Probablemente te vuelva a ver, pero, ya no tendré 18, ni moriría por ti.
BambinaMoon


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Probablemente te vuelva a ver, pero, ya no tendré 18, ni moriría por ti.
BambinaMoon

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.
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— 𝐇𝐘𝐔𝐍 𝐘𝐎𝐍𝐆𝐒𝐀𝐄𝐍𝐆 en 𝐁𝐋𝐀𝐂𝐊𝐁𝐈𝐑𝐃.
que gracioso cuando estoy durante días hecha una larva en mi cama y de repente me acuerdo que hay un montón de cosas divertidas que podrían pasar si me muevo un poco!! hace 2 minutos he recobrado momentáneamente las ganas de existir y hacer y ver cosas nuevas!! listoooooo
Salí temprano del laburo, dormí una horita, me hice un batido de naranja y procederé a ponerme en modo termo para festejar el aniversario mundialista

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Ouch.
From the Telegraph:
An exclusive poll by this newspaper found that 85 per cent of over 97,000 readers do not think Prince Harry and his wife should attend the Coronation.
One of the overriding reasons, echoed by many of our readers, is that the Coronation is a state occasion, not a private one.
The poll, which has been running for a few months, began changing direction a few weeks ago, when nine per cent of readers voted that they thought the couple should attend, and six per cent voted that only Prince Harry should attend.
Full article
Now I'm curious, why would these new pro-lgbt/women laws be nefarious? Why do you think they will not work?
Actually, I rather not talk much about politics (which means I should start by not posting political things, lol). But regarding the trans law, a not-too-long answer would be that some of those laws have already been passed in other European countries, and are now being proved to cause many problems, and more harm than good in many cases. One of the things I dislike about the law is that it allows anyone to legally change their sex in official documents. They did so so as to prevent young teens to go into hormone therapy or harmful surgeries to feel validated as their ownselves (which is, I guess, the bright side of the law, teen and preteen kids are now not required to undergo surgical procedures that can mess them up for good in order to be recognised as men or women), but it also means anyone can officially and legaly change their identity in official documents in a whim, as there's no need for any psychological nor medical document that accredits that the individual, is, in fact, a trans person. This can affect women (mostly, though I guess it could also afect men, though less severely) in some contexts that can get serious, such as bathrooms, gyms, sports, prison cells, plus exposes them to crazy and potentialy harmful individuals. Sure, the crazy will be a minority, but the thing is, while this minority was previously pointed out and incarcerated, now they will be backed up by the law itself (because no, there's no clause whatsoever regarding fraud, which should be a MUST in all law of this nature). Also, the fact that no medical nor phychological documentation is needed goes hand in hand with the fact that, according to the new law, no doctor nor phychologist is allowed to intervene in the process, and by this I mean they are not allowed to analyse the individual. Summing up, right know, if someone says they are trans, they are. Period. Which, if this didn't have any further consequences, would be okay. No one whould, or should, care about that. Problem is, teens can get into these harmful procedures if they want to without the need for approval and guidance of a proffesional. This may seem great at first, you do you, no one else to monitor your life choices; but cases of young teens with autism or other actual mental disorders thinking they are trans and undergoing life-chaging and irreversible surgeries with life-lasting consequences who suddenly realise they're actually not trans (and therefore having now to survive and live through their already mental disroders plus the undesirable effect of the surgeries and hormone treatment) are becoming way too common in later years. Many of these cases in the countries where similar laws have been passed, and are now trying to fix. Tbh, I think that not all that is called pro-something is actually pro-that-something. The German Democratic Republic had "Democratic" in its title, yet was everything but such, and its defenders would kill anyone who dared wander near its infamous wall. Not saying the law is ill-intentioned. Not at all. In fact, I think the people behind the law(s) are truly pro lgtb+, problem is, when you make laws, it is not enough to have good in your heart, or claim "look at me, what a good person I am!", and a bit less ideological propaganda and a bit more knowledge about how to make laws is always welcome (yes, "Solo sí es sí" law, I'm looking at you). As we say in Spanish, "el camino al infierno está empedrado de buenas intenciones", or in English, "Hell is paved with good intentions".