Græna tæknin og aukið lífsloft, Co2 kallað mengun, bjargaði milljónum. Pearce bendir á að fólkið er hungrað í dag vegna þess að fólkið hefur ekki efni á að borða, frekar en skortur á mat.

Afnema „Malthus goðsögnina“

Dispelling “the Malthus myth”

Issue: 127

Martin Empson

Fred Pearce, Peoplequake: Mass Migration, Ageing Nations and the Coming Population Crash (Eden Project Books, 2010), £12.99

In the 200 years since the Reverend Thomas Malthus first penned his tract An Essay on the Principle of Population the question of the “carrying capacity” of the planet has repeatedly appeared. Most recently, mainstream debates around how to solve the question of climate change have boiled down to the simplistic argument that “there are too many people”. James Lovelock for instance argues “that we are treating the planet so badly that we are likely to require a population crash to about one billion people before the world can again live within its ecological means”. The Optimum Population Trust, who “support research into lower optimum population sizes” and “campaign for a lower population in the UK”, claim that “human consumption of renewable resources is already overshooting Earth’s capacity to provide”.

This argument fits perfectly with Malthus’s own beliefs. It would have been recognised by writers such as Paul Ehrlich who spent the 1960s warning the world that its rapidly growing population would soon exceed the planet’s ability to provide. It is a recipe that ends up blaming the poorest people for the world’s problems.

The idea that a growing population means a greater pressure on natural resources, which eventually exceeds planetary capacity, is a simple common sense one. It is also wrong. Since Malthus’s time, those who have followed in his footsteps have used such arguments to justify the world’s unequal distribution of wealth and argue against the possibility of social reform. Racism and scapegoating have flowed from the theory and have lead to forced sterilisation programmes, abortion and anti-immigrant legislation. The resurgence of these debates in the context of environmental crisis is a distraction from discussions about the political and economic changes required to tackle global warming.

It is in this context that Fred Pearce’s latest book is such an important contribution. Pearce turns just about every perceived wisdom about population on its head. From the publication of his first writings, Malthus’ ideas rapidly made it into the mainstream. Eugenicists tacked on their ideas of racial superiority to Malthusian concerns and the resultant poisonous mix made the perfect ideology to justify colonialism and empire. Malthus himself had become the first professor of political economy, teaching a generation of future administrators of empire about the “perils of overpopulation” and the “pointlessness of charity”. Charles Trevelyan, who oversaw the Irish Potato famine for the British government, was a student of Malthus.

The same ideas were at the back of Winston Churchill’s mind when he called for the sterilisation of the “feeble-minded”. Between the First and Second World Wars “60,000 imbeciles, epileptics and ‘feeble-minded’ were compulsorily sterilised in the US”, there were tens of thousands of further victims in countries as diverse as Sweden and Japan. The logic was taken to its brutal extreme by the Nazis, who sterilised half a million people, though as Pearce points out, their policies were “widely admired”.

In the post war period, Malthusian ideas were very much part of the ruling ideology of the Cold War. In the early 1950s, the Rockefeller Foundation was set up to ensure that industrial development was held back from countries like India until they had dealt with their population problem. Senior figures in United Nations organisations and Western governments believed that aid shouldn’t be given to “overpopulated” countries, such as Japan, until they had reduced the numbers living there.

But for leading figures in the US administration at this time, concerns about overpopulation were not driven by a desire to improve the lives of the world’s poorest. Rather they saw the issue as a strategic threat to US dominance. One government report concluded that “hungry people without enough land to grow food were likely to be seduced by dreams of land reform”. Such dreams could lead to revolution, and something had to be done. In addition to the introduction of population control programmes, groups like the Rockefeller Foundation funded research into crop improvements—the “green revolution”.

One of the problems for Malthus’s followers, is that time and again their predictions haven’t come true. Today’s population of Britain is far in excess of what was possible, according to Malthus. Billions of people did not starve to death in the developing world as Ehrlich had promised in the 1970s. The simple reason for this is the development of new and improved ways of producing food. The introduction of improved varieties of wheat, rice and maize massively increased the amount of food that was grown. In the “30 years from 1963, food output outstripped population growth by 36 percent in Asia as a whole”, writes Pearce. “In this light”, he continues, “the green revolution and population control were both part of a fix to preserve the capitalist status quo”.

Changes in farming brought other consequences—the risks of relying on a few crop varieties, the environmental problems caused by increased use of water as well as the consequences of over-reliance on pesticides. The green revolution hasn’t led to an end to hunger—though
millions of people who might have starved to death can get food to eat. As Pearce points out, those who starve today do so because they can’t afford to eat, rather than a shortage of food.

But for Pearce there is another unintended consequence. Because the green revolution allowed greater crop yields, less people were needed to farm the land. This led to smaller families and falling fertility levels in Asia. Pearce argues that falling fertility and crashing population are likely to be the real population problem for the 21st century. In many parts of Europe we are already experiencing a major population crisis. If fertility rates stay the same in countries like Italy and German native populations will fall by over 80 percent by the end of the century. Currently Europe is producing about 6 million babies a year. That’s 2 million less than needed to maintain the population. The population of Russia is dropping by half a million every year.

Increasingly, richer countries will be relying on immigration from the developing world to keep society running. But the developing world is also having fewer children. On current trends, world population is likely to start falling within a generation for the first time since the Black Death. The reasons for this are complex. Pearce highlights a number of factors—improved access to contraception, for instance. He also notes how, when access to education improves, women tend to have fewer children. But he also makes the point that when there is access to decent healthcare and childcare, women are able to make the decision to have children.

An ageing, shrinking population brings its own problems. Already in France and Japan there are only two taxpaying workers to support each pensioner. In Italy the figure is as low as 1.3. Many economies will increasingly rely on migrants to work, flying in the face of the anti-immigrant rhetoric we currently are experiencing. But the conclusion that Pearce comes to is a positive one. Although from an environmental point of view, he doesn’t believe we should stop worrying. Population is not the key factor in environmental destruction. What is important is the distribution of wealth.

“The poorest three billion or so people on the planet (roughly 45 percent in total) are currently responsible for only 7 percent of emissions, while the richest 7 percent (about half a billion people) are responsible for 50 percent of emissions.” Thus an increase in the population of the poorest areas of the world, despite what we are told by some environmentalists, will make little impact on climate change. The big question is how we change society in the richer world.

Fredrick Engels summed up Malthus’s ideas simply: “The earth is perennially overpopulated, whence poverty, misery, distress and immorality must prevail; that it is the lot, the eternal destiny of mankind, to exist in too great numbers, and therefore in diverse classes, of which some are rich, educated, and moral, and others more or less poor, distressed, ignorant and immoral.”

For Marx and Engels, arguments of overpopulation hid a wider issue. They were a fig leaf covering racist ideas that justified the way that the world was. Today questions of population are still distorted by myths and lies. And they still serve to hide from us the wider question of how we must transform our own societies to save the planet and its people. It is for these reasons that Fred Pearce has done socialists engaged in the environmental movement, as well as those defending migrants and fighting racism, a tremendous service with this book.

 Book reviews

The green revolution hasn’t led to an end to hunger - though millions of people who might have starved to death can get food to eat. As Pearce points out, those who starve today do so because they can’t afford to eat, rather than a shortage of food.

 Dispelling “the Malthus myth”

Issue: 127

Martin Empson

Fred PearcePeoplequakeMass MigrationAgeing Nations and the Coming Population Crash (Eden Project Books2010), £12.99

In the 200 years since the Reverend Thomas Malthus first penned his tract An Essay on the Principle of Population the question of the “carrying capacity” of the planet has repeatedly appeared. Most recently, mainstream debates around how to solve the question of climate change have boiled down to the simplistic argument that “there are too many people”. James Lovelock for instance argues “that we are treating the planet so badly that we are likely to require a population crash to about one billion people before the world can again live within its ecological means”. The Optimum Population Trust, who “support research into lower optimum population sizes” and “campaign for a lower population in the UK”, claim that “human consumption of renewable resources is already overshooting Earth’s capacity to provide”.

This argument fits perfectly with Malthus’s own beliefs. It would have been recognised by writers such as Paul Ehrlich who spent the 1960s warning the world that its rapidly growing population would soon exceed the planet’s ability to provide. It is a recipe that ends up blaming the poorest people for the world’s problems.

The idea that a growing population means a greater pressure on natural resources, which eventually exceeds planetary capacity, is a simple common sense one. It is also wrong. Since Malthus’s time, those who have followed in his footsteps have used such arguments to justify the world’s unequal distribution of wealth and argue against the possibility of social reform. Racism and scapegoating have flowed from the theory and have lead to forced sterilisation programmes, abortion and anti-immigrant legislation. The resurgence of these debates in the context of environmental crisis is a distraction from discussions about the political and economic changes required to tackle global warming.

It is in this context that Fred Pearce’s latest book is such an important contribution. Pearce turns just about every perceived wisdom about population on its head. From the publication of his first writings, Malthus’ ideas rapidly made it into the mainstream. Eugenicists tacked on their ideas of racial superiority to Malthusian concerns and the resultant poisonous mix made the perfect ideology to justify colonialism and empire. Malthus himself had become the first professor of political economy, teaching a generation of future administrators of empire about the “perils of overpopulation” and the “pointlessness of charity”. Charles Trevelyan, who oversaw the Irish Potato famine for the British government, was a student of Malthus.

The same ideas were at the back of Winston Churchill’s mind when he called for the sterilisation of the “feeble-minded”. Between the First and Second World Wars “60,000 imbeciles, epileptics and ‘feeble-minded’ were compulsorily sterilised in the US”, there were tens of thousands of further victims in countries as diverse as Sweden and Japan. The logic was taken to its brutal extreme by the Nazis, who sterilised half a million people, though as Pearce points out, their policies were “widely admired”.

In the post war period, Malthusian ideas were very much part of the ruling ideology of the Cold War. In the early 1950s, the Rockefeller Foundation was set up to ensure that industrial development was held back from countries like India until they had dealt with their population problem. Senior figures in United Nations organisations and Western governments believed that aid shouldn’t be given to “overpopulated” countries, such as Japan, until they had reduced the numbers living there.

But for leading figures in the US administration at this time, concerns about overpopulation were not driven by a desire to improve the lives of the world’s poorest. Rather they saw the issue as a strategic threat to US dominance. One government report concluded that “hungry people without enough land to grow food were likely to be seduced by dreams of land reform”. Such dreams could lead to revolution, and something had to be done. In addition to the introduction of population control programmes, groups like the Rockefeller Foundation funded research into crop improvements—the “green revolution”.

One of the problems for Malthus’s followers, is that time and again their predictions haven’t come true. Today’s population of Britain is far in excess of what was possible, according to Malthus. Billions of people did not starve to death in the developing world as Ehrlich had promised in the 1970s. The simple reason for this is the development of new and improved ways of producing food. The introduction of improved varieties of wheat, rice and maize massively increased the amount of food that was grown. In the “30 years from 1963, food output outstripped population growth by 36 percent in Asia as a whole”, writes Pearce. “In this light”, he continues, “the green revolution and population control were both part of a fix to preserve the capitalist status quo”.

Changes in farming brought other consequences—the risks of relying on a few crop varieties, the environmental problems caused by increased use of water as well as the consequences of over-reliance on pesticides. The green revolution hasn’t led to an end to hunger—though
millions of people who might have starved to death can get food to eat. As Pearce points out, those who starve today do so because they can’t afford to eat, rather than a shortage of food.

But for Pearce there is another unintended consequence. Because the green revolution allowed greater crop yields, less people were needed to farm the land. This led to smaller families and falling fertility levels in Asia. Pearce argues that falling fertility and crashing population are likely to be the real population problem for the 21st century. In many parts of Europe we are already experiencing a major population crisis. If fertility rates stay the same in countries like Italy and German native populations will fall by over 80 percent by the end of the century. Currently Europe is producing about 6 million babies a year. That’s 2 million less than needed to maintain the population. The population of Russia is dropping by half a million every year.

Increasingly, richer countries will be relying on immigration from the developing world to keep society running. But the developing world is also having fewer children. On current trends, world population is likely to start falling within a generation for the first time since the Black Death. The reasons for this are complex. Pearce highlights a number of factors—improved access to contraception, for instance. He also notes how, when access to education improves, women tend to have fewer children. But he also makes the point that when there is access to decent healthcare and childcare, women are able to make the decision to have children.

An ageing, shrinking population brings its own problems. Already in France and Japan there are only two taxpaying workers to support each pensioner. In Italy the figure is as low as 1.3. Many economies will increasingly rely on migrants to work, flying in the face of the anti-immigrant rhetoric we currently are experiencing. But the conclusion that Pearce comes to is a positive one. Although from an environmental point of view, he doesn’t believe we should stop worrying. Population is not the key factor in environmental destruction. What is important is the distribution of wealth.

“The poorest three billion or so people on the planet (roughly 45 percent in total) are currently responsible for only 7 percent of emissions, while the richest 7 percent (about half a billion people) are responsible for 50 percent of emissions.” Thus an increase in the population of the poorest areas of the world, despite what we are told by some environmentalists, will make little impact on climate change. The big question is how we change society in the richer world.

Fredrick Engels summed up Malthus’s ideas simply: “The earth is perennially overpopulated, whence poverty, misery, distress and immorality must prevail; that it is the lot, the eternal destiny of mankind, to exist in too great numbers, and therefore in diverse classes, of which some are rich, educated, and moral, and others more or less poor, distressed, ignorant and immoral.”

For Marx and Engels, arguments of overpopulation hid a wider issue. They were a fig leaf covering racist ideas that justified the way that the world was. Today questions of population are still distorted by myths and lies. And they still serve to hide from us the wider question of how we must transform our own societies to save the planet and its people. It is for these reasons that Fred Pearce has done socialists engaged in the environmental movement, as well as those defending migrants and fighting racism, a tremendous service with this book.

 Book reviews

Diabetes is a terrible disease, but also a multi billion for pharmaceuticals. The secret, these funds do not allow you to completely eliminaten-dollar incom the symptoms of diabetes - not profitable to sell drugs that will cure you completely.

Oft hugsum við, þeir sem stjórna okkur

búa sennilega líka til mest af fréttunum

sem vara við þeim sem stjórna. 

000

Það virðist vera búið að fikta í greininni.

Mér líst ekkert á þessa slóð,

Glykiron sem er neðarlega í greininni

hér virðist sem verið sé að leiða á villigötur. 

Glykiron

000

vafrinn þýði á íslensku

- removes the reasons
cellular diabetes!

Innovative diabetes biocomplex for

a healthy, full life. New 2020! 

Cleans cells and boosts
insulin sensitivity

Protects against hypoglycemia
and diabetes complications

Normalizes work
pancreas

Restores
well-being and improves
quality of life

Stabilizes sugar level
in blood

000

The whole secret is that these funds do not allow you to completely eliminate the symptoms of diabetes

- it is simply not profitable for manufacturers to sell drugs that will cure you completely.

000

Þannig að ef þú eykur magn króms í líkamanum, þá þarf miklu minna insúlín fyrir eðlilegt líf án sykursýkis einkenna.

Sykursjúkir af tegund 2 geta fundið fyrir verulegum létti og insúlínháðir sykursjúkir minnka skammt og tíðni insúlínnotkunar og í flestum tilfellum hætta alveg að sprauta sig.

- Það er mjög einföld lausn! Hvers vegna það er ekki notað til að meðhöndla sykursýki strax?

Króm kostar lítið. En framleiðsla og sala sykursýkislyfja er margra milljarða dollara fyrirtæki.

Í 80s, hleyptu Sovétríkin af stokkunum áætlun um þróun á þessari meðferð.

Þegar á fyrsta stigi klínísku rannsóknanna, komu ótrúlega góðar niðurstöður,

en þegar hrun Sovétríkjanna fylgdi í kjölfarið og allir gleymdu króminu,

Búðarborð apóteka fylltust af innfluttum vörum, og meðulum frá erlendum framleiðendum. 

Sykursýki er ekki aðeins hræðilegur sjúkdómur, heldur einnig margra milljarða dollara tekjur fyrir lyfja fyrirtæki.

000

Diabetes is no2022-11-15-cromint only a terrible disease, but also a multibillion-dollar income for pharmaceuticals. Corporations.

The whole secret is that these funds do not allow you to completely eliminate the symptoms of diabetes - it is simply not profitable for manufacturers to sell drugs that will cure you completely.

000

Þannig að ef þú eykur magn króms í líkamanum, þá þarf miklu minna insúlín fyrir eðlilegt líf án sykursýkis einkenna.

Sykursjúkir af tegund 2 geta fundið fyrir verulegum létti og insúlínháðir sykursjúkir minnka skammt og tíðni insúlínnotkunar og í flestum tilfellum hætta alveg að sprauta sig.

- Það er mjög einföld lausn! Hvers vegna það er ekki notað til að meðhöndla sykursýki strax?

Króm kostar lítið. En framleiðsla og sala sykursýkislyfja er margra milljarða dollara fyrirtæki.

Í 80s, hleyptu Sovétríkin af stokkunum áætlun um þróun á þessari meðferð.

Þegar á fyrsta stigi klínísku rannsóknanna, komu ótrúlega góðar niðurstöður,

en þegar hrun Sovétríkjanna fylgdi í kjölfarið og allir gleymdu króminu,

búðarborð apóteka fylltust af innfluttum vörum, sem og okkar, sem voru stofnaðir undir leyfi erlendra framleiðenda.

Sykursýki er ekki aðeins hræðilegur sjúkdómur, heldur einnig margra milljarða dollara tekjur fyrir lyfja fyrirtæki.

000  Hér byrjar greinin.

Diabetes is not a hindrance to life! 91-year-old Russian surgeon told how she fought diabetes Life

Levushkina A. I. - a famous Soviet and Russian surgeon, inventor, professor of the department Operative Surgery and Clinical Anatomy of SSMU, Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, laureate of the Lenin University Prize, State Prize of the USSR.

Alla Ilyinichna is a diabetic with extensive experience. She was diagnosed with diabetes at the age of 31, she has lived with him for 60 years. During this time, she developed her own scheme to combat diabetes, which is significantly different from the "traditional" one.

In the year of the fight against diabetes declared by the Government of the Russian Federation, Alla Ilyinichna, at the request of Minister of Health (Skvortsova Veronika Igorevna), shared her own, unique a way to prolong life and maintain health in diabetes mellitus.

cromin1

With On her 91st birthday, Alla Ilyinichna Levushkina was congratulated by the President himself. Photos from the workplace Levushkina A. I.

 

- Alla Ilyinichna, how do you feel now?

- I feel great. Full of energy for work. I'm not going to retire at home.

- You are one of the few women who lived to such an age and so beautifully yourself Feels. And this despite the fact that you have had diabetes for 60 years. Tell us how you like it Could?

- I know many people who have lived with diabetes for no more than 10-20 years. You'll forgive me, but in much of it is their own fault. Diabetes mellitus is a new living condition, under which it is necessary to adjust, otherwise the consequences will not be long in coming. I realized this very much. long ago. And I also realized that if you act correctly, you can avoid all that, what is dangerous diabetes. That's exactly what I was doing. This is the key to a long and healthy life.

- Could you tell us about your method of dealing with diabetes?

- Actually, this method is not mine, but the famous Soviet endocrinologist Baranov Vasily Gavrilovich.

Back in the '50s, I had the opportunity to talk to him on about the diabetes I was already diagnosed with.

He told me the basic rules, what and how to do - to reduce the effects and symptoms of diabetes. 

cromin2

Vasily Gavrilovich Baranov – the largest endocrinologist, Doctor of Medicine Sciences. Academician of the Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR. For many years, Vasily Gavrilovich Baranov was the main endocrinologist of the Main Health Department of the Leningrad City Executive Committee. He was treated. Leonid Brezhnev, Yuri Andropov, Mikhail Kovalenko and other well-known political activists figures of the USSR.

The main rule that Vasily Gavrilovich told me then was to use it as more chrome is allowed.

This is due to the fact that chromium is a catalyst for the breakdown of glucose. Insulin.

- I'll try to explain "on my fingers". Diabetes mellitus occurs due to the fact that the excreted pancreatic insulin is not able to break down incoming glucose. As a result blood sugar levels rise.

However, there is a third element in the reaction of insulin and glucose – it's chrome.

The more it is, the faster this reaction passes, and the less the body has. it is necessary to produce insulin.

Thus, if you increase the level of chromium in the body, then for a normal life without The symptoms of diabetes will require much less insulin.

Type 2 diabetics can feel significant relief, and insulin-dependent diabetics reduce the dose and frequency taking insulin, and in most cases completely abandon the injections.

- It's a very simple solution! Why it is not used to treat diabetes Right away?

- Because chrome costs a penny. And the production and sale of antidiabetic drugs it's a multibillion-dollar business.

In the 80s, the USSR launched a program for the development of this type of therapy.

Already at the stage of the first clinical trials, remarkable results, but then the collapse of the USSR followed and everyone forgot about it, the counters of pharmacies filled imported funds, as well as ours, which were created under the license of foreign Manufacturers.

Diabetes is not only a terrible disease, but also a multibillion-dollar income for pharmaceuticals. Corporations.

The whole secret is that these funds do not allow you to completely eliminate the symptoms of diabetes

- it is simply not profitable for manufacturers to sell drugs that will cure you completely.

 

By the way, do you know that in the USSR the treatment of diabetes was much more successful than now?

And that's it. despite the fact that more than 30 years have passed!

However, it is not customary to talk about this - the tone in treatment of diabetes is set from the West, and there everything is set to pull money from the sick.

- And how do you relieve the symptoms of diabetes for so many years?

Fortunately, I am a doctor myself and I have access to laboratories and experimental Drugs.

There was even a time when I had to make a drug with chromium myself - its it is very easy to get if you know the chemistry and have the appropriate equipment.

Now such a drug is produced in large batches, so this problem no longer exists - everyone who wants to be treated with a chromium-containing drug gets it.

- And why can't you eat, for example, foods that have a lot of chromium?

- Why not? You can and should eat such products! However, in diabetes mellitus, it is spent too much chromium - the stock of which is simply impossible to replenish with products.

2 years ago, the Moscow Institute of Nutrition measured the amount of chromium in products bought in ordinary stores, such as Pyaterochka or Magnit.

- Alla Ilyinichna, you said that today there is a drug with a high content of chromium. How can I get it? Is there such a possibility?

- Yes, there is such a possibility. And I advise all diabetics to use it, as well as those who have who is diagnosed with a pre-diabetic condition.

2 years ago, together with the staff of the Department of Endocrinology of Moscow State University, we created a special chromium-containing agent for diabetics - Glykiron. 3 months ago he passed a series of clinical trials that showed his high efficiency. 98% of diabetics who took part in the studies noted a significant improving your well-being.

However, we have been using this tool "unofficially" for a year – and the results are impressive. Right away this was confirmed by clinical trials.

Glykiron is a unique domestic remedy with a high content of chromium for the treatment of Diabetes.

In addition to increasing the level of chromium in the body, Glycyrone has a number of other useful for Diabetes Action:

  1. Promotes the active division of Langerhans beta cells in the pancreas.
  2. Stimulates the production of insulin by beta cells.
  3. Reduces the resistance of body cells to insulin (the effectiveness of insulin rises).
  4. Normalizes metabolic processes, prevents thyroid dysfunction and Ovarian.
  5. Cleanses blood vessels from cholesterol plaques, restores blood vessels (as a result, restores the work of internal organs).
  6. Prevents hypoglycemia.
  7. Improves vision (patients starting to take Glycyrone note improvements in vision already 4-5 months after the start of admission).

- Alla Ilyinichna, is it possible to buy Glykiron in a pharmacy, and how much does it cost approximately?

- It is not yet sold in pharmacies, but we are actively negotiating with pharmacy chains. Not I am sure that they will give a positive result.

Pharmacies want to sell it with a markup more than 700%. 

We don't want to make money on patients – I myself am a diabetic and I know what it's like to live with Disease.

But even if Glycyron appears in pharmacies, it is because of various bureaucratic procedures. will not happen until the springof 2023. If you want to give it a try Glycyron, you don't have to wait for that.

2 months ago, together with the Shervinsky Research Institute of Endocrinology, we created a special drawing, through which we distribute Glycyronfor FREE.

Egilsstaðir, 15.11.2022   Jónas Gunnlaugsson


New Lada Granta 2023 - new Lada Granta 202 UAZ Hunter 2022-2023 - high ground clearance.Will it replace the Toyota Land Cruiser in Russia? - Tank 300 all-wheel drive,

Home European Cars  Lada

LADA

MOST 

Lada - Complete sets, prices, photos, video and specifications of the models in the new body - CenyAvto.com

more

 

000

Presented a brand new Lada Granta 2023, as the best alternative to the Renault Logan...

000

A completely different UAZ Hunter 2022-2023 is presented. Will it replace the Toyota Land Cruiser in Russia?

 

000  

Tank 300 is a full-fledged SUV with all-wheel drive, frame construction and high ground clearance.

000

As for the appearance of the Geely Haoyue L, there is a design with pronounced brutal notes.

Geely Haoyue L 2023 will go on sale this year (cenyavto.com)Geely Haoyue L 2023 will go on sale this year (cenyavto.com) 

https://cenyavto.com/prodazhi-geely-haoyue-l-2023-startuyut-v-etom-godu/?utm_referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fpulse.mail.ru&utm_source=MRG_Pulse

000 

Russian man bought himself a GAZ-66 for mere pennies in not the best condition. 

The guy took the old GAZ-66 "Shishiga" for a penny and almost without money made the best house on wheels with a turbodiesel and automatic transmission. (cenyavto.com)  

https://cenyavto.com/muzhik-vzyal-staryj-gaz-66-shishiga-za-kopejki/ 

000

The guy made a rotten GAZ-66 "Shishiga" SUV cooler than Hummer. And that's...

000

 

The guy took the old GAZ-66 "Shishiga" for a penny and almost no money ...


Bloggfærslur 15. nóvember 2022

Innskráning

Ath. Vinsamlegast kveikið á Javascript til að hefja innskráningu.

Hafðu samband