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Gast

#6826 Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 14:42

#6824: - Re: weg met de onmens 

 ga college geven. dit is the real world.


Gast

#6827 Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 14:48

#6826: - Re: Re: weg met de onmens    ga college geven. dit is the real world.

 Och, kun je er weer niet tegen dat er ook mensen zijn die anders denken dan jij? En nee, het leven is geen MTV-serie.


Gast

#6828

2014-08-08 14:57


Gast

#6829 Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 14:58

#6827: - Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

 Verbreed je blik. het leven omvat meer als de straat waarin je woont. jouw utopie is een wereld waarin iedereen lief is voor elkaar. paradox: die utopie laat je wegsmelten als sneeuw voor de zon door te ontkennen dat er op deze wereld, in nederland, in den haag (waar deze petitie over ging) onmensen zijn die schreeuwen dat mensen om het leven gebracht moeten worden. volgens jouw moet dat dus kunnen. de meerderheid vind van niet. als ook nog de doden konden spreken die op 4 mei herdacht worden, de doden die het slachtoffer werden van de onmens, krijg je misschien reden om 'vaagtekens' te zetten bij je 'alllebloemetjeszijnliefvoorelkaarwereldje'


Gast

#6830

2014-08-08 14:59

Gelukkig heb je altijd weer een ad rem antwoord klaar …

 

 

 

 

… om te plakken.


Gast

#6831 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 15:01

#6829: - Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

 Leer eindelijk een lezen, suffe drol. Ik heb nergens over een utopie gesproken en ik heb al helemaal nergens gezegd dat de gewraakte leuzen tijdens de demonstratie in Den Haag 'moeten kunnen'.

Leg mij geen woorden in de mond en verdraai niet wat ik gezegd heb.


Gast

#6832 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 15:03

#6831: - Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

 suffe drol...

einde communicatie. (period)


Gast

#6833 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 15:06

#6832: - Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

 Werkelijk? Had ik dat eerder geweten, dat je over zoiets ging vallen.

Afijn, inhoudelijk ontwijk je dus weer de discussie. Hoe verwonderlijk?

Mensen betitelen als 'onmens', daar heb je geen problemen mee, maar zelf aangesproken worden met 'suffe drol', omdat je weigert te lezen wat er staat en mijn woorden voortdurend blijft verdraaien, DAAR val je over?

Verbaast het je als ik zeg dat ik het 'einde van de communicatie' niet echt betreur? Ik hoop dat je je aan je woord houdt, deze keer.


Gast

#6834 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 15:35

#6833: - Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

 

 Werkelijk? Had ik dat eerder geweten, dat je over zoiets ging vallen.

Afijn, inhoudelijk ontwijk je dus weer de discussie. Hoe verwonderlijk?

 

Je vriendjes in Irak en Gaza zijn meesters in het ontwijken van de discussie. En dat geschreeuw eindigt alleen met gerectificeerde bommen op de kopjes.

Maar veel plezier in Utrecht zondag met je Free Free Palestine gutmenschjes.

De andere helft laat in Den Haag ff zien met een Obama-shirt dat je met westelijke waarden niet fuckt.


Gast

#6835 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 15:36

#6834: - Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

 Niet de moeite waard om op te antwoorden.


Gast

#6836

2014-08-08 15:37

Op dit moment is mijn Soennitische, blij dat de ramadan over is, overbuurman zijn dochter weer eens aan t afranselen. Aangifte 4 gaat volgen. Multicul it is.


Gast

#6837 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 15:44

#6835: - Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

 hoef je ook niet te doen. Dit is mijn mening. Dat mag hier. Dank je wel opa.


Gast

#6838

2014-08-08 16:11

't wordt zo weer de jaren dertig van de vorige eeuw!

Gast

#6839 Israel carries out strikes on Gaza after rocket fire resumes

2014-08-08 16:19

Gaza City (CNN) -- For residents of Gaza and southern Israel, the fleeting period of calm is over.

The Israeli military said it carried out strikes on militant targets in Gaza on Friday in response to a barrage of rocket fire after a three-day truce in the region came to an end without a longer-term agreement.

At least 50 rockets were fired at Israel after the cease-fire expired Friday morning, the Israel Defense Forces said. Most of the rockets hit unpopulated areas, but one injured a civilian and slightly injured a soldier, the IDF said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon ordered the military to respond forcefully to the resumption in rocket fire, Israeli officials said. The IDF said it "targeted terror sites across the Gaza Strip."

Several explosions were heard in Gaza City as Israeli fighter jets flew overhead. Local media reported airstrikes elsewhere in the territory. One strike in Gaza City killed a 10-year-old boy, said Ashraf el-Qedra, a spokesman for the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

Hamas, the Islamic militant group that holds power in Gaza, said that Palestinian officials at peace talks in Cairo hadn't agreed to extend the truce but would continue negotiations.

But Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev told CNN that the resumption of rocket fire means Hamas has "broken the fundamental premise of the talks in Cairo."

The Israeli delegation arrived back from Egypt about an hour before the cease-fire ended, Israeli officials said.

Israel says truce violated

Israel, which pulled its ground forces out of Gaza earlier this week, had said Thursday it was willing to extend the truce unconditionally.

Two militant factions -- Islamic Jihad and the Al-Nasser Salah al-Din Brigades -- who have fought alongside Hamas in Gaza under the banner of "the resistance" said they had fired rockets at Israel on Friday.

"The enemy ended the cease-fire when he refused to accept the demands of the resistance and he bears responsibility for the consequences of that," the military wing of Islamic Jihad said in a statement.

Roughly three hours before the truce was due to end, the IDF said two rockets fired from Gaza had hit southern Israel, without causing any casualties. "Terrorists have violated the cease-fire," the IDF wrote on Twitter.

It was unclear who in Gaza, where multiple militant factions are active, launched the two rockets, which landed near Eshkol in southern Israel.

 

Hamas denies responsibility for the rockets fired before the cease-fire ended, said Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokesman for the group. The allegations "are based on Israeli reports aimed at confusing the situation," the Gaza-based spokesman said.

No breakthrough in talks

The reports of rocket fire came as hopes faded for an agreement to extend the Egyptian-brokered cease-fire, which began Tuesday.

Under the truce, Israeli and Palestinian delegations held indirect talks in Cairo through Egyptian go-betweens. But the two sides appeared to be too far apart in their positions.

A Palestinian member of the negotiating delegation, not authorized to speak to the media directly about the talks, told CNN on condition of anonymity that the two sides failed to agree on the wording of a cease-fire extension that included the Palestinian demand for Israel to lift the blockade on Gaza. The official also indicated the Palestinian demands to open an airport and a seaport, and to release prisoners who had been released and rearrested in June, were declined by the Israeli negotiators.

Despite the lack of a breakthrough in the talks, Israel had said Thursday that it was willing to extend the cease-fire unconditionally. The country's military said earlier in the week that it had achieved its goal of destroying Hamas' network of tunnels that extend under the border into Israel. In light of the recent wave of rocket attacks, on Friday the country's Foreign Ministry said via Twitter that Israel "will not conduct negotiations while under fire."

But Hamas, one of several factions in the Palestinian delegation, meanwhile, says the longstanding Israeli blockade of Gaza must end before a lasting peace deal can be reached.

"Up until this minute, the Palestinian delegation did not receive the Israeli response on any of the Palestinian demands and positions in this conflict in order to reach a cease-fire fire agreement or in trying to end the war," said Izzat Risheq, a Hamas senior leader.

The Hamas leader said the Israelis are "evasive and dishonest and are just wasting time. They bear the full responsibility for the breakdown of the talks," adds Risheq.

As violence flared once again Friday, a senior PLO official said that cease-fire talks in Cairo were still possible and Israel should "lift the siege of Gaza immediately."

"Talks are not dead" Saeb Erakat, a veteran Palestinian negotiator told CNN.

While the spokesman for the Egyptian Foreign Ministry, Ambassador Badr Abdel Atti, told CNN that discussions are still "ongoing" but could not elaborate on the specifics in an effort not to "jeopardize the talks."

Civilian population suffering

The lack of a deal appears to be reviving a conflict that brought death and destruction to large areas of Gaza and thousands of rockets fired at Israel.

Renewed hostilities also deepen the misery for people in Gaza who were wounded, displaced or deprived of basic necessities by the first four weeks of fighting.

On Friday, the Palestinian Ministry of Health issued new casualty numbers for the conflict -- 1,893 deaths, including 446 children, and 9,805 injured.

It's unclear how many of the Palestinian dead were militants.

The United Nations has estimated that at least 70% of the dead were civilians. The Israel Defense Forces believes it killed about 900 militants -- roughly half of the dead.

Israeli officials have said 64 Israeli soldiers and three civilians in Israel died. Israel's Iron Dome missile defense system intercepted many of the rockets fired at populated areas of the country.

Additionally, about 65,000 Gaza residents lost their homes to the fighting, according to U.N. estimates. The territory is also short on running water, power and medical supplies.

 

"We have an emergency situation in Gaza," Erakat said.


Gast

#6840 Which Mideast power brokers support Hamas?

2014-08-08 16:22

(CNN) -- If the Gaza truce holds and Israel's Operation Protective Edge comes to its conclusion, some things are certain.

Both Israel and Hamas will declare military victory -- Israel pointing to the destruction of militants' tunnels and depletion of Hamas' rocket supply; Hamas pointing to dozens of dead Israeli troops and the survival of Hamas leadership in Gaza.

But unlike in previous conflicts, when Hamas had the support of many Arab nations, things have changed. This time, as CNN has reported, the fighting between Israel and Hamas has been a proxy war for the Mideast.

Key regional players Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia have their own reasons to want to fend off the Muslim Brotherhood, of which Hamas is part, experts say. And Europe, like the United States, lists Hamas as a terrorist organization for its numerous attacks on civilians.

But the group does have the support of some countries.

"It's no longer the Muslims against the Jews," said Danielle Pletka, vice president of foreign and defense policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute. "Now it's the extremists -- the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Hezbollah, and their backers Iran, Qatar and Turkey -- against Israel and the more moderate Muslims including Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia."

A look at some key Hamas supporters:

Turkey

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan openly supports Hamas.

"Erdogan has tried to use the cause of the Brotherhood to bolster his own Islamist credentials at home," says Eric Trager, of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Turkey also has "more of an ideological sympathy with the Brotherhood," Trager says.

Qatar

Qatar supported the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt -- which was toppled from power in a coup last year. Qatar funds many Muslim Brotherhood figures in exile, including Hamas political leader Khaled Meshaal, who is believed to have orchestrated numerous terrorist attacks.

"Qatar has a long history of providing shelter to Islamist groups, amongst them the Muslim Brotherhood and the Taliban," Shashank Joshi of the Royal United Services Institute tells Time.

Advocating for Hamas is beneficial to Turkey and Qatar in their political objectives because the cause draws popular support at home, says world affairs writer Frida Ghitis in a CNN.com column.

It's no longer the Muslims against the Jews. Now it's the extremists -- the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Hezbollah, and their backers Iran, Qatar and Turkey -- against Israel and the more moderate Muslims including Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia.
Danielle Pletka, American Enterprise Institute

But some question whether Qatar's support still is for Hamas is still strong. The country's financial support to the group "largely dried up" as Qatar sought "to mend ties with its neighbors, with whom it had fallen out in part for backing the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt," the Council on Foreign Relations said.

While Qatar and Turkey are powerful allies, "Hamas might wish for more support given the breadth of the Arab world," Time reported.

Iran and Syria

In the past, Iran and Syria supported Hamas. Iran supplied the group with weapons; Syria was home to Meshaal.

But Meshaal did not support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the country's civil war. In 2012, Meshaal left for Qatar, causing a breakdown in his relationship with both Syria and its ally Iran, says Firas Abi Ali, head of Middle East and North Africa Country Risk and Forecasting at the global information company IHS.

And while Iran still professes to support Hamas, such claims "are more ostentatious, showy, exaggerated and theatrical rather than genuine and practical," writes Majid Rafizadeh, an Iranian-American scholar at Harvard University, in a column for al Arabiya.

Iran, which is a Muslim but not an Arab nation, "uses Hamas (as well as Tehran's support for the Palestinian cause) as a tool to project its power and influence in the Arab world," he argues.

The Council on Foreign Relations says Iran, while cutting its funding to Hamas in recent years, "sought to bolster its ties to other resistance groups in the region, such as Islamic Jihad."

Hezbollah

The Lebanese militant group based in Lebanon is aligned with al-Assad's regime in Syria. During the conflict, Hezbollah reached out to Hamas, praising its "steadfastness."

This does not mean the relationship is repaired to where it stood before Syria's civil war, but "a new realignment might happen," Farwaz Gerges of the London School of Economics told Time.

Popular support

Hamas' greatest support in the wake of the conflict with Israel may be from the public in Gaza and other parts of the Arab world.

"Hamas is not a monolith, nor is it only a terrorist group," Ed Husain of the Council on Foreign Relations writes on CNN.com. "It is a social movement, with a mass membership, a popular message of resistance that resonates across the Muslim world, and a political party with which we must negotiate."

Some analysts believe Hamas will emerge stronger from the fight with Israel. The conflict "will only further radicalize the Palestinian population -- and alienate frustrated friends in the United States," Mark Perry of Foreign Policy argues.

Before Operation Protective Edge, a poll by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy found that most Palestinians in Gaza oppose a two-state solution and want to work toward abolishing Israel -- a goal that is in line with Hamas' charter.

But the poll also found most Palestinians support nonviolent methods of achieving their goals.

Support could affect arms supply

While Hamas' recruitment might soar now, militarily the group "is on the ropes," with tunnels destroyed and much of its rocket supply depleted, writes Rick Francona, retired U.S. Air Force intelligence officer and CNN military analyst.

"After similar conflicts in the past, Hamas has been rearmed and resupplied by its supporters, primarily Iran and to some extent Syria. The most efficient method for the rearming and resupply effort has been via the large number of smuggling tunnels between Gaza and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.

"That is not likely to be the case this time -- another blow to Hamas, which it must factor in to its assessment of this conflict as well as its future planning."


Gast

#6841

2014-08-08 16:29

 

'Als we willen dat het stopt, dan stopt het. Je moet het hard genoeg willen, met elkaar, zij aan zij, en voor niets wijken. Geef het tuig geen seconde de kans te hopen dat wij een stap terug doen, maar ontneem ze die hoop. Onthoud dat ze niets zijn behalve hun haat, dat ze geen eigenwaarde hebben. Alleen hun haat. En die bezit hen. Maar hun haat tegen alles dat anders is, is eigenlijk de haat tegen zichzelf. Dat ze nooit, gewoon, met vriendjes kind zijn geweest. Dat ze de taal die ook van hen een succes had kunnen maken, niet goed spreken waardoor ze op school achter bleven en ze allemaal wegstroomden naar het praktijkonderwijs - ondanks dat een normale vertegenwoordiging het IQ moet hebben voor hoger onderwijs. Ze haten zichzelf, ze haten de achterlijke sociale omstandigheden waar ze uit komen. Ze schamen zich voor hun ouders en daarover haten ze zichzelf weer. Hun enige uitweg uit dit deze put van minderwaardigheid is de verheerlijking van een imaginair verleden en de volledige onderwerping aan een repressieve orthodoxie. Het geluk dat zij daarin vinden is de sexuele bevrediging van de vernedering. Ze roepen de suprematie van RTL5 en SBS6 uit om eindelijk bij iets groots te horen. Maar hoe harder ze schreeuwen, hoe harder de echo verraad dat het gebouw van hun gedachten leeg is. Hun enige hoop op de toekomst komt voort uit hun gedrag van vernietiging dat zo kenmerkend is voor mensen zonder eigenwaarde. Hun enige beeld van de toekomst is er een van dood en verderf. De leugen van de reality-soap drijft hen voort. Het is de overwinning van de haat, van de God van de pecunia. De haat die als voortrazend vuur alles op zijn pad verteert. Maar aan het eind verteert het ook zichzelf. Heel Tokkistan valt er aan ten prooi. En er is maar een weg uit dit dal: laat ze hun haat, laat ze aan hun eigen haat ten onder gaan.'

 


Gast

#6842 What chance do Yazidis have against group too brutal for al Qaeda?

2014-08-08 16:31

Editor's note: Maajid Nawaz is co-founder and chairman of Quilliam, a think tank formed to combat extremism in society, and the author of"Radical." The views expressed in this commentary are solely the author's. For more on this story watch The World Right Now with Jim Clancy at 7:30 p.m. GMT tonight.

(CNN) -- The terror group ISIS (Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) which has shortened its name to "Islamic State" or "IS", led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, its self-proclaimed caliph, has hit a new low. Having spread across huge swathes of Iraq and Syria, leaving absolute devastation in its wake, its latest offensive has brought it to Sinjar, a city in the north western region of Nineveh in Iraq and home to at least 200,000 of the world's 700,000 members of the Yazidi faith

ISIS has always worn its love for sectarianism on its sleeve, and its vicious hatred for Yazidis has been no mystery. Repeatedly, disturbing videos have been circulated on social media depicting Yazidis held in tiny cells being cruelly taunted by ISIS prison guards. On top of this, "IS" propagandists have continuously warned of their intention to execute or enslave the adherents of this ancient Zoroastrian-linked religion, whom they view as "devil worshippers" on account of their revering a fallen angel.

Therefore, it should come as no surprise that, when it seemed that ISIS were about to sweep into Sinjar last week, thousands upon thousands of Yazidis fled from their homes. Tragically, alongside the local Yazidis that fled were others who had taken refuge in Sinjar the month before, when ISIS captured Tal Afar, a neighboring city.

Everyone's fears proved to be rightly placed, with ISIS fiercely battling and soon routing the Kurdish Peshmerga,leaving them in control of Sinjar and many of its surroundings.

What's transpiring now is a new Kosovo, an ethno-religious cleansing on a huge scale. That it is taking place at the hands of a jihadist group too extreme for al Qaeda, a group that has repeatedly shown that it has internationalist ambitions, is all the more worrying. 
Maajid Nawaz, Quilliam

While most fled to refugee camps in semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan, some 30,000 families ended up on Mount Sinjar, where they are now stranded, surrounded by jihadists.

They are forced to sleep in caves, faced with temperatures of over 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) and have no food or water, let alone arms to defend themselves with. Initially, they could contact the outside world using mobile phones. Now, though, most of these have run out of battery and there is no telling how critical the situation has become. What is for certain is that their prospects for escape are minimal.

This is yet another instance of the appalling brutality of "IS", a group that has consistently abused the most basic human rights of the people it has forced itself upon. Over the last two months, it has committed countless mass summary executions of Shiite soldiers and tortured and shot hundreds of Sunni tribespeople who resisted its rule before taking to social media to boast about their actions.

Likewise, it recently gave the entire Christian population of Mosul a choice -- either they leave their homes and livelihoods, or they pay a tax to IS on the basis of their religion. Those who refused to do either faced death.

The list of human rights offenses goes on. These jihadists are making a mockery of international law. It is becoming increasingly clear that they will not stop committing these criminal acts unless they are forced to stop. Unfortunately, the prospects for this are becoming more remote by the day, as ISIS fighters continue from strength to strength,capturing most of north-west Syria's largest military facilities and repelling all counter attacks by the Iraqi Armed Forces (IAF).

We, the international community, must not turn a blind eye to what's happening in on Mount Sinjar like we did in the wake of the expulsion of Mosuli Christians or the mass executions of Shiite soldiers. What's transpiring now is a new Kosovo, an ethno-religious cleansing on a huge scale. That it is taking place at the hands of a jihadist group too extreme for al Qaeda, a group that has repeatedly shown that it has internationalist ambitions, is all the more worrying. It is ludicrous that no one has acted against it already when it is clear that neither the IAF nor the Peshmerga is capable of shutting it down alone.

ISIS has acted with impunity in the region for far too long. It has been allowed to take control of an area larger than the United Kingdom, commandeer hundreds of thousands of dollars of U.S.-made weaponry and subjugate nearly 6 million people.

The international community needs to step up to this most troubling challenge. It must provide substantial and coordinated humanitarian assistance to all refugees and internally displaced people -- of any faith or ethnicity -- in the region. Furthermore, diplomatic pressure must be exerted on Turkey, the only military power in the region that stands a chance of crushing this false caliphate. Ankara must be ready to bury its differences with the Kurds and extend all the assistance it can to them on a human rights basis, even if this means military support.

Lastly, it is imperative that states across the world reaffirm their absolute commitment to article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which establishes the right to free thought, conscience and belief. If we do not stand by our principles, who will?

It is not enough to just condemn something with rhetoric; the world must react robustly and directly to these reprehensible developments.


Gast

#6843

2014-08-08 16:38

Kijk, dit is een 'mening' en niet dat discriminerende geneuzel van jou.


Gast

#6844

2014-08-08 16:51

Zullen we vast gaan brainstormen wat we gaan doen als een halve gare hier wat opblaast omdat Obama verantwoordelijkheid pakt


Gast

#6845

2014-08-08 16:53

Voorstel: tekstjes plakken?


Gast

#6846

2014-08-08 17:28

Dion Graus getrouwd in gothicstijl

 

PVV-Tweede Kamerlid Dion Graus is vrijdagmiddag in Roermond in het huwelijk getreden met zijn vriendin en manager Joyce Schmeytz. De politicus droeg tijdens de inzegening een lange zwarte fluwelen mantel met een groot paars kruis op zijn rug. Ook zijn kersverse vrouw was gehuld in dergelijk gewaad.

 

Na het wettelijk huwelijk, dat werd voltrokken in de kapel aan De Weerd in Roermond, verplaatste het gezelschap met onder meer Geert Wilders als getuige van Graus zich naar Asselt, waar de kerkelijke inzegening plaatsvond.

 

 

Nee, die staat met twee benen in de realiteit.

 


Gast

#6847 Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens

2014-08-08 18:13

#6832: - Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: weg met de onmens 

En ho ho ho een zak met lol, eeeh....dat schreef iemand anders. Nog steeds niet gemerkt dat anderen hier ook hun gral en brol ejaculeren; de ene gast, op de gast van de andere gast een eind weg tiert? en ach....waarschijnlijk lul ik hier ook tegen de verkeerde (....'tsik tsik') 


Gast

#6848

2014-08-08 18:18

 

Het is u niet gelukt (-:

U mag weg blijven.

 


Gast

#6849 Re:

2014-08-08 18:29

#6848: -   ...'u mag wegblijven' etc...

Kijk dit bedoel ik. ...Nog steeds niet gemerkt dat anderen hier ook hun gral en brol ejaculeren... (sic èn deja vu)  Deze raaskallende zielepoot heeft wéér geen bevredigende pornosite gevonden om zijn kwakje te lozen. hij zit nu de hele avond met zijn armetierige aanhangsel te spelen en als hij hier een post tegenkomt die zijn prostaat kietelt.... enfin vul maar aan, ik ben zo al vulgair genoeg ;-)


Gast

#6850

2014-08-08 18:38

 

Het is u niet gelukt (-:

U mag weg blijven. U had het beloofd.