereignty," he said. "We are sorely in need of that in a world full of diseases and wars."
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/africa/top-st ... 065edfdc85
Hive mind: Tunisia beekeepers abuzz over early warning system
Elias Chebbi inspected a beehive in a field in Tunisia, minutes after a buzz on his phone warned him of a potential problem.
The 39-year-old beekeeper opened a flap in the hive to reveal a low-cost, locally made sensor dedicated to measuring key environmental variables. An app on his phone then warns him if action needs to be taken.
"Thanks to this, I can relax," he said. "It tells me remotely everything that's happening."
Chebbi has two of the sensors, entirely produced in Tunisia by the only company of its kind in North Africa.
He periodically places one in each of the 100 or so hives he keeps, on a grassy hillside an hour's drive from the capital Tunis.
The devices, each costing under 300 Tunisian dinars (around 92 euros), send live updates on temperature, humidity and the weight of the hive to a central computer.
It then analyses the data and helps him react quickly to potential problems -- as well as selecting the most resilient, productive queens for breeding.
That is a major asset as bee colonies face multiple threats, including climate change and increasingly common collapses of entire hives.
- Key role of bees -
Chebbi remembers being stung by a sudden heatwave in 2013, before he started using the system, when he lost around a quarter of his hives.
"I had big losses, 26 hives, because of humidity and the sudden change in temperature," he said.
But since he started using the SmartBee system -- developed in 2020 by a group of young Tunisian engineering graduates -- his losses have dropped dramatically, to under 10 percent of his hives in a given year.
He has also boosted his honey production by 30-40 percent.
Today, Khaled Bouchoucha, 34-year-old CEO of manufacturer Beekeeper Tech, says the sensors gather "a huge amount of information on the bees' yield and the threats they face".
The gadgets "gather reliable data in real time, so beekeepers can make good decisions and avoid collapse of their hives", he said.
This data is then fed wirelessly to the company's cloud computing system, which analyses it to identify potential problems.
If it does, it sends a warning to the beekeeper to intervene -- by cooling overheating hives, adding insulation to those that are dangerously cold, or providing sugar solution to those whose weight shows that they have not produced enough honey to survive the winter.
Beekeeper Tech has sold over 1,000 of the systems, mostly in Tunisia and neighbouring countries.
Bouchoucha says customers are swarming to the app and the firm's workers are preparing another 1,500 orders for customers in Libya, Algeria, Saudi Arabia and even New Zealand.
- Boosting food security -
Bee populations around the world are facing disaster from overuse of pesticides, mites and temperature extremes due to climate change.
That also spells catastrophe for humans, as we depend on pollination by bees for over a quarter of all the food we consume.
According to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization, three quarters of the world's main crops depend on pollinators -- but the insects are in decline worldwide, mostly due to human activities.
Beekeeping itself is also a vital livelihood for many.
In Tunisia, with its population of 11 million, the sector employs some 13,000 people and produces some 2,800 tonnes of honey every year, according to its agricultural union.
The FAO marks a World Bee Day every year on May 20 to raise awareness about "the essential role bees and other pollinators play in keeping people and the planet healthy."
The SmartBee app offers more than an early warning system.
The data it collects also tells beekeepers about the health and productivity of each hive, its resistance to changes in climate.
Mnaouer Djemali, chief scientific officer at the National Agronomic Institute of Tunisia and a co-founder of Beekeeper Tech, said data from the hives "enables us to measure the profitability of each queen" and to select the best for breeding.
"That can help us boost our food security and sovereignty," he said. "We are sorely in need of that in a world full of diseases and wars."
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/africa/top-st ... 065edfdc85
Always "hope" but never "expect".
- John Bingham
- Expatriate
- Posts: 13763
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Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
I don't expect young journalists to have much worldly knowledge these days but is it too much to expect Forbes to use a recognized spelling of the Cambodian capital's name? Stupid cunts.Forbes wrote: Phenom Pen
https://www.forbes.com/sites/rebeccasuh ... servation/
Silence, exile, and cunning.
Re: Angelina Visits Cambodia
Clicked on his thread hoping to see breasts. Disappointed.
- John Bingham
- Expatriate
- Posts: 13763
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2014 11:26 pm
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