That's true if it's been left unrefrigerated for hours. However, (most) fried rice is usually made from day-old, cold rice that's been refrigerated soon after cooking. That video massively overstates and simplifies the issue, like most video shorts do. And really? Asians don't make a batch of rice and eat it over several days. They just make a batch of new rice for each meal. A rice cooker makes that trivial.
The problem comes when you eat improperly handled rice.
Not if you refrigerate it. Like Nao said, all fried rice is made from old cold rice. And there are no Health Codes regarding anything rice related, other than the HCAAP procedures for Ph levels in sushi rice so you can leave it at room temperature beyond the 4 hour mark.
Thank you, Naomasa and Homer.
Is that a bad practice? *curious* I did notice a slight stomach pain after eating, but I'd usually make green tea after dinner, and it went away.
Which is counterintuitive when you compare that to the word international. But then you realize there are no physical interstitial spaces between nations, aside from bodies of water. The space between galaxies however is frigging huge!
I'm no astrophysicist or astronomer, which is why I always relied on these wise words:
"Space," it [the Guide -Ed.] says, "is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space."
(The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams)
Seriously, though: the nearest star to our planet is 4.5 light years away. So theoretically speaking, if we had a spacecraft that could travel the speed of light, it would be a 9 year round trip. Of course, anything inside the spacecraft would have to be able to withstand the enormous pressures of traveling at light speed ... something which, alas, human biology has thus far failed to do.
Is there life somewhere in the Universe? The chance of it lies somewhere between 'perhaps' and 'I believe so'.
Could we ever physically encounter it? Given how vast the universe is, the answer must be 'regrettably, no'.