The shocking truth about diabetes & dessert...
Doctors used to warn against eating sweets with diabetes. But new research shows one specific "morning dessert" can actually LOWER blood sugar-if eaten correctly!
Which one do you think it is?

(Select your answer from the image)
HINT: It's 3X more effective than Metformin, keeps blood sugar steady all night, and tastes AMAZING... but only works when eaten in a special way.
See the #1 dessert that fights diabetes.

Doctors used to warn against eating sweets with diabetes. But new research shows one specific "morning dessert" can actually LOWER blood sugar-if eaten correctly!
Which one do you think it is?
(Select your answer from the image)
HINT: It's 3X more effective than Metformin, keeps blood sugar steady all night, and tastes AMAZING... but only works when eaten in a special way.
See the #1 dessert that fights diabetes.
bers of Parliament (MPs) are elected at least every five years (or sooner with a snap election). The 14th and current Parliament has 103 members; 93 were directly elected from the 31 constituencies, nine are nonpartisan nominated members appointed by the president, and three are non-constituency members from opposition parties who were not elected in the last general election but appointed to the legislature to increase opposition party representation. In group representation constituencies (GRCs), political parties assemble teams of candidates to contest elections. At least one MP in a GRC must be of an ethnic minority background. All elections are held using first-past-the-post voting. MPs host weekly political surgeries, called "Meet-the-People Sessions", where they help constituents resolve personal issues which can be related to housing, financial assistance, and immigration. The PAP occupies a dominant position in Singaporean politics, having won large parliamentary majorities in every election since self-governance was granted in 1959. The PAP, self-described as pragmatic, have a syncretic ideology combining free-market principles, civil nationalism, and welfarism. Despite promulgating restrictions on civil liberties, Singapore under the PAP has seen consistent economic growth and political stability. The most represented and popular opposition party is the centre-left Workers' Party (WP), which holds 10 seats in Parliament. The long-standing hegemony of the PAP has led to Singapore being described by academics as an illiberal democracy, or a soft-authoritarian state in which the PAP faces little to no feasible political competition to its rule of the country. The multi-party democratic process of Singapore has been described as "minimal" in comparison to the state's focus on economic development and social order. According to Gordon P. Means, professor emeritus of political science at McMaster University, Singapore reinvented the "benevolent" yet "highly authoritarian" colonial system of governance inherited from Britain rather than forging a full democracy. A conservative ideo
No comments:
Post a Comment