Stories (7/0)
Java Burn - True Reviews - Pros & Cons - 80% OFF today.
Java Burn supplement is a healthy coffee additive fat burner product that uses eight natural compounds that dissolve fast into your morning cup of java in order to shed a significant amount of weight. Only the original Java Burn website, JavaBurn.com, sells powdered, flavorless products that are fully verified and tested by the actual company. When it comes to reducing weight, there are a variety of options available. However, some of these techniques may not necessarily be the most accurate or long-lasting. Increasing the speed and efficiency of your metabolism is one method that has been found to be effective.
By Tushar Nandanwar2 years ago in Lifehack
Explaindio 4 Video Creator Review.
Do you know how much money you can make by making 2D-3D videos in a pinch? Explaindio is an easy, simple online whiteboard software animation tool that helps in creating 2D and 3D videos. This is a complete package which helps in creating effortless and amazing designs, full motion videos with unlimited access for users.
By Tushar Nandanwar3 years ago in 01
Is It a Good Idea to Invest in the Bitcoin Blockchain?
Bitcoin Blockchain: Bitcoin, the world's most popular cryptocurrency, was launched in 2009 and is based on Blockchain technology. This technology is well-known for providing unrivalled security. Because of this, this technology is fast gaining traction.
By Tushar Nandanwar3 years ago in The Chain
Can Capitalism Bring Inclusive Growth?
The recent Oxfam Report, 2016 has once again brought forth the debate on global inequality in light of its findings that the richest 1 per cent of the world’s population now own more than the rest of us combined. This debate on global inequality in contemporary times also raises a question mark on the ability of capitalism – the economic system predominantly being followed all over the world, barring a few exceptions, to deliver inclusive growth. Capitalism is an economic system believed to have been born in the aftermath of the industrial revolution in the eighteenth-century Europe. It is based on private enterprise and private ownership of means of production like land, labor, capital etc. as compared to the economic system of Socialism, on the other end of the spectrum, which encourages public or state ownership of means of production. The producers belonging to the elite capitalist class are driven by the sole motive of profit. However, the system of capitalism has been criticized since its inception due to the exploitation of working class under horrible working conditions and low wages and for the very fact that it divides societies into classes of ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’. Its proponents have pointed towards ills of other economic systems and freedom of choice to encourage a laissez faire system. However, in light of the growing global economic inequality and poor standards of living even among sections of citizens in first world countries that have been following capitalism in spirit and law for centuries, certainly does raise a question on capitalism’s flaws and its ability to deliver inclusive growth.
By Tushar Nandanwar3 years ago in The Swamp
Yinshi - A Lifestyle That Leads To Personal Freedom.
‘While weaving flowers in the garden, I look at the high mountains in front of my eyes. Touching the mountain and returning to the evening air, there is a different freshness. At sunset the birds return to their homes rather than singing. It is just that I have come to understand the meaning of life in such scenes.’
By Tushar Nandanwar3 years ago in FYI
How much the world will change with Covid-19!
Seminars, articles and books on the effect of Covid-19 on global politics have started appearing in abundance only last year. Till then, however much things were uncertain about this epidemic, then there should be a holiday to examine its effect on the global setting! World politics is a very complex structure and at the same time it has many dynamic components. Now is an opportune time to understand its structural and functional implications to an extent. Global order and global configuration approach.
By Tushar Nandanwar3 years ago in Humans
Victory and defeat are activities of life, not of life.
The Olympics is over. The winners have returned to their home countries and so are those who could not make it to the winner's line. All the people who dreamed of joining the venture have returned from that journey. The world saw him, saw his journey, but remembered whom? Who will be remembered? If someone asks you how many people from India had participated in this Olympic tour, you can hardly answer it, but if someone asks you the names of the winners, then you will count the names falling down. Or maybe you forget some names but your good will is to remember all the names, but for losers this feeling does not come to mind. We only remember the winners in any walk of life, not just the Olympics. The most beautiful words of language, the most advanced forms of rhetoric and the most effective rules of grammar are spent on them. And for those who do not have a mark of victory on their foreheads, some pretty seemingly hollow words and blessings wishing to 'win further' are used. You might be wondering what is wrong with that? When everyone's effort is to win, then the determination of success and failure will also be in the same way? There is nothing wrong with the notion of winning from this point of view, but there are serious difficulties in making losing synonymous with dismissal.
By Tushar Nandanwar3 years ago in Motivation