Bitcoin Forum
April 27, 2024, 03:54:09 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Poll
Question: What happens first:
New ATH - 43 (69.4%)
<$60,000 - 19 (30.6%)
Total Voters: 62

Pages: « 1 ... 27037 27038 27039 27040 27041 27042 27043 27044 27045 27046 27047 27048 27049 27050 27051 27052 27053 27054 27055 27056 27057 27058 27059 27060 27061 27062 27063 27064 27065 27066 27067 27068 27069 27070 27071 27072 27073 27074 27075 27076 27077 27078 27079 27080 27081 27082 27083 27084 27085 27086 [27087] 27088 27089 27090 27091 27092 27093 27094 27095 27096 27097 27098 27099 27100 27101 27102 27103 27104 27105 27106 27107 27108 27109 27110 27111 27112 27113 27114 27115 27116 27117 27118 27119 27120 27121 27122 27123 27124 27125 27126 27127 27128 27129 27130 27131 27132 27133 27134 27135 27136 27137 ... 33304 »
  Print  
Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26368596 times)
This is a self-moderated topic. If you do not want to be moderated by the person who started this topic, create a new topic. (174 posts by 3 users with 9 merit deleted.)
vapourminer
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 4312
Merit: 3509


what is this "brake pedal" you speak of?


View Profile
September 06, 2020, 09:53:41 PM

What does it mean jojo? I dun geddit Embarrassed


 It depends upon what the meaning of the word "is" is.


fine. keep your secrets  Roll Eyes

new game, i think. answer a question with someones elses quote?



Advertised sites are not endorsed by the Bitcoin Forum. They may be unsafe, untrustworthy, or illegal in your jurisdiction.
1714233249
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1714233249

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1714233249
Reply with quote  #2

1714233249
Report to moderator
vapourminer
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 4312
Merit: 3509


what is this "brake pedal" you speak of?


View Profile
September 06, 2020, 10:08:15 PM
Merited by nutildah (1)

Has anyone got any charts with lines? Anyone?

I need some charts with lines.

at this point i would just settle for a line, period. and i swore off that a loooong time ago too.
Vectra
Jr. Member
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 345
Merit: 4


View Profile WWW
September 06, 2020, 10:35:29 PM

come on you beautiful bastard, give us some fucking bounce. Looked promising to break up few hours ago, but it's struggling again.

kurious
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2590
Merit: 1643



View Profile
September 06, 2020, 11:01:39 PM
Merited by strawbs (22), El duderino_ (4), LFC_Bitcoin (2), vapourminer (1), aesma (1), AlcoHoDL (1), goldkingcoiner (1)

Covid arguments
inevitably pointless
it is what it is

inevitably
what will bring us all solace
is Bitcoin of course


(and by the way..)


The Wall Observer
Does not need to Justify
Freedom of merit
goldkingcoiner
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2030
Merit: 1654


Verified Bitcoin Hodler


View Profile WWW
September 06, 2020, 11:36:55 PM

Covid arguments
inevitably pointless
it is what it is

inevitably
what will bring us all solace
is Bitcoin of course


(and by the way..)


The Wall Observer
Does not need to Justify
Freedom of merit

I don't have anymore merit so IOU 1 merit.
BobLawblaw
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1822
Merit: 5551


Neighborhood Shenanigans Dispenser


View Profile
September 06, 2020, 11:44:48 PM
Merited by El duderino_ (2), kurious (1), Last of the V8s (1), OutOfMemory (1)

OT: Covid-19 crap / Braindump

There's this dude on Twitter named @JamesTodaroMD, who is talking a lot about T-Cell Memory serving as a form of immunity to Coronaviruses, and Covid-19.

It's being hypothesized that folks with healthy immune systems, are near middle age, and have no co-morbidities, have good protection against Covid-19, if you've had colds in the past (been exposed to Coronaviruses before, on several occasions); can fight off and develop an immunity to a strain of Covid-19.

Also, T-Cells apparently are capable of forming immunity memory against Covid-19, and this is leading to PCR Tests for re-testing infections as near useless. If you've had Covid-19 already, test negative; it's possible to retest positive, while asymptomatic, at a later date, because the PCR test is detecting dead viral shedding of a Covid-19 infection that was already taken care of by your T-Cell memory, generating the needed immune response.

Also, it is speculated by the medical community there is "at least one more strain of Covid-19" which is possible to become full-course reinfected with, again.

Again, speaking about healthy folk here, with strong immune systems, and no co-morbidities.
goldkingcoiner
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2030
Merit: 1654


Verified Bitcoin Hodler


View Profile WWW
September 06, 2020, 11:53:46 PM
Last edit: September 07, 2020, 12:21:21 AM by goldkingcoiner
Merited by El duderino_ (3)

OT: Covid-19 crap / Braindump

There's this dude on Twitter named @JamesTodaroMD, who is talking a lot about T-Cell Memory serving as a form of immunity to Coronaviruses, and Covid-19.

It's being hypothesized that folks with healthy immune systems, are near middle age, and have no co-morbidities, have good protection against Covid-19, if you've had colds in the past (been exposed to Coronaviruses before, on several occasions); can fight off and develop an immunity to a strain of Covid-19.

Also, T-Cells apparently are capable of forming immunity memory against Covid-19, and this is leading to PCR Tests for re-testing infections as near useless. If you've had Covid-19 already, test negative; it's possible to retest positive, while asymptomatic, at a later date, because the PCR test is detecting dead viral shedding of a Covid-19 infection that was already taken care of by your T-Cell memory, generating the needed immune response.

Also, it is speculated by the medical community there is "at least one more strain of Covid-19" which is possible to become full-course reinfected with, again.

Again, speaking about healthy folk here, with strong immune systems, and no co-morbidities.

The longer we take for a vaccine, the more mutations there will be. Which is by itself not something you want.

Russia prematurely released a vaccine without testing much. Europe makes promises and shows no results. USA's too busy trying to keep everyone happy so they don't riot, especially with the corona economy and a president who spends his time acting out WWE fights... We got nothing.

Even if over 70% of the deaths are 65+ years or already sick. We remain with 30% of the young and healthy dropping like flies. Corona lungs will already be permanently damaged. What happens if you get corona again? Are you going to become part of the "elderly and already sick" death statistic?

Our biggest hope right now is that Europe or Israel does something.
strawbs
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 868
Merit: 1340



View Profile
September 06, 2020, 11:54:01 PM
Merited by Last of the V8s (1)

Sunday passes by
One more week must be endured
'til haikus return

Until then, we watch
Lines, charts. Merits come and go.
So sweet to hodl.

Lying awake now
Wondering whether hodl
Should be one or two?
aesma
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 2380
Merit: 916


fly or die


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 12:02:42 AM

OT: Covid-19 crap / Braindump

There's this dude on Twitter named @JamesTodaroMD, who is talking a lot about T-Cell Memory serving as a form of immunity to Coronaviruses, and Covid-19.

It's being hypothesized that folks with healthy immune systems, are near middle age, and have no co-morbidities, have good protection against Covid-19, if you've had colds in the past (been exposed to Coronaviruses before, on several occasions); can fight off and develop an immunity to a strain of Covid-19.

Also, T-Cells apparently are capable of forming immunity memory against Covid-19, and this is leading to PCR Tests for re-testing infections as near useless. If you've had Covid-19 already, test negative; it's possible to retest positive, while asymptomatic, at a later date, because the PCR test is detecting dead viral shedding of a Covid-19 infection that was already taken care of by your T-Cell memory, generating the needed immune response.

Also, it is speculated by the medical community there is "at least one more strain of Covid-19" which is possible to become full-course reinfected with, again.

Again, speaking about healthy folk here, with strong immune systems, and no co-morbidities.

Some of that/all of that is probably true, but what to do about it is up in the air. I'm below 40 so even with comorbidities I'm unlikely to die from COVID, I have a very strong immune system (I haven't been seriously ill since childhood, the few times I catch something I sleep it off with a bit of fever and it's gone in one night), should I seek to get the virus ? How would I do that ?

Also, some of the worst cases of COVID seem to be linked to the immune system going berserk, so my strong immune system might be a disadvantage after all.
nullius
Copper Member
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 630
Merit: 2610


If you don’t do PGP, you don’t do crypto!


View Profile WWW
September 07, 2020, 12:07:05 AM
Merited by vapourminer (1), AlcoHoDL (1)

As a matter of thinking differently about goals, I posit that, unless a major expenditure is desired, there should be no “liquidation” phase for any asset with the fundamentals to constitute a long-term investment (as opposed to a short-term speculation).  Given your apparent familiarity with estate planning, you can probably guess why:  A goal of parlaying personal success into the intergenerational accumulation of familial wealth.

Sure it is possible that you could suggest that one of your goals is to pass on all or some of your wealth, but seems to be somewhat unrealistic to suggest that to be any kind of reasonable goal that should motivate the vast majority of regular investors.

Cynical though I am, that is to me a shocking view of most investors.  Has the world really changed so much while I was sleeping?  “Back in the day”, I think, the goal that I stated was a significant motivating factor for most people who were striving to accrue wealth, and even a primary motive for not a few.

“I want a better future for my children and grandchildren, and their grandchildren” is unrealistic to expect as a motive for most investors?

On the other hand, maybe that explains why the markets are so fucked up:  The types of speculators who seek to Get Rich Quick are not typically long-term thinkers!  Of course, they would not give a hoot about their descendants.  Perhaps they may be fanatical Christians:  They take no thought for the morrow (Matthew 6:34).

What is best left to one’s children?  Depreciating fiat currency?  Or a portfolio of gold, real estate, and nowadays, Bitcoin?  (I don’t consider stocks to be a “long-term” investment, unless either it is a large share of a privately held company under management personally known and trusted, or you have a Warren Buffet strategy with commensurate capital.)

Sure if you put the assets in a kind of trust, then the you have chosen the various allocations, but if you give the assets to the kids outright, then as soon as they get control of the asset, they can choose to reallocate into whatever kind of asset that they prefer, including if they want to convert such assets into hookers, lambos and blow.  Their choice.   Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy

Of course, such planning must assure insofar as practicable that one’s heirs are of a character to grow the wealth and pass it on, rather than irresponsibly dissipating it.  Now, there is a discussion which could delve deeply into the context of the rule against perpetuities—among many other topics:  The legal terms of devises cannot substitute for sound breeding and upraising.

So, yeah, generally speaking, the rule against perpetuities suggest that you can only create some kind of legal instrument to control your assets and the wealth determinations for the measurement of any life in being plus 21 years.. So you are not going to be able to control how those assets are held forever, and I am NOT even sure if that is a reasonable goal,
(Boldface is Jay’s.)

I know that this will shock the hyper-individualists in the peanut gallery:  As an ethical matter, heirs do not receive bequests as their individual property.  Ethically if not legally, it is collective property held in trust for the family—for posterity, for future generations.

To protest this would be shameful.  There is no such thing as a free lunch.  With every privilege comes a duty.  People who receive wealth from their parents must accept that duty; thus, enjoy it though they may within the spans of their own lives, they must tend it wisely, and ultimately pass down the gifts that they have received.  You can’t have your cake and eat it, too.

No, heirs don’t have a right to spend their inheritances on “hookers, lambos and blow”.  If they do choose to do so, at least they should be subject to severe social shaming.  I think that used to be the case, when prodigal heirs were the exception rather than the rule.

Those who insist on having only absolute individual property rights should relieve themselves of this burden by having a solemn talk with their parents, and requesting to be disinherited.  That’s only fair.  Such individualists should earn their own wealth all by themselves, totally alone, and thus free up their parents to re-allocate bequests to their other children, or spend it all on their own pleasures, or bequeath it all to charity, or put it all into gold and then sink the gold to the bottom of the ocean.  It is their individual property right, yes?

That said, I don’t think that laws and legally enforceable terms in wills can help much here.  Perhaps a bit.  For example, once upon a time, in some European countries, there were laws that protected familial ownership of the family home.  If the inheritor of the family home tried to sell it outside the family, other potential heirs who were next in line could challenge and prohibit the sale; thus, the family home was effectually inalienable from the family, unless a unanimity of a whole generation should be in folly.

This must be unimaginable to most Americans:  There were families who held the same home for centuries.  I do not speak only of the nobility with their familial castles and palaces:  In some parts of Europe, it was not even rare for a family of peasant freeholders or the petite bourgeoisie to hold the same home for ten or twenty generations.  I think that most of this broke down during the Twentieth Century, and most of the relevant laws are probably no longer on the books.  It’s a shame.  Those people had excellent social stability.  They were productive and happy.  Children did not rebel against their parents, as seems to be expected nowadays (!).

But such things depend on the living.  Such “hand from beyond the grave” long, complex chains of devises as prohibited by the Rule Against Perpetuities could not instill in prodigal heirs the character that they lacked; and if they did not lack such character, the terms of long-ago wills would only be an unnecessary burden.

The point of my post was that the human element is much more important than the legalities.  If you have good kids, you don’t need fancy wills or trusts; but if your kids are

snot-nosed non-appreciative brats

...then no legal instruments can make them behave themselves after you are gone.

but hey, I understand that people sometimes want to contribute to some kind of lasting legacy that extends beyond their lives and perhaps touches the lives of many others.

Not just any others:  Their own descendants.  I hope that it is not politically incorrect nowadays to point out that people do and should prefer to benefit their own descendants over arbitrary “others”.  If so, then surely, mankind will go extinct.  I think that Darwin would agree with me:  What creature could long survive, if it did not prefer its own offspring?

(Of course, people often make bequests to charity, etc.—just as they often give such gifts in their lifetimes.  It is a different motive.  My point is that a bequest to one’s own posterity is very specific, and not just based on a vague notion of touching someone’s life out there.)



I suppose that this ran far afield of the original discussion about investments.  Re-reading the above before posting, I hope that it doesn’t come off as too negative; it’s certainly not intended to be argumentative.

It seems that whenever I start to think that I am too cynical, I find that to the contrary, I am naïve; and that idea that most investors don’t even include intergenerational wealth in their explicit goals is really shocking to me.  Perhaps, to some degree, that may be the “ethnic” in me speaking; in some parts of the world, much of what I have said would be commonplace.  But then, as noted above, such thinking used to be commonplace amongst Europeans, too.

No wonder the world is doomed.  Life is cheap, and people have lost all sense of purpose.  They are all short-term thinkers:  Life is short!

Well, it’s an important insight, in and of itself...  I’m glad to have this discussion.
nullius
Copper Member
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 630
Merit: 2610


If you don’t do PGP, you don’t do crypto!


View Profile WWW
September 07, 2020, 12:16:31 AM

What does it mean jojo? I dun geddit Embarrassed


 It depends upon what the meaning of the word "is" is.


fine. keep your secrets  Roll Eyes

In Bitcoinland, it is unsurprising that some should be cryptic.

Code:
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----

hF4DAAAAAAAAAAASAQdAUuGyU/Z/XkJcdu6zuPV2cYeEUcW/Cot3BwN1+fbwJyow
kIIWNt8NvYgaczHtjp3t61wW/+Ge+kP4ozXyLr72cI1MpTUJKBTa2LFLbQvLpajf
0sAGAadfjt+a4MQE7D2+SO7yWdYZABZqGbrCRSAVZ/4QhGHddm1gM8ODi06YhMBy
yeABzJxbYpdhqJ71XuSgoMmnO/Jsz8X4vn7mrWLGl1kJGob9m772P+mYfulfL/Gx
5c9DMteREa8ClHIY/AQ+GvnaMeUeOaPwAO89ELP9ussl55S4s6zRMuvTYZXptrRg
iBM63qpcCzH4BtuDH8qaoCT+ZJ1Q5y5ponQX1C6StcXunWTtR+ZvkXRm2JFGy8OA
Web3GJdc9rNH
=EymV
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
vapourminer
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 4312
Merit: 3509


what is this "brake pedal" you speak of?


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 12:23:22 AM
Merited by El duderino_ (2)

off topic? normal
on topic? on occasion
covid? bleh.. just stop

lines? now there ya go
bitcoin going up and up?
yeah baby lets talk

#haiku
LFC_Bitcoin
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3514
Merit: 9498


#1 VIP Crypto Casino


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 12:26:18 AM

Since I brought it up, I'll be happy to change the subject back to WO'ing bitcoin.

Let's see what's happening in the bitcoin marke--- ok still nothing.  Cool

Btw, who sold sub $10K ?

mind...., forget it Sad
aesma
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 2380
Merit: 916


fly or die


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 12:26:31 AM
Merited by vapourminer (1), JayJuanGee (1), 600watt (1)

About heirs, we often hear of stories where basically someone (a man usually) has worked his ass off all his life to be richer and richer, with the justification that "it's for my children", the problem being that they didn't actually take care of their children while doing that. Then they realize too late that they did it wrong.
Xinarae*
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 1414
Merit: 326



View Profile
September 07, 2020, 01:20:52 AM


lines? now there ya go
bitcoin going up and up?
yeah baby lets talk

#haiku
Observing $10265

Bitcoin already now going to up then last 24 hours hopefully $15k line over out at this month that this thinking specially bitcoin lover. like you can be believed bitcoin price going to up and up starting soon.
jbreher
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3038
Merit: 1660


lose: unfind ... loose: untight


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 02:09:25 AM

You learned correctly. Language is plastic (ask JJG about that one). Rules change.

You are suggesting that I twist language to my advantage in some kinds of ways?  

Absolutely. You have absolutely misused words to mean something quite opposed to their actual meaning, and when called out on it, you have used the 'words mean exactly what I want them to mean whenever I want them to mean that' defense.

Although, truth be told, it was not "to your advantage", as it was an egregious transparent act of disingenuosity ( <- alas - probably not available in the dictionary) fooling nobody, and therefore gaining you no advantage whatsoever.

Nothing egregious of late, this is true. But Pepperidge Farm remembers. As, no doubt, do you. Dissemble no further!
rpgmasters
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 702
Merit: 105


t.me/CryptoPortfel > JOIN


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 02:40:23 AM

https://twitter.com/OnlyAltcoins/status/1296237036949721093
soon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tz87FG1zH4k
JayJuanGee
Legendary
*
Online Online

Activity: 3696
Merit: 10167


Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 04:04:04 AM
Last edit: September 07, 2020, 04:15:34 AM by JayJuanGee


I still hate you, but,

eh join the club. I hate me too for what I did to you. I did defend it for a few minutes before you departed, but soon came to some sense, and have not and will not defend it since, because obviously cannot. Grossly stupid of me, I am truly sorry.

Bad boy, V8.

You deserve a spanking.



Seems that the rod may well  be spared, in this case.  

Looks to me like the $1,000/btc and below price levels need more testing. I'm just telling ya'll the truth. I could see maybe bitcoin long term stable in the $200-$500 range after a lot of faffing about.

If we do go down there, $975 looks like some good support

If we reach $5, I'm intended to buy some more. So there's certainly some support at $5, modest but you've got to start somewhere.

Add three zeros, and you are going to have troubles finding any situation in which you would be able to buy below $5k - even in a hypothetical fire sale... but we can all have some kinds of fantasies, I suppose.
Capanatlax
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 15
Merit: 15


View Profile
September 07, 2020, 04:06:10 AM

Funding seems to be really low for quite some time now, and market is going sideways + we are near support, I think we are near the local bottom right now


https://www.tradingview.com/x/ui7ojK9Y/

Exactly see to trample near the supporting area also i think approximately $8k supporting area albeit not break $9200 We now have to wait to see the next boundaries or bottom over and hit exactly the bottom point.
nullius
Copper Member
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 630
Merit: 2610


If you don’t do PGP, you don’t do crypto!


View Profile WWW
September 07, 2020, 04:32:02 AM
Merited by AlcoHoDL (1)

About heirs, we often hear of stories where basically someone (a man usually) has worked his ass off all his life to be richer and richer, with the justification that "it's for my children", the problem being that they didn't actually take care of their children while doing that. Then they realize too late that they did it wrong.

Eh, I don’t buy it.  The mother is always the greatest influence on the development of a child’s character.

That’s not feminist stuff.  Even Napoleon said so; and he was so much not-a-feminist that he banned women from wearing pants in public within the city of Paris, on pain of arrest by the police.  (That law was repealed in 2013, when feminists realized it was still on the books and screamed bloody murder.  Napoleon’s own mother, by the way, was of such a famously forceful character that Nietzsche later cited her as an example of “the most powerful and influential women in the world” (Beyond Good and Evil, Aphorism 239).  And she raised a son who conquered the Continent...)

Indeed, I would go so far as to say that all of a man’s efforts directly to shape a child’s character are nugatory.  A father is, in the abstract, a fixed axis of power and authority in a household (which is why modernity prefers single motherhood...).  His primary influence on the child is through his relationship with his wife; it is the attitude that she exudes toward him which is absorbed by the child, at the very young ages when the mind has the plasticity to be shaped—a matter of emotions, the woman’s domain, and not of rational didacticism.  If a woman respects and admires her husband, then the children will absorb her devotion, and they will later report being “close to Dad growing up”.  If she despises him, then even without conscious intention, she will undermine him; and the children will always have “daddy issues”, no matter what he does.

If it seems I make women out to be powerful—yes, they are.  In all times and societies in which men have held exclusive political leadership and “oppressed” women through “patriarchy”, women have exercised a profound influence on the world by shaping the next generation of sons—and the next generation of mothers for grandsons.  The sexes are unavoidably interdependent; and talk about men “going their own way” is equally foolish to feminist nonsense about fish and bicycles.

Moreover, if you were to look back to times when families were really stable—before 1850, maybe even earlier—you will find that society had a very different idea of the paternal rôle.  Fathers weren’t babysitters; they were certainly involved with their families, but much more detached from daily childrearing (especially of very young children) than people would expect nowadays.  Within the family, fathers and mothers were not “partners in childcare” or anything of that nature.  Don’t forget that the feminist masculinization of women has been linked to the feminization of men, which has been ongoing for at least 170 years now.  Much is made of how far women have moved into masculine jobs; how much have men moved into women’s work?

Before approximately the middle of the Nineteenth Century, indeed, the respective rôles of the sexes were so drastically different that it is difficult for us nowadays even to imagine what life was really like.

None of this discussion is new.  Read books on the subject from the circa 1900, plus or minus a few decades; you will find them eerily similar to arguments seen all over the Internet nowadays, but much more insightful.  And they, in turn, will provide you references stretching back much further.

For my part, when I contemplate the general pattern of human society throughout most of history, excepting only periods of cultural degeneration and the collapse of civilizations, I am willing to bet on what enduring experience has shown to work.

And in the instances that you describe, I think you will find that there were many sources of dysfunction other than simply, “Dad was too busy.”



For obvious reasons, I have ignored the opposite case of the “a man usually” clause.  Of course, if a mother devotes her life to her chasing money, money, money at the expense of her children, they will grow up to be neurotic, perhaps psychotic.
Pages: « 1 ... 27037 27038 27039 27040 27041 27042 27043 27044 27045 27046 27047 27048 27049 27050 27051 27052 27053 27054 27055 27056 27057 27058 27059 27060 27061 27062 27063 27064 27065 27066 27067 27068 27069 27070 27071 27072 27073 27074 27075 27076 27077 27078 27079 27080 27081 27082 27083 27084 27085 27086 [27087] 27088 27089 27090 27091 27092 27093 27094 27095 27096 27097 27098 27099 27100 27101 27102 27103 27104 27105 27106 27107 27108 27109 27110 27111 27112 27113 27114 27115 27116 27117 27118 27119 27120 27121 27122 27123 27124 27125 27126 27127 27128 27129 27130 27131 27132 27133 27134 27135 27136 27137 ... 33304 »
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!