Results 31 to 40 of 62
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June 22nd, 2014 01:04 PM #31
You mean si retz yan? :lashing: :P
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June 22nd, 2014 01:10 PM #32
What heck if someone eats what they wanna eat. It's nature of survival nothing to do with beliefs. I eat pussy and reciprocated enjoying and loved it. So what the heck, life is about be born and dying, at the end everyone dies irregardless of what they ate in life,that is evolution of life. It happens to all living things, human, plants animals etc..even cars. Whether one die early or too late in life, he/she still gonna die anyway and cannot get away with it.
Mods, paki delete na lang itong thread. This is plain BS.
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June 22nd, 2014 03:00 PM #33
the guy can't seem to see the big picture
the goal in avoiding pork is to live longer diba?
so dapat mas mahaba ang buhay ng mga Muslim kaysa sa general population
so why don't Muslims live longer than non-Muslims?
mas mahaba ba ang buhay ng mga Filipino Muslim kaysa Filipino Catholics?
nope
if Muslims have such a healthy diet they should be the longest living people on the planet
So, globally, why are countries with the highest life expectancy not Muslim countries?Last edited by uls; June 22nd, 2014 at 03:56 PM.
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June 22nd, 2014 08:15 PM #34
Live healthy and wait to be blown up by which religion again?
Nakiki wi-fi lang
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June 22nd, 2014 08:28 PM #35
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June 22nd, 2014 09:51 PM #36
paulit ulit niya sinasabi dahil sa pork 50% of Americans are hypertensive
Many Americans are hypertensive coz a lot of them are overweight
why are a lot of Americans overweight?
coz mura ang pagkain
percent of income spent on food:
Last edited by uls; June 22nd, 2014 at 10:11 PM.
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June 22nd, 2014 10:09 PM #38
The US Spends Less On Food Than Any Other Country In The World [MAPS]
U.S. residents spent on average about $2,273, or about 6.4 percent of their annual consumer expenditures, on food in 2012, according to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA).
As a percentage of consumer expenditures, that is less than any of the 83 other countries for which the USDA tracks data.
That doesn’t mean food is cheaper in the U.S. than anywhere else in the world. In fact, the annual cost of food in the U.S. is more than the average of all the countries for which data is tracked by the USDA.
It means that the average amount spent on food, when expressed as a percentage of all the consumer goods the average U.S. citizen purchases in a year, is less than in any of these other 83 countries.
This percentage is the highest in Pakistan, where the average person spends about half his/her annual income on food. This is despite the fact that food for one person in a year in Pakistan costs about a fourth of what it costs in the U.S.-- $415.
But even high-income countries, like Switzerland (11 percent) and Sweden (12.2 percent), spend a higher percentage of their annual consumer expenditures on food than U.S. residents do.
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June 22nd, 2014 10:47 PM #39
MODERATOR'S NOTE: toty5, please cite your sources or quote posts that are not your own words.
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June 23rd, 2014 07:35 AM #40
Thank you!
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