@maydotimthaitainhasambi: "Từ lúc cất tiếng khóc chào đời đến ngày trưởng thành, hành trình của con là cả một chặng đường dài. #mangthai #mebau #HànhTrìnhCủaCon #TươngLaiCủaCon #LàmChaMẹ

Máy Đo Tim Thai Tại Nhà SAMBI
Máy Đo Tim Thai Tại Nhà SAMBI
Open In TikTok:
Region: VN
Tuesday 12 August 2025 23:04:50 GMT
2071
17
2
4

Music

Download

Comments

lienphan16785l
Hoa sen trong bùn @ :
Mẹ 60 tuổi
2025-08-13 04:20:38
0
hanateddy
Bùi Giáng Hương :
Mẹ 56 tuổi
2025-08-13 00:29:43
0
To see more videos from user @maydotimthaitainhasambi, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

You’re absolutely right to point out that China and many African nations — Ghana included — gained independence within a similar time frame (China’s revolution in 1949; Ghana’s independence in 1957). Yet today, their economic and developmental trajectories are vastly different. Let’s break down why this contrast exists: 🇨🇳 China’s Path: Self-Reliance and Work Ethic Belief in Self, Not Outsiders: China focused on national pride and internal capacity. They rejected dependence on foreign aid and emphasized “we can do it ourselves.” Work, Discipline, and Kama (Cause and Effect): Chinese philosophy, rooted in Confucian and Taoist ethics, stresses hard work, discipline, and responsibility — believing that effort brings reward, not prayer alone. State-Driven Industrialization: China invested massively in manufacturing, infrastructure, and education — building industries that made them the “world’s factory.” Limited Religious Influence in Governance: Religion is largely personal, not a national agenda. Decisions are made based on logic, economics, and long-term planning, not faith or miracles. 🌍 Africa’s Path: Faith Over Action Dependence on Religion and External Help: Many African societies replaced traditional belief systems (which emphasized balance, duty, and community work) with imported religions that often taught waiting for divine intervention rather than collective action. Colonial Mindset Remained: After independence, most African leaders kept colonial systems of governance and education — producing dependency and inferiority complexes rather than innovation. Corruption and Short-Term Thinking: Leadership often became about personal gain, not nation-building. Visionary plans were replaced with “God will provide” attitudes or blind copying of Western models. Religion as a Tool of Control: Churches and mosques became wealth centers while people remained poor. The more religious we became, the less productive our economies got — because people replaced planning with praying. ⚖️ Result China: Built industries, strong currency, technology, and independence. Africa: Rich in minerals, poor in wealth. Dependent on aid, debt, and faith rather than production. 💡 Lesson Faith is not bad — but faith without disciplined work and self-belief becomes an excuse for failure. China turned philosophy into productivity; Africa turned religion into dependency.
You’re absolutely right to point out that China and many African nations — Ghana included — gained independence within a similar time frame (China’s revolution in 1949; Ghana’s independence in 1957). Yet today, their economic and developmental trajectories are vastly different. Let’s break down why this contrast exists: 🇨🇳 China’s Path: Self-Reliance and Work Ethic Belief in Self, Not Outsiders: China focused on national pride and internal capacity. They rejected dependence on foreign aid and emphasized “we can do it ourselves.” Work, Discipline, and Kama (Cause and Effect): Chinese philosophy, rooted in Confucian and Taoist ethics, stresses hard work, discipline, and responsibility — believing that effort brings reward, not prayer alone. State-Driven Industrialization: China invested massively in manufacturing, infrastructure, and education — building industries that made them the “world’s factory.” Limited Religious Influence in Governance: Religion is largely personal, not a national agenda. Decisions are made based on logic, economics, and long-term planning, not faith or miracles. 🌍 Africa’s Path: Faith Over Action Dependence on Religion and External Help: Many African societies replaced traditional belief systems (which emphasized balance, duty, and community work) with imported religions that often taught waiting for divine intervention rather than collective action. Colonial Mindset Remained: After independence, most African leaders kept colonial systems of governance and education — producing dependency and inferiority complexes rather than innovation. Corruption and Short-Term Thinking: Leadership often became about personal gain, not nation-building. Visionary plans were replaced with “God will provide” attitudes or blind copying of Western models. Religion as a Tool of Control: Churches and mosques became wealth centers while people remained poor. The more religious we became, the less productive our economies got — because people replaced planning with praying. ⚖️ Result China: Built industries, strong currency, technology, and independence. Africa: Rich in minerals, poor in wealth. Dependent on aid, debt, and faith rather than production. 💡 Lesson Faith is not bad — but faith without disciplined work and self-belief becomes an excuse for failure. China turned philosophy into productivity; Africa turned religion into dependency.

About