#Omar Bolivar
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thecraggus · 5 months ago
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The Black Demon (2023) Review
The Black Demon looks better than most of its contemporaries and has a message amidst the mayhem but it's still a run of the mill shark movie. #Review
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tctmp · 2 years ago
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The Black Demon: Directed by Adrian Grunberg. With Omar Chaparro, Bolivar Sanchez, Carlos Solórzano, Josh Lucas. Stranded on a crumbling rig in Baja, a family faces off against a vengeful megalodon shark.
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matterscatchers · 2 years ago
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The Black Demon 2023 English 720p | 480p HDCAM 1GB | 350MB Download
The Black Demon 2023 English 720p | 480p HDCAM 1GB | 350MB Download IMDB Ratings: 4.2/10Directed: Adrian GrunbergRelease Date : March 31, 2023 (United States)Genres: Action, Adventure, FantasyLanguages: EnglishFilm Stars: Omar Chaparro, Bolivar Sanchez, Carlos SolórzanoMovie Quality: 720p HDCAMFile Size: 993MBStoryline, Paul Sturges takes his family on a trip to Mexico to inspect an oil rig his…
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acapulcopress · 2 years ago
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Titular de Educación Básica SEP y titular de SEG visitan escuela primaria Simón Bolívar
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CHILPANCINGO * 28 de febrero de 2023. ) SEG
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El Secretario de Educación en Guerrero, Marcial Rodríguez Saldaña, y la subsecretaria de Educación Básica de la SEP, Martha Velda Hernández Moreno, visitaron a estudiantes, docentes, directivos y trabajadores de la escuela primaria "Simón Bolivar" --que dirige Omar Ocampo Astudillo-- y el Centro de Atención Infantil (CAI) Número 1 (que dirige la Mtra. María de la Luz Mejia Salinas), ubicadas en esta ciudad capital. Rodríguez Saldaña, a nombre de la gobernadora Evelyn Salgado Pineda, dio una cordial bienvenida a Velda Hernández y expresó que en el Estado se trabaja para impulsar el modelo educativo de la "Nueva Escuela Mexicana". Luego visitaron a las niñas y niños en sus aulas, dialogaron con los docentes y entregaron material desinfectante, de limpieza, de oficina, cívico y deportivo.
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La subsecretaria federal estuvo el día lunes en otras escuelas de educación básica en Amojileca, en esta ciudad, y visitará instituciones educativas en Tixtla. Estuvieron en los eventos los subsecretarios de Educación Básica, Ricardo Castillo Peña; de Educación Media Superior y Superior, Marco Antonio Marbán Galván, y parte de la estructura de la SEG. ] Visítanos en ) acapulcopres.com y Síguenos en ) facebook.com/acapulcopress.news Read the full article
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elcorreografico · 7 years ago
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Cena show a beneficio de la Sociedad de Bomberos Voluntarios de Berisso
Cena show a beneficio de la Sociedad de Bomberos Voluntarios de #Berisso
La Municipalidad de Berisso comunica que la Sociedad de Bomberos Voluntarios de Berisso, organiza una cena show a beneficio de esta entidad, la que contará con la actuación especial de la cantante Sonia Godoy con su espectáculo entre “tangos y boleros”.
El mismo se llevará a cabo el sábado 28 de abril a partir de las 21:30 horas en el salón Dorado que la institución posee en Avenida Génova y…
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hjalvino · 3 years ago
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Bolivar ya no es negroide, y el indio es un piel roja, o apache de película
Bolivar ya no es negroide, y el indio es un piel roja, o apache de película
1- Con motivo de los veinte años de aquel golpe fallido contra Chávez intentado hace veinte años -por una élite políticoempresarial decadente-, y los treinta del golpe fallido del mismo Chávez, las autoridades chavistas caraqueñas decidieron cambiar el escudo símbolo de la capital venezolana; claramente, con esa operación alguien se ganó unos reales -un tal Omar Cruz, representante eximio del…
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omarsanchez78 · 3 years ago
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Batalla de Carabobo en sus 200 años: "Historia, importancia, arte y Curiosidades" Por Lic. Omar Sanchez
Batalla de Carabobo en sus 200 años: “Historia, importancia, arte y Curiosidades” Por Lic. Omar Sanchez
Por Lic. Omar Sanchez “Mas cuesta mantener el equilibrio de la libertad que soportar el peso de la tirania” Simon Bolivar La Batalla de Carabobo es uno de los hechos más importantes en la historia, donde hace 199 años se llevó a cabo las principales acciones militares de la guerra de independencia de Venezuela. El ejército patriota en el Campo de Carabobo batalló contra el ejército real del…
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rabbittstewcomics · 4 years ago
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Episode 268
August Sales
Comics Reviews:
Batman 100 by James Tynion IV, Carlo Pagulayan, Jorge Jimenez, Guillem March, Danny Miki, Tomeu Morey
American Vampire 1976 1 by Scott Snyder, Rafael Albuquerque
Legend of the Swamp Thing Halloween Spectacular by James Tynion, Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Vita Ayala, Ram V, Julian Lytle, Emma Rios, Christian Ward, Domo Stanton, John Timms, Mike Perkins, Jordie Bellaire, Gabe Eltaeb, Andy Troy, Jeremiah Skipper
Super Sons Escape to Landis by Ridley Pearson, Ileana Gonzales
Amazing Spider-Man 49/850 by Nick Spencer, Kurt Busiek, Saladin Ahmed, Tradd Moore, Aaron Kuder, Ryan Ottley, Mark Bagley, Chris Bachalo, Humberto Ramos, Cliff Rathburn, Victor Olazaba, John Dell, David Curiel
Champions 1 by Eve Ewing, Simone Di Meo, Federico Blee
Marvels Snapshots: Spider-Man by Howard Chaykin, Jesus Aburtov
Getting it Together 1 by Sina Grace, Omar Spahi, Max Struble, Jenny Fine
Neil Gaiman's Norse Mythology 1 by Neil Gaiman, P. Craig Russell, Mike Mignola, Jerry Ordway, Dave Stewart, Lovern Kindzierski, Galen Showman
Sonic the Hedgehog: Bad Guys 1 by Ian Flynn, Jack Lawrence
Star Wars Adventures 1 by Michael Moreci, Nick Brokenshire, Ilias Kyriazis
Transformers/Back to the Future 1 by Cavan Scott, Juan Samu, David Garcia Cruz
Penultiman 1 by Tom Peyer, Alan Robinson, Lee Loughridge
American Ronin 1 by Peter Milligan, Aco, Dean White
Carmen Sandiego: The Chasing Paper Caper
Riverdale Diaries: Hello, Betty! by Sarah Kuhn, J. Bone
Bolivar by Sean Rubin
Dear Rodney by Cris Trout, Peter Dalkner
Over the Garden Wall: The Benevolent Sisters of Charity by Sam Johns, Jim Campbell
Hollywood Trash 1 by Stephen Sonneveld, Pablo Verdugo, Exposito, Birch
Space Battle Lunchtime vol 3 by Natalie Riess
Additional Reviews: Fant4stic, Friday the 13th (2009), Haunting of Bly Manor, Being a Cosplayer
News: Janeway returns to Star Trek, Doc Strange in Spider-Man 3, Marvel Action Captain Marvel returns - guest starring Spider-Gwen, Tom Taylor graphic novel series with Random House, Eternals delayed to January, Doc Shaner nonsense, NYCC news, Ottley off Amazing, Green Lantern Corps series details, Venom 200, Hellstrom and Marvel TV in review, two new Cates comics, Soul directly to Disney+, Gal Gadot
Trailers: Mank, Invincible 
Comics Countdown:
Decorum 5 by Jonathan Hickman, Mike Huddleston
Space Battle Lunchtime Vol 3 by Natalie Riess
Batman 100 by James Tynion IV, Carlo Pagulayan, Jorge Jimenez, Guillem March, Danny Miki, Tomeu Morey
Die 14 by Kieron Gillen, Stephanie Hans, Clayton Cowles
American Vampire: 1976 1 by Scott Snyder, Rafael Albuquerque
We Only Find Them When They're Dead 2 by Al Ewing, Simone Di Meo
Legend of the Swamp Thing Halloween Spectacular by James Tynion, Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Vita Ayala, Ram V, Julian Lytle, Emma Rios, Christian Ward, Domo Stanton, John Timms, Mike Perkins, Jordie Bellaire, Gabe Eltaeb, Andy Troy, Jeremiah Skipper
Bang 4 by Matt Kindt, Wilfredo Torres
Black Widow 2 by Kelly Thompson, Elena Casagrande, Jordie Bellaire
Thor 8 by Donny Cates, Aaron Kuder, Matt Wilson
Check out this episode!
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soycabcba · 4 years ago
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Primera Nacional: ¿cómo está el mercado de pases?
Los equipos de la Primera Nacional esperan la vuelta a los entrenamientos que se concretará la semana que viene, pero mientras tanto el mercado de pases experimenta algunos movimientos, que entre los cordobeses incluye a Instituto y Estudiantes de Río Cuarto, que sumaron refuerzos, mientras que Belgrano hasta ahora no cerró ninguna contratación.
AgropecuarioAltas: Juan Ignacio Dïaz, Mauricio Rosales, Braian Álvarez, Renso Pérez, Valentín Viola y Gonzalo Urquijo.Bajas: Facundo Pérez, Franco Quiroz, Mauro Albertengo, Federico Rosso, Nahuel Gómez, Emiliano Tellechea, Franco Colela, Emmanuel Giménez, Agustín García Basso y Exequiel Narese.DT: Manuel Fernández (sigue).
All BoysAltas: Brian Guerra y Alejo Distaulo.Bajas: Jonathan Ferrari, Gonzalo García, Nahuel Losada, Isaac Monti, Lucas Agüero, Lucas Nicchiarelli, Nicolás Igartua, Facundo Callejo, Sebastián Martínez, Sebastián Navarro, Agustín Suárez, Nicolás Sánchez, Matías Sandoval, Federico Morales y Facundo Parra.DT: José Romero (sigue).
AlmagroAltas: Gabriel Morales, Tobias Moriceau, Gonzalo Giménez, Francisco Del Riego, Santiago Sendín, Gastón Blanc, Juan José Ramírez, Sebastián Valdez y Sebastián Hernández Le Pors.Bajas: Luis Vila, Dario Botinelli, Juan Manuel Martínez, Ezequiel Denis, Brian Benítez, Christian Limousin, Fermín Holgado, Sebastián Diana, Nicolás Arrechea, Norberto Paparatto, Marco Lambert, Nahuel Basualdo, Santiago López De Marchi, Ramiro Arias, Lucas Bossio, Gustavo Turraca, Lucas Wilchez, Walter Rueda, Román Martinangeli, Agustín Coscia, Alejandro Mendez y Ezequiel Piovi.DT: Gastón Esmerado (sigue).
AlvaradoAltas: Esteban Ruiz Díaz, Brian Visser, Pedro Fernández, Iván Molinas, Julian Vitale, Robertino Giacomini, Emiliano Bogado, Franco Ledesma, Felipe Cadenazzi y Brian Mieres.Bajas: Matías Degra, Matías Caro, Germán Rivero, Gabriel Fernández, Lucas Fernández, Patricio Vidal, Maximiliano Oliva, Diego Becker, Robertino Giacomini, Walter Bracamonte, Nicolás Andereggen, Martín Quiles, Pablo Morata y Santiago Zurbriggen.DT: Walter Coyette (reemplaza a Juan Pablo Pumpido).
AtlantaAltas: Julián Marcioni y Agustin Bolivar.Bajas: Rodrigo De Ciancio, Walter Mazzantti, Héctor Villalba y Matías Donato.DT: Fabián Lisa (sigue).
Atlético de RafaelaAltas: Ramiro Macagno, Luciano Pogonza, Enzo Gaggi, Matías Valdivia, Francisco Ortega, Lautaro Navas, Diego Meza y Facundo Soloa.Bajas: Ignacio Liporace, Maximiliano Paredes, Renzo Pérez, Alexis Niz, Sergio Rodríguez, Nereo Fernández, Ijiel Protti, Facundo Britos, Joaquín Quinteros, Reinaldo Alderete, Alan Bonansea, Denis Stracqualursi, Leonardo Acosta, Stefano Brundo, Junior Mendieta y Marco Borgnino.DT: Walter Otta (sigue).
Barracas CentralAltas: Nicolás Trecco, Jonathan Rivero, Juan Martín Capurro, Matías Acuña, Francisco Solé, Facundo Onraita, Mauro Cachi, Germán Estigarribia, Jorge Ferrero, Bruno Cabrera, Luciano Romero, Alan Brondino y Enzo Ybañez.Bajas: Elías Gómez, Alexis Cuello, Gonzalo Córdoba, Fernando Valenzuela, Leonel Bontempo, Cristian Arce, Nicolás Minici, Clemente Rodríguez, Facundo Oreja, Gastón Bojanich, Marcos Pinto, Jorge Velázquez, Ramiro López, Franco Niell, Rodrigo Pacheco, Mauro Matos, Carlos Salom y Enzo Ortiz.DT: Alejandro Milano (sigue).
BelgranoAltas: No ha realizado incorporaciones.Bajas: Ricardo Noir, Lucas Acosta, Ignacio Vazquez, Carlos Franco, Gonzalo Martínez.DT: Ricardo Caruso Lombardi (sigue).
Brown de AdroguéAltas: Matías Sproat, Mauro Bazán, Nicolás Arrechea, Joel Martínez, Jacobo Mansilla, Facundo Bruera, Julián Giménez Pilutik, Agustín Graneros, Germán Aguila, Mateo Acosta y Agustín Vallejos.Bajas: Guillermo Sotelo, Cristian Amarilla, Elías Contreras, Leandro Sapetti, Felipe Cadenazzi, Mauricio Carrasco e Iván Becker.DT: Pablo Vico (sigue).
Chacarita JuniorsAltas: Lucas Pérez Godoy, Iván Centurión y Ramiro Ríos.Bajas: Adrián Torres, Brian Mieres, Ignacio Cacheiro, Salvador Sánchez, Rodrigo Insúa, Nicolás Da Campo, Lucas Cano, Gabriel Lazarte, Adrián Torres, Gian Croci, Joaquín Ibañez, Jim Morrison Varela Devotto y Lucas Bruera.DT: Claudio Biaggio (sigue).
Defensores de BelgranoAltas: Ignacio Pietrobono.Bajas: Martín García y Nicolás Carrizo.DT: Fabián Nardoza (sigue).
Deportivo RiestraAltas: Guillermo Pereira, Alejandro Guiterrez y Wilson Chimeli.Bajas: Facundo Pons, Leandro Bacaloni, Oscar Eduardo Velasco Torijano y Gastón Montero.DT: Guillermo Duró (sigue).
Deportivo MorónAltas: Luciano Guaycochea, Alan Salvador, Alan Schönfeld, Matías Mansilla.Bajas: Nicolás Ramírez, Luis Vergara Nisim, Bruno Galván, Francisco Oliver, Matías Nizzo, Diego Tonetto, Agustín Lavezzi, Esteban Ciaccheri, Fabricio Alvarenga, Lucas Pérez Godoy y Bruno Galvan.DT: Sergio Lara, Sebastián Sibelli (siguen).
Estudiantes (Bs. As.)Altas: Ezequiel Mastrolía, Gastón Martínez, Juan Cruz Randazzo, Sebastián González, Agustín García Basso y Enzo Acosta.Bajas: Tobías Albarracín, Federico Carrizo, Nahuel Pereyra, Emiliano López, Alejandro García, Matías Gallegos, Carlo Lattanzio, Matias Villarreal, Paolo Impini, Hugo Silva, Lenadro González y Gastón Goñi.DT: Mauricio Giganti reemplazó a Diego Martínez.
Estudiantes (Río Cuarto)Altas: Luis Ardente, Francisco Aman, Leonel Ceresole, Matías Montejano y Marcos Fernández.Bajas: Maximiliano Zbrum (se retiró), Claudio Cevasco, Adrián Peralta, Juan Miguel Reynoso, Alejandro Cabrera y Martín Peralta.DT: Marcelo Vázquez (sigue).
Ferro Carril OesteAltas: Cristian Carrizo, Matías Ramírez, Rodrigo Brandán, Gabriel Díaz, Lautaro Gordillo y Emanuel Grespan.Bajas: Renzo Tesuri, Gustavo Canto, Pablo Medina, Leonel Alvarez y Bruno Barranco.DT: Jorge Cordon (sigue).
Gimnasia de JujuyAltas: Emir Faccioli, Adrián Torres, Francisco Gatti, Lucas Perez Godoy, Fernando Brandán, Lucas Di Fulvio y Martín Pérez Guedes.Bajas: Dino Castagno, Carlos Morel, Carlos De Giorgi, Jorge Sanabria, Franco Lazzaroni, Mauro Leguiza, Leonardo Ferreyra, Gonzalo Castillejos, Ezequiel Gallegos, Sebastián Sánchez, Daniel Juárez, Matías Carabajal, Nicolás Yécora, Federico Quintana.DT: Arnaldo Sialle (sigue).
Gimnasia de MendozaAltas: Matías Vera, Brian Alferez y Marcos Gelabert.Bajas: Alejandro Molina, Leandro Aguirre, Lucio Compagnucci, Félix Orode, Jacobo Mansilla, Luis Castillo, Ivan Ramirez, Lisandro Cabrera, Leonardo Aguirre y Emanuel García.DT: Diego Pozo (sigue).
Guillermo BrownAltas: Khalil Caraballo.Bajas: Agustín Bolivar, Facundo Soloa, Cesar Taborda, Brian Maya, Mauro Bazán, Luciano Sánchez, Mauro Osores, Leandro Lugarzo, Diego Herner, Mauricio Vera, Facundo Soloa, Matías Ruiz Díaz, Ezequiel Ávila, Cristian Lobo, Matías Rojo, Elías Umeres, Facundo Pumpido, Rodrigo Depetris, Gonzalo Urquijo, Joel Martínez y Emanuel Moreno.DT: Marcelo Broggi (sigue).
Independiente RivadaviaAltas: Damián Cebreiro, Paolo Impini, Leonel Ferroni, Alejandro Rébola, Carlos Araujo, Emanuel Romero, Tomás Zavaglia, Daniel Imperiale, Hernán Soria, Juan Amieva y Sebastián Navarro.Bajas: Julián Navas, Julián Marchioni, Julian Marcioni, Franco Ledesma y Pablo Palacio.DT: Marcelo Straccia reemplazó a Matías Minich.
InstitutoAltas: Leonardo Ferreyra, Lucas Landa y Gonzalo Castillejos.Bajas: Maximiliano López, Facundo Silva, Germán Estigarribia y Franco Flores.DT: Fernando Quiroz (sigue).
Mitre (Santiago del Estero)Altas: Juan Ignacio Mercier, Yair Bonnin, Nicolás Benavidez, Rubén Zamponi, Ezequiel Cérica, Franco Flores, Jonathan Duche, Hernán Tiffner e Israel Roldán.Bajas: Leandro Lencinas, Alejandro Rébola, Pablo Burzio, Ezequiel Mastrolía, Agustín Verdugo y Lucas Di Fulvio.DT: Hernán Darío Ortíz (sigue).
Nueva ChicagoAltas: Paul Charpentier y Alejandro Aranda.Bajas: Axel Juarez, Jonatan Fleita, Adrián González, Alan Brondino, Mauricio Asenjo, Valentín Viola, Aldo Araujo, Emiliano Trovento y Gonzalo Vivas.DT: Rubén Forestello reemplazó a Omar Labruna.
PlatenseAltas: Jonathan Bustos y Daniel Vega.Bajas: Nahuel Clavero, Alfredo Ramírez, Gonzalo Bazan, Manuel Capasso, Javier Rossi, Leonardo Baima.DT: Juan Manuel Llop (sigue).
QuilmesAltas: Emanuel Moreno, Leonardo Rolón y Rodrigo Moreira.Bajas: Federico Alvarez, Matías Noble, Juan Bautista Cejas, Alejandro Altuna, Gabriel Ramirez, Raúl Lozano, Gastón Pinedo, Marcos Ledesma, Enzo Acosta y Abel Masuero.DT: Facundo Sava (sigue).
Ramón SantamarinaAltas: Matías Donato, Agustín Sufi, Luis Vergara e Iván Pérez.Bajas: Fernando Telechea, Lucas Krupsky, Ezequiel Ham, Adrián Scifo y Joaquín Papaleo.DT: Pablo Ricchetti (sigue).
San Martín (SJ)Altas: Alejandro Molina y Bruno Rodríguez.Bajas: Facundo Monteseirín, Pablo Palacios Alvarenga, Luis Ardente, Marcos Gelabert y Marcos Fernández.DT: Paulo Ferrari reemplazó a Alfredo Grelak.
San Martín (T)Altas: Nicolás Carrizo.Bajas: Juan Ignacio Mercier, Luciano Pons, Ignacio Arce, Emiliano Amor, Mauro Bellone, Ramiro Costa, Pier Barrios, Sebastián Matos, Germán Voboril, Pedro Fernández, Abel Luciatti, Rodrigo Moreira, Claudio Mosca, Nicolás Castro, Matías Fissore, Ignacio González, Emiliano Purita y Matías Gómez.DT: Fabio Orsi-Sergio Gómez (siguen).
Sarmiento (Junín)Altas: No realizó incorporaciones.Bajas: Franco Leys, Ariel Colzera, Facundo Castelli, Fernando Núñez, Lautaro Geminiani, Francisco Molina, Claudio Pombo, Facundo Daffonchio, Lautaro Amadé, Yamil Garnier, Lautaro Geminiani, Wilfredo Olivera, Lucas Landa, Federico Vismara, Fabio Vázquez y Pablo Magnin.DT: Iván Delfino (sigue).
TemperleyAltas: Joaquín Papaleo, Pablo Zalazar, Julián Marchioni, Ariel Cólzera, Franco Leys, Gonzalo Vivas, Jonathan Fleitas, Luciano Balbi, Marcos Figueroa, Federico Vietto y Elías Contreras.Bajas: Lucas Angelini, Agustín Sosa, Mauro González, Johnny Da Silva, Marcos Martinich, Roberto Brum, Lautaro Rinaldi, Robertino Lanziani, Nicolás Messiniti, Gonzalo Asis, Mauro González, Mauro Cerutti y Emanuel Ibañez.DT: Walter Perazzo (sigue).
TigreAltas: David Gallardo, Román Martinez, Sebastián Prieto, Abel Luciatti, Facundo Monteseirín, Diego Becker, Braian Ruiz, Ijiel Protti, Pablo Magnin.Bajas: Jorge Ortíz, Gustavo Villarruel, Fabricio Domínguez, Jonathan Ramis, Jordan Mosquera, Emanuel Dening, Marcelo Larrondo, Gerardo Alcoba, Matías Pérez Acuña.DT: Néstor Gorosito (sigue).
Villa DálmineAltas: Franco Marchetti, Maximiliano García, Francisco, Sergio Sosa, Enzo Fernández y Lucas Bruera.Bajas: Sergio Díaz, Brian Orosco, Alán Picazzo, Nicolás Del Priore, Matías Ramírez, Cristián Carrizo, Alejandro Maciel, Santiago Moyano, Catriel Sánchez, Lucas Cuevas, Gastón Martínez, Germán Lesman, Nicolás Sansotre, Fernando Brandán, David Gallardo y Alvaro Veliez.DT: Felipe De la Riva (sigue).
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Gonzalo Castillejos. Trae sus goles a Instituto. (Prensa Instituto)
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Marcos Fernández. El volante es refuerzo de Estudiantes RC. (Prensa Estudiantes)
source https://mundod.lavoz.com.ar/futbol/primera-nacional-como-esta-el-mercado-de-pases
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muffins-are-ok-i-guess · 7 years ago
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All Named Talos 1 Crew in Prey
Aaron Ingram Abigail Foy Aime Schmidt Akande Benin Alan Bianchi Alejandra Mata Alex Yu Alfred Rose Alice Aiken Alika James Allison Brady Alton Weber Anders Kline Andrew Grey Anna Goldcrest Annalise Gallegos Anong Lao April McGuire Argentino Pero Ari Liudnarht Ash Lasair Augusto Vera Austin Cool Bernard Griffith Beth Ino Bill Nixon-Greene Blaine Cooly Brandi Pester Brenda Cabrera Brittany LaValley Bruce Cobb Caleb Hawthorne Carin Buckley Carlos Popinga Carol Sikes Carolyn Wheeler Chloe Burgess Chris Wade Clarke Rafferty Clive Lawrence Conrad Birchman Cory Richard Collette May Schult Crispin Boyer Cynthia Dringus Daisy White Dan Billingsly Daniel Landon Danielle Sho Darcy Maddox David Branch David Simmonds Dayo Igwe Demetri Bowser Demian Linn Diane Washington Divya Naaz Don Davis Donald Hall Drew Springer Duncan Krassikoff Eddie Vass Edna Burton Edward Douglas Ekaterina Mulsaev Elias Black Elizabeth Bay Emily Carter Emma Beatty Emanuella DeSilva Enoch Kouneva Eric Berger Erica Teague Evan Avery Evelyn McCarthy Frank Jones Franklin Goode Franz Klinger Frederick Steele Galel Seif Garfield Langly Gary Snow Gennady Mironov Gerald Wildman Gregory Kepner Grete Mikkelson Gordon Bitz Guy Croal Guy Jameson Hadley Dalton Halden Graves Hans Keltsrup Harley Grainger Harvey Clausen Heather Bentz Helen Baker Combs Hendrik DeVrie Hope Ellis Hunter Hale Ian Rolston Ike Stewart Ivy Song Iris Stein Izumi Minami Jada Marks Janos Jozsef Jason Chang Jean Faure Jenni Garbentzoff Jennifer Lee Jenny King Jia Kyung Ho Jias Long Heng Jillian Quigg Joel Weeks John Haskins Johnny Brungen Jorgen Thorstein José Costa Josh Dalton Joshua Vanstry Jovan Graviovic Julien Howard Junior Bookman Kade Mason Kane Rosito Karisma Chouhan Keira Whitman Kelly Randolf Kevin Hague Kimberly Bomo Kristine Lloyd Lan Nguyen Lane Carpenter Laura McAvoy Laurel Davis Lawrence Baxter Leon Woods Lia Macy Lily Morris Lisa Larson Lizzy Colton Lloyd Thompson Lorenzo Calvino Lucia Jimenez Luka Golubkin Luther Glass Lyn Cloyer Marc Sellers Mariana Arias Marietta Kyrkos Martin Giroud Mary Page Mary Malinaro Mary Stevens Marco Simmons Mathias Kohl Matt Cothran Max Weigel-Goetz Maxine Ford Mickey Pitt Mike Turner Mike Devlin Mia Bayer Mischa Lazarev Miguel Lopez Mikhaila Ilyushin Mitsuko Tokaji Miyu Okabe Morgan Yu Nash Underwood Natasha Nikova Neil Warnes Nickie Tannar Nicole Hague Nicholas Stillwater Nils Kjaergaard Octavia Figgs Oliver Benoit Omar Bolivar Otto Louda Pablo Meyers Patricia Varma Patricia Wang Perry Fullbright Peter Coleman Phong Vu Price Broadway Quinten Purvis Ramon Ridley Randall Wood Randolf Hutchinson Rani Chaudhary Raya Leiruat Regina Sellers Riley Butler Rich Ivers Richard Coveney Rodney Poole Rodrigo Diaz Roger Meir Rory Manion Ruby Stone Sadie Hall Salman Kapoor Sanjay Puri Sarah Elezar Scott Parker Sam Hertz Skye Braxton Steve Folson Steven Mueller Spencer Ogden Stone Blanchard Sylvain Bellamy Talia Brooks Tamiko Hayashi Thaddeus York Thomas Lutz Thomas Tucker Tobias Frost Todd Matsuyama Tom Cooper Tina Snow Titus Cromwell Trevor Young Umi Isaka Veer Singh Vincent Schubel "Volunteers" Walter Dahl William Mitchell Yuri Kimura Zachary West
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jalgenismota · 5 years ago
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👉UNA DE LAS MEJORES ENTREVISTAS QUE HEMOS TENIDO 👏 #Repost @chefdavidmartinez • • • • • • Guasipati es la puerta a La Gran sabana, Tierra Bendita por Dios! Tierra del merey, su gente es laboriosa, talentosa y emprendedora. Desde el año 2014 nace el duo Yoyo & Tutu emprendido por Jalgenis Mota y Omar Peña, jovenes que unieron su talento, craetividad y ganas de salir adelante! En entrevista para la emisora Oro95.9Fm los consentidos del sur del Edo Bolivar hablaron de los inicios de su carrera y agradecieron a su pueblo Guasipati por ser su fans numero 1 y al mismo tiempo a El Callao por abrirles las puertas y ser el municipio donde más los contratan. @jalgenis_mota y @omar_pg97 durante esta corta pero muy productiva trayectoria han creado un Team donde dictan cursos de pinta caritas, pantomima, planes vacacionales, organización de eventos, bailoterapias, cine, teatro y ahora forman parte del mundo del Fitness. Agradecidos con este divertido Duo por asistir a mi programa EL Plato Musical y entablar esta entrevista🔥💥Gracias @ixzehmania por el patrocinio del Almuerzo y @javiersalmeronfotografia por la producción del espacio👏👏 #ElPlatoMusical🍽🎶 #SomosOro959fm #VolvioElChef👨‍🍳 #AlmorzandoConDavidMartinez🍽👨‍🍳📻 (en El Callao, Bolivar, Venezuela) https://www.instagram.com/p/B24OUbipKi3/?igshid=bdygeg7yssd6
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infomundoar · 6 years ago
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店面轉讓 Alsina 和 Bolivar 披薩 / Empanadas 店面, Alsina 和 Bolivar 披薩 / Empanadas 店面, 底層 90 平方,地下室 90 平方 權利金:USB 600,000.- 租金便宜 11-4415-5609 Ariel 15-5925-8255 Omar
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chloe-jayde · 6 years ago
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Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
New Post has been published on https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
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&copy Bloomberg. Omar Hassan Ahmed Al Bashir, Sudan’s president, shakes hands with Yasuo Fukuda, Japan’s prime minister, not seen, prior to their meeting at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD) in Yokohama City, Japan, on Wednesday, May 28, 2008.
(Bloomberg) — For autocratic leaders seeking lessons from the toppling of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, avoiding a currency crisis may be the key to survival.
It’s the same problem that did for long-standing rulers from Angola to Zimbabwe and may yet claim Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro.
Al-Bashir, who the military ousted on Thursday to end 30 years of rule, faced months of protests against the government’s economic mismanagement, repression and corruption. One of the root causes of the 75-year-old’s downfall was his inability to manage a shortage of foreign exchange that sent inflation soaring and hammered living standards.
Sudan’s woes can be traced back to the secession of South Sudan in 2011, which saw it lose almost all its oil fields and 60 percent of fiscal revenue, according to the Institute of International Finance. But the government’s decision to ramp up spending while pegging its currency only exacerbated the situation.
“With the loss of oil revenue, the government monetized the deficit, causing inflation to spiral and reserves to dwindle as the central bank maintained an overvalued exchange rate,” Jonah Rosenthal and Garbis Iradian, economists at the Washington-based IIF, said in a note Thursday.
The central bank devalued the pound almost 40 percent to 47.5 per dollar in October. But it was too little, too late. The currency’s black-market rate tumbled again and now stands at around 75 against the greenback. Inflation is almost 120 percent, according to Steve H. Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Al-Bashir is far from the only strongman to come unstuck in recent years thanks to a balance-of-payments crisis. Robert Mugabe was pushed out by Zimbabwe’s army in 2017 as a dollar squeeze and political tension caused havoc in the southern African nation, while the ruling party in Angola pressured President Jose Eduardo dos Santos to resign earlier than he wanted in the same year. Tellingly, one of the first things his successor, Joao Lourenco, did was devalue the kwanza to try and end a dire scarcity of hard currency.
And Algeria’s Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was forced out of power this month, faced his own currency problems. The 2014 crash in oil and gas prices crimped the Arab nation’s dollar earnings. While it avoided the kind of economic pain seen in Sudan, it spent more than $100 billion of reserves to prop up the dinar and avoid tough measures such as a major devaluation or turning to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout.
In Venezuela, where inflation is more than 1 million percent, making the bolivar all but worthless, Maduro has managed to hold on thanks to continued support from the military and outside powers such as Russia. But if Sudan and Zimbabwe are a guide, he’ll also need to solve the currency chaos.
“Nobody survives hyperinflation,” Daniel Osorio, president of New York-based Andean Capital Advisors, which advises money managers on Latin America, said Thursday at a debt conference in Washington. “Sooner or later, it pushes you out.”
(Updates paragraph under chart with political tension in Zimbabwe.)
Disclaimer: Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. All CFDs (stocks, indexes, futures) and Forex prices are not provided by exchanges but rather by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual market price, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Therefore Fusion Media doesn`t bear any responsibility for any trading losses you might incur as a result of using this data.
Fusion Media or anyone involved with Fusion Media will not accept any liability for loss or damage as a result of reliance on the information including data, quotes, charts and buy/sell signals contained within this website. Please be fully informed regarding the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, it is one of the riskiest investment forms possible.
Read More https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
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jettadarkwynd · 6 years ago
Text
Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
New Post has been published on https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
Tumblr media
&copy Bloomberg. Omar Hassan Ahmed Al Bashir, Sudan’s president, shakes hands with Yasuo Fukuda, Japan’s prime minister, not seen, prior to their meeting at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD) in Yokohama City, Japan, on Wednesday, May 28, 2008.
(Bloomberg) — For autocratic leaders seeking lessons from the toppling of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, avoiding a currency crisis may be the key to survival.
It’s the same problem that did for long-standing rulers from Angola to Zimbabwe and may yet claim Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro.
Al-Bashir, who the military ousted on Thursday to end 30 years of rule, faced months of protests against the government’s economic mismanagement, repression and corruption. One of the root causes of the 75-year-old’s downfall was his inability to manage a shortage of foreign exchange that sent inflation soaring and hammered living standards.
Sudan’s woes can be traced back to the secession of South Sudan in 2011, which saw it lose almost all its oil fields and 60 percent of fiscal revenue, according to the Institute of International Finance. But the government’s decision to ramp up spending while pegging its currency only exacerbated the situation.
“With the loss of oil revenue, the government monetized the deficit, causing inflation to spiral and reserves to dwindle as the central bank maintained an overvalued exchange rate,” Jonah Rosenthal and Garbis Iradian, economists at the Washington-based IIF, said in a note Thursday.
The central bank devalued the pound almost 40 percent to 47.5 per dollar in October. But it was too little, too late. The currency’s black-market rate tumbled again and now stands at around 75 against the greenback. Inflation is almost 120 percent, according to Steve H. Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Al-Bashir is far from the only strongman to come unstuck in recent years thanks to a balance-of-payments crisis. Robert Mugabe was pushed out by Zimbabwe’s army in 2017 as a dollar squeeze and political tension caused havoc in the southern African nation, while the ruling party in Angola pressured President Jose Eduardo dos Santos to resign earlier than he wanted in the same year. Tellingly, one of the first things his successor, Joao Lourenco, did was devalue the kwanza to try and end a dire scarcity of hard currency.
And Algeria’s Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was forced out of power this month, faced his own currency problems. The 2014 crash in oil and gas prices crimped the Arab nation’s dollar earnings. While it avoided the kind of economic pain seen in Sudan, it spent more than $100 billion of reserves to prop up the dinar and avoid tough measures such as a major devaluation or turning to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout.
In Venezuela, where inflation is more than 1 million percent, making the bolivar all but worthless, Maduro has managed to hold on thanks to continued support from the military and outside powers such as Russia. But if Sudan and Zimbabwe are a guide, he’ll also need to solve the currency chaos.
“Nobody survives hyperinflation,” Daniel Osorio, president of New York-based Andean Capital Advisors, which advises money managers on Latin America, said Thursday at a debt conference in Washington. “Sooner or later, it pushes you out.”
(Updates paragraph under chart with political tension in Zimbabwe.)
Disclaimer: Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. All CFDs (stocks, indexes, futures) and Forex prices are not provided by exchanges but rather by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual market price, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Therefore Fusion Media doesn`t bear any responsibility for any trading losses you might incur as a result of using this data.
Fusion Media or anyone involved with Fusion Media will not accept any liability for loss or damage as a result of reliance on the information including data, quotes, charts and buy/sell signals contained within this website. Please be fully informed regarding the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, it is one of the riskiest investment forms possible.
Read More https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
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cute1dfacts · 6 years ago
Text
Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
New Post has been published on https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
Tumblr media
&copy Bloomberg. Omar Hassan Ahmed Al Bashir, Sudan’s president, shakes hands with Yasuo Fukuda, Japan’s prime minister, not seen, prior to their meeting at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD) in Yokohama City, Japan, on Wednesday, May 28, 2008.
(Bloomberg) — For autocratic leaders seeking lessons from the toppling of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, avoiding a currency crisis may be the key to survival.
It’s the same problem that did for long-standing rulers from Angola to Zimbabwe and may yet claim Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro.
Al-Bashir, who the military ousted on Thursday to end 30 years of rule, faced months of protests against the government’s economic mismanagement, repression and corruption. One of the root causes of the 75-year-old’s downfall was his inability to manage a shortage of foreign exchange that sent inflation soaring and hammered living standards.
Sudan’s woes can be traced back to the secession of South Sudan in 2011, which saw it lose almost all its oil fields and 60 percent of fiscal revenue, according to the Institute of International Finance. But the government’s decision to ramp up spending while pegging its currency only exacerbated the situation.
“With the loss of oil revenue, the government monetized the deficit, causing inflation to spiral and reserves to dwindle as the central bank maintained an overvalued exchange rate,” Jonah Rosenthal and Garbis Iradian, economists at the Washington-based IIF, said in a note Thursday.
The central bank devalued the pound almost 40 percent to 47.5 per dollar in October. But it was too little, too late. The currency’s black-market rate tumbled again and now stands at around 75 against the greenback. Inflation is almost 120 percent, according to Steve H. Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Al-Bashir is far from the only strongman to come unstuck in recent years thanks to a balance-of-payments crisis. Robert Mugabe was pushed out by Zimbabwe’s army in 2017 as a dollar squeeze and political tension caused havoc in the southern African nation, while the ruling party in Angola pressured President Jose Eduardo dos Santos to resign earlier than he wanted in the same year. Tellingly, one of the first things his successor, Joao Lourenco, did was devalue the kwanza to try and end a dire scarcity of hard currency.
And Algeria’s Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was forced out of power this month, faced his own currency problems. The 2014 crash in oil and gas prices crimped the Arab nation’s dollar earnings. While it avoided the kind of economic pain seen in Sudan, it spent more than $100 billion of reserves to prop up the dinar and avoid tough measures such as a major devaluation or turning to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout.
In Venezuela, where inflation is more than 1 million percent, making the bolivar all but worthless, Maduro has managed to hold on thanks to continued support from the military and outside powers such as Russia. But if Sudan and Zimbabwe are a guide, he’ll also need to solve the currency chaos.
“Nobody survives hyperinflation,” Daniel Osorio, president of New York-based Andean Capital Advisors, which advises money managers on Latin America, said Thursday at a debt conference in Washington. “Sooner or later, it pushes you out.”
(Updates paragraph under chart with political tension in Zimbabwe.)
Disclaimer: Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. All CFDs (stocks, indexes, futures) and Forex prices are not provided by exchanges but rather by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual market price, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Therefore Fusion Media doesn`t bear any responsibility for any trading losses you might incur as a result of using this data.
Fusion Media or anyone involved with Fusion Media will not accept any liability for loss or damage as a result of reliance on the information including data, quotes, charts and buy/sell signals contained within this website. Please be fully informed regarding the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, it is one of the riskiest investment forms possible.
Read More https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
0 notes
breakbit · 6 years ago
Text
Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
New Post has been published on https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
Currency Chaos That Felled Sudan Leader Is Lesson for Maduro
Tumblr media
&copy Bloomberg. Omar Hassan Ahmed Al Bashir, Sudan’s president, shakes hands with Yasuo Fukuda, Japan’s prime minister, not seen, prior to their meeting at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD) in Yokohama City, Japan, on Wednesday, May 28, 2008.
(Bloomberg) — For autocratic leaders seeking lessons from the toppling of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, avoiding a currency crisis may be the key to survival.
It’s the same problem that did for long-standing rulers from Angola to Zimbabwe and may yet claim Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro.
Al-Bashir, who the military ousted on Thursday to end 30 years of rule, faced months of protests against the government’s economic mismanagement, repression and corruption. One of the root causes of the 75-year-old’s downfall was his inability to manage a shortage of foreign exchange that sent inflation soaring and hammered living standards.
Sudan’s woes can be traced back to the secession of South Sudan in 2011, which saw it lose almost all its oil fields and 60 percent of fiscal revenue, according to the Institute of International Finance. But the government’s decision to ramp up spending while pegging its currency only exacerbated the situation.
“With the loss of oil revenue, the government monetized the deficit, causing inflation to spiral and reserves to dwindle as the central bank maintained an overvalued exchange rate,” Jonah Rosenthal and Garbis Iradian, economists at the Washington-based IIF, said in a note Thursday.
The central bank devalued the pound almost 40 percent to 47.5 per dollar in October. But it was too little, too late. The currency’s black-market rate tumbled again and now stands at around 75 against the greenback. Inflation is almost 120 percent, according to Steve H. Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Al-Bashir is far from the only strongman to come unstuck in recent years thanks to a balance-of-payments crisis. Robert Mugabe was pushed out by Zimbabwe’s army in 2017 as a dollar squeeze and political tension caused havoc in the southern African nation, while the ruling party in Angola pressured President Jose Eduardo dos Santos to resign earlier than he wanted in the same year. Tellingly, one of the first things his successor, Joao Lourenco, did was devalue the kwanza to try and end a dire scarcity of hard currency.
And Algeria’s Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was forced out of power this month, faced his own currency problems. The 2014 crash in oil and gas prices crimped the Arab nation’s dollar earnings. While it avoided the kind of economic pain seen in Sudan, it spent more than $100 billion of reserves to prop up the dinar and avoid tough measures such as a major devaluation or turning to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout.
In Venezuela, where inflation is more than 1 million percent, making the bolivar all but worthless, Maduro has managed to hold on thanks to continued support from the military and outside powers such as Russia. But if Sudan and Zimbabwe are a guide, he’ll also need to solve the currency chaos.
“Nobody survives hyperinflation,” Daniel Osorio, president of New York-based Andean Capital Advisors, which advises money managers on Latin America, said Thursday at a debt conference in Washington. “Sooner or later, it pushes you out.”
(Updates paragraph under chart with political tension in Zimbabwe.)
Disclaimer: Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. All CFDs (stocks, indexes, futures) and Forex prices are not provided by exchanges but rather by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual market price, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Therefore Fusion Media doesn`t bear any responsibility for any trading losses you might incur as a result of using this data.
Fusion Media or anyone involved with Fusion Media will not accept any liability for loss or damage as a result of reliance on the information including data, quotes, charts and buy/sell signals contained within this website. Please be fully informed regarding the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, it is one of the riskiest investment forms possible.
Read More https://worldwide-finance.net/news/commodities-futures-news/currency-chaos-that-felled-sudan-leader-is-lesson-for-maduro
0 notes