Kindness-Gentileza

Coisas da SIL

Hoje em dia está em falta muita pequenas gentilezas.

Um obrigada, por favor e com licença.

Por nada, não há de quer, um sorriso mesmo sem querer, sem perceber.

Tem um princípio, muito comum que diz: Gentileza gera gentileza.

With love: Coisas da SiL

KINDNESS

Nowadays, a lot of little kindness is missing.

A thank you, please and excuse me.

For nothing, there is no want, a smile even without wanting, without realizing it.

It has a principle, very common that says: kindness generates kindness.

With love: Things from SiL

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For Own Happiness

Kaushal Kishore

Earlier people used to come in contact at school, shop, workplace and social or religious gatherings etc. Such contacts developed into cordial relations and friendships, if the individuals were found to have common interests.

It still happens, but many people are now connecting and making friends on social media without even meeting each other in person. This is the era of social media, where people from the country and abroad easily get in touch.

Social media is a collective term for websites and applications that focus on communication, community-based input, interaction, content-sharing and collaboration. People use social media to stay in touch and interact with friends, family and various communities.

Blogging has opened doors for individuals worldwide to meet others with similar interests and views on social media. The idea behind blogging is all the same, sharing thoughts and lives with others, though the formats may be a little different.

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Worldwide plastic waste has doubled since 2000 – and working animals are suffering

Stigmatis

Heartbreaking new footage shows working donkeys, camels, and cows left to scavenge for food among mountains of plastic waste – with life-threatening results

By Andrew Young

Worldwide plastic waste has more than doubled since 2000, figures show – but two-thirds of Brits (67 per cent) are unaware of the impact this is having on working animals overseas.

With an estimated 200 million animals working globally – including camels, horses, donkeys, oxen, mules, and even elephants – they are now more at risk than ever of catching a potentially fatal condition from dumped plastic waste.

These livestock are already faced with harsh conditions, in 40°C temperatures in countries like India and Mali, helping their owners transport water and goods for a small income – and even occasionally travelling to dumps, carrying the plastic waste that is threatening their welfare.

And ahead of International Working Animal Day on June 15, this heartbreaking…

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