Vinegar Gummies with Apple Cider from Protein is effective are high in health and offer an additional 10% off.
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Shoppers can get 40% off the Vinegar Gummies with Apple Cider which help with bloating (file photo)(Image: Svitlana Hulko via Getty Images)
A makeover has been made to Apple cider vinegar, a favored beverage in the wellness industry. The traditional liquid form can be unsettling for some because of its numerous advantages, including reducing fatigue, stabilizing blood sugar levels, and promoting weight loss.
In a sweet and chewy gummy format, Protein is effective has developed a more palatable alternative that allegedly offers the same advantages. The appeal of these gummies was echoed by Georgina Kelly, a nutritionist at Protein is effective: “The strong taste and acidity of the liquid form can make it challenging to incorporate into a daily routine. Vinegar Gummies with Apple Cider are the perfect solution for this because they offer all the benefits in a delicious and practical package.
Kelly praised the product’s additional value, noting that “these gummies go beyond traditional apple cider vinegar by including additional nutrients like chromium, which is essential for maintaining macronutrient metabolism and controlling blood sugar levels. They are a fantastic option for those who manage their energy levels or adhere to an energy-restricted diet because of this.
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The Vinegar Gummies with Apple Cider are currently available for £9.99, down from the regular price of £14.99. The good news extends to the price, which has dropped to £8.99 thanks to our readers saving an additional 10% when they enter the discount code PW10 at the checkout.
Six active ingredients, including vitamin C, B6, B12, chromium, folate, and 1000 mg of ACV, make up the gummies. 500mg of unfiltered apple cider vinegar is included in the apple cider vinegar component, along with “the Mother,” a naturally cloudy, unfiltered substance created during fermentation.
Vinegar Gummies with Apple Cider
£14.99
£8.99
Purchase here
These gummies are completely vegan, GMO-free, and full of nutrients that help “maintain energy, support metabolism, and regulate blood sugar levels.” It’s advised to consume two of these treats every day, either spread out or all at once, which might help you recover from the midday slump.
Available in packs of 60, 120, or 180, purchasing a 60-pack at £9.99 means each gummy costs just 16p. Protein is effective emphasises the benefits of apple cider vinegar for blood sugar management: “One of the best researched benefits of apple cider vinegar is its effect on blood sugar control. Various studies have shown that it can level out insulin and glucose levels after eating a carbohydrate-heavy meal.”
The company explained the procedure in detail, noting that “only a small amount of vinegar is required to have this effect.” It does this by slowing the rate of stomach emptying. It has been demonstrated that 20ml before meals make a difference. This might be of particular benefit to those who have diabetes or PCOS, as well as those who have a range of other health issues as a result.
The gummies have a delicious red apple flavour(Image: Protein is effective)
Protein is effective is championing the use of apple cider vinegar in daily regimes as a remedy for bloating, particularly beneficial for those struggling with digestive issues, and it’s even claimed to aid in managing cravings when taken with food. Apple Cider Vinegar (ACV) is renowned for its health advantages; however, the potent taste can be off-putting for many.
Retailers like Holland and Barrett are offering palatable ACV gummies for £13.99, which includes a pack of 60 gummies containing “Mother.” Additionally, MyVitamins offers a substitute for their 30 or 60 gummies, which cost between £7.99 and £10.99, respectively.
Currently, there’s one review for Protein is effective’ gummies on their website, and it’s overwhelmingly positive: “I’m loving these gummies, they taste so good. I’m a big believer in supplementing with apple cider vinegar and these are a much nicer way to consume than a tablet.”
The company has received incredibly positive feedback, and it has a remarkable “excellent” 4.7% rating on Trustpilot. “From the fantastic customer service to the prompt same-day dispatch and next-day delivery (on weekends, perhaps), to the sheer quality of the products,” one delighted customer said. Outstanding products, I can’t recommend them highly enough, a new customer wrote.
Continue reading the article.
So far, not a single gripe has emerged from consumers regarding the gummies. Nevertheless, Protein is effective warns that excessive consumption of apple cider vinegar gummies could result in sensitive teeth, gastric distress or a decrease in potassium levels.
After an incident at the main train station in Hamburg, which left at least 17 people injured, authorities in Germany have detained a woman.
In the city’s rush hour of Friday evening’s mass stabbing incident, at least four of the victims suffered life-threatening injuries, according to emergency services.
A 39-year-old German woman was detained by law enforcement at the scene, according to a police spokesperson in Hamburg.
In comments made by public broadcaster ARD, spokesman Florian Abbenseth said: “She allowed herself to be arrested without resistance.
According to Abbenseth, “We don’t know for a fact that the woman may have had a political motive.”
Instead, we have information that we want to look into to determine whether she might have had a psychological emergency.
According to Hamburg police, the suspect was allegedly acting alone in a post on X.
According to a spokesman for Hamburg’s fire department, four of the victims have life-threatening injuries, down from earlier.
According to a spokeswoman for the Hanover federal police directorate, which also covers Hamburg, the suspect was believed to have turned “against passengers” at the station.
Following the knife attack on Friday evening, Hamburg’s central station and police [Daniel Bockwoldt/EPA]
Images of the scene showed people being loaded into waiting ambulances and people having access to the platforms at one end of the station blocked off by police.
Deutsche Bahn, a railroad company, said it was “deeply shocked” by the attack, and that the station’s four platforms were closed while the investigation was ongoing. Following the attack, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz called the Hamburg mayor to express his shock.
A number of violent attacks that have elevated security to the top of the agenda have rocked Germany recently.
According to Mayor Vitaly Klitschko, witnesses reported a series of explosions and waves of Russian drones roost over the city, and at least eight people were hurt when Kyiv, the country’s capital, was attacked by both a combined drone and missile attack.
Following the dawn attack, anti-aircraft units were deployed throughout the Ukrainian capital. The capital’s military administration’s head of state, Timur Tkachenko, reported two fires in the city’s Sviatoshynskyi district. In four other districts, drone fragments also hit the ground.
According to authorities, Russian missile attacks on port infrastructure in Odesa, in southern Ukraine, resulted in at least two fatalities.
According to authorities, three people died in shelling incidents in the eastern Donetsk region of Ukraine, which is at the heart of the conflict’s front line.
The Ukrainian military claimed to have struck a battery-making facility in the Lipetsk region of Russia, which it claimed provided Russian missile and bomb manufacturers. The batteries were also used in cruise missiles, Iskander-M ballistic missiles, and aerial bombs, according to the statement.
diplomacy and politics
Once the prisoner exchange, which is currently taking place, is finished, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has stated that Moscow will be prepared to hand Ukraine a draft document outlining conditions for a long-term peace agreement.
Lavrov has cast doubts on the Vatican’s potential location for peace talks with Ukraine. After Trump suggested the Vatican as a location, Italy had stated that Pope Leo XIV was willing to host the peace talks. The pope and the US had expressed hope for the city-state to host the talks.
In accordance with discussions between Russian and Ukrainian officials in Turkiye last week, Russia and Ukraine have each released 390 war prisoners and have committed additional release plans in the upcoming days.
Putin has stated in televised remarks that Russia needs to strengthen its position on the world’s arms market by boosting its weapons exports.
In his first phone call with China’s leader since Merz took office this month, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged Chinese President Xi Jinping to support Western efforts to end the conflict in the Ukraine.
Bangkok, Thailand – Local looters picked up the ruins of an ancient temple in northeast Thailand over the course of several years.
Possibly hundreds of centuries-old statues that were long buried beneath the soft, verdant grounds around the temple were stolen.
The Prakhon Chai hoard, which is collectively known as the Prakhon Chai hoard, is housed in museums and collections throughout the United States, Europe, and Australia, and is still in existence.
In a matter of weeks, though, the first of those statues will begin their journey home to Thailand.
The Asian Art Museum’s acquisitions committee recommended that four bronze statues from the hoard, which had been in the museum’s collection since the late 1960s, be released last year.
San Francisco city’s Asian Art Commission, which manages the museum, then approved the proposal on April 22, officially setting the pieces free.
They are scheduled to return to Thailand in about a month or two after being suspected of spiriting the statues out of the country six decades later by the late British antiquities dealer Douglas Latchford.
“We are the righteous owners”, Disapong Netlomwong, senior curator for the Office of National Museums at Thailand’s Fine Arts Department, told Al Jazeera.
Disapong, who also serves on Thailand’s Committee for the Repatriation of Stolen Artefacts, said, “It is something our ancestors… have made, and it should be displayed here to show the civilisation and the beliefs of the people.”
The imminent return of the statues is the latest victory in Thailand’s quest to reclaim its pilfered heritage.
Their return exemplifies the efforts of nations all over the world to retrieve items from their own stolen histories that are still in the exhibit cases and the vaults of some of the best museums in the West.
The Golden Boy statue on display at the National Museum Bangkok, Thailand, following its return last year from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art]Zsombor Peter/Al Jazeera]
From Thai temples to Athens’ Acropolis
Latchford, a high-profile Asian art dealer who came to settle in Bangkok and lived there until his death in 2020 at 88 years of age, is believed to have earned a fortune from auction houses, private collectors and museums around the world who acquired his smuggled ancient artefacts from Thailand and neighbouring Cambodia.
Nawapan Kriangsak, Latchford’s daughter, agreed in 2021 to give Cambodia access to her late father’s private collection, which included more than 100 artefacts, valued at more than $ 50 million.
Though never convicted during his lifetime, Latchford was charged with falsifying shipping records, wire fraud and a host of other crimes related to antiquities smuggling by a US federal grand jury in 2019.
Before the trial for the man’s death was possible, he passed away the following year.
In 2023 the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York agreed to return 16 pieces tied to Latchford’s smuggling network to Cambodia and Thailand.
In a statement released during a ceremony at the Department of Homeland Security’s New York field office, Ricky Patel makes remarks about the repatriation and return to Cambodia of 30 Cambodian antiquities that Douglas Latchford and the US Attorney’s Office in Manhattan, New York City, United States, in August 2022 [Andrew Kelly/Reuters].
San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum has also previously returned pieces to Thailand – two intricately carved stone lintels taken from a pair of temples dating back to the 10th and 11th centuries, in 2021.
Greece has had a good time with the British Museum in London, whereas Thailand and Cambodia have recently done fairly well in efforts to reclaim their looted heritage from US museum collections.
Perhaps no case of looted antiquities has grabbed more news headlines than that of the so-called “Elgin Marbles”.
The 2, 500-year-old friezes, also known as the Parthenon Marbles, were stolen from Athens’ famous Acropolis in the early 1800s by Lord Elgin’s agents, Britain’s ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, which at the time ruled Greece.
Elgin claimed he took the marbles with the permission of the Ottomans and then sold them in 1816 to the British Museum in London, where they remain.
The non-governmental Hellenic Institute of Cultural Diplomacy claims that Greece has requested the return of the items since 1832 when it first declared its independence and that it first submitted an official request to the museum in 1983.
“Despite all these efforts, the British government has not deviated from its positions over the years, legally considering the Parthenon marbles to belong to Britain. According to the institute, they have even passed laws to stop the return of cultural objects.
A woman looks at the Parthenon Marbles, a collection of stone objects, inscriptions and sculptures, on show at the British Museum in London in 2014]File: Dylan Martinez/Reuters]
Colonialism is still pervasive and pervasive.
Tess Davis, executive director of the Antiquities Coalition, a Washington-based nonprofit campaigning against the illicit trade of ancient art and artefacts, said that “colonialism is still alive and well in parts of the art world”.
Some institutions make the mistaken assumption that they are better carers, owners, and custodians of these cultural objects, Davis said.
But Davis, who has worked on Cambodia’s repatriation claims with US museums, says the “custodians” defence has long been debunked.
Before there was a market demand for these antiquities, leading to their looting and trafficking, “these were cared for by [their] communities for centuries, in some cases for millennia,” she said. “We still see resistance today.
Brad Gordon, a lawyer representing the Cambodian government in its ongoing repatriation of stolen artefacts, has heard museums make all sorts of claims to defend retaining pieces that should be returned to their rightful homelands.
Some museums make excuses, including claims that they are unsure where the pieces came from, that disputed items were bought before domestic laws forbid their repatriation, or that the pieces’ ancestors deserve a wider audience than they would in their home country.
Still, none of those arguments should keep a stolen piece from coming home, Gordon said.
The artefact should be returned, he said, “if we believe the object is stolen and the country of origin wishes for it to come home.”
Old attitudes have started breaking down though, and more looted artefacts are starting to find their way back to their origins.
“I hope more museums follow the example of the Asian Art Museum, and there is definitely a growing trend toward doing the right thing in this area.” We’ve come a long way, but there’s still a long way to go”, Davis said.
Following its return from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art last year [Zsombor Peter/Al Jazeera], The Kneeling Lady is now on display at the National Museum in Bangkok, Thailand.
Much of the progress, Davis believes, is down to growing media coverage of stolen antiquities and public awareness of the problem in the West, which has placed mounting pressure on museums to do the right thing.
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, a well-known US comedy show, gave the subject its own episode in 2022. As Oliver said, if you go to Greece and visit the Acropolis you might notice “some odd details”, such as sections missing from sculptures – which are now in Britain.
“Frankly out of ten, it’s in the British Museum,” Oliver quips. “Officially, if you’re ever looking for a missing artefact, it’s in there.”
Gordon also believes a generational shift in thinking is at play among those who once trafficked in the cultural heritage of other countries.
When their parents return the artefacts, he said, “for example, the children of many collectors do this once they are aware of the facts about how they were taken from the country of origin.”
Proof of the past
The San Francisco Museum’s four bronze statues date from the 7th and 9th centuries and are scheduled to arrive in Thailand soon.
Thai archaeologist Tanongsak Hanwong said that period places them squarely in the Dvaravati civilisation, which dominated northeast Thailand, before the height of the Khmer empire that would build the towering spires of Angkor Wat in present-day Cambodia and come to conquer much of the surrounding region centuries later.
Bodhisattva, one of the slender, mottled Buddhas who follow Buddhists on the path to nirvana, are depicted in three of the slim, mottled figures, one of whom is nearly a metre tall (3. 2 feet). The other is the Buddha himself, who is draped in a wide, flowing robe.
Tanongsak, who brought the four pieces in the San Francisco collection to the attention of Thailand’s stolen artefacts repatriation committee in 2017, said they and the rest of the Prakhon Chai hoard are priceless proof of Thailand’s Buddhist roots at a time when much of the region was still Hindu.
It means we don’t have any evidence of the Buddhist history of that time at all, he said, which is strange because there are no Prakhon Chai bronzes on display anywhere in Thailand, in the national museum, or any local museums, either.
Plai Bat II temple in Buriram province, Thailand, from where the Prakhon Chai hoard was looted in the 1960s, as seen in 2016]Courtesy of Tanongsak Hanwong]
The Fine Arts Department first inquired about the statues’ illegal provenance in a letter to the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco in 2019, but it only became clear that it would get them returned once the US Department of Homeland Security intervened on behalf of Thailand.
Robert Mintz, the museum’s chief curator, said staff could find no evidence that the statues had been trafficked in their own records.
Once Homeland Security provided proof, with the assistance of Thai researchers, they were persuaded that they had been looted and smuggled out of Thailand and of Latchford’s involvement.
“Once that evidence was presented and they heard it, their feeling was the appropriate place for these would be back in Thailand”, Mintz said of the museum’s staff and acquisition committee.
“Clear the curtain,” you say?
The San Francisco Asian Art Museum went a step further when it finally resolved to return the four statues to Thailand.
Additionally, it placed a special exhibit around the pieces to highlight the specific queries raised by the incident regarding the theft of antiquities.
The exhibition – Moving Objects: Learning from Local and Global Communities – ran in San Francisco from November to March.
According to Mintz, “one of our goals was to try to show the museum’s visitors how significant it is to examine where works of art have been historically,”
“To pull back the curtain a bit, to say, these things do exist within American collections and now is the time to address challenges that emerge from past collecting practice”, he said.
According to Mintz, Homeland Security has requested that the Asian Art Museum investigate the likely origin of at least another ten pieces from Thailand.
Thai dancers perform during a ceremony to return two stolen hand-carved sandstone lintels dating back to the 9th and 10th centuries to the Thai government in 2021, in Los Angeles, the US. The San Francisco Asian Art Museum [Ashley Landis/AP] had the items on display.
Tess Davis, of the Antiquities Coalition campaign group, said the exhibition was a very unusual, and welcome, move for a museum in the process of giving up looted artefacts.
Disapong and Tanongsak claim that the Asian Art Museum’s recognition of Thailand’s legitimate claim to the statues could also aid in the return of the remaining Prakhon Chai hoard, which includes 14 more well-known pieces from other US museums and at least a dozen scattered throughout Europe and Australia.
“It is indeed a good example, because once we can show the world that the Prakhon Chai bronzes were all exported from Thailand illegally, then probably, hopefully some other museums will see that all the Prakhon Chai bronzes they have must be returned to Thailand as well”, Tanongsak said.
Thailand is looking to repatriate a number of other artifacts from international collections besides the Prakhon Chai hoard, he said.
Davis said the repatriation of stolen antiquities is still being treated by too many with collections as an obstacle when it should be seen, as the Asian Art Museum has, as an opportunity.
Davis remarked, “It’s a chance to educate the public.”
Kim Kardashian has spoken out after eight individuals were found guilty in the trial over her 2016 Paris robbery, saying the incident was the ‘most terrifying experience’ of her life
Kim Kardashian leaving the Assize Court after testifying in a trial over the 2016 robbery(Image: AFP via Getty Images)
After taking the stand at a trial in Paris, where the armed robbers who burst into her Paris hotel room and held her at gunpoint in October 2016 were found guilty, Kim Kardashian has spoken out.
The ordeal took place almost ten years ago, with robbers making off with jewels from Kim’s hotel room, but the legal proceedings only just wrapped up on May 23. Millions worth of jewelry was stolen, including a $4.5 million engagement ring given by her then-husband Kanye West, as she faced the threat of a gunpoint robbery.
Ten people went on trial in the French capital for their involvement in the robbery and faced charges including armed robbery and kidnapping in an organised gang. During the terrifying incident, Kim, who was in Paris for Fashion Week, was tied up and held at gunpoint by the men.
A six-member jury, led by three judges, came to a verdict today in Paris. They found the ringleader and seven others guilty, with two of the 10 defendants acquitted.
READ MORE: Freddie Mercury’s final gift to his secret love child REVEALED after new book uncovers life secrets
(Image: AFP via Getty Images)
Article continues below
She expressed her gratitude to French law enforcement to NBC News: “I am deeply grateful to the French authorities for pursuing justice in this case. The crime was the most terrifying experience of my life, leaving a lasting impact on me and my family. While I’ll never forget what happened, I believe in the power of growth and accountability and pray for healing for all. I remain committed to advocating for justice, and promoting a fair legal system.”
Reflecting on the harrowing event, Kim divulged that she feared for her life so much that she became numb to the fact they wanted her jewelry and told them to take it. “So, I said a prayer for my family and my mom and my sister and best friend,” she disclosed.
Of those involved, eight were found culpable, although two were cleared of allegations connected to organizing and performing the heist. Aomar Ait Kedach, identified as the ringleader, was charged with armed theft and kidnapping leading to involuntary detention, reports the Mirror US.
Kim Kardashian waves as she arrives to testify regarding a robbery of millions of dollars in jewels from her Paris hotel room(Image: AP)
Kim Kardashian gave a heartfelt testimony at the trial on May 13, sharing with the court: “I came to Paris for Fashion Week, and Paris is always a place that I love so much, but when I came for Fashion Week during that trip, it changed everything.”
Her legal team, Michael Rhodes, Léonor Hennerick, and Jonathan Mattou, released a joint statement expressing gratitude, “Kim appreciates the Court’s decision and once again thanks the French authorities for treating her with great respect throughout the process.”
They included in their message the impact this event has had on Kim’s advocacy efforts: “She looks forward to putting this tragic episode behind her as she continues working to improve the criminal justice system on behalf of victims, the innocent, and the incarcerated seeking to redeem themselves.”
This news comes in the wake of another legal triumph for Kim. The owner of SKIMS reached a milestone by completing her law apprenticeship, making her eligible to sit the bar exam in the USA. Kim took to Instagram to celebrate this accomplishment, donning a cap and gown for a mock graduation captured on her story.
Jessica Jackson, who mentored Kim, praised her commitment to the programme, saying: “Six years ago, Kim Kardashian walked into this programme with nothing but a fierce desire to fight for justice. No law school lectures, no ivory tower shortcuts, just determination. And a mountain of case law books to read.”
Article continues below
If you’ve been the victim of sexual assault, you can access help and resources via www.rapecrisis.org.uk or calling the national telephone helpline on 0808 802 9999
Kim Kardashian has spoken out after eight individuals were found guilty in the trial over her 2016 Paris robbery, saying the incident was the ‘most terrifying experience’ of her life
Kim Kardashian leaving the Assize Court after testifying in a trial over the 2016 robbery(Image: AFP via Getty Images)
After taking the stand at a trial in Paris, where the armed robbers who burst into her Paris hotel room and held her at gunpoint in October 2016 were found guilty, Kim Kardashian has spoken out.
The ordeal took place almost ten years ago, with robbers making off with jewels from Kim’s hotel room, but the legal proceedings only just wrapped up on May 23. Millions worth of jewelry was stolen, including a $4.5 million engagement ring given by her then-husband Kanye West, as she faced the threat of a gunpoint robbery.
Ten people went on trial in the French capital for their involvement in the robbery and faced charges including armed robbery and kidnapping in an organised gang. During the terrifying incident, Kim, who was in Paris for Fashion Week, was tied up and held at gunpoint by the men.
A six-member jury, led by three judges, came to a verdict today in Paris. They found the ringleader and seven others guilty, with two of the 10 defendants acquitted.
READ MORE: Freddie Mercury’s final gift to his secret love child REVEALED after new book uncovers life secrets
(Image: AFP via Getty Images)
Article continues below
She expressed her gratitude to French law enforcement to NBC News: “I am deeply grateful to the French authorities for pursuing justice in this case. The crime was the most terrifying experience of my life, leaving a lasting impact on me and my family. While I’ll never forget what happened, I believe in the power of growth and accountability and pray for healing for all. I remain committed to advocating for justice, and promoting a fair legal system.”
Reflecting on the harrowing event, Kim divulged that she feared for her life so much that she became numb to the fact they wanted her jewelry and told them to take it. “So, I said a prayer for my family and my mom and my sister and best friend,” she disclosed.
Of those involved, eight were found culpable, although two were cleared of allegations connected to organizing and performing the heist. Aomar Ait Kedach, identified as the ringleader, was charged with armed theft and kidnapping leading to involuntary detention, reports the Mirror US.
Kim Kardashian waves as she arrives to testify regarding a robbery of millions of dollars in jewels from her Paris hotel room(Image: AP)
Kim Kardashian gave a heartfelt testimony at the trial on May 13, sharing with the court: “I came to Paris for Fashion Week, and Paris is always a place that I love so much, but when I came for Fashion Week during that trip, it changed everything.”
Her legal team, Michael Rhodes, Léonor Hennerick, and Jonathan Mattou, released a joint statement expressing gratitude, “Kim appreciates the Court’s decision and once again thanks the French authorities for treating her with great respect throughout the process.”
They included in their message the impact this event has had on Kim’s advocacy efforts: “She looks forward to putting this tragic episode behind her as she continues working to improve the criminal justice system on behalf of victims, the innocent, and the incarcerated seeking to redeem themselves.”
This news comes in the wake of another legal triumph for Kim. The owner of SKIMS reached a milestone by completing her law apprenticeship, making her eligible to sit the bar exam in the USA. Kim took to Instagram to celebrate this accomplishment, donning a cap and gown for a mock graduation captured on her story.
Jessica Jackson, who mentored Kim, praised her commitment to the programme, saying: “Six years ago, Kim Kardashian walked into this programme with nothing but a fierce desire to fight for justice. No law school lectures, no ivory tower shortcuts, just determination. And a mountain of case law books to read.”
Article continues below
If you’ve been the victim of sexual assault, you can access help and resources via www.rapecrisis.org.uk or calling the national telephone helpline on 0808 802 9999