Compilation of videos I found on Internet #100 (Swedish subtitles)
1. "A planned shutdown? Let’s see what happens. Trump's comments on the shutdown may prove to be very telling: "
2. “Norway has one of the dirtiest & most inhumane industries”
3. POTUS: "To ensure the success of this effort, my plan calls for a new international oversight body — the Board of Peace... which will be headed, not at my request... by a gentleman known as President Donald J. Trump of the United States."
4. Joakim Lamotte's message to Israel about Greta Thunberg
5. "Pastor drops truth bombs on vaccines & population control in under 2 minutes."
6. "So where do these “facts” REALLY come from?"
7. President Trump Drops a Bombshell by Announcing Reopening of Mental Institutions, Labeling Their Closure a "Catastrophic Mistake".
8. "The video that stopped me eating sugar"
9. "This clip was recorded 20 years ago. Watch it and be amazed at how gradually they normalize everything."
10. "You thought 3g, 4g, 5g and ...
I just upgraded my X account to Premium+ since they had a 60% discount offer for the first 3 months.
And I also tested Grok imagine for the first time and generated this video from an image.
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The Food Pyramid 1974-2026
The food pyramid is a visual guide to healthy eating, showing recommended proportions of food groups, with larger sections at the base for foods to eat more of and smaller at the top for those to limit.
Origins in Sweden (1970s)
The concept began in Sweden amid high food prices in the early 1970s. The Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare sought ways to recommend affordable, nutritious diets. In 1974, Anna-Britt Agnsäter (from a grocery cooperative) introduced the first food pyramid in a magazine. It featured three levels:
Base: grains, potatoes, legumes, and milk (basic, cheap foods).
Middle: fruits and vegetables.
Top: meat, fish, and eggs (to eat less of).
USDA Adoption and the Classic 1992 Food Guide Pyramid
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) adapted the pyramid shape in 1992, building on earlier guides like the "Basic Seven" (1940s) and "Basic Four" (1950s–1970s). The 1992 version had six horizontal sections:
Base (largest): Bread, ...