@@Chaotic_Autism I'm sorry you do not understand my comment, it is rather cryptic. When we colonised many countries (some would say civilised them) we gave the gifts of our language, education, industrialisation and Judaeo-Christian codes of conduct. Although some of those modernising influences took hold, others did not. Industrialisation without the important due care and attention for workers welfare/health and safety. That means only half of the lessons were taken onboard. Those machines (Limb remover 5000) based on western designs, would never pass our stringent health and safety regulations. Neither would the workshop they are built in, pass inspections. Now do you understand. Sometimes former colonies deliberately chose not to benefit from all the lessons on offer. It has come to be known as the White Mans Burden.
@@Chaotic_Autism I'm British. The country that civilised 25% of the globe including America. The country that outlawed the practice of slavery in the civilised world, etc etc.
What amuses me is watching third world engineering videos completely void of health and safety standards. Human life is so cheap in those places that labour is a disposable commodity. Watch the first five minutes of this video and count the insane practices. I'll start you off with wearing flip flops/sandals.
Some of the carp fishes love organic materials from ground and some from water. I used to feed thilapia and grass carp fishes with those edibles. They love it.
Its more like pulp than 'timber' probably only gets as hard as a raw potato, and its young banana trees most likely softer. It may be that fish actually eat it. 🤷🏾♂️
Bananas don't grow on trees; the trunk is made up of the stem of the leaf; they look much like corrugated cardboard and are full of water; you can eat most of the plant; it's very soft; fish love it; there's no dumping going on here.
@@mojavegold- in common language even if there are multiple species they are still said to be 'fish'. 'Fishes' is rare word for scientists not common language.