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The Potential of the people with disabilities.

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People with Disabilities are like any human being deserving of the rights enjoyed by all human beings. So there should be no nothing which can discriminate against any sphere of their life. Needless to say, the government made some noteworthy commitments in the last GDS and ratified UNCRPD as a part of its vision to build a welfare state considering the PWDs as a community with priority. The government has taken initiatives such as Digital Bangladesh and Smart Bangladesh which if implemented well has the potential to garner significant output and enormously contribute to the development of economy. The government needs to inspire Bangladeshi people with disabilities that they can live a fulfilling life and live creatively like the Chinese man in the video above who made helicopters despite being a PWD. In Bangladesh there are over 1 crore 60 lakh people with disabilities. Most of them are seen as a burden to society and live in a sorry state. They struggle to fulfill their basic needs ...

A. M.Sami Services aims to let you enjoy a simple minimalist life

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A. M.Sami Services is a company registered in Finland with the aim to establish tech transfer for the benefit of humanity, especially the less privileged. Below are some some solutions which has the potential to improve the standard of living for many people if implemented on scale.  Let's convert our rooftops into urban farms, power generators and spaces for interaction UL Helis are practical for commuting from rooftops S. Korean companies join hands to build vertiports at gas stations By Hong Yoo   Published : May 11, 2022 -  Visualization of GS Caltex‘s next generation charging stations at CES 2021 (GS Caltex) There's potential to turn under utilised rooftops into useful income generating assets Turning gas stations into useful spaces with rooftop accessibility for UAM by  architecturexmobility.com Imagine refueling your UAM and getting work done at the same time. Al Ghazal Golf Club shows how we can develop waterfront properties Floating waterfront properties wi...

How to gain access to Arabian Royals' Luxury Jets

I asked: How can I have access to the Saudi Royal private jets Background: The Royal family of KSA has a large fleet of jets including Boeing 747s, 787s, 777 and 737s along with Airbus A340, A321, Gulfstream IV and more.  My Aim is to have access to the Royals' Jets so that it's possible to visit and team up with innovators and investors world wide so that we can solve some of the world's major problems such as: Using Bamboo to build homes to house with dignity those struggling with housing issues Scaling up and developing open source Pyrolysis to turn waste plastic back to oil Proliferate DIY Helicopter production and later AAM and/ or UAM projects Connect mosques ablution waste water to the mosques watering system Global shipping's emission can be reduced through solar sail drones High population density can be dealt by 3D printing skyscrapers Establishing floating homes in flood prone zones ChatGPT reply: As an AI language model, I don't have direct access to the...

Rothchilds Helicopters, Car Collection, Mansion and Yacht

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 Benjamin de Rothschild 300 voitures de collection, Savières ou Favières Rothschild Swiss registered HB-ZDR Helicopter Rothchilds are rich because they understand society's needs, invest in good projects and saves time Rothchilds HB-ZBY helicopter Gitana Yacht Unlike Rich Arabs and Muslims in general the Rothchilds don't indulge in excessive luxury so the following article seems incorrect Lebanese Businessman: It’s A Pity The Arabs Never Managed To Leverage Their Capital Like The Jewish Rothschild Family, Which Uses Its Wealth To Control The World September 21, 2020 Lebanon |  Special Dispatch No. 8938 May 2, 2020 article in the Bahraini daily Al-Ayyam, Lebanese businessman Akram Miknas, founder and board chairman of Promoseven, a large advertising and communications company based in Dubai, writes that the Jews were unable to take over the world using military power or even culture and innovation, and therefore chose to do so by amassing capital. This plan, he exp...

The world’s most, and least, expensive cities

Daily chart Two share the top spot but prices are up almost everywhere Nov 30th 2022 read more of The Economist’s data journalism visit our Graphic Detail page Everybody is feeling the pinch. Prices in big cities around the world have risen by an average of 8.1% in local-currency terms over the past year, according to the latest Worldwide Cost of Living Survey from eiu, our sister company. Vladimir Putin’s war is one cause. Energy prices have rocketed by 29% on average in western Europe and 11% globally since last year, exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February. The cost of food is up, too. Both countries are important producers of cereals, oilseed and fertiliser, and global food prices are now increasing at their fastest rate this century. The impact of China’s covid-19 restrictions on global supply chains is another factor, although frustration among the population is growing. Overall the survey, which compares the prices of more than 200 products and services in o...

British Bangladeshis are doing astonishingly well at school

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Good jobs and household riches remain out of reach Nov 24th 2022 In 1985 two articles about the Bangladeshi population of east London appeared—one in an academic journal, the other in an education report. Both were despondent. Bangladeshi children were “seriously underachieving” at school, said the education study. The academic paper described knots of unemployed men hanging around the streets, and forecast even worse for Bangladeshis as London deindustrialised. Barring a major intervention, the authors wrote, “they will become more marginalised than at present.” Happily, something has happened to a group that accounts for about one percent of the population of England and Wales. Over the past two decades Bangladeshis in England have gone from performing worse than white Britons in the gcse exams taken at age 16 to performing considerably better (see chart). No other ethnic group has improved as much. Bangladeshis now compete for top university places and good jobs. Their progress su...

Why Britain is a world leader in offshore wind

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Its wind farms are key to the country’s net-zero hopes Nov 24th 2022 One turn of an “sg 8.0-167 dd” turbine generates enough electricity to run a British home for a day and a night. sg stands for Siemens Gamesa, a subsidiary of the German industrial giant, which makes the machines in Hull. The 8.0 is the turbine’s maximum output in megawatts (mw). The 167 is the diameter of its rotor in metres: it sweeps out in a circle equivalent in area to about three football pitches. And the dd stands for direct drive, an electricity-generation technology with no fiddly gears to wear out. At Hornsea 2, a wind farm located off the Yorkshire coast, 165 of these vast turbines form a field of steel stretching farther than the eye can see. Hornsea 2, which became fully functional in August, is now the largest wind farm in the world. When the wind really blows it can power 1.4m homes. The development of its offshore wind industry is one of Britain’s biggest infrastructural successes. The first farms, ins...