Resultados de la búsqueda:

>>2420904
Dime de que presumes y te diré de que careces.
>>2420906
No, hoy sí tuve feria para pagarlos.
>>2420904
Putos billetes de 500 porque los hicieron parecidos a los de a 20? Creo que pague una coca con uno de 500 pensando que era de 20, porque no encuentro mi billete.
>>12738
Eso pasa porque no estan protegidos por lá oración a Dios.
>>210872
>Imagino que sería una imagen horrible ver a King mudando de craneo, rascándola para reemplazarla por una nueva más grande que comienza siendo blanda y carnoza pero eventualmente acaba endureciendose.
Sí le preguntaras a Dana diría que es como lo describiste, viendo que a ella le gustan ese tipo de cosas raras.

Pero viendo que King sigue usando el mismo esqueleto con el que Eda lo encontró (El que esta roto) significa que ellos crecen a medida que el individuo crece.
>>1667238
>But it didn’t end there, as WND continued:

>Both Haitian officials and the Haiti Observateur stated that Clinton reaffirmed his faith in voodoo during his March 31, 1995 visit to the island. The official purpose of the visit as told by the American media was to celebrate Haiti’s supposed “return to democracy. ” However, the Haitian press had a much different story. The headlines of the March 29, 1995 issue of the Haiti Observateur read: “CLINTON ASSISTERA A UNE CEREMONIE VAUDOU EN HAITI” (Clinton to assist in a voodoo ceremony in Haiti). The story, confirmed by Haitian officials, stated that initiating Clinton under the power of voodoo had two purposes — to render him impervious to the attacks of his Republican enemies in Washington, and to guarantee his re-election. While the initiation could protect Clinton from his political enemies, they say, it could not protect him from himself

>The ceremony was said to have been hidden within a public event touted as a dedication of a monument to Haiti’s boat people. The focal point was a “magic well” concealed inside a sculptor’s rendition of a brick and concrete boat which was hurriedly constructed for the event in the vicinity of Aristide’s residence at Tabarre
>>2420904
¿cómo estás campeón?
¿hoy no te faltaron tus 8 pesos en el corte de caja del OXXO?
aldo, deja en paz a Loan, ¿no ves que se la cogieron 4 otakus y ya anda arrepentida?
>>1667234
>“After several minutes of rhythmic dancing to pounding drums, the spirits arrived, seizing a woman and a man. The man proceeded to rub a burning torch all over his body and walk on hot coals without being burned. The woman, in a frenzy, screamed repeatedly, then grabbed a live chicken and bit its head off. Then the spirits left and those who had been possessed fell to the ground.”

>Clinton wrote that his “brief foray into the world of voodoo” furthered his fascination with “the way different cultures try to make sense of life, nature, and the virtually universal belief that there is a nonphysical spirit force at work in the world.”

>Clinton had recently lost the race for congress and Arkansas was about to have an opening for attorney general, so he was trying to decide whether to give it another run.

>“By the time we got back from Haiti, I had determined to run for attorney general,” Clinton recalled. This time, he won – and was on his way to the White House.

>One lesson he took from Haiti, he wrote: “The Lord works in mysterious ways.”

>Yes, the Lord does work in mysterious ways Bill, and I don’t think a voodoo ceremony is going to save you now

>This was potentially the early stages of the Clintons intrigue into the world of voodoo, and they returned several times to Haiti for voodoo ceremonies (and black magic) to assist with Bill’s elections. This may sound like a contrived story, but this has been confirmed by Haitian officials and priests, in addition to my source, a native of Haiti. It is important to understand that surveys have put the number of voodoo adherents in Haiti as high as 85 percent, even among the educated classes, and Houngans (a voodoo priest) are even more important in the Haitian capital than psychiatrists are in Washington, D.C.
>>2420890
Para nada