Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Get your FREE Fat-burning Fried Foods Cookbook

Who doesn't like chomping down on crispy fried chicken fresh from a fast-food joint?



But here’s the problem...

These chickens are fried in TOXIC industrial oils... it's like gluing sticky fat around your abdomen, all while causing runaway internal inflammation and clogging your arteries leading to heart disease and early death.

Gross, I know.???

On the other hand...

Air-fried chicken is healthier yet it has the same crisp, crunch, and yummy flavor.

So it’s perfect for children, adults, and even seniors.

And that’s why I switched to eating it instead.

Now, if you would like to receive my private collection of fried recipes...

Including a delicious air-fried chicken I cook on weekends.

>>> ==> Click here to get your FREE Fat-burning Fried Foods Cookbook

(No credit card required.)













 
til the mid 14th century. In 1351, the Samma Dynasty, of Rajput descent from Sehwan, seized the city and made it their capital as well. It was during this time that the Makli Necropolis rose to prominence as a funerary site. Muhammad bin Tughluq died in 1351 during a campaign to capture Thatta. Firuz Shah Tughlaq unsuccessfully attempted to subjugate Thatta twice; once in 1361 and again in 1365. Portuguese In 1520, the Samma ruler Jam Feroz was defeated by Shah Beg of the Arghun-Tarkhun dynasty, which in turn had been displaced from Afghanistan by the expanding Timurid Empire in Central Asia. The Tarkhuns fell into disarray in the mid-1500s, prompting Muhammad Isa Tarkhun (Mirza Isa Khan I) to seek aid from the Portuguese in 1555. 700 Portuguese soldiers arrived in 28 ships to determine, at the time of their arrival, that Isa Tarkhun had already emerged victorious from the conflict. After the Tarkhuns refused to pay the Portuguese soldiers, the Portuguese plundered the town, robbing its enormous gold treasury, and killing many inhabitants. Despite the 1557 Sack of Thatta, the 16th century Portuguese historian Diogo do Couto described Thatta as one of the richest cities of the Orient. Nevertheless, some Portuguese presence was early in the 16th century with the conquest of Hormuz by Afonso de Albuquerque in 1507, which started the relationship with Sindi. Later in the first decade of the 16th century, traders created a factory (feitoria), and at the end of the 16th century a religious Order (Carm

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