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"Ultravisionary Blackpilism"
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So today i will explain why these people affect me to the inceldom. First of all majority of indonesians are muslims so kinda like chad worship. I myself as a non muslim Indonesian think that their habit very very harmful for them. So, here is my point :
1. Ciggaretes bad for children height growth yet they are the highest consooomer of it.
Indonesia has one of the highest smoking rates in the world, and is one of the biggest producers of tobacco worldwide. In 2017, approximately 322.1 billion cigarettes were consumed in Indonesia, making it the largest consumer of cigarettes in the Asia Pacific region. According to a survey on regular smokers in there in 2019, curiosity was the main reason why Indonesians tried smoking cigarettes for the first time, and most were between 16 to 18 years when they first started smoking.
Indonesia is a producer of tobacco. In 2018, approximately 180 thousand metric tons of tobacco were produced in Indonesia. In that same year, Indonesia imported tobacco from other major producers to fulfil the tobacco industry's need.
However, in the last decade there had been some attempts to restrain smoking, such as an increase in government funding for medical research on the health impacts of smoking. The Indonesian government had also been raising the taxes on tobacco products for almost every year since 2014. However, this had not shown a significant reduction on smoking rates. A survey on the daily cigarette consumption in Indonesia found that 32 percent of respondents claimed to smoke between ten to 15 cigarettes a day, while ten percent said that they smoked more than 20 cigarettes per day. While cigarette smoking is decreasing all over the world, Indonesia seemed to be bucking the trend.
This text provides general information. Statista assumes no liability for the information given being complete or correct. Due to varying update cycles, statistics can display more up-to-date data than referenced in the text.
Here is the bad side of cigs for ugly ethnics subhuman:
CBC News · Posted: Mar 24, 2008 4:37 PM ET | Last Updated: March 24, 2008
Smoking cigarettes won't help teenage girls lose weight, but it may stunt teen boys' growth, a Canadian study suggests.
The study, published online March 17 in the journal Annals of Epidemiology, found that teenage boys who smoke are on average 2.54 centimetres shorter than non-smokers.
"Girls who smoked did not end up skinnier than girls who did not smoke. They ended up having a similar height and BMI," lead author Dr. Jennifer O'Loughlin, with the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine at the University of Montreal, told CBC News in an e-mail.
"However the evidence presented supports the old adage 'Don’t smoke. It will stunt your growth', at least in boys."
The study said the effect on boys' heights may be because they are still growing when they start to smoke.
The researchers surveyed 1,293 Montreal teens from age 12 through 17 every three months about their smoking and lifestyle habits.
O'Loughlin said the researchers were most surprised to find that there was no link between weight and smoking habits.
O'Loughlin said the findings can be integrated into prevention messages to help persuade teens not to start smoking.
"Girls might not start smoking if they realize that they will not end up skinnier than girls who don’t smoke," she said. "Boys may not start smoking if they think they might end up shorter and smaller overall if they smoke."
She said the findings "might also help uncover the reasons why smoking affects birth weight and possibly growth in adolescents."
The study is part of the Natural History of Nicotine Dependence in Teens Study, funded by the Canadian Cancer Society.
2. They are fasting even force underage children to participate
Children’s guide to fasting during Ramadhan Muslim children are encouraged to fast from small, from as young as seven years old. (Shutterstock/File) Share this article Whatsapp Facebook Twitter Linkedin Sheela Chandran (The Star/Asia News Network) ● Wed, June 6, 2018 Are your children starting to fast this Ramadan? Most young Muslim children look forward to Ramadan as an important rite of passage. It allows them to deepen their faith while understanding the significance of fasting. Fasting during the holy month is one of the five obligations that every Muslim must fulfill. Muslims fast from dawn to dusk for a month. Muslim children are encouraged to fast from small, from as young as seven years old. Tuanku Mizan Armed Forces Hospital’s dietitian Major Razni Shauna Abdul Razak shares some tips for fasting children this Ramadan: Stay hydrated Drink sufficient fluids daily to maintain hydration, especially water. Water keeps your child’s body hydrated from dawn to dusk. Limit drinks that contain sugar and diuretic drinks such as coffee, soda, and black tea.
This article was published in thejakartapost.com with the title "Children’s guide to fasting during Ramadhan". Click to read: https://www.thejakartapost.com/life/2018/06/06/childrens-guide-to-fasting-during-ramadhan.html.
Download The Jakarta Post app for easier and faster news access:
Android: http://bit.ly/tjp-android
iOS: http://bit.ly/tjp-ios
So the bad thing is nutrition is a very big problem in Indonesia:
Millions of Indonesian children and adolescents remain threatened by staggering rates of stunting and wasting and the ‘double burden’ of malnutrition where under- and over-nutrition co-exist.
UNICEF Indonesia/2018/Noorani
Stunting: The failure to reach one’s potential for growth – is caused by chronic malnutrition and repeated illness during childhood. It can permanently limit a child’s physical and cognitive capacity and cause livelong damage.
Wasting: On the other hand, wasting, or acute malnutrition, is the result of recent rapid weight loss or the failure to gain weight. A child who is moderately or severely wasted has an increased risk of death.
Overweight and obesity: Locally known as ‘gemuk’ – this has nearly doubled among adults in Indonesia in the last 15 years, driving an alarming increase in non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.
Larger working populations, longer commuting times, along with changing diets and lifestyles have all contributed to the inadequate consumption of fresh produce and increased intakes of processed and pre-prepared foods that are often high in carbohydrates (including sugar), salt, and fats, resulting in a spike in overweight in the country.
The effects of the double burden of malnutrition are not only felt by people. The economy suffers too, with malnutrition perpetuating the cycle of poverty.
While poverty contributes to malnutrition, inadequate knowledge and practices of child caring and child feeding also sustain the high rates of malnutrition.
Maternal health also plays a role. Many women fall pregnant as teens, don’t eat properly during pregnancy and often give birth to small or ‘low birth weight’ babies.
New evidence has emerged that maternal and fetal under-nutrition increases a population’s susceptibility to over-nutrition and diet-related non-communicable diseases in adolescence and adulthood.
In addition, around 55 million people nationwide (22 per cent of the population) practices open defecation – a highly unsanitary habit that contributes to the high burden of childhood diarrhoea and malnutrition.
Fasting on underage children make things worse.
3. Indonesia the shortest country but mogged other east and southeast in terms of dick
Oops sorry wrong picture
This is the average height. Now all we need to do is to set the tolerance. Let's take 3 cm, so too short would be under 155 for men and under 144 for women
Mogs every oriental but still the ugliest tbh.
Conclusion:
Our retarded government gave up our country to China for the sake of investment also they are JBW worshipper for example they will worshipp literal lighskin arabs.
Lol Nusantara now Indonesia in the past 350 years bow down to low tier European countries such as Netherland and now still a cuck. I lost all hope not even i want to do anything about this country anymore.
1. Ciggaretes bad for children height growth yet they are the highest consooomer of it.
Tobacco industry in Indonesia - statistics & facts
Published by Hanadian Nurhayati-Wolff, Apr 7, 2021Indonesia has one of the highest smoking rates in the world, and is one of the biggest producers of tobacco worldwide. In 2017, approximately 322.1 billion cigarettes were consumed in Indonesia, making it the largest consumer of cigarettes in the Asia Pacific region. According to a survey on regular smokers in there in 2019, curiosity was the main reason why Indonesians tried smoking cigarettes for the first time, and most were between 16 to 18 years when they first started smoking.
Kretek - the Indonesian cigarette of choice
Indonesian smokers tend to favor the local kretek cigarettes. Kretek is a clove cigarette that consists of tobacco, ground clove buds, clove oil as well as other spices such as cumin, cinnamon, or nutmeg. Saccharin is then added to the kretek cigarette wrapping paper to give it a sweet taste. In 2017, machine made kretek had a share of around 75 percent of the Indonesian tobacco market, compared to the five percent for white cigarettes. Kretek cigarettes are, however, more harmful than regular cigarettes due to a higher percentage of tar and nicotine - the average kretek cigarette has 56 milligrams of tar and 2.8 milligrams of nicotine.Indonesia is a producer of tobacco. In 2018, approximately 180 thousand metric tons of tobacco were produced in Indonesia. In that same year, Indonesia imported tobacco from other major producers to fulfil the tobacco industry's need.
Smoking - a habit that is here to stay?
The Indonesian government had always been supportive of the kretek industry and were slow to implement a functioning system of tobacco control and consumer protection. This was mainly due to the economic importance of its tobacco industry. In 2018, Indonesia's tax revenue from tobacco excise was around 160 billion Indonesian rupiah.However, in the last decade there had been some attempts to restrain smoking, such as an increase in government funding for medical research on the health impacts of smoking. The Indonesian government had also been raising the taxes on tobacco products for almost every year since 2014. However, this had not shown a significant reduction on smoking rates. A survey on the daily cigarette consumption in Indonesia found that 32 percent of respondents claimed to smoke between ten to 15 cigarettes a day, while ten percent said that they smoked more than 20 cigarettes per day. While cigarette smoking is decreasing all over the world, Indonesia seemed to be bucking the trend.
This text provides general information. Statista assumes no liability for the information given being complete or correct. Due to varying update cycles, statistics can display more up-to-date data than referenced in the text.
Here is the bad side of cigs for ugly ethnics subhuman:
Smoking won't help teens lose weight, may stunt growth: study
Social Sharing
CBC News · Posted: Mar 24, 2008 4:37 PM ET | Last Updated: March 24, 2008
Smoking cigarettes won't help teenage girls lose weight, but it may stunt teen boys' growth, a Canadian study suggests.
The study, published online March 17 in the journal Annals of Epidemiology, found that teenage boys who smoke are on average 2.54 centimetres shorter than non-smokers.
"Girls who smoked did not end up skinnier than girls who did not smoke. They ended up having a similar height and BMI," lead author Dr. Jennifer O'Loughlin, with the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine at the University of Montreal, told CBC News in an e-mail.
"However the evidence presented supports the old adage 'Don’t smoke. It will stunt your growth', at least in boys."
The study said the effect on boys' heights may be because they are still growing when they start to smoke.
The researchers surveyed 1,293 Montreal teens from age 12 through 17 every three months about their smoking and lifestyle habits.
O'Loughlin said the researchers were most surprised to find that there was no link between weight and smoking habits.
O'Loughlin said the findings can be integrated into prevention messages to help persuade teens not to start smoking.
"Girls might not start smoking if they realize that they will not end up skinnier than girls who don’t smoke," she said. "Boys may not start smoking if they think they might end up shorter and smaller overall if they smoke."
She said the findings "might also help uncover the reasons why smoking affects birth weight and possibly growth in adolescents."
The study is part of the Natural History of Nicotine Dependence in Teens Study, funded by the Canadian Cancer Society.
2. They are fasting even force underage children to participate
Children’s guide to fasting during Ramadhan Muslim children are encouraged to fast from small, from as young as seven years old. (Shutterstock/File) Share this article Whatsapp Facebook Twitter Linkedin Sheela Chandran (The Star/Asia News Network) ● Wed, June 6, 2018 Are your children starting to fast this Ramadan? Most young Muslim children look forward to Ramadan as an important rite of passage. It allows them to deepen their faith while understanding the significance of fasting. Fasting during the holy month is one of the five obligations that every Muslim must fulfill. Muslims fast from dawn to dusk for a month. Muslim children are encouraged to fast from small, from as young as seven years old. Tuanku Mizan Armed Forces Hospital’s dietitian Major Razni Shauna Abdul Razak shares some tips for fasting children this Ramadan: Stay hydrated Drink sufficient fluids daily to maintain hydration, especially water. Water keeps your child’s body hydrated from dawn to dusk. Limit drinks that contain sugar and diuretic drinks such as coffee, soda, and black tea.
This article was published in thejakartapost.com with the title "Children’s guide to fasting during Ramadhan". Click to read: https://www.thejakartapost.com/life/2018/06/06/childrens-guide-to-fasting-during-ramadhan.html.
Download The Jakarta Post app for easier and faster news access:
Android: http://bit.ly/tjp-android
iOS: http://bit.ly/tjp-ios
So the bad thing is nutrition is a very big problem in Indonesia:
The challenge
Indonesia has achieved many milestones in its journey to becoming a middle-income country. Decreases in child deaths and significant increases in primary school enrolment are among them. Improvements in children’s nutrition status, however, are not.Millions of Indonesian children and adolescents remain threatened by staggering rates of stunting and wasting and the ‘double burden’ of malnutrition where under- and over-nutrition co-exist.
A fifth (20 per cent) of primary school-aged children and about 15 per cent of adolescents are overweight or obese. Two million children under 5 suffer from severe acute malnutrition, a life-threatening condition if left untreated.In 2018, close to 3 in 10 children under 5 years of age were stunted while 1 in 10 were wasted.
UNICEF Indonesia/2018/Noorani
Stunting: The failure to reach one’s potential for growth – is caused by chronic malnutrition and repeated illness during childhood. It can permanently limit a child’s physical and cognitive capacity and cause livelong damage.
Wasting: On the other hand, wasting, or acute malnutrition, is the result of recent rapid weight loss or the failure to gain weight. A child who is moderately or severely wasted has an increased risk of death.
Overweight and obesity: Locally known as ‘gemuk’ – this has nearly doubled among adults in Indonesia in the last 15 years, driving an alarming increase in non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.
Larger working populations, longer commuting times, along with changing diets and lifestyles have all contributed to the inadequate consumption of fresh produce and increased intakes of processed and pre-prepared foods that are often high in carbohydrates (including sugar), salt, and fats, resulting in a spike in overweight in the country.
The effects of the double burden of malnutrition are not only felt by people. The economy suffers too, with malnutrition perpetuating the cycle of poverty.
While poverty contributes to malnutrition, inadequate knowledge and practices of child caring and child feeding also sustain the high rates of malnutrition.
Maternal health also plays a role. Many women fall pregnant as teens, don’t eat properly during pregnancy and often give birth to small or ‘low birth weight’ babies.
New evidence has emerged that maternal and fetal under-nutrition increases a population’s susceptibility to over-nutrition and diet-related non-communicable diseases in adolescence and adulthood.
In addition, around 55 million people nationwide (22 per cent of the population) practices open defecation – a highly unsanitary habit that contributes to the high burden of childhood diarrhoea and malnutrition.
Fasting on underage children make things worse.
3. Indonesia the shortest country but mogged other east and southeast in terms of dick
Oops sorry wrong picture
This is the average height. Now all we need to do is to set the tolerance. Let's take 3 cm, so too short would be under 155 for men and under 144 for women
Mogs every oriental but still the ugliest tbh.
Conclusion:
Our retarded government gave up our country to China for the sake of investment also they are JBW worshipper for example they will worshipp literal lighskin arabs.
Lol Nusantara now Indonesia in the past 350 years bow down to low tier European countries such as Netherland and now still a cuck. I lost all hope not even i want to do anything about this country anymore.
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