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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 23 Nov 2021 at 2:16pm

Xi Jinping: 'we can build a peaceful home together'

Daniel Hurst 

Incidentally, the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, has spoken to south-east Asian counterparts and attempted to assure them “we can build a peaceful home together”.

Xi did not specifically mention Aukus (even though state media and the Chinese foreign ministry have renewed their criticism of the arrangement in recent days). But in yesterday’s speech, Xi backed an initiative for south-east Asia to be a nuclear weapon-free zone (the Aukus plan is for nuclear-powered submarines, not nuclear-armed submarines):

We need to pursue dialogue instead of confrontation, build partnerships instead of alliances, and make concerted efforts to address the various negative factors that might threaten or undermine peace. We need to practice true multilateralism and stick to the principle that international and regional affairs be handled through discussion among us all. China firmly opposes hegemonism and power politics. China pursues long-term, friendly coexistence with neighbouring countries, and is part of the common efforts for durable peace in the region. China will never seek hegemony, still less bully smaller countries. China supports Asean’s efforts to build a nuclear weapon-free zone, and is prepared to sign the Protocol to the Treaty on the Southeast Asia Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone as early as possible.”

China has competing claims with a number of south-east Asian nations over the South China Sea. Beijing has not recognised a 2016 Hague arbitration ruling that undermined the basis for China’s claims. The president of the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte, reportedly urged China to respect that ruling. Duterte also condemned an incident in which Chinese coastguard vessels blocked and used a water cannon on two Philippine supply boats heading to a disputed shoal occupied by Filipino marines in the South China Sea.

Xi told Asean leaders: “Joint efforts are needed to safeguard stability in the South China Sea and make it a sea of peace, friendship and cooperation.”

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote stayer Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Nov 2021 at 3:36pm
There's a short book, and even an animated movie of it, that says all that needs to be said: Animal Farm by George Orwell. The same pattern that the book describes happens every time, regardless of place or time. It's just human nature.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shrunk in the Wash Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Nov 2021 at 12:01pm
Originally posted by djebel djebel wrote:

Peng Shuai

Whatever may transpire it’s certainly a very sad situation. 
According to the flag wavers of the dictatorship there’s nothing to see
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hello Sunshine Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Nov 2021 at 10:37am
Typical obscure djebal post
but
typically, I can say
Chinese female doubles tennis player has gone missing in China after revealing being sexually assaulted by a Chinese police officer, 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote djebel Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Nov 2021 at 9:38am
Peng Shuai
reductio ad absurdum
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hello Sunshine Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 Nov 2021 at 8:19am

From Nicaragua to China, reckless autocrats betray the promises of revolution

Freedom and progress are hard won, and any gains made are all too often lost by a single, self-aggrandising individual

o revolutions always end in betrayal? Sudanese citizens are but the latest group to see a democratic dawn blotted out by the forces of reaction. It’s an age-old story. Napoleon subverted the French Revolution, imposing an imperium where freedom briefly reigned. Stalin purloined the power of the proletariat to build a totalitarian dictatorship.

From southern Africa to Cuba to Myanmar, today’s ruling heirs to revolutionary political struggle dishonour their inheritance. European peoples who joyfully cast off the Soviet yoke watch liberties erode anew. The Arab spring swiftly wilted. The 1776 “American revolution” was arguably no revolution at all – more a white middle-class taxpayers’ revolt dressed up in fancy language.Developments last week in countries as far apart as Nicaragua, Ethiopia and China are a warning of how radical change may be halted and reversed, how hard-won revolutionary gains are easily lost. In all three, as throughout history, a single, self-aggrandising individual squats at the heart of the problem.

Nicaragua has never been anything but poor. Yet the victorious Sandinista revolution of 1979 initially brought reform and hope of a better future. The defeat of the Somoza family dictatorship became the left’s biggest cause célèbre since the Spanish civil war. Volunteers flooded in. Fighting off US-backed Contra rebels, Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega became a political superstar.

Yet Nicaraguans eventually tired of the war and tired of Ortega, too. In 1990 I watched as he toured the countryside atop a flatbed truck, trying to revive flagging belief in the revolution’s promise. To his surprise, Ortega lost the election that year. Defeat soured him. He vowed to regain the presidency – by any means.

He achieved his aim in 2007 and, abolishing term limits, has clung to power ever since. Abetted by his wife and vice-president, Rosario Murillo, his regime has become “an insular dynastic tyranny that eerily resembles the one he fought decades ago”, wrote journalist and author Stephen Kinzer.

Political opponents and old comrades have been locked up, the press and judiciary silenced, and protesters killed and abused. Last week’s presidential election, won by a “landslide”, was widely condemned as a sham. But Ortega, 76, seems impervious to criticism. He’s expected to rule until his death, when he hopes Rosario or one of their sons will succeed him.“He seemed a reasonably promising leader. Few could have imagined that he would degenerate into a hermit dictator,” Kinzer lamented. “How did this soft-spoken, introverted, even self-effacing revolutionary, who was a Boy Scout and once considered entering the priesthood, ultimately emerge as the most brutal ruler in his country’s history?”

That’s a cautionary conundrum Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s embattled prime minister, would do well to ponder. Like Ortega, Abiy has morphed from global pin-up, winning the 2019 Nobel peace prize, to international outcast, after his disastrous invasion of northern Tigray province last year.

Abiy’s war of choice now threatens to engulf the capital, Addis Ababa, shatter Ethiopia’s fragile unity, and further destabilise the Horn of Africa. Like Ortega, his personal ambition and poor judgment have jeopardised the considerable gains made since the 1991 revolution that ended the Marxist Derg military regime.

Abiy declared a nationwide state of emergency last week, urging citizens to take up arms. African Union and UN ceasefire calls have been rejected. Human rights groups document ongoing war crimes allegedly committed by Abiy’s forces as well as by his foes and allies.

Meanwhile, his policy has brought famine back to Ethiopia – a horribly symbolic failure, given still vivid memories of the 1980s. The UN says 400,000 people in Tigray face a food emergency. Millions are displaced.

What kind of leadership is this? How may one reckless man, refusing to admit error and resign, retain the power to trash three decades of achievement and incinerate a nation’s future? It’s a question that should also be asked of China’s autocratic, over-reaching leader, Xi Jinping.

He spent last week securing internal Chinese Communist party (CCP) backing for an unprecedented third term as president, beginning next year. Xi is now the most powerful politician since Mao Zedong, to whose brutally authoritarian style he closely adheres. Official media sing his praises with sickly sycophancy. Critics keep mum out of fear of their lives. In Xi’s surveillance state, techno-fascism rules.Yet what connection truly exists between Xi’s power politics and personality cult and the aspirations of the founding CCP revolutionaries who, meeting 100 years ago in Shanghai and inspired by Russia’s revolution four years previously, pledged to fight oppression? After decades of steady progress, what price might China’s people yet pay for Xi’s aggressive ambitions?

Facing a slowing economy, a growing debt crisis, a degrading environment, an ageing population and a widening array of external antagonists, Xi has but a few years to realise his “China dream” of global pre-eminence, geographical reunification, internal consolidation, strict political monogamy and stifling social conformity.With one eye on history and another on the future, Xi gambles on glory. It could go either way. A China crash could lead to conflict or worldwide recession or both. Yet a China triumphant under Xi could be fatal, too, for global democracy, civil rights, free speech and international law. Hong Kong is the grim portent.

How do such rulers justify their betrayals of the people, the ideals and the struggles that brought them to where they are? Perhaps, like Ortega and Abiy, Xi believes only he can rule effectively, that he’s irreplaceable, unique. Perhaps they confuse confidence with hubris. They seek to secure fatuous “legacies”. They grow addicted to power.

In truth, there is no justification. Such traitors to reformation are a toxic blight. Like Mao’s one thousand blossoms, they seed across the modern world – not as flowers but as weeds.eguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/14/from-nicaragua-to-china-reckless-autocrats-betray-the-promises-of-revolution

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Carioca Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:10pm
Originally posted by Shrunk in the Wash Shrunk in the Wash wrote:

Originally posted by Carioca Carioca wrote:

Thanks for your reply Shrunk Wink irrespective of our different views on things I find PT excellent value and quite intelligent on a wide variety of stuff , it should not worry you as we live in a democratic society , you may challenge me on any subject that we have an opinion on as long as there is no BS . Smile Cheers .

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Peacefull, can't get a better reply . Clap
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shrunk in the Wash Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 5:11pm
Originally posted by Carioca Carioca wrote:

Thanks for your reply Shrunk Wink irrespective of our different views on things I find PT excellent value and quite intelligent on a wide variety of stuff , it should not worry you as we live in a democratic society , you may challenge me on any subject that we have an opinion on as long as there is no BS . Smile Cheers .

Hug
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 3:39pm
Originally posted by Shrunk in the Wash Shrunk in the Wash wrote:

I’ll apologise for lumping you in with the other bloke who I reckon holds those views.Thumbs Up

I stand to be corrected

I will wait while you find the relevant posts.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Carioca Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 2:10pm
Thanks for your reply Shrunk Wink irrespective of our different views on things I find PT excellent value and quite intelligent on a wide variety of stuff , it should not worry you as we live in a democratic society , you may challenge me on any subject that we have an opinion on as long as there is no BS . Smile Cheers .
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shrunk in the Wash Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 1:11pm
I’ll apologise for lumping you in with the other bloke who I reckon holds those views.Thumbs Up

I stand to be corrected
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Carioca Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 1:07pm
Don't assume What you don't know Shrunk , I've never been part of that topic And I have expressed my anti china stance on bullying on smaller nations a number of times on here eg , Tibet , Nepal etc , get it right old boy , apology not needed .Wink
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shrunk in the Wash Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 1:02pm
Originally posted by Carioca Carioca wrote:

Originally posted by Shrunk in the Wash Shrunk in the Wash wrote:

Originally posted by Passing Through Passing Through wrote:

I have posted it many times already. Wont be repeating for the slow ones.


LOLLOLArrogance personified LOL

Oh and you’re clearly to scared to expose your theories 
I thought the response was witty and funny , for me StarStarStar

That’s probably because you support PTs view that China should take back Taiwan and will be cheering on any invasion 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Carioca Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 12:04pm
Originally posted by Shrunk in the Wash Shrunk in the Wash wrote:

Originally posted by Passing Through Passing Through wrote:

I have posted it many times already. Wont be repeating for the slow ones.


LOLLOLArrogance personified LOL

Oh and you’re clearly to scared to expose your theories 
I thought the response was witty and funny , for me StarStarStar
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:48am
Arguing against yourself now?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Bonjour Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:45am
Originally posted by Passing Through Passing Through wrote:

I notice you also commenting on Afghanistan(again) yesterday and not about horses.

I think everyone with a good heart and a conscience would comment on Afghanistan wouldn't they? what happened there is gut wrenching, and Morrison is as much to blame as Biden, they are both fools and lunatics, oh, and liars.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shrunk in the Wash Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:41am
Originally posted by Passing Through Passing Through wrote:

Got me again.

It’s not hard as Bonjour is showing 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:41am
I notice you also commenting on Afghanistan(again) yesterday and not about horses.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Bonjour Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:39am
Originally posted by Passing Through Passing Through wrote:

Ok, just wondering what qualifies you to comment?

Oh please, read the comment again, it relates to horse welfare, and you might not recognise that, but many do.....it means a lot to us.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:32am
Got me again.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shrunk in the Wash Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:31am
Originally posted by Passing Through Passing Through wrote:

I have posted it many times already. Wont be repeating for the slow ones.


LOLLOLArrogance personified LOL

Oh and you’re clearly to scared to expose your theories 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:29am
Ok, just wondering what qualifies you to comment?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Bonjour Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:28am
Originally posted by Passing Through Passing Through wrote:

Have you lived in China Bonjour?

NO....Thank God, only went to Beijing once, for 2 days, to accept an award, lowest 2 days of my life, gelati hole that it is, been to HK many many times, loved the old HK it was a treasure from the moment you landed at Kai Tak, if some of you remember the old airport.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:23am
I have posted it many times already. Wont be repeating for the slow ones.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Shrunk in the Wash Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 8:20am
Originally posted by Bonjour Bonjour wrote:

When China takes Taiwan.  

PT, what are your thoughts re this and how it should play out?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Passing Through Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 Oct 2021 at 6:53am
Have you lived in China Bonjour?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Bonjour Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 26 Oct 2021 at 8:13pm
When China takes Taiwan and we are at war, what happens to all those beautiful innocent horses on that Island? Does anyone care, I bet only a minuscule do....I think about it often, I think I know what will happen, repatriation, I can't find a Mandarin word for it, Cantonese yes, but they won't have a say.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Bonjour Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Oct 2021 at 11:52am
When China takes Taiwan and we are at War will the unvaccinated young men be conscripted? 
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Purges, a plot and the real reason why Xi Jinping might be afraid to leave China

It’s hard to see into the Chinese Communist Party’s politics. That doesn’t mean it doesn’t have any. Only that they’re well concealed. But every now and then, the careful stage management slips and the red curtain twitches aside unexpectedly. We’ve been treated to a few revealing moments in the past few weeks.

President Xi Jinping projects an air of serene imperial command. He has the most comprehensive grip on power of any Chinese president since Mao, many sinologists tell us, as he prepares to enter a third five-year term.But it seems that not all of the courtiers are as submissive as they appear to be, and Xi not quite as calm. Or, as the Lowy Institute’s Richard McGregor puts it: “We have election season; China has selection season, and we are moving into that now.

“Xi has a ton of enemies to handle. He can’t just coast into a third term on the basis of his personality cult.” Foreign media sometimes describe him as president for life. But while he removed the two-term limit on the presidency, he still needs party approval to win a third term when the Party Congress meets next October.

Sensationally, Xi has moved decisively against two of the topmost officials responsible for China’s internal security, a serving and a former vice-minister of public security, in less than a week.

One of them, Fu Zhenghua, served as vice-minister until October 2 and also as China’s Justice Minister. He was in charge of China’s police, secret police, prosecution and court system, putting him at the pinnacle of the country’s political-legal apparatus. He was described by Japan’s Nikkei newspaper as “the man who knew too much of Xi’s power plays”.“Fu is an intriguing case, he was considered close to Xi for many years,” explains the eminent analyst of elite Chinese politics, Willy Wo-Lap Lam. The bland-faced and unwrinkled 66-year-old Fu was considered the ruthless enforcer of Xi’s political purges. “He did Xi a big favour by removing one of his main opponents in 2013.”

Indeed, Fu broke an unwritten rule of top-level party politics to do so. With Xi’s backing, Fu broke the convention protecting former or current members of China’s inner cabinet, the Politburo Standing Committee, against criminal prosecution. He jailed a retired Politburo member for life on a corruption charge in 2015, raising the stakes for political survival in China.But now the chief purger has been himself purged. “Fu lost favour,” Lam tells me, “because he was seen to be involved in building cliques and factions within the police apparatus. What Xi and all party leaders are paranoid about is senior cadres building cliques and factions because they could be up to all sorts of conspiracy and so forth.”

But perhaps the most dramatic revelation in recent weeks was the publication of two articles last month outlining a foiled police plot against Xi. The exact nature of the plot isn’t clear – the reports didn’t mention whether they planned to swoop and arrest the President or to do something more grievous. McGregor points out that wherever he moves in China, his personal bodyguard unit has “a lot of people” around him.

A “a conspiratorial clique” allegedly was involved in “planning something illegal and improper” against the President during an expected visit to the city of Nanjing, in Jiangsu province.

Several high-level police figures from Jiangsu were named in the plot, supposedly financed by a billionaire who’d been executed for bribery in January, the prominent former head of the Huarong Asset Management company, Lai Xiaomin.

How credible is the story of the foiled plot, removed within 24 hours from the two sites that reported it?

“It seems very credible because the two media outlets – NetEase and Sohu.com – are not party mouthpieces, but I would describe them as semi-official,” says Lam, from the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “They are widely read and have been tolerated by the Propaganda Department for at least 20 years.”

So if Xi Jinping’s enemies are real and plotting against him, is he still paranoid? “Emperor-like figures, whether in China or other countries, because they are seen as demigods, they would be seen as paranoid” when they seek out enemies, says Lam, “and, in the case of Xi, paranoid about the security establishment”.

Xi launched a “rectification campaign” against the police and public security establishment in 2020 to ensure its loyalty in the approach to next year’s crucial Party Congress.

Between February to July this year alone, this purge meted out punishment to 178,431 security personnel, including 1,258 heads of departments, Lam points out in a recent essay.

And then there’s the army, Xi’s ultimate guarantor of power. The top officer of China’s Western Theatre Command has been changed four times in less than a year. Lam describes this as a sign that Xi’s control of the People’s Liberation Army is “less than ironclad”. This particular command is responsible for the sensitive areas of Xinjiang and Tibet as well as India and Afghanistan.

“There is speculation that these extraordinary personnel changes may have involved issues of loyalty to the Central Military Commission chairman”, who is Xi himself, according to Lam. “Xi still appears to harbour doubts about the loyalty of the military leadership.”A top party publication, Quishi, last month carried a warning against “cliquishness” in the army. It related the object lesson of Marshal Lin Biao’s unsuccessful attempt at an army coup d’état against Mao in 1971.

Overall, how secure is the emperor? “The fact that Xi is still implementing purges against his enemies indicates he’s quite paranoid and the fact that he’s not been out of the country for 650 days suggests he may be insecure about leaving the capital,” says Lam.

“He’s made many, many enemies because of his ruthless purges, but I’ve seen no evidence that they’ve been able to coalesce and put up a united front against Xi. He divides and rules.”

When it comes to party discipline, Xi once said, “to forge iron, you need a strong hammer”. Even after nearly a decade in power, Xi is wielding the hammer as hard as ever.

Peter Hartcher is international editor.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote acacia alba Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Oct 2021 at 11:44am
I keep getting phone messages about my account , with someone I have never heard of, telling me they sre shutting it down, which is fine by me.
animals before people.
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