#export to europe
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keenaminternational · 6 days ago
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Export to Europe
🇮🇩🇪🇺 Export to Europe from Indonesia | Keenam International – Official & Fully Compliant 🚢 Export from Indonesia to Europe – Fast, Legal, and Professional Looking to export to Europe from Indonesia? Keenam International offers complete, official export services for businesses shipping to Germany, Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, and the UK. As a fully licensed company in Jakarta, we…
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Export to Europe
🇮🇩🇪🇺 Export to Europe from Indonesia | Keenam International – Official & Fully Compliant 🚢 Export from Indonesia to Europe – Fast, Legal, and Professional Looking to export to Europe from Indonesia? Keenam International offers complete, official export services for businesses shipping to Germany, Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, and the UK. As a fully licensed company in Jakarta, we…
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girlactionfigure · 22 days ago
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chalkythetalkie · 2 months ago
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Idk if it's happening elsewhere in the world or just here but man, real chocolate has become so prohibitively expensive over the past year, the only chocolate eggs you can find that don't cost literally 100 reais are actually "chocolate-flavored dessert eggs" (so, not real chocolate), and even real chocolate bars have reduced cocoa percentage, increased sugar + fat content, and STILL are way more expensive than before
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arctic-hands · 1 year ago
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You ever be totally immersed in a story and then you come across a line about a subject and you realize you know more about this subject than the author and what the author wrote down was completely wrong and it's not even that the author didn't do research so much as the author didn't even think this was something that even needed to be researched? And it drives you absolute cuckoo bananas?
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fatehbaz · 1 year ago
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[T]he Dutch Republic, like its successor the Kingdom of the Netherlands, [...] throughout the early modern period had an advanced maritime [trading, exports] and (financial) service [banking, insurance] sector. Moreover, Dutch involvement in Atlantic slavery stretched over two and a half centuries. [...] Carefully estimating the scope of all the activities involved in moving, processing and retailing the goods derived from the forced labour performed by the enslaved in the Atlantic world [...] [shows] more clearly in what ways the gains from slavery percolated through the Dutch economy. [...] [This web] connected them [...] to the enslaved in Suriname and other Dutch colonies, as well as in non-Dutch colonies such as Saint Domingue [Haiti], which was one of the main suppliers of slave-produced goods to the Dutch economy until the enslaved revolted in 1791 and brought an end to the trade. [...] A significant part of the eighteenth-century Dutch elite was actively engaged in financing, insuring, organising and enabling the slave system, and drew much wealth from it. [...] [A] staggering 19% (expressed in value) of the Dutch Republic's trade in 1770 consisted of Atlantic slave-produced goods such as sugar, coffee, or indigo [...].
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One point that deserves considerable emphasis is that [this slave-based Dutch wealth] [...] did not just depend on the increasing output of the Dutch Atlantic slave colonies. By 1770, the Dutch imported over fl.8 million worth of sugar and coffee from French ports. [...] [T]hese [...] routes successfully linked the Dutch trade sector to the massive expansion of slavery in Saint Domingue [the French colony of Haiti], which continued until the early 1790s when the revolution of the enslaved on the French part of that island ended slavery.
Before that time, Dutch sugar mills processed tens of millions of pounds of sugar from the French Caribbean, which were then exported over the Rhine and through the Sound to the German and Eastern European ‘slavery hinterlands’.
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Coffee and indigo flowed through the Dutch Republic via the same trans-imperial routes, while the Dutch also imported tobacco produced by slaves in the British colonies, [and] gold and tobacco produced [by slaves] in Brazil [...]. The value of all the different components of slave-based trade combined amounted to a sum of fl.57.3 million, more than 23% of all the Dutch trade in 1770. [...] However, trade statistics alone cannot answer the question about the weight of this sector within the economy. [...] 1770 was a peak year for the issuing of new plantation loans [...] [T]he main processing industry that was fully based on slave-produced goods was the Holland-based sugar industry [...]. It has been estimated that in 1770 Amsterdam alone housed 110 refineries, out of a total of 150 refineries in the province of Holland. These processed approximately 50 million pounds of raw sugar per year, employing over 4,000 workers. [...] [I]n the four decades from 1738 to 1779, the slave-based contribution to GDP alone grew by fl.20.5 million, thus contributing almost 40% of all growth generated in the economy of Holland in this period. [...]
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These [slave-based Dutch commodity] chains ran from [the plantation itself, through maritime trade, through commodity processing sites like sugar refineries, through export of these goods] [...] and from there to European metropoles and hinterlands that in the eighteenth century became mass consumers of slave-produced goods such as sugar and coffee. These chains tied the Dutch economy to slave-based production in Suriname and other Dutch colonies, but also to the plantation complexes of other European powers, most crucially the French in Saint Domingue, as the Dutch became major importers and processers of French coffee and sugar that they then redistributed to Northern and Central Europe. [...]
The explosive growth of production on slave plantations in the Dutch Guianas, combined with the international boom in coffee and sugar consumption, ensured that consistently high proportions (19% in 1770) of commodities entering and exiting Dutch harbors were produced on Atlantic slave plantations. [...] The Dutch economy profited from this Atlantic boom both as direct supplier of slave-produced goods [from slave plantations in the Dutch Guianas, from Dutch processing of sugar from slave plantations in French Haiti] and as intermediary [physically exporting sugar and coffee] between the Atlantic slave complexes of other European powers and the Northern and Central European hinterland.
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Text above by: Pepijn Brandon and Ulbe Bosma. "Slavery and the Dutch economy, 1750-1800". Slavery & Abolition Volume 42 (2021), Issue 1. Published online 28 February 2021. DOI at: doi dot org slash 10.1080/01440396 . 2021. 1860464 [Text within brackets added by me for clarity and context. Bold emphasis and some paragraph breaks/contractions added by me. Presented here for commentary, teaching, criticism.]
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monstermoviedean · 9 months ago
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i wish the us would get with the program on blackcurrant-flavored things
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kobzars · 1 year ago
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Two beautiful paintings by Ukrainian avant-garde artist Petro Boyko "Europe" and "Roxolana" perfectly complement each other.
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Buy these paintings, support Kobzar
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saccharine-pink-lemonade · 4 months ago
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being a writer has me googling some wacky wild things
#trying to find some semblance of sense in the visas haly's circus would have came to the usa under#on one hand I think the fact that both dick & leila were on temporary visas alone would complicate the matter so much#on the other hand she is his closest next of kin so that might be too easy??#i already have it written into the au that there was some wacky temporary adoption shit up so i have 2 options#1: put leila & dick on diff visas (1 vacation which would probs be dick & 1 work/p-2 for leila#which if i do a p-2 i have to invent an reciprocal trade program between europe & the usa that isn't britain. unless i want some mini arc#where halys circus actually DOES go to the UK for some inexplicable reason & manage to get into an exchange program#for performers. which both would be so complicated but i gotta do what i gotta do.#& if I do a work visa 'circus performer' has to be a specialty industry in the usa for some reason)#or 2: i invent a ex husband for leila to which she refuses custody of their shared child#and for some reason this means she cant adopt according to US adherence to turkish divorce law#and turkish law has to say that if she refuses custody of her hypothetical bio daughter she cant adopt dick in the usa#which is definently still not exactly realistic#anyways halfway thru accumulatin g the screenshots for this part i started doing research on how tf leila ended up in turkiye anyways#and originally i thought of giving her documentation issues but id already established her as being in turkiye before the circus#picked her up by the time i realized that she couldn't have come in as an immigrant worker bc turkiye exports tons#more than they import labor. so i think now I'll have the circus swing by because of her hypothetical divorce#& stick with a p-1B for the circus's general visa#im still debating whether or not to have dick fall under a p-4 or give him a vacation visa to complicate everything 10 times over#alto ig if i tried to make it complicated i would lose track of it & also i think the US visa system would pick them apart like vultures fo#the random kid who is coming as a vacation visa rather than a p-4 when his parents are p-1Bs#or maybe not idk this depends on what year this happend#cause currently i have a continuity of when things are in relation to each other. but not in relation to actual years#like if this is 2001 they would be cooked. but if things overlay so that all their current ages apply to the current year.#this would be like 11 years ago so erm. 2014. hm I like those numbers#sunlight au
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keenaminternational · 10 days ago
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Freight Forwarders International
🌍 Freight Forwarders International | Keenam International – Global, Legal & Trusted Since 1993 🌐 Your Global Freight Forwarding Partner – From Indonesia to the World Keenam International is a leading international freight forwarder based in Jakarta, Indonesia, serving global export-import markets with full legal compliance and professional handling. Since 1993, we have been a trusted partner…
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Freight Forwarders International
🌍 Freight Forwarders International | Keenam International – Global, Legal & Trusted Since 1993 🌐 Your Global Freight Forwarding Partner – From Indonesia to the World Keenam International is a leading international freight forwarder based in Jakarta, Indonesia, serving global export-import markets with full legal compliance and professional handling. Since 1993, we have been a trusted partner…
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ask-artsy-oncie · 2 years ago
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It fucking kills me hearing the way Richard Williams talked about Thief and the Cobbler. I mean it's not like I don't have criticisms for the movie (on a fundamental level, not just the Miramax cut), but at the same time, as an artist, as an animator, it's something else to hear him say that he felt as though he had mastered 2D animation (which I would absolutely argue that he had) and that it was time to make his masterpiece.
This was his masterpiece. His magnum opus. It was meant to showcase everything he and his crew were capable of. And to this day, well beyond his death, it remains unfinished and otherwise butchered because of the nature of the animation industry. This movie could have absolutely been finished properly under Miramax's funding if it hadn't been filled with caveats of making it marketable to children when it was never meant to be.
Someone's masterpiece was literally destroyed because the west doesn't respect animation as a genuine medium. It's not enough that a fantastic work of art can be made, art that is made has to be marketable.
Animation as an artform is a slave to its own cost. If it weren't so dependent on money from producers who care MUCH more about a return than funding a quality piece of work, then I could only imagine how much more beautiful the western animation industry would be.
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bopinion · 7 months ago
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2024 / 46
Aperçu of the week
„F-e-a-r has two meanings: Forget everything and run. Or Face everything and rise."
(Thomas Wirth on his transportable mega artwork "Global Gate", which is currently on display at the Zollverein UNESCO World Heritage Site in Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia)
Bad News of the Week
"The Sick Man of Europe" was the headline of the British business magazine 'The Economist' in 1999, describing the toxic mixture of the burdens of reunification, a rigid labor market, excessive social benefits and a lack of dynamism that weighed Germany down at the time. 25 years later, it's that time again. Because Europe's largest economy is sick again. And this time even more fundamentally. And with very bad timing.
Yes, there was the coronavirus shock. And yes, there were supply chain problems and inflation. But the fundamental problem is homemade: Germany has been asleep politically and economically. And must now be careful not to fall into a coma. Like Japan, Germany has always been an exporter of high-quality goods. And, like Japan, has been too slow and inadequate in adapting to a new global economy. The shift of the dominant nations, the USA and China, has made it a very different one today than it was ten years ago.
Thanks to its huge market, China has been able to force foreign companies to settle locally and enter into partnerships. Originally "the world's extended workbench", China was able to benefit from an enormous transfer of technological knowledge in a short space of time. And thus became a quality supplier itself. As a result, China now covers more of its own production needs and has also become a serious competitor on the global market. Both bad for exporting nations.
The USA, on the other hand, has once again placed itself at the forefront of technological development (connectivity, digital, AI, etc.) and at the same time has brought industrial production back into the country through an increasingly isolationist trade policy. The restrictions imposed by Donald Trump in his first term of office were not (!) reversed by Joe Biden's government. And Trump has unequivocally announced that he will continue to tighten the America First screw - his declared favorite word is "import tariffs". Both bad for exporting nations.
The German flagship industry, automotive manufacturing, is symptomatic of the general economic trend. After decades of success stories and technological and brand leadership, we were crushed by electromobility. Which we underestimated in many respects. For example, the fact that it considerably simplifies vehicle construction - which brings us back to the competitive pressure from the USA and China. Now the share prices of our former industrial jewels are plummeting, short-time work is being introduced everywhere and now there is even talk of entire plant closures: Volkswagen - not long ago worlds biggest manufacturer - alone wants to close three German factories.
The political magazine Cicero analyzes: "The location conditions in Germany are getting worse and worse. In particular, the excessive bureaucracy, the tax burden and the high energy prices are having a negative impact. If politicians fail to find solutions here, things will look bad for the industrial future." Rising unemployment will increase social spending. At the same time, labor costs will continue to rise due to inflation. And the infrastructure, which has been neglected for 20 years, should be urgently and expensively modernized. Not to mention the necessary climate-neutral restructuring of the economy. I find it difficult to be optimistic about our economic future right now...
Good News of the Week
Lately, Ukraine has had to accept rather bad news from the USA. Donald Trump himself and his entourage have confirmed more than once that the extensive military aid from the USA will certainly not continue in full. This means that half of the arms deliveries are at risk and full compensation from other countries - Germany is a distant second - is practically impossible.
But now there has probably been a kind of farewell gift from Joe Biden, which could possibly even be a game changer. It concerns long-range weapons systems and their use on Russian territory. Until now, this was formally prohibited, as Ukraine's partner countries wanted to avoid the escalation of being seen as a party of war themselves. Specifically, this means that the US ATACMS missiles with their range of 300 kilometers can also be deployed behind the Russian border.
This is a decisive strategic advantage that replaces a previous disadvantage. Until now, the aggressor's supply routes, weapons depots, military bases, etc. have been practically unassailable. The outcry on the Russian side is correspondingly great. The "first deputy chairman of the International Affairs Committee of the Russian Federation Council" (yeah, that's his title) Vladimir Jabarov even speaks of an "unprecedented step of escalation that could lead to the start of the Third World War".
Ukraine's NATO neighbor Poland, for example, sounds different. Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski wrote on Twitter that Biden had responded to the deployment of North Korean troops to Russia and the massive Russian missile attacks on Ukraine "in a language that Vladimir Putin understands". Let's hope so. And let's also hope that Germany, for example, allows the use of its Taurus cruise missiles, which experts see as ideal for Ukrainian defense purposes. The current Chancellor Olaf Scholz has always refused to do so. By contrast, the likely incoming chancellor (in the early elections at the end of February 2025), conservative opposition leader Friedrich Merz, is in favor. As far as I know, this is the only position where I am leaning more towards Merz than Scholz. So at least there's something good in this respect too...
Personal happy moment of the week
I've really thought about it. But I'm so stressed at the moment that happiness just doesn't get enough attention. But I did remember one thing: we got our winter tires fitted just in time before the first snow. You get modest in age... ;-)
I couldn't care less...
...that it is always possible to use legal sophistry to overturn a groundbreaking court ruling. In this case, and once again at the expense of the environment. The British-Dutch oil and natural gas giant Shell does not have to drastically reduce its CO2 emissions after all. This is because a civil court in The Hague overturned a corresponding climate ruling by the court of first instance and dismissed the lawsuit brought by environmentalists. The latter had originally demanded that the company reduce its carbon dioxide emissions by a net 45 percent by 2030. However, the appeal chamber found that this figure lacked a "reliable basis for calculation". Excuse me? So now - exactly: nothing is happening.
It's fine with me...
...that fat doesn't always have to be bad. It's actually considered fattening. And extremely unhealthy, especially belly fat, which not only looks shitty (I've been developing alarmingly for ten years now), but can also damage the organs. However, a study by the Charité hospital in Berlin and the German Institute of Human Nutrition (DIfE) in Potsdam has now shown that a diet containing polyunsaturated fatty acids - such as those found in oils, nuts, avocado or fish - not only melts belly fat, but also has a positive effect on cholesterol levels, blood pressure and the brain. That should give me pause for thought.
As I write this...
...EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is putting together her new Commission. Each country has the right to one post - with 27 countries in the European Union, this is quite a large governing body. Its members are appointed by the respective country. So in the case of Italy, for example, Raffaele Fitto from the right-wing Fratelli d'Italia is actually an imposition - but in the shadow of Viktor Orban, everyone seems harmless. Nevertheless, von der Leyen seems to have managed to find a balanced personnel tableau. This is also necessary, as this Commission can only be confirmed as a whole by the European Parliament. Or not.
Post Scriptum
Apparently, New Zealand is not a perfect world either. At least not for the original population, because ruthless colonialism was also practiced there. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has publicly apologized in parliament for the immense suffering that occurred according to an investigation by the Royal Commission of Inquiry. Around 200,000 mainly young people and mainly indigenous Maori experienced violence in New Zealand's state and religious institutions between 1950 and 1999. In view of a population of just 5 million, this is a huge number. This means that almost one in three people under protection suffered some form of abuse. We're talking about rape, electric shocks and sterilization, among other things. Whew, that's hard to take. I could cry over their wounded souls.
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thefisherqueen · 1 year ago
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This article is a few months old, but today the EU council confirmed the ban on export of plastic waste. This is pretty huge!
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thevalicemultiverse · 11 months ago
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During the American colonial period, lobsters were not valued as food and were mainly eaten by the poor, prisoners, and indentured servants.
Native tribes near the coasts used lobsters as fertilizer or bait rather than food.
People even hid lobster shells to avoid the stigma of poverty. In Massachusetts, indentured servants sued to limit their lobster meals to three times a week, winning the case. Lobsters were abundant, easy to collect from the shore, and considered bottom feeders.
They were often consumed as a paste or stew. In the early 19th century, lobsters were cheaper than Boston baked beans, sometimes even fed to cats.
However, by the late 19th century, as railroads spread and lobsters were served on trains, people who were unfamiliar with them found them delicious.
This led to increased demand and the start of lobster canning. By the 1920s, with lobsters becoming less plentiful but demand growing, lobsters transitioned to a delicacy, popular among celebrities and the wealthy by the 1950s.
Alice: I never knew any of that before -- what about you, Victor? Seems at least historically relevant to your family's business.
Victor: I think I have heard a story like this before, yes -- except about caviar. Maybe that has a similar history?
Alice: I guess I wouldn't be surprised -- I mean, in the end, it's just fish eggs, isn't it? The fancy part comes from how rare they are. We'll have to look it up later.
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bibleofficial · 11 months ago
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legal weed comparisons netherlands to us:
- purchase limit (day): 5g vs 1oz
- available to purchase: bud/hash, brownies vs … name a noun ? 😭😭
- percentages: <25% vs >25%
- price 35€/3.5, 15€ fatty prerolls vs just buy it illegally so u don’t have to pay taxes on the same product 😭😭
overall i mean it runs standard to black market broadly for eu it’s just … legal-ish
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