> The majority of the world, for most of history drinks tea without milk.
Don’t know about history, but currently India consumes the most tea or perhaps second most (in total, not per capita) , and almost all of tea in India is consumed with milk.
Sanctions are are easy now, help now, and easily justified in the short term, but they bring a serious and destructive cost in that their maintenance relies on oppressive surveillance. This is detrimental to the value of the currency and payment network over the long run as it will as surely be abused for political purposes as mass surveillance in any other context. (Eg. Messages)
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[ 4.8 ms ] story [ 75.8 ms ] threadhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37625703/
Is it something else other than the drink I’m used to?
If it isn’t, the UK and Ireland are nations of junkies. Myself included.
Also, the Brits didn’t invent adding milk to tea, the Tibetans did. The majority of the world, for most of history drinks tea without milk.
To answer your question, it’s the drink you are used to but with even more sugary additives and usually in a significantly larger serving :).
We are all sugar junkies.
[0] https://amp.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/oct/03/bubble...
Don’t know about history, but currently India consumes the most tea or perhaps second most (in total, not per capita) , and almost all of tea in India is consumed with milk.