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ReVanced's reset version application allows you to patch the app to remove ads and unlock some premium features, including YouTube, YouTube Music, Twitter, etc. The web version showcases all supported applications.
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Many people are busy solving problems while neglecting to identify them.
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Tumo's article on euthanasia. A significant reason for the opposition to euthanasia is religious influence; opponents believe that humans are created by a higher power and view life as an abstract value that transcends the individual and should be protected. China is similar, but with an added layer of ancestral influence. Only highly developed modern countries are likely to implement euthanasia effectively.
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After watching many novels and dramas, we are too enamored with beautiful or twist endings, but real life often has no endings. Reading yufan's article resonates: "I no longer cling to the person I loved at seventeen."
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A pseudo-Soviet joke: After four years of famine, can the country blame the debts on the Soviet Union? For the next four years, can we blame Trump?
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The term "adaptive" has now become a pejorative.
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The opposite of anxiety is specificity. List out what you are anxious about, as specifically as possible, then list the things you can do, and go do them.
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In the Pearl River Delta, you can go to Lecong, Foshan for furniture, Zhongshan Ancient Town for lighting, Shenzhen Shuibei for gold, and Pingzhou, Foshan for jade. Mark it down.
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A list of independent developers to see what products everyone is working on, which can inspire you and help you avoid pitfalls.
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I completely agree with this statement: China's worst custom is not the bride price, but the lack of distinction between public and private, and the failure to recognize the sacred and inviolable dignity and rights of individuals. Employers, village heads, or certain "patriarchs" arbitrarily intrude into others' personal lives. The regulations prohibiting bride prices by Pang Donglai may seem to please many, but they actually exceed the employer's authority; who do you think you are?
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Lu Changhai: In the postscript of "The Smiling, Proud Wanderer," the versions in mainland China and Hong Kong/Taiwan are very different. Jin Yong wrote in the Hong Kong/Taiwan version that he wanted to showcase the madness during the Cultural Revolution: "I write martial arts novels to explore human nature, just like most novels. During the years I wrote 'The Smiling, Proud Wanderer,' the power struggle of the Cultural Revolution was in full swing, with the ruling class and rebels resorting to all means to fight for power and profit, revealing the baseness of human nature. I wrote editorials for 'Ming Pao' daily, and my strong aversion to the sordid behaviors in politics naturally reflected in the martial arts novel I wrote each day. This novel is not an intentional allegory of the Cultural Revolution, but through some characters in the book, I attempt to depict several universal phenomena in China's political life over the past three thousand years."
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Teachers and doctors have different parenting views, stemming from their professional environments; teachers see the best students, while doctors see the most regretful parents.
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Fast-acting medicines cannot be covered by health insurance; medicines that can be covered by health insurance cannot act quickly. Think about it.