javeria Nadeem
@javeria active 8 years, 1 month ago-
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If you haven’t tasted yuca leaves, why not try if you are from a tropical county? These leaves could be good supplement from other vegetables you believe so expensive. I think there are cassava plantations and I doubt if people the harvesters know about the benefits of cassava leaves. i have not eaten these leave, I may try, but there is problem, I cannot find them here in the city where I leave. They are mostly planted in Bukidnon and other parts in in the Philippines.
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Love cassava chips. Have never eaten cassava leaves but would be happy to try them. I have come to realize that there are many leaves that people in other countries eat that I could have been enjoying too. I just didn’t know they were edible. You just added cassava leaves to my list of edible leaves.
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I love cassava roots, it has low glycemic index though it too, have so much carbohydrates. But I have not tasted the leaves. Will try sometime.
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@Treathyl FOX , That is nice you like cassava chips.I have not seen in our city malls and stores cassava chips. How nice of you liking to taste the taste of cassava leaves. My sister told me that those leaves are edible.
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Cooked cassava is nice if cook them fresh for if cook dried already, it becomes toxic. Those dried are good for cassava flour and others. The young leaves called the cassava tops are most edible and great source for Vitamin K.Vitamin K is a protector for a deadly cancer.
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Language is for communication, not miscommunication and misunderstanding. Whatever the rules or conventions or grammatical structure, etc. may be … if you’re not communicating then you’re simply not speaking the same language. If people want to live together and get along, they better figure out how to talk to each other.
For the record, why would any judge let the lawyer get away with asking the witness a stupid question like that? Why would any jury not look at the lawyer with a wary eye? Why wouldn’t the opposing attorney object? Simple. The case wasn’t about justice.
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Having been in Court. The Prosecutor had sat, the Defence rose, and quietly asked the questions and got the answers. Why interfere? If you were giving evidence; “I was on Literacy Base at six o’clock’ and I stood up, “Is that post meridian or anti- meridian?” and you said ‘anti’ did I trick you when you confused anti with post? Nope.
There was a case, a young man was charged with an offense. His alibia; “I went to the midnight show at the Palace…” the offence happened shortly before one… the very witness who put him on the scene had testified he was at the midnight show.
I knew, the Court didn’t, that a ‘midnight show’ starts at 11:30
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You said the accused was exonerated. Exonerated? That means nothing ever happened. Innocence proven all because a person couldn’t speak English properly? Suppose the poor woman couldn’t speak English. She spoke another language. Or worse, she was mute and couldn’t scream for help. I get very touchy about injustice. But especially about rape cases because almost always there usually are only 2 eye witnesses: the rapist and the victim.
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The Rapist was found Not Guilty by the Jury. The address of Defence counsel focused on ‘consent’. Embrace, Stroll, Make Love.
This is the cost of not speaking English. At no time did the complainant seem unfamiliar with the terms, changed them, asked them to be repeated. Her evidence is as I gave it. This is just one example… possibly the most obvious.
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In America, if you can raise a reasonable doubt in a criminal case then the accused can be set free. I understand the Defense has to do their job. Their job is to defend the accused. The Defense did their job. But there were other responsible parties involved who had a job to do too! Seems like not everybody wasn’t doing their job. It happens a lot. Not just in your country.
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People will use your weakness against you. In Ja. it has led to a lot of out sourcing. A lot of jobs have been filled by ex-pats because Jamaicans can’t speak English. I’m going to blog about it
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