Arunyaprathet
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15
Thought my inverter had failed .....
OK, sounds nice, but when you have melted insulation on wires there are not so many possibilities. Couls it be that you have too small dimensioned wires for what is consumed? Please check what you have and compare with the screenshot. A1 & B1: Single wires in tubing underneath in brick / concrete wall A2 & B2: Cables in tubing underneath brick / concrete wall The expression "n Stromkreise" means one phase only Sorry for the screenshot in German language. But as a swiss (retired) technician I use apps what are easy to handle for me. -
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Lentles for gut health?
Do you recommend lentles? and what with ? I always found em very weird -
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Myanmar Army Retakes Key Trade Town in Rare Battlefield Win
Hopefully not for long. Once the freedom fighters regroup and rearm the situation could change! -
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Report Doctor Tells Court 'Thaksin Could Have Returned to Prison Hospital Early'
Send Thaksin to jail. He scammed the system. But if a foreigner had done this s/he would have been deported. Maybe he should be deported (to Dubai). -
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Middle East Gaza Grief: Children Pay Hefty Price in Ongoing Conflict
I studied this subject at Leeds University. Unlike you, I have no bias. In 1947, the United Nations proposed a Partition Plan (Resolution 181) to end British rule in Mandatory Palestine by dividing the territory into two states - one Jewish and one Arab. According to this plan, Jews - who made up about one-third of the population and owned roughly 6-7% of the land - were allocated 55% of the territory, including much of the fertile coastal plain. The Arab majority - around two-thirds of the population - were to receive just 45% of the land, most of it in less desirable areas. To Palestinians and Arab states, this was a deeply unfair arrangement. They saw it as a plan that legitimized the dispossession of the native Arab population to accommodate a largely European Jewish immigrant population, many of whom had only arrived in the preceding decades. Beyond the disproportionate land allocation, Palestinians rejected the plan for ideological and political reasons. The very idea of partition - of dividing their homeland to create a new state for another people - was perceived as a colonial imposition that ignored Arab self-determination. The memory of centuries of local rule, the influx of Zionist settlers under British protection, and fears of further displacement all contributed to Arab opposition. Though the Zionist leadership accepted the plan - as a strategic step toward statehood - Arab leaders rejected it on principle, believing that it violated their rights and sovereignty. The rejection led directly to the 1948 war following Israel’s declaration of independence - a war that resulted in over 700,000 Palestinians becoming refugees and the permanent failure of the proposed Palestinian state.
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