cropped-ariel-1.jpg

http://ariel.fisica.ru/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2018/04/cropped-ariel-1.jpg
Este shortcode LP Profile solo se utiliza en la página Perfil

59.333 respuestas a «cropped-ariel-1.jpg»

  1. Washington
    CNN

    Republican senators struggled to defend Donald Trump’s decision to commute and pardon hundreds of January 6 protesters, including those who were charged and convicted of crimes against police officers, just hours after the president entered office Monday.
    [url=https://http-blacksprut.ru]blacksprut[/url]
    Sen. Thom Tillis, a Republican from North Carolina, who has warned before about giving a blanket pardon to the rioters, said, “I just can’t agree” with Trump’s decision to commute the sentences or pardon a vast swath of January 6 insurrection participants.

    He added the move “raises a legitimate safety issues on Capitol Hill” before also attacking former President Joe Biden’s pardons in his final hours in office.
    https bs2best at
    https://mbs2siteat.ru
    Trump’s executive action, which many GOP senators had hoped would be directed at only nonviolent offenders who entered the Capitol that day, thrust Republicans once again into a familiar posture of navigating how and when to distance themselves from the sitting president and leader of their party. And Republicans largely attempted to sidestep direct questions about whether they personally agreed with Trump’s action, arguing it was up to the president to use his pardon powers at his discretion.
    [url=https://https-blacksprut.ru]bs2best at[/url]

  2. how to get generic prednisone price prednisone information for patients can i order prednisone price
    can you get generic prednisone tablets how can i get prednisone for sale can i order prednisone pills
    can i get generic prednisone pill
    can i buy generic prednisone pills can i order generic prednisone tablets can you get cheap prednisone without rx
    how to get generic prednisone no prescription can you get prednisone otc get prednisone without rx

  3. Why expanding the College Football Playoff worked – and what still needs to be fixed
    [url=https://www.nur.kz/incident/crime/2021669-podozrevaemuyu-v-organizatsii-finpiramid-life-is-good-i-hermes-arestovali-v-zko/]гей порно молодые[/url]
    Now that it’s all over and the Ohio State Buckeyes are the college football national champions, it can be definitively said: expanding the College Football Playoff worked.

    The grand experiment to allow more teams to play for the national championship wasn’t perfect, but it ended up where it was supposed to: a worthy national champion with exciting, close games in the later rounds when the best teams faced one another. It gave us awesome scenes on campuses around the nation, created new legends and showed how a sport so steeped in tradition can evolve when faced with new demands from its fans and business partners.

    Here are four reasons why the new version of the College Football Playoff worked – and the areas that can still be fixed.

    The committee picked the right teams, even if some games were blowouts
    Before the games kicked off in December, much of the focus was put on the inclusion of Southern Methodist University (SMU) and Indiana University – two teams that won a bunch of games but didn’t have the brand recognition of schools like Alabama, South Carolina and Ole Miss.

    Here’s what else those teams had that SMU and Indiana didn’t: three losses.

    The Hoosiers lost only once in the regular season – to eventual national champion Ohio State. The Mustangs had lost twice, once to Brigham Young University and again in the ACC championship game to Clemson.

    In the first year of the expanded, 12-team playoff, could the committee really leave out a major conference team with 11 wins and punish another one for playing for a conference championship while other teams sat at home? Warde Manuel, the University of Michigan athletic director who served as chair of the committee, said they could not.

  4. Price gouging laws are being ignored by landlords, says estate agent
    published at 14:39
    14:39
    New
    [url=https://kraken7jmgt7yhhe2c4iyilthnhcugfylcztsdhh7otrr6jgdw667pqd-onion.org]kraken onion[/url]
    Jason Oppenheim shot from shoulders up, smiling and looking to right
    Image source,Getty Images
    Let’s bring you a bit more about reports of price gouging by landlords in Los Angeles, which we reported on earlier.

    Speaking a little earlier on BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Jason Oppenheim, a real estate agent in Los Angeles, says some landlords are breaking the law by raising rents more than 10% high than pre-disaster prices.

    “We’re having landlords taking advantage of the situation,” says Oppenheim, who stars in the reality show Selling Sunset about LA’s luxury real estate market.

    kraken7jmgt7yhhe2c4iyilthnhcugfylcztsdhh7otrr6jgdw667pqd onion
    https://kraken7jmgt7yhhe2c4iyilthnhcugfylcztsdhh7otrr6jgdw667pqdonion.net
    “There are thousands of people who are displaced…the hotels are overwhelmed,” he says.

    Oppenheim says he sent a client to a rental property which was listed for $13,000 (?11,000) a month. “(My client) offered $20,000 (?16,400) a month and he offered to pay six months upfront and the landlord said ‘no, I want $23,000 (?19,000) a month’,” he says.

    “There are price gouging laws in California, they are just being ignored right now…it’s illegal to take advantage of a natural disaster.”

    Share

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *