Vlog 3 of 5 Istanbul Turkish Restaurants.
Satisfy your hunger cravings with the wide range of authentic Turkish delights here at Istanbul Turkish SG! In this Vlog, I was served with 5 appetizers and my fav is the Kunefe! Power wei!!!
A large array of delights from Turkish and Arabic. They only serve the freshest ingredients and the most authentic recipes,as Head Chef Sameer says.
Their signature dish, Lamb Mandi, a preparation of lamb and rice, specifically where the method of cooking ensures that the juices of the cooking meat drip into the rice, giving you a burst of flavours in this simple dish.
Istanbul Turkish Restaurant is giving away FREE Kunefe ($15+ value) in this for every $70.00 minimum spent.
And if you are looking for an event space to host gathering/parties, their cozy and spacious event space (can hold up to 20pax) is now made available. Take this opportunity to gather friends and family to create new fond memories together at Istanbul Turkish Restaurant today! 😍
Head on and experience it yourself!
ISTANBUL TURKISH RESTAURANT
(LOCAL MALAY MUSLIM OWNED)
25 BAGHDAD STREET, S(199664)
BOOKINGS & RESERVATIONS
6296 4084 or via FB/IG messenger
Sun to Thurs 11am - 11pm
Fri & Sat 11am - 12am
IG @Istanbulturkishsg
FB Page Istanbul Turkish SG
#istanbulturkishsg #food #makansg #macam👍
同時也有3部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過19萬的網紅PS5 & XBOX SeriesX info,也在其Youtube影片中提到,#PS5 【PS5発売後の重要動画プレイリスト】 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLr1PNOqBW2n2kQh7x4qPhxcFKLBBnrelK 【PS5の最適なモニター/テレビ選び講座】 https://www.youtube.com/play...
「power your hunger」的推薦目錄:
- 關於power your hunger 在 Khairudin Samsudin Facebook 的最讚貼文
- 關於power your hunger 在 Mordeth13 Facebook 的最讚貼文
- 關於power your hunger 在 FlashFire富雷迅 Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於power your hunger 在 PS5 & XBOX SeriesX info Youtube 的最佳貼文
- 關於power your hunger 在 GDJYB雞蛋蒸肉餅 Youtube 的最佳解答
- 關於power your hunger 在 The Meatmen Channel Youtube 的最讚貼文
power your hunger 在 Mordeth13 Facebook 的最讚貼文
Jenna Cody :
Is Taiwan a real China?
No, and with the exception of a few intervening decades - here’s the part that’ll surprise you - it never has been.
This’ll blow your mind too: that it never has been doesn’t matter.
So let’s start with what doesn’t actually matter.
Until the 1600s, Taiwan was indigenous. Indigenous Taiwanese are not Chinese, they’re Austronesian. Then it was a Dutch colony (note: I do not say “it was Dutch”, I say it was a Dutch colony). Then it was taken over by Ming loyalists at the end of the Ming dynasty (the Ming loyalists were breakaways, not a part of the new Qing court. Any overlap in Ming rule and Ming loyalist conquest of Taiwan was so brief as to be inconsequential).
Only then, in the late 1600s, was it taken over by the Chinese (Qing). But here’s the thing, it was more like a colony of the Qing, treated as - to use Emma Teng’s wording in Taiwan’s Imagined Geography - a barrier or barricade keeping the ‘real’ Qing China safe. In fact, the Qing didn’t even want Taiwan at first, the emperor called it “a ball of mud beyond the pale of civilization”. Prior to that, and to a great extent at that time, there was no concept on the part of China that Taiwan was Chinese, even though Chinese immigrants began moving to Taiwan under Dutch colonial rule (mostly encouraged by the Dutch, to work as laborers). When the Spanish landed in the north of Taiwan, it was the Dutch, not the Chinese, who kicked them out.
Under Qing colonial rule - and yes, I am choosing my words carefully - China only controlled the Western half of Taiwan. They didn’t even have maps for the eastern half. That’s how uninterested in it they were. I can’t say that the Qing controlled “Taiwan”, they only had power over part of it.
Note that the Qing were Manchu, which at the time of their conquest had not been a part of China: China itself essentially became a Manchu imperial holding, and Taiwan did as well, once they were convinced it was not a “ball of mud” but actually worth taking. Taiwan was not treated the same way as the rest of “Qing China”, and was not administered as a province until (I believe) 1887. So that’s around 200 years of Taiwan being a colony of the Qing.
What happened in the late 19th century to change China’s mind? Japan. A Japanese ship was shipwrecked in eastern Taiwan in the 1870s, and the crew was killed by hostile indigenous people in what is known as the Mudan Incident. A Japanese emissary mission went to China to inquire about what could be done, only to be told that China had no control there and if they went to eastern Taiwan, they did so at their own peril. China had not intended to imply that Taiwan wasn’t theirs, but they did. Japan - and other foreign powers, as France also attempted an invasion - were showing an interest in Taiwan, so China decided to cement its claim, started mapping the entire island, and made it a province.
So, I suppose for a decade or so Taiwan was a part of China. A China that no longer exists.
It remained a province until 1895, when it was ceded to Japan after the (first) Sino-Japanese War. Before that could happen, Taiwan declared itself a Republic, although it was essentially a Qing puppet state (though the history here is interesting - correspondence at the time indicates that the leaders of this ‘Republic of Taiwan’ considered themselves Chinese, and the tiger flag hints at this as well. However, the constitution was a very republican document, not something you’d expect to see in Qing-era China.) That lasted for less than a year, when the Japanese took it by force.
This is important for two reasons - the first is that some interpretations of IR theory state that when a colonial holding is released, it should revert to the state it was in before it was taken as a colony. In this case, that would actually be The Republic of Taiwan, not Qing-era China. Secondly, it puts to rest all notions that there was no Taiwan autonomy movement prior to 1947.
In any case, it would be impossible to revert to its previous state, as the government that controlled it - the Qing empire - no longer exists. The current government of China - the PRC - has never controlled it.
After the Japanese colonial era, there is a whole web of treaties and agreements that do not satisfactorily settle the status of Taiwan. None of them actually do so - those which explicitly state that Taiwan is to be given to the Republic of China (such as the Cairo declaration) are non-binding. Those that are binding do not settle the status of Taiwan (neither the treaty of San Francisco nor the Treaty of Taipei definitively say that Taiwan is a part of China, or even which China it is - the Treaty of Taipei sets out what nationality the Taiwanese are to be considered, but that doesn’t determine territorial claims). Treaty-wise, the status of Taiwan is “undetermined”.
Under more modern interpretations, what a state needs to be a state is…lessee…a contiguous territory, a government, a military, a currency…maybe I’m forgetting something, but Taiwan has all of it. For all intents and purposes it is independent already.
In fact, in the time when all of these agreements were made, the Allied powers weren’t as sure as you might have learned about what to do with Taiwan. They weren’t a big fan of Chiang Kai-shek, didn’t want it to go Communist, and discussed an Allied trusteeship (which would have led to independence) or backing local autonomy movements (which did exist). That it became what it did - “the ROC” but not China - was an accident (as Hsiao-ting Lin lays out in Accidental State).
In fact, the KMT knew this, and at the time the foreign minister (George Yeh) stated something to the effect that they were aware they were ‘squatters’ in Taiwan.
Since then, it’s true that the ROC claims to be the rightful government of Taiwan, however, that hardly matters when considering the future of Taiwan simply because they have no choice. To divest themselves of all such claims (and, presumably, change their name) would be considered by the PRC to be a declaration of formal independence. So that they have not done so is not a sign that they wish to retain the claim, merely that they wish to avoid a war.
It’s also true that most Taiwanese are ethnically “Han” (alongside indigenous and Hakka, although Hakka are, according to many, technically Han…but I don’t think that’s relevant here). But biology is not destiny: what ethnicity someone is shouldn’t determine what government they must be ruled by.
Through all of this, the Taiwanese have evolved their own culture, identity and sense of history. They are diverse in a way unique to Taiwan, having been a part of Austronesian and later Hoklo trade routes through Southeast Asia for millenia. Now, one in five (I’ve heard one in four, actually) Taiwanese children has a foreign parent. The Taiwanese language (which is not Mandarin - that’s a KMT transplant language forced on Taiwanese) is gaining popularity as people discover their history. Visiting Taiwan and China, it is clear where the cultural differences are, not least in terms of civic engagement. This morning, a group of legislators were removed after a weekend-long pro-labor hunger strike in front of the presidential palace. They were not arrested and will not be. Right now, a group of pro-labor protesters is lying down on the tracks at Taipei Main Station to protest the new labor law amendments.
This would never be allowed in China, but Taiwanese take it as a fiercely-guarded basic right.
*
Now, as I said, none of this matters.
What matters is self-determination. If you believe in democracy, you believe that every state (and Taiwan does fit the definition of a state) that wants to be democratic - that already is democratic and wishes to remain that way - has the right to self-determination. In fact, every nation does. You cannot be pro-democracy and also believe that it is acceptable to deprive people of this right, especially if they already have it.
Taiwan is already a democracy. That means it has the right to determine its own future. Period.
Even under the ROC, Taiwan was not allowed to determine its future. The KMT just arrived from China and claimed it. The Taiwanese were never asked if they consented. What do we call it when a foreign government arrives in land they had not previously governed and declares itself the legitimate governing power of that land without the consent of the local people? We call that colonialism.
Under this definition, the ROC can also be said to be a colonial power in Taiwan. They forced Mandarin - previously not a language native to Taiwan - onto the people, taught Chinese history, geography and culture, and insisted that the Taiwanese learn they were Chinese - not Taiwanese (and certainly not Japanese). This was forced on them. It was not chosen. Some, for awhile, swallowed it. Many didn’t. The independence movement only grew, and truly blossomed after democratization - something the Taiwanese fought for and won, not something handed to them by the KMT.
So what matters is what the Taiwanese want, not what the ROC is forced to claim. I cannot stress this enough - if you do not believe Taiwan has the right to this, you do not believe in democracy.
And poll after poll shows it: Taiwanese identify more as Taiwanese than Chinese (those who identify as both primarily identify as Taiwanese, just as I identify as American and Armenian, but primarily as American. Armenian is merely my ethnicity). They overwhelmingly support not unifying with China. The vast majority who support the status quo support one that leads to eventual de jure independence, not unification. The status quo is not - and cannot be - an endgame (if only because China has declared so, but also because it is untenable). Less than 10% want unification. Only a small number (a very small minority) would countenance unification in the future…even if China were to democratize.
The issue isn’t the incompatibility of the systems - it’s that the Taiwanese fundamentally do not see themselves as Chinese.
A change in China’s system won’t change that. It’s not an ethnic nationalism - there is no ethnic argument for Taiwan (or any nation - didn’t we learn in the 20th century what ethnicity-based nation-building leads to? Nothing good). It’s not a jingoistic or xenophobic nationalism - Taiwanese know that to be dangerous. It’s a nationalism based on shared identity, culture, history and civics. The healthiest kind of nationalism there is. Taiwan exists because the Taiwanese identify with it. Period.
There are debates about how long the status quo should go on, and what we should risk to insist on formal recognition. However, the question of whether or not to be Taiwan, not China…
…well, that’s already settled.
The Taiwanese have spoken and they are not Chinese.
Whatever y’all think about that doesn’t matter. That’s what they want, and if you believe in self-determination you will respect it.
If you don’t, good luck with your authoritarian nonsense, but Taiwan wants nothing to do with it.
power your hunger 在 FlashFire富雷迅 Facebook 的精選貼文
❤肯德基氣炸鍋電競主機Finally登場❤
打電動邊炸雞😆😆😆
https://youtu.be/G2xa7vabDkE
肯德基於 2020 年 6 月公開的「KFConsole」遊戲主機現在真的來了,結合 Intel NUC 套件、華碩 GeForce RTX 顯卡、Seagate PCIe NVMe SSD 和 Cooler Master 客製機殼,甚至內建如同氣炸鍋的「Chicken Chamber」氣流加熱功能,當你還在遊戲中奮戰時依舊保持炸雞酥脆。
power your hunger 在 PS5 & XBOX SeriesX info Youtube 的最佳貼文
#PS5
【PS5発売後の重要動画プレイリスト】
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLr1PNOqBW2n2kQh7x4qPhxcFKLBBnrelK
【PS5の最適なモニター/テレビ選び講座】
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLr1PNOqBW2n0Oo4vrMZr1OPtuNBhDfYmr
【PS5予約対策方法を解説!完全版】
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLr1PNOqBW2n30-NDsecpJwGoNJ-TFkPHa
■サブチャンネルでは主に生放送しています!😎よかったら気軽に遊びに来てください!質問もOKです!
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrXy4aTxlbki8uyzJ65U7xA
■PS5の最新の予約情報が見れるTwitterはこちら!
https://twitter.com/DGalle___?s=09
■毎月のPS4新作まとめはこちら
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLr1PNOqBW2n2dPPNnvwrgJAlMzigWBVx5
■オススメのPS4の新作ソフト解説動画はこちら
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLr1PNOqBW2n3zPSTl8qAjNpSB2EN1YIpn
■XBOXシリーズXのまとめ動画はこちら!
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLr1PNOqBW2n1svYPbdBTBzA5vKlj0N3L2
今回引用した動画
①KFConsole: Power Your Hunger
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2xa7vabDkE
②Introducing the KFConsole
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73SqN-ueP7g
■使用したBGM
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Track: Robin Hustin x TobiMorrow - Light It Up (feat. Jex) [NCS Release]
Music provided by NoCopyrightSounds.
Watch: https://youtu.be/bdE_SyHad90
Free Download / Stream: http://ncs.io/LightitupYO
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Track: Deflo & Lliam Taylor - Reflections [NCS Release]
Music provided by NoCopyrightSounds.
Watch: https://youtu.be/pMarN41uJqE
Free Download / Stream: http://ncs.io/DLTReflectionsYO
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power your hunger 在 GDJYB雞蛋蒸肉餅 Youtube 的最佳解答
Music Composed & Arranged by | GDJYB
Lyrics Written by | Soft@GDJYB
All Guitars & Programming by | Soni@GDJYB
Drums by | Heihei@GDJYB
Bass by | Wing@GDJYB
Vocal & All Backing Vocals by | Soft@GDJYB
Recording & Mixing Engineer | Jay Tse
Mastering Engineer | Anthony Yeung@AYM Studio
Music Video Illustration Featuring | Wanwaiiu
Directed & Edited by | Leung Hung Yik
Creative Team | Heihei@GDJYB/ Leung Hung Yik/ Wanwaiiu
Artiste Management | Daymaker Creatives Limited
WHY DON'T YOU KILL US ALL?
Take your breath slowly
Close your eyes lightly
To see the world up high
Just one more step to go
Everything starts from
A fire, then hunt, desire
To chase, to care, with conscious
To hate, to love or die
Someone becomes friendly
When someone live so greedy
Hunger of power, money, violence
They don't care who's innocent
Bodies lying down oh
Black smoke choking my throat
What's wrong with all those souls
Can't you hear them screaming below
Why don't you kill us all
Why don't you kill us all
Why don't you kill us all
Why we live to see people fall
Why don't you kill us all
Why don't you kill us all
Why don't you kill us all
Why we live to see people fall
Ahhhh ahhhh ahhhh ahhh
-----------------------
You own the world now
So what do you want
You own the world now
So what do you still want
power your hunger 在 The Meatmen Channel Youtube 的最讚貼文
Recipe at: http://www.themeatmen.sg/abc-soup
A B C, it’s as easy as 1 2 3. Forget store bought chicken soup, this wholesome pot of homemade soup can be made effortlessly with just one pot and a few simple ingredients.
Add in chunks of chicken and onions wedges into a pot together with chopped carrots, potatoes and tomatoes for a mild tangy sweetness. For that added depth of flavour, sprinkle on a few grinds of crushed white peppercorns and a pinch of salt. This straightforward recipe just needs 45 minutes of gentle simmer to maximize the flavour of each ingredient and achieve a more harmonious taste.
Aside from how incredibly easy it is to make, this soothing pot of soup is power packed with vitamins! The ‘ABC’ represents the various vitamins the ingredients provide; vitamin A from the carrots, vitamin B from the potatoes and vitamin C from the tomatoes. This familiar assortment of vegetables is what makes this soup so healthy and tantalizing for both kids and adults alike.
Stay warm and cozy, for this classic one-pot treasure is sure to appease your hunger as well as help relieve the tension for the day. Slurp your way through spoonfuls of natural sweet goodness with this simple yet nourishing pot of ABC Soup.
#themeatmensg #simple #delicious
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