How is the knee situation going? Got anyone else's knees?
Ok I think I finally figured it out, so here's an ariana griande as an "i'm sorry my computer was being stupid" gift
(with a pretty pink background of course)
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Pakistan
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Brazil

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Poland

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Poland
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
How is the knee situation going? Got anyone else's knees?
Ok I think I finally figured it out, so here's an ariana griande as an "i'm sorry my computer was being stupid" gift
(with a pretty pink background of course)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
its a but rough and emotional but the lyrics are âim not proud of all the choices ive made for a lot of my life. Following the shadow where I damn well know that behind me is the lightâ
song is cocaine and abel by amigo the devil
Whump Prompt #104
Whumpee pressed their face to the ground desperately.
âPlease, Whumper, havenât I been good? I want to be good for you.â
Shaking slightly, Whumpee prayed Whumper would think so too as the footsteps coming towards them grew louder and louder.
Suddenly, a sharp tug on Whumpeeâs hair had a cry of pain coming to their lips, but instead, their eyes widened and Whumpee swallowed the cry as best they could.
Supported by nly their hair, Whumpee subtly supported themself with their knees as Whumper brought Whumpeeâs face closer to their own. Like so many times before, Whumperâs breath became harder and harder to ignore.
The ironic thing about Whumperâs breath is that it wasnât all that unpleasant, a hint of mint always caressing Whumpeeâs nose. Now every time a hint of mint hit their nose, they were automatically ready for Whumperâs arrival.
Whumper stayed breathing their minty breath in Whumpeeâs face with an impassive expression before they brought their other hand out with a gun. Whumpee had only seen that gun when they had done a very bad thing and needed to be punished more than usual.
âPlease...â
Whumpee didnât know what they were asking for, but Whumper made their own assumption anyway.
âIs Pet talking back? I think Pet needs a very hard lesson on respect. Starting with kneeling properly.â
Whumperâs expression immediately grew angry as they spoke, angling the gun to something outside of what Whumpee could look at.Â
But Whumpee got the message as a loud Bang! filled the space and their knee simultaneously blossomed into excruciating pain.
They were barely aware of Whumper letting go of their hair and saying something else. But the pain in their knee was overwhelming and their vision slowly faded as the pain grew.
Unconsciousness couldnât come fast enough. Â
âItâs terribleâ: Fears grow that Trump is kneecapping the Pentagon
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/its-terrible-fears-grow-that-trump-is-kneecapping-the-pentagon/
âItâs terribleâ: Fears grow that Trump is kneecapping the Pentagon
Questions about the Pentagonâs credibility carry a host of real-world implications, from allies not trusting Americaâs word, to worries that more troops will commit war crimes, to growing skepticism over intelligence the Pentagon uses to justify military action.
âItâs terrible,â Eric Edelman, who served as undersecretary of Defense for President George W. Bush, said of the impact Trump is having on the Pentagonâs ability to make its case. âTrump is basically essentially doing things that make the Russians and Chinese happy. They can say, âThey are just like us. They do whatâs in their interest. The notion that America is different is all bullshit.ââ
As the military conflict with Iran deepens, the presidentâs behavior is hamstringing the U.S. military, warned nearly a dozen current and former officials. In particular, Trumpâs threats to commit violations of international law are fueling perceptions in the Muslim world that the U.S. military is little more than an imperial occupying force.
And the Pentagonâs credibility faces its next big test Wednesday, when senior military leaders brief skeptical lawmakers in the House and Senate on the decision to conduct a drone strike on Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, a move that sparked the missile attack that struck Iraqi bases that house U.S. troops.
Lawmakers, mostly Democrats, have made it clear theyâre in no mood to accept the administrationâs claims that Soleimani was prepared to attack U.S. forces, especially since thereâs no guarantee that the military tit-for-tat in the Middle East will die down anytime soon.
Trumpâs defenders dismiss claims the presidentâs shoot-from-the-hip style is harming the militaryâs reputation. And the Pentagon says itâs still credible because it doesnât get political.
âThereâs a reason the U.S. Department of Defense remains the most trusted institution in American government â we stay out of politics,â the Pentagon said in a written response to POLITICO. âDoD also maintains a strong relationship with our allies through our [military-to-military] relationships with countries around the globe, where we do joint training, exercises, and serve together on the battlefield.â
But current and former administration officials worry the presidentâs growing pattern of breaking faith with some of those allies, ignoring the chain of command, and forcing Pentagon leaders to publicly defend his actions mean that the militaryâs word does not carry the same weight it once did â just as it tries to head off a major war in the Middle East.
âThe institution is losing its credibility because it is continually being politicized, itâs politically being antagonized and itâs seen ⊠as a Defense Department thatâs either out of touch, thatâs rogue, thatâs partisan, [or] thatâs lawless,â said a former senior military officer who served in the Trump administration and requested anonymity to speak freely.
âYou donât know whatâs solid and whatâs reliable,â added a former senior Pentagon official who served in the Trump administration.
The Defense Departmentâs credibility gap has been on display time and again, most recently this week when a draft letter from a U.S. general to an Iraqi counterpart laying out plans for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq was leaked to the media.
Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley quickly declared the U.S. wasnât leaving Iraq and said the communication should never have been sent. But it made little difference; Iraqâs prime minister brushed off Esperâs and Milleyâs statements and said he was treating the draft letter as official policy.
Even some of the Pentagonâs biggest supporters said they donât know what to believe about the episode.
âI do think Esper and Milley have to explain what the hell happened with this unsigned letter that may or may not have gotten sent,â Rep. Mike Gallagher, a Republican from Wisconsin who served as a Marine Corps officer in Iraq, said in an interview. âWas this just pure incompetence or was this part of some deliberate messaging strategy?â
âWe canât be playing games like that, especially at times like this,â Gallagher added, saying he hopes to get clarity from the closed-door briefing Wednesday. âThey seemed genuinely surprised. Iâm struggling to make sense of it now. I hope they will take advantage of that opportunity ⊠to tell us what exactly happened.â
Trump seems oblivious to how his words and actions forced Pentagon leaders to constantly scramble to explain away his comments.
Most recently, it was his threat over the weekend to bomb cultural sites if Iran retaliated for the Soleimani attack. If carried out, such an attack would violate both a United Nations-backed treaty calling for the protection of cultural sites in wartime as well as the Geneva Conventions.
After Trumpâs comments, Esper hopped into damage control mode. âWe will follow the laws of armed conflict,â he insisted to reporters on Tuesday, not directly commenting on the fact that the president had threatened to do something illegal.
Later on Tuesday Trump backed off, telling reporters, âI like to obey the law.â
But even some of the most hawkish voices winced at the episode.
âI donât think we should be targeting cultural sites,â Gallagher said. âI do think we should avoid anything that would drive a wedge between us and our allies in the region.
âThere is no decision more serious and consequential for presidents and commanders in chief than to order military action,â added Michael Rubin, a former adviser on Iraq and Iran at the Pentagon from 2002 to 2004 and resident scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. âTrumpâs off-handed remarks about targeting cultural sites â an illegal order should he try which the Pentagon could never obey â highlights what happens when Trumpâs political style clashes with the legal and planning processes developed by the Pentagon over decades.â
The threat came just weeks after the president took the extraordinary step of granting clemency to a trio of accused or convicted war criminals in the Army and Navy. It set off an outcry in the ranks and on Capitol Hill that Trump was meddling in the military justice system and was encouraging lawlessness and damaging good order and discipline.
After Navy Secretary Richard Spencer was forced out over his handling of Navy Chief Petty Officer Eddie Gallagherâs case, Esper followed Trumpâs order and canceled an administrative board that could have removed Gallagherâs SEAL trident pin. In issuing the order, Trump ignored his military advisers in favor of a campaign in conservative media to restore Gallagherâs pin.
âThereâs a sense of dejection by senior leaders in the Pentagon, that the president and the secretary of Defense are going to side with the loudmouths at Fox News against the reasoned opposition of senior military professionals,â a senior Pentagon official with direct knowledge of high-level discussions told POLITICO at the time. âThatâs the sense in a nutshell.â
In another recent example, Trump gave voice to what many critics of U.S. military operations in the Middle East have been saying for decades: Itâs all about the oil.
After abruptly ordering most U.S. troops out of Syria, the president told reporters that âWeâre keeping the oil, we have the oil, the oil is secure, we left troops behind only for the oil.â
âIt can help us because we should be able to take some also,â he told reporters on Oct. 27. âAnd what I intend to do, perhaps, is make a deal with an Exxon Mobil or one of our great companies to go in there and do it properly.â
The Pentagon quickly pushed back. âThe revenue from this is not going to the U.S.,â Pentagon spokesperson Jonathan Hoffman said, insisting local Kurds will be âthe sole beneficiary of the sale of the oil from the facilities they control.â
Esper weighed in, saying Trump meant that he wants to keep the oil from benefiting ISIS.
âItâs â itâs, you know, half dozen, six. I interpret that as deny ISIS access to the oil fields; secure them so that they are denied access to the oil fields,â he told reporters on Oct. 31.
The Pentagon and State Department have long sought to combat the public perception that the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 was designed to seize Mideast oil.
The former Trump Pentagon official said the presidentâs statements about the oil is particularly damaging to the Pentagonâs credibility at home and abroad.
âItâs is a pretty serious concern among the senior uniformed military,â said the former official, who declined to be identified discussing recent conversations with former colleagues. âThe taking of the oil fields is exactly what the criticism was of almost every one of our activities in Middle East. It plays right into critics and skeptics and even conspiracy theorists and is against U.S. values.â
The oil field controversy sprang up weeks after Trump ordered troops out of parts of Syria after Turkey threatened to invade northern areas. The withdrawal left Americanâs Kurdish allies in the lurch, sparking outrage in the military and Congress who said the U.S. was betraying a partner that was instrumental in crushing ISIS.
âWe are not abandoning the Kurds,â Esper insisted, even as Trumpâs allies in Congress said the president was doing exactly that.
Edelman, the former Bush Pentagon official, said heâs worried about how the department can stop the loss of trust.
âWe didnât take anything over and establish puppet regimes in Europe after World War II,â he said. âThe sense that the United States has acted more often than not in a disinterested way by creating some semblance of world order has given us enormous ability to do stuff around the world. Trump is undermining that.â
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Hero: *Has a gun.*
Villain: You can't shoot me.
Me: Ah. Shut up, villain. Come on hero you can do it.
Hero: See this gun here? I'm not bluffing, you know.
Me: Come on! Shoot him already! He's calling you out, so you better prove that you mean business!
Villain: Hah! You? Kill me? You can't. You'd never dare to do it.
Me: He didn't say anything about killing you. Now come on, hero! Shoot him in the leg or something! You will still be orally just, since you didn't kill him, and you can still get information out of him! Just shoot him already!
Hero: I...
Me: Shoot him in the leg! Shoot him in the leg! Shoot him in the leg!
Hero: I can't! I can't do it!
Villain: Hah! I knew that you didn't have it in you.
Me: OH FOR FUCKS SAKE! YOU SHOULD HAVE JUST SHOT HIM!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Business News: Twitter Trades Higher On Reportâs Indication Of Coming Asian Growth
Business News: Twitter Trades Higher On Reportâs Indication Of Coming Asian Growth
Twitter Trades Higher On Reportâs Indication Of Coming Asian Growth
Itâs been a rollicking few weeks in the stock market for Twitter, a company that has seen its share price knee-capped as part of a larger retreat of so-called âmomentumâ technology firms. That said, today Twitter is trending higher on the back of a report that forecasts growth for the firm in Asia, indicating that TwitterâsâŠ
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i think it's kind of interesting how the names of a lot of torture methods didn't have very creative names like kneecapping and hamstringing.