
Gustave Caillebotte, The Orange Trees (1878).
Courtesy of the Houston Museum of Fine Arts.
Gustave Caillebotte, The Orange Trees (1878).
Courtesy of the Houston Museum of Fine Arts.
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Firsticus??? Wow – ya’ll musta had a wild weekend 😉
Thinking of TexMo this morning, prayers continuing. I will say that the Hospice Folks are angels on this earth.
Mornin’ Gang
Second??
Good morning bsue and SD. We (the royal we meaning I) cooked quite a bit this weekend:
Fri evening: ribeyes on the flame pit in the back yard
Sat morning: breakfast tacos
Lunch/early supper: pot roast
Sunday: This was powercook Sunday; Chili, stuffed cabbage, cabbage soup. Also I did another run of Honeyshine.
The kitchen is clean and everything is put away.
I’m moving a little slowly this morning.
OK This is just too neat;
91 year-old former ship’s Lifeboat, Lady of Mann, No 8 of 10 from the 1930 Isle of Man Steam Packet ship, RMS Lady of Mann, veteran of both Dunkirk & the D-Day landings has had her interior fit out finished and thus completes her restoration by Dennett’s Boatbuilders based in Chertsey on the River Thames. She is a standard Board of Trade clinker double-ended lifeboat. Mahogany planking on oak ribs. Her cabin is iroko, replacing a previously constructed ply cabin constructed in 1972 when she was salvaged from the ‘ship breakers’ of the RMS Lady of Mann on the Clyde — with Heather Dennett.
#4 Bones – thanx for the ideas… I always wondered what else to do with “left-over/extra” cabbage, besides coleslaw or golumpkis – well, I guess stuffed cabbage and golumpkis are pretty much the same thing… I need more coffee LOL
#5 Super Dave says:
May 15, 2023 at 7:30 am
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And yes, I used three links.
So Bones and El Gordo, what’s y’all’s recipes for cabbage soup? I don’t think I’ve ever had it.
Morning gang. Bright sunshine this morning but nice temperatures, so I may be forced to get out and mow today. Got up a little late, but TOK is closed today, so no rush to get down there. All this talk of fine cooking, and all I did was grind up rotten fruits and veges for worm food. Still made a big mess though, so I did get to wash dishes and straighten things up. Still got more to do.
I’m not sure if I have ever written my cabbage soup recipe down, but I’ll try to do that as a separate post. I put meat in mine unlike most people – pork, chicken, or beef as available. But first, a little more coffee. BTW, I like it spicy.
I caught this on local TV;
HAMPDEN, Maine (AP) — David Bishop spends the school day as a mild-mannered custodian, but before the final bell rings, he grabs his chess boards and pieces and begins his second role.
“The Queen’s Gambit” is playing out in real life in Maine, where this custodian is coaching his schools’ chess teams to acclaim.
Bishop, a part-time chess coach and full-time custodian, led his elementary and middle school teams to state championship titles this year, drawing comparisons to the Netflix series about a chess prodigy inspired by a janitor.
Some of his players are good enough to beat their coach, proudly declaring “checkmate!”
“Initially, it was humiliating and demoralizing, but it didn’t take long for me to realize that’s a good thing. They’re getting stronger,” the 61-year-old said.
The canning went well last night, but I realize I need more pint size jars. I could’ve canned in quarts, but I prefer the pints. Hubby and I can make s meal of a pint without worrying about refrigerating leftovers.
And I think I’ve convinced Hubby that we need to replace my catalytic converter instead of screwing around with these oxygen sensors.
Progress
My Cabbage Soup:
I use my Instapot to prepare meat, usually chicken legs or thighs or whatever is on sale, about 25 minutes pressurized and let it depressurize – so about an hour there. Debone and save meat in the broth created. Since you are going to use the broth, you might want to add a little extra water when doing this – say maybe an inch or so at the bottom at the beginning. I normally cook the chicken, chop veges while it is cooking, then removed the meat to cool while I’m working on the vege concoction below.
I use my big old enameled cast iron bean pot since I tend to make a lot at once. I chop about a pound of carrots, 2 onions, a thing of celery (I even include the leaves), maybe a couple of serranos, and chopped garlic; and sautee in the bean pot in olive oil. I normally add a lot of black pepper, slap yo mama, chili powder to taste, salt, and any other spice that I’m thinking might taste good at the time while I’m sauteeing. This starts off as the pot being about 1/3 full but cooks down and produces juice. When the carrots finally get softer and I’m about tired of standing there stirring it to keep it from sticking, I add some water, the meat and broth, and bring it slowly to simmer. Somewhere in there, I take time out to debone the chicken and put the bones out back for the varmits to feast on. Mine is the keto version, so if you wanted to add some corn or peas or something like that, you can do so. For some reason, I’ve never put green beans in mine, but it would probably be OK. Anyway, while the heat is coming up on the simmering pot, I get to work chopping up a head of cabbage. I chop mine with a knife and make about 1″ pieces rather than fine chop like cold slaw or something. Anyway, this will make a heaping pile of cabbage, and I just start introducing it to the simmering pot. Go ahead and pile it up and the steam will melt it down pretty quickly. Once all the cabbage is stirred in, let it simmer for a few minutes (not very long), put the lid on the pot, and turn the fire off. Go on about your business and come back in about 30 or 45 minutes and it should be cool enough to sample. As I said, I like mine pretty spicy. Doesn’t sound all that good, but it certainly does taste good. Lots of room for creativity here.
Re: Texmo
Yeah, I pray for him and his family daily. I may have bruised Mary a bit with the rosary I sent up on Sunday.
The family seems remarkably stable emotionally about the situation. I guess they’ve had time to absorb it and are just enjoying what time they still have.
Good family.
SD #5 released.
Thanks for the boat porn.
Roundup:
Good morning C&C! It’s Monday, and I have a terrific roundup for you today: Recent study provides evidence how hospitals killed so many covid patients; Twitter’s new CEO looks a little more complex than people first thought; Soros moves to buy failing empire of Vice for pennies on the dollar; Jamie Foxx is out of the hospital but we still have no idea what happened to him; the many wonderful implications of the Danny Penny fundraiser; DeSantis signs commonsense medical freedom laws and some people don’t like it; Governor DeSantis calls covid experts dummies in Iowa while campaigning/not campaigning for president; another woke Netflix series bites the ratings dust; and an important lesson for young people about nature.
That bland-sounding headline conceals some pretty incriminating evidence.
It seems that AI tools crunched numbers and came up with the conclusion that a lot of folks who went into the hospital didn’t die from WLR, but rather from hospital acquired infections, (aka, “pneumonia”).
It’s being referred to as VAP – Ventilator Acquired Pneumonia. I heard that the ventilator was dangerous and pretty much useless, statistically speaking. Now it was actually a source of deadly little buggers, said buggers being shoved into the lungs by the medical ‘care’ professionals.
As if that weren’t bad enough, at least half of the patients who got Ventilator-Acquired Pneumonia later died, if not from the first infection, then from the next, or the next.
So, the hospitals could see that people were catching pneumonia from the vents, but just kept on letting it happen. Until the person either died or got discharged. Flip a coin.
In other words, the researchers essentially said that it was the hospitals — and not covid — that people should have been more afraid of:
/snip
The study,..highlighted the dreadful cost we paid for hospitalizing covid patients. Instead of sending people home with safe and effective treatments like hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, as third-world countries were forced to do… the U.S. jammed everyone right onto a dirty, disgusting ventilator without any real treatment. (I’m not counting remdesivir, which only increased iatrogenic mortality in covid patients.)
This study explains..of how the United States had the highest covid mortality of any country. Despite all our “wealth” and our massive hospital infrastructure system. Or maybe because of it.
Never forget that the majority of people put on ventilators was for PATIENT CONTROL and not for any beneficial treatment.
Here’s the link: https://www.jci.org/articles/view/170682/pdf
I know an ER doc, but I avoid discussing this with him. He’s pretty liberal, and pro-vaxx. “They’ve been working on the mRNA stuff since the sixties,” he said. Like that means they got it to work.
We are usually discussing other stuff, so I just avoid the argument. It ain’t worth it.
Next up, Mr. C. tackles the new CEO of Twitter controversy. Turns out, she also did some stuff for Trump.
So, the two camps have polarized: either she’s a left-wing nutbat or a right-wing nutbat.
So it looks like Elon Musk has done it again, embarrassing both over-reactive sides of the political spectrum. Last week, either Elon or Yaccarino could have played the Trump appointment card, to defuse all the initial rightwing hate. But they didn’t, they played it cool, letting the market sort things out, and letting conservatives muddy the waters so much her politics are now totally inscrutable.
That neutrality will be a great help as Yaccarino works to bring advertisers back to Twitter and build a content-neutral streaming platform.
…it’s usually better to wait for all the evidence to comes in before leaping to an extreme position on these developing stories.
Regarding the bankruptcy and sale of Vice assets:
The lawyerly Mr. Childers does a brief description of how companies use bankruptcy to “wash clean” their debts. But it seems that Emperor Palpatine is making his move on said assets:
So, absent a better offer, George Soros will snap up the aptly-named Vice Media at pennies on the dollar. Of course, that still tallies to about $225 million, a pretty penny, but for some reason, George Soros is willing to pay a quarter billion to save the scurrilous media empire. I wonder why.
Indeed, Vice is not known for the middle-of-the-road headlines, aptly living up to its name. Why would someone as evil as Soros want to save the site?
I think I just answered my own question.
#5 – Wow SD cool old rig!
Good news: Jamie Foxx’s family reports he is out of the hospital and playing pickle ball, though he hasn’t made any tweets or whatever himself. We still don’t know what happened, but I’m glad he’s recovering.
The C&C Army and DeSantis’ followers have been doing their job (oh, and Scott Adams also threw in his support);
After multiplier for subway hero Danny Penny was multiplied, over the weekend it multiplied again, soaring to nearly $2 million so far, which guarantees Danny will get a complete defense, one usually unavailable to most folks who can’t afford specialist lawyers, experts, jury trial consultants, practice trials, and appellate lawyers involved from day one. Not to mention that Danny can now also afford a civil lawyer and all the other support for that case, to defend the lawsuit Jordan Neely’s relatives already have in the works.
By the way, Jordan Neely supporters, and his family, argue that the late ex-con drug addict never actually touched anybody before Danny put him in the tragically fatal headlock. That is misdirection. The crime of “assault” arises when you put someone in legitimate fear for their life or safety, such as by pointing a gun at them or telling someone you’re going to beat them up. Assault carries the same punishments as battery (when contact occurs), and the two crimes are considered equivalents for a reason.
At minimum, the undisputed facts show Jordan Neely was assaulting everyone on the subway car.
Mr. C. then ponders the fact that high visibility folks like DeSantis and Adams were willing to publicly support Penny. Sometimes – as we’ve often seen in the medical arena over the last few years – the first “facts” sometimes bite one on one’s butt later on. Mr. C sees this as a turning point, the overwhelming support for the man who stepped up to protect his fellow citizens from a threat.
The fact DeSantis and Scott Adams were willing to crawl out on the limb with us is new, it’s different, and I believe it is significant.
So, what is it? What makes Danny’s case special? Well, for one thing, he wisely stayed out of the limelight, so the media can’t publicly vivisect him, reporting stuff about Danny for people to dislike.
But, with Danny’s personality out of the picture, I think what it really shows is: our American society is not, in fact, suicidal. We want to live. We aren’t giving up. We do intend to forcefully eject the satanic termites who’ve hollowed out our government and our educational institutions and send them swarming back to China or Venezuela or the Gates of Hell, we don’t really care which.
Danny’s developing story is already incredibly encouraging, not just for what it says about Danny, but also for what it says about US.
#17 –
Why would someone as evil as Soros want to save the site?
EVIL is as EVIL does! sorry sonomabeech!! NO SMILEY
Mr. C also notes that the woke “Cleopatra” is tanking at the box office. I’ve heard the same about the woke new “Little Mermaid” release.
The last time I went to see a movie – “Nefarious” and I had Handsome Son with me – I was quite vocal about how stupid it was to have a mermaid with melanin loaded skin. I mean, living underwater, her skin would have no stimulation to develop melanin. I’m thinking it would be a pasty gray or white color, if anything.
The ticket taker just smiled bigly.
One last Mr. C link from the DeSantis War Room:
From the C&C comments:
I worked as a covid ICU nurse and instead of patients getting turned and having their mouths cleaned every 2hrs like we usually do with intubated patients to help prevent infections. Nurses were told to leave them alone to help prevent the nurses from getting covid. A lot of nurses didn’t want to grown up and getting help to move patients was so hard. The patient would be just be left in the same spot for hours. No family was around to see the conditions these people were in. I was taking ivermectin and not afraid of covid and I would work so hard to get people better. I often times would care for a patient for 4-6 days in a row and the patient would be improving. I’d come back to work and they would be dead. It felt like I was working in the nazi gas chambers.
***
Jeff – are you aware of the article titled Biden’s Bounty on Your Life? It discusses the payments made to hospitals for each step of Covid treatment. The largest payout was for patients who died on ventilators. That’s why hospitals were forcing the nasty tubes down patients’ throats.
https://aapsonline.org/bidens-bounty-on-your-life-hospitals-incentive-payments-for-covid-19/
***
THIS IS ONE THING I HOLD AGAINST TRUMP:
For me, the worst part about Trumps involvement in this was that even when he realized the course he took was the wrong one (sometime in June/July), he continued it based on the advice of a youngster (Jared K). Supposedly, Jared thought it would hurt his reelection chances. So you have two sins there – listening to someone without sufficient wisdom and experience and no expertise in epidemics (although he is plenty smart), and basing your decision on politics instead of evidence. And he put Pence, a vacuous, shallow, cliche machine, in charge of the COVID task force.
Trump totally effed the management of the COVID scamdemic.
***
Mercola ran this article today on the same topic… unnecessary covid deaths!
Aspirin is a staple medicine that is frequently recommended as a remedy to control inflammation and prevent blood clots. It could have helped limit the pandemic death toll, had it not been downplayed and ignored.
According to research published in April 2021, aspirin reduced COVID-19 patients’ need for mechanical ventilation by 44%, ICU admission by 43% and mortality by 47%
Hard to not see this as intentional now.
https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2023/05/15/aspirin-for-covid.aspx
***
The Daniel Penny fund and Bud Light cases are related. Both show that when pushed far enough, conservatives (and others) who just want to be left alone to live their lives, will push back, and push back hard. It’s a small glimmer of hope in this increasing darkness. There is a reason why people still love and respond to a strong, righteous hero in action movies. We know truth when we see it, and more eyes are seeing it every day.
***
I don’t get the take on the new twitter woke CEO. Yes, she’s followed a few right-ish accounts. That’s it. But 95% is her loving covid jabs, masks, lockdowns; getting rid of whites and men, pushing gay and trans agenda. Loves her some WEF 20 minute cities. All into the green propaganda
***
House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer said their leading whistleblowers have gone missing in their probe of President Biden’s family over foreign influence-peddling allegations. Washington Times
Cabbage soup procedure:
Boil a cored, big red cabbage.
Peel off outer layers for cabbage rolls (this is a different dish)
Let the liquid cool a bit, fish out the remaining cabbage and cut in 1 in squares or so.
in a goodly sized black iron skillet, brown and heavily season a pound of 80-20 hamburger.
remove meat but leave the grease
add 3 stalks of celery, some carrots, and a big onion, all finely chopped. Cook these way down over high heat until it starts to carmelize the onions. DON’T LET IT BURN.
Add everything together in the big simmering pot and toss in some quartered, little red taters and a can of corn. Add whatever else you want and let it fester at a low boil/simmer for about an hour, so that the taters are soft.
Let it cool a bit so that you don’t scorch the top of your neck hole.
Got outside to clean up some buckets with the water hose. The skeeters are out in force this morning. We don’t usually get many skeeters out here because of the arid climate, but when it does get wet, they are coming out of hiding where they have been laying in wait.
Yeah, my gardening has been halted, either by rain or skeeters. I stepped outside this morning and it was like filings to a magnet.
Been dreading this season.
Now that I think about it, I do favor diversity. I want a country where our leadership is diverse and comes from the world of average Americans, where Ivy League degrees are rare, and where people rise in organizations based on their talent, not based on their connections or their exclusive degrees.
H/T: Buck Throckmorton/ACE.
I agree wholeheartedly. From what I can tell, there is almost zero diversity of thought from the Ivy League schools. Over the last 50 years or so, the rot has all come from the Ivy League sewer.
Morning, gang. The mosquitoes are really bad at Chez Harp, from these sudden fierce rain storms we’ve had lately. And looks like more on the way this week. I need a couple of dry days so I could mow the grass. Back yard is worst, but no one except me sees that.
What about Billy? Or would he rather have a jungle back there to work with?
Got 3/4 of the yard mowed, all but the west side. It’s narrow but it’s long. Had to take a break from the gnats, skeeters, ants, humidity, and such. Lawn was way overgrown, so mowing is a slow process to not choke down the mower. I went ahead and took down the bluebonnets and everything else while I was at it, so it’s at least going to look more like a normal yard when it’s done.
The rotten fruit that I was saving for the neighbor’s boyfriend’s chickens got too ripe for my tastes, so I wound up just tossing it all on my outdoor compost pile. I haven’t buried it yet, so I would not be surprised to see the varmits try to get in to it tonight unless I get other chores done and go cover it up a little.
I knew I had forgotten something on my cabbage soup. I usually add a couple of cans of Rotels and a couple more large cans of stewed tomatoes. I like fresh tomatoes in there too, but sometimes cooking with fresh tomatoes seems like a waste.
Clouding up a little out here, and while the ground is still moist, another 1/2″ or so every two or three days would make this a nice place to live. OK, got to go cool off a little more.
Oops, rain out. Little shower passing through. We’ll see how long it lasts.
Peter Halligan tends to board the reader with relevant data, but he could use an editor for clarity. He writes at substack.com:
In round numbers – cumulative global deaths with C19 present using the “not fit for purpose” RT-PCR test were 2 million in calendar year 2020, 5.5 million in 2021 (+3.5 million) and 6.7 million in 2022 (+1.2 million from 2021 to 2022).
What kind of moron would claim that any measures taken to address C19 have been “effective”. Certainly not 95% effective, unless you believe that without the measures, deaths with C19 present would have doubled to more than 13 million by now.
More clearly, the question is how can anyone make the case the “vaccines” were increasingly effective since the injections given around the world the more people died ?
Now, factor in that 95% of deaths also had 2-6 co-morbidities also present and the average age at time of C19 death was 1-2 years longer than average life expectancy. Then factor in that the RT-PCR test was not intended to determine infectiousness, only the presence of a guess of what the SARS-COV2 looked like.
Also bear in mind that IVM (and HCQ) treatment protocols were proven as a safe and effective prophylactic and early to mid-stage cure by May 2020. It has no side effects unless extreme dosages are used (like those used in studies sponsored by the BMGF).
Maybe as many as 85% of all deaths globally from C19 were preventable from May 2020 onwards.
and this on the money side,
A note on Ivermectin (IVM) IVM costs 200 bucks a kilo. A kilo is enough for 50,000 doses for an average weight per person of 100 kg. Five doses is more than sufficient to treat and prevent C19. For the 8 billion people on the planet = 800,000 kilos for everyone to get 5 doses each of IVM at 200 bucks per kilo.
That works out at 160 million bucks. Keep that 160 million cost to prevent and cure C19 at the forefront of your mind.
Just loaded “Nat” with reduced for quick sale boneless sirloin steaks, boneless pork loin chops, and Sam’s Club frozen meatballs… It’s currently in the “freeze” cycle – which seems to take an inordinate amount of time, considering everything I put in (just like the last load) was already frozen… but I did some meatballs in one of my first loads, and they came out amazingly dry – stuck one with a fork to check and it crumbled in my hand kinda like a sand-tart cookie.
TP @ 12:39 – As they said on the OLD Pace Picante ads………….
GIT a ROPE!! NO Smiley
How did your first load come out, Bsue?
Texpat –
The whole sordid saga turns my stomach. So much suffering, now and in the future. So much money squandered. So many criminals succeeding.
#36 Tedtam – the first load (steaks of varying thickness, and frozen meatballs) came out dry as a bone… feel like styrofoam, just like Red Rose says they are supposed to… Next load was pre-sliced breakfast ham half – likely slightly under 1/4″ thick??? They bear a strong resembles to the tongues of antique shoes LOL… These boneless sirloin steaks and boneless pork loin chops are thicker – so may take a while… but Nat’s down to 12F now… Thank God everything was already frozen LOL
Shower passed on by, so I went back out and finished up the west side, wet grass and all. Lawn does not look like a golf green, but it looks a lot better than it did. Still thundering around, but no serious weather threatening anywhere nearby. I took some items, floor rug, mop head, etc. out to dry this morning, so the rain soaked them again. Oh well, no big deal.
Last time I did the yard my artificial knee joint began aching on top, and I could hardly get up the stairs with out pulling on the handrail. After a couple of days, the soreness went away for the most part. Well, once again, it is sore after doing doing the mowing, but not nearly as sore as the last time. I think it’s telling me that I need to get more exercise and strengthen those thigh muscles that all connect down there. Hard to believe that the implant is already 10 years old. Supposed to last 15 or 20 years – that’s why they do not like to implant young people, they only want to do it once.
OK, I’m going to go watch a YT movie or something and take a break. I’m patting myself on the back for gettin’ ‘er done today.
PS: Just checked and they issued a flood advisory for a line of storms out west. I’ll believe it when I see it.
#31 EG
Billy likes to lounge in the grass or other ground foliage, after he has eaten. In nice weather, I sometimes see him apparently taking a nap in the foliage.
Why, here’s a lonesome l’il ole 42… Guess I’ll adopt it.
Hey, Katfish.
More than 50 years after hundreds of us had a sit-in against haircut policies at Westchester High School, there is a bill sitting on the Governor’s desk outlawing such nonsensical rules.
I assume he is going to sign it.
I assume it covers white kids, too.
John Durham finally releases his report.
Surprised it didn’t come out on a Friday afternoon.
Early reports indicate the report is somewhat flaccid.
Imagine that.
I haven’t heard of sand tarts in I don’t how long. Forever.
And they had a saltwater taffy display at HEB.
What is this? The 50’s?
43
Memory is a little fuzzy, but I think when I pulled up at the school, saw all those folks out front and cops showing up, it seemed to be the perfect day to skip school.
Again.
🙂
#43
Lol, we had a sit-in as well at Spring Woods High School, me as well against hair policies, it lasted till the jocks came in and started kicking everyone’s azz,s. Then it was over. We were on the news too, my mom was so proud. /sarc
47 GJT
Heh.
Dang, I thought that was all rednecks and jocks on that side of the tracks.
Right on, dude.
🙂
I’m a little tired and knee is a little sore from all my outdoor activities today. Actually feels pretty good to get something accomplished occasionally. Peeked in on the worms and they all appear to be doing well. I don’t think they will need another feeding before the end of the week, and maybe not even then. The ones that I saw all look healthy and are working on the last feeding I put in their bins. I didn’t spend a lot of time on them today and I suspect they appreciated that. I’m ready for the baby worms to grow up. It’s supposed to take between 60 and 90 days. Nearly all of the little babies that I put in there, as well as those that may have hatched from the cocoons that I loaded it up with, are so tiny that the only way I could find them would be to dump the whole thing on a big piece of white cardboard and start working with a magnifying glass. Hopefully and about 30 days they will at least be large enough to see.
I plinked a white tail with the bb gun this afternoon. I got one yesterday too. This one flopped around which was not the right thing to do as there was a cat hunting near by. It shot over there like a rocket and went to work on the bird. A couple more cats showed up to help.
OK, more later. Off to find something on YT or somewhere.
48 GJT
(Some of us (including you) remember that in the olden days there was was a railroad track that ran the entire length of Katy Road.)
#43 – More than 50 years after
hundreds of us(actually closer to 2,000) had a sit-in against haircut policies at Westchester High
& 46 & 47
We called KLOL in hopes of getting a big turnout and it WAS! (plenty of kids showed up even from HISD)
Until the Paddy Wagons showed up – unfortunately HS property on west side of the street and Elementary school property on the east side (and city street of course in the middle).
It turned into *disperse or get a free ride down to 61 Riesner St.*
We did make a lot of noise but no rules ever changed.
Ah the good old Daze!
Dang, I thought that was all rednecks and jocks on that side of the tracks.
Yeah well we thought it was all rich kids driving hot rod Camaros and Chevelles on that side of the track.
Nah. That was my neighbor, the pot dealer around the corner.
SS 396. Black inside and out. Very cool.
😉
Not too many 19 year olds in my neighborhood who could afford a car like that.
Unless daddy bought it for them. And his daddy certainly couldn’t.
Nite all.
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