[1/16/17] What will America look like after 4 years of Trump? [
Quora]
[12/22/16] Trump tweets that the U.S. must
expand nuclear capability
[12/15/16] Kudlow close to being named Trump's
chief economist
[12/13/16] Trump
picks Rex Tillerson, Exxon CEO, as Secretary of State
[12/13/16] Reid
blames Comey for Hillary losing
[12/7/16] Trump meets with DiCaprio to discuss
green jobs
[12/7/16] Trump
picks Linda McMahon to lead Small Business Administration [jokes to come]
[12/7/16] Trump picks
guy suing EPA to head EPA
[12/7/16]
Time person of the
year (who else?)
[12/5/16] Trump
chooses Ben Carson to be secretary of Department of Housing and Urban Development
[12/5/16]
Al Gore meets with Trump and Ivanka about climate change
[12/1/16] Trump names General Mattis as
Secretary of Defense
[11/29/16] Trump names Price and Verma to repeal and
replace Obamacare
[11/27/16] Trump says it is sad that Clinton in joining
recount effort
[11/22/16] Trump
not looking to hurt the Clintons
[11/22/16] Trump says he enjoyed
meeting with Obama
[11/22/16] Trump keeping an
open mind on climate change
[11/15/16] In the
60 Minutes interview, Trump said he won easily. I was surprised he said that since he lost the popular vote. He did win the Electoral College vote 290-232 according to the
New York Times.
But
how did he win? He flipped
five states from
2012.
Florida 49.1% to 47.8%
Ohio 52.1% to 43.5% (surprisingly big here)
Iowa 51.8% to 42.2% (big again here)
Wisconsin 47.9% to 46.9%
Pennsylvania 48.8% to 47.6%
[6/14/17] Trump 26%, Clinton 26%,
did not vote for either 48%
[11/13/16] Trump
names Priebus as Chief of Staff and Bannon as chief strategist
[11/13/16] Greg Popovich:
We Are Rome
[11/11/16] Trump tweets that he had
great chemistry with Obama.
[11/10/16] WASHINGTON » In a cordial beginning to their transfer of power,
President Barack Obama and President-elect Donald Trump
met at the White House today.
Obama called the 90-minute meeting “excellent,” and his
successor said he looked forward to receiving the outgoing president’s
“counsel.”
[11/10/16] LOS ANGELES »
Late-night hosts pivoted from candidate Donald Trump to
President-elect Trump, combining punch lines and audience group
counseling after the billionaire’s defeat of Hillary Clinton.
“For years I’ve come out every night and asked how you’re doing, but
I’ve never meant it. Tonight I actually mean it. Does anyone need a
hug?” Conan O’Brien said in his monologue Wednesday on TBS. Despite
divisions among voters, he said, “the optimist in me chooses today to be
happy that we have fair and free elections at all. It’s an amazing
thing.”
And then there were the jokes. “The first thing I did this morning
was call my old high school bully and congratulate him,” O’Brien said.
ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel took viewers through the stages of grief,
including denial (“No, the host of ‘The Celebrity Apprentice’ is not our
president”) and bargaining (“Maybe he’ll only build the wall
waist-high, to keep short people out”) and, finally, acceptance.
“No matter how you feel about it, Donald Trump is the president of
the United States. Of America. So thank God we legalized marijuana
yesterday,” Kimmel said, referring to pot-related measures passed by
voters in several states.
[11/10/16] A day after Donald Trump’s election to the presidency, campaign
divisions appeared to widen as many thousands of demonstrators — some
with signs with messages declaring “NOT MY PRESIDENT” — flooded streets
across the country to
protest his surprise triumph.
From New England to heartland cities like Kansas City and along the
West Coast, demonstrators bore flags and effigies of the
president-elect, disrupting traffic and declaring that they refused to
accept Trump’s victory.
Flames lit up the night sky in California cities Wednesday as
thousands of protesters burned a giant papier-mache Trump head in Los
Angeles and started fires in Oakland intersections.
Los Angeles demonstrators also beat a Trump piƱata and sprayed the
Los Angeles Times building and news vans with anti-Trump profanity. One
protester outside LA City Hall read a sign that simply said “this is
very bad.”
[11/9/16] Putin ready to restore
relations with U.S.
[11/9/16] Duterte congratulates Trump and wishes to stop
quarreling with U.S.
[11/9/16] Mexico say it will not
pay for the wall, peso falls
[11/9/16] Clinton, Obama pledge to unite
behind Trump
[11/9/16] Stock market
jumps after Trump surprise
[11/9/16]
Shockingly, it's President Trump [editorial]
***
Who voted for Trump?
Men voted for Trump. Women voted for Clinton
Whites voted for Trump. Blacks, Hispanics, Asians voted for Clinton
Rural voters voted for Trump. Urban voters voted for Clinton.
Older voters voted for Trump. Younger voters voted for Clinton.
***
Donald Trump has been
elected president of the United States.
The Republican nominee won Wednesday after capturing Wisconsin’s 10 electoral votes, putting him over the 270 threshold.
Voters eager to shake up the nation’s political establishment picked
the celebrity businessman to become the nation’s 45th president.
Trump rode an astonishing wave of support from voters seeking change
and willing to accept a candidate loose with facts and accused of sexual
misconduct.
He upset Democrat Hillary Clinton, who would have become the first woman to serve in the Oval Office.
Trump struck a populist tone and placed a hardline immigration stance at his campaign’s heart.
Trump rose to political fame after questioning whether President
Barack Obama was born in the United States. He will now follow Obama
into the White House.
***
Donald J. Trump has been elected
the 45th president of the United States, the capstone of a tumultuous and divisive campaign that won over
white voters with the promise to "Make America Great Again."
Trump crossed the 270 electoral vote threshold at 2:31 a.m. ET, according to Associated Press projections.
The
rise of Trump, a candidate with no prior experience in the military or
elected office, confounded nearly everyone in politics. Improbably, the
real-estate-scion-turned-reality-TV-star had not even been a member of
the Republican Party for long. That made his victory over Democratic
rival Hillary Clinton even more stunning, preventing her from becoming
the nation's first female president.
***
Trump’s victory could produce significant
repercussions, both economic
and political. Stock markets had risen in recent days, believing that
Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton would win. On Tuesday evening, as
Trump reeled off a string of unexpected victories across the Midwest,
futures market nosedived -- likely anticipating global upheaval as Trump
tries to follow through on aggressive campaign promises: to build a
wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, to impose tougher trading conditions
on China, and to force U.S. manufacturers not to move operations
overseas.
Trump has won one of Maine’s electoral votes. That means he’ll be the
first Republican to win an electoral vote in New England since 2000.
He’s the first to win an electoral vote in any New England state other
than New Hampshire since 1988.
John Podesta just said that Hillary Clinton has no plan to concede
tonight, as many states are still close (though most have been called
for Trump). The last time we didn’t get a concession speech on election
night was 2004. Kerry conceded the
next day.
CNN has called Alaska for Trump. Trump looks to be on his way to winning over 300 electoral votes, if current trends hold.
Which means, Harry, that the AP has essentially called the presidency for Trump.
The Associated Press has called Pennsylvania for Trump.
We expect that Trump will eventually finish with about 47 percent of
the popular vote which, if he wins the Electoral College, would be the
lowest vote share for a president-elect since Bill Clinton in 1992 (43
percent).
The Associated Press has called Toomey the winner of the Pennsylvania
Senate race. The Republican Party has officially retained control of
the upper chamber of Congress with that victory.
Hillary Clinton could still conceivably win the election — or she could lose the national popular vote. But since both outcomes
look unlikely,
we should start preparing ourselves for the possibility of the second
split between the national popular vote and the electoral vote in the
last five presidential elections.
Fox News has called Wisconsin for Trump. There doesn’t seem to be
enough votes left in Pennsylvania for Clinton to come back. If that’s
right, it means Trump is likely the president-elect.
The Clinton campaign is basically hanging on by a thread at this
point. She needs to pull out Michigan and Pennsylvania and then hit one
of two scenarios: 1. Win Alaska and New Hampshire or 2. win Arizona.
That’s going to be extremely difficult. It’s not impossible, but it’s a
straight, if not royal, flush.
Clinton wins Nevada. Our model now gives her a 21 percent chance of winning the election.
Clinton has won in Nevada, according to The Associated Press. That’s a
consolation prize of sorts for her. The early vote in that state that
pointed to a Clinton victory turned out to be predictive after all.
Pennsylvania is close, with Trump barely ahead. Here’s the Clinton
problem: Lebanon County hasn’t reported yet. Romney easily won there
four years ago. This is serious trouble for Clinton.
Clinton needs to win Pennsylvania. The problem is that her lead has
dropped to about 7,000 with plenty of votes left to be counted in
Republican areas. Meanwhile, the city of Philadelphia has had almost all
of its votes counted.
With so many close races this time,
FiveThirtyEight was unlikely
to match its 2012 feat of calling every state and Washington, D.C.,
correctly: In that election, far fewer races were close. Given how low
the win probabilities were for favorites in many states this time, our
average pre-election simulation showed five or six races going to the
underdog this time. So far that’s happened in Florida and North
Carolina, and it could also happen in Michigan, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin. Clinton was leading in our final forecast in all five of
those states — Florida and North Carolina by less than a percentage
point — but Trump is either the
projected winner or
ahead in the polls in all five. And each of the five states have at least 10 electoral votes. So these would be enormously important upsets.
6:54PM: Trump 84%, Clinton 14%. TOTLTPO.
Trump wins Georgia. Our model now gives him an 84 percent chance of winning the election.
Fact is, unless Clinton somehow wins in Arizona, Trump is likely to be the next president.
We gave Trump a 27 percent chance of winning the election in
our final forecast. Other forecasters gave him
a much smaller chance — as low as 1 percent. Some people have raised the possibility of
complacency among Democratic voters. There certainly seems to have been some among Democratic elected officials. Last week,
Kate Nocera of BuzzFeed talked
to some who said they basically had no plan for how to deal with a
Trump presidency. “It’s never talked about in much depth or detail
because the guy is such a joke,” U.S. Rep. Marc Veasey of Texas said.
“We can’t fathom it and therefore are not planning for it.”
Trump wins Iowa. Our model now gives him a 78 percent chance of winning the election.
This map is about the most hopeful scenario I can identify for
Democrats if Trump wins Wisconsin, which Fox News has already called for
him. And it would still only result in a 269-269 tie:
Clinton wins Washington. Our model now gives her a 21 percent chance of winning the election.
Trump wins Florida. Our model now gives him a 77 percent chance of winning the election. [Not looking good for Hillary.]
The Wisconsin numbers are something else, as others have said. This
is a state that Trump lost in the primary by a wide margin. This is a
state where conservative talk radio was against Trump. This is a state
where Paul Ryan, who Trump went toe-to-toe with, is from. And it looks
like the most likely state to put Trump in the White House right now.
Looking at the chart at the right. Too close to call: Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin.
Trump wins Utah. Our model now gives him a 59 percent chance of winning the election.
As the night ticks on, the question that seems to be on everyone’s lips is simply this: What is happening?
Clinton, considered the favorite going into the race is now an
underdog — our live forecast now gives Trump a better chance to win the
White House. So what are the factors at work, upending expectations of
how this race would unfold?
At the heart of all this seems to be a Midwestern collapse by
Clinton; she lost Ohio, which Obama won in both 2008 and 2012, the race
in Michigan is currently too close to call, as is the one in Wisconsin.
Obama won both these states in both 2008 and 2012. Pennsylvania, another
state nudging into the Midwest, is also too close to call.
These states are filled with white voters without college degrees, a
demographic that has in the past trended more favorably toward
Democrats. But preliminary exit polls are showing that Trump’s margin in
this group is unprecedented among exit polls that date back to 1980 —
he is winning the demographic 67 percent to Clinton’s 28 percent, a
spread of 39 points. By comparison, Mitt Romney won non-college-educated
white voters by a margin of only 26 points in 2012.
I’m looking at this map right now, and it’s pretty clear that Trump
is winning the states he needs to be winning in order to be elected.
That doesn’t mean he will be. But if you aren’t a Trump fan, you better
start coming to terms with the fact he will probably be president.
Clinton wins Oregon. Our model now gives her a 40 percent chance of winning the election.
North Carolina, which ABC News just called for Trump, is the first
really big shoe to drop against Clinton, since it deprives her of her
best backup plan if she loses a Midwestern or Rust Belt state. Now
Clinton has to run the table in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.
She could wind up losing several swing states by just 1 to 3 percentage
points, losing just a little bit too much ground in the Midwest, and not
making up quite enough in the Southeast.
Trump wins North Carolina. Our model now gives him a 61 percent chance of winning the election.
There’s been a lot of talk about Clinton trailing in Michigan and
Wisconsin. Pennsylvania may be a far bigger problem. Clinton is up by
just 4 percentage points, and that lead is slipping as more of the vote
comes in from outside the Philadelphia media market. Clinton cannot lose
Pennsylvania and win the election.
ABC News has called Colorado for Clinton, her third swing-state win,
in addition to Virginia and New Mexico. So she’s holding up just fine in
diverse, wealthy states. But she’s lost Ohio and is in profound trouble
in Michigan and Wisconsin, perhaps along with Pennsylvania. Her
weakness in the Midwest could wind up costing her the Electoral College.
As Andrew noted a few minutes ago, Clinton seems to be struggling in
Michigan, a state where she was favored but where there are a large
number of manufacturing jobs. As of September, about 14 percent of
nonagricultural jobs in Michigan were in the manufacturing sector, the
third-highest share of any state. The two above it: Indiana, where Trump
won comfortably, and Wisconsin, where Clinton is in more trouble than
expected.
5:45pm - 538 now projects Clinton 272.1 to Trump 265.2. 50% Clinton, 48%, Trump, 2% nobody. What happens if it's
nobody? It will go to the House of Representatives. And since the House is Republican, you might as well say it's 50-50. And considering the day started 61-29, I would have to say Trump is the favorite.
Michael Moore may be right.
11/08/16 5:20pm - NBC projects Trump to win Ohio (despite LeBron's support for Hillary).
538 now projects Trump 272.9 to Clinton 264.4. And Trump at 55% to Clinton 44% and 1% no winner. Uh oh. Dow futures now down 700+.
11/08/16 - Election Day. At 5:08pm HST, Trump doing better than expected. Leading in Florida. Leading in Ohio. What does Nate Silver say. Earlier it was a 29% chance for Trump. Right now as I
look, "Trump wins Missouri. Our model now gives him a 38 percent chance of winning the election:"
Minutes before, Clinton was at 60%.
Trump leading in Florida. Silver had it 55.1% Clinton this morning. If he wins it...
11/06/16 - Comey announces
no change after review of new
emails
11/06/16 -
Lies about Donald Trump (Quora)
11/05/16 - The
alternate universe of the presidential candidates
11/04/16 -
Trump the Closer (by Scott Adams)
11/04/16 -
Unhypnotizing a Clinton Supporter (by Scott Adams)
11/03/16 - Compaing
campaign coverage by Fox News to CNN (by Scott Adams)
11/03/16 - Mark Cuban would rather
lose every penny than have Trump become
president
11/02/16 - Trump campaign
denounces support from KKK newspaper
11/02/16 - Bill Weld
vouches for Hillary
11/01/16 - Eric Zorn:
unkind to Trump
11/01/16 - CNN
severs ties to Donna Brazile
11/01/16 - New York Times reports Trump used dubious means to
avoid paying taxes
10/31/16 - Democrats
sue Trump to shut down poll watching effort
10/31/16 - Clinton
lead narrows as FBI reviews new emails
10/31/16 - Trump
the businessman
10/29/16 - Sowell: vote Trump because he's more
impeachable
10/29/16 - Trump says
Justice Department is trying to protect Hillary
10/29/16 - Attorney General Loretta Lynch
disagreed with Comey's decision to send letter
10/29/16 - Hillary calls timing of FBI Director James Comey's
letter to Congress
strange
10/24/16 - Trump declares Democrates are making up
phony polls
10/24/16 - Conway says "we are behind" but the election
doesn't feel over
10/23/16 -
Endorsements:
Star Advertiser,
Las Vegas Review Journal
10/23/16 -
President Clinton's America /
President Trump's America
10/22/16 - Trump says he will
sue accusers
10/21/16 - the huge
education gap
10/20/16 - Trump says
he will accept the election results ... if he wins
10/19/16 - Fact check:
AP,
NY Times,
Politifact,
USA Today,
The Guardian /
trumpcheck
10/19/16 -
Seven moments /
Hillary won (
opinion) / LA Time
scorecard
10/19/16 - A
brutal third debate / Trump
won't say if he'll
accept election results
10/16/16 - Trump says it's time to
retire SNL
10/15/16 - Trump calls for
drug test before next debate
10/14/16 -
Two more accusers / Trump accuses Carlos Slim
10/13/16 -
the list of Trump accusers (so far)
10/12/16 - Steve Bannon
says they're going to turn Bill Clinton into Bill Cosby
10/12/16 -
PEOPLE writer recalls incident with Trump /
and more
10/12/16 - Trump denies incidents
reported by New York Times
10/12/16 - Putin ally, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, says to vote Trump
or risk World War Three
10/12/16 - Trump says if Hillary wins,
ISIS will take over our country ("believe me")
10/12/16 -
Trump says Hillary corrupt, media dishonest, disappointed in Congress
10/11/16 -
Trump says disloyal R's are more difficult than Hillary
10/10/16 - Bill O'Reilly
proclaims at least three media organizations have been ordered to
destroy Trump
10/10/16 - Trump
crushes in the polls (but not
CNN because they're
biased) /
LA Times has Trump ahead
10/10/16 - Jonathan Gruber
responds to Trump
10/10/16 - Warren
Buffett responds to Trump's allegation
10/10/16 -
The Telegraph coverage
10/10/16 -
Paul Ryan won't defend Trump
10/10/16 - Trump's team planned to have women
confront Bill Clinton at the debate
10/9/16 - A
nasty debate /
fact check /
winners and losers
10/9/16 - Trump calls his deserters self-righteous
hypocrites
10/8/16 - Condoleeza Rice says Trump should
withdraw
10/8/16 - John McCain no longer offering
support for Trump
10/8/16 - Paul Ryan
heckled by Trump supporters
10/8/16 - Pence decides
not to attend Ryan event
10/8/16 - Mike Pence
offended by Trump video
10/8/16 -
Fiornia says Trump should step aside
10/7/16 -
Jerry Springer on Trump
10/7/16 -
De Niro on Trump
10/7/16 -
Letterman on Trump
10/7/16 - Wikileaks
releases Hillary's
private speeches to Wall Street
10/7/16 - Trump
apologizes but says Bill Clinton is worse / two Senators call for him to
step aside
10/6/16 - 30 former GOP members of Congress sign
letter saying Trump is not qualified
10/6/16 - Hannity
calls Megyn Kelly a Hillary Clinton
supporter
10/6/16 - Trump tells everyone how to
pronounce Nevada correctly (residents
disagree)
10/5/16 - VP debate
fact check
10/3/16 -
LeBron backs Hillary
10/1/16 - Star
Trek against Trump
9/30/16 - If Trump was
a woman
9/30/16 - If Trump published an
academic article
9/30/16 -
USA Today declares Trump unfit for the presidency
9/30/16 - Trump calls Alicia Machado
disgusting
9/29/16 - Trump
can't stop himself from talking about Bill Clinton
9/28/16 -
John Warner endorses Hillary
9/28/16 - who won the debate:
New York Times,
Huffington Post,
Michael Moore,
Ted Cruz,
Vicente Fox
9/27/16 - The Telegraph's (UK)
report on the debate
9/27/16 - What Trump
means when he says Hillary doesn't have
the look (opinion) / Tim Kaine
responds
9/26/16 -
Debate fact check /
who tells more lies?/
Trump fans don't care
9/26/16 - Does Trump have a
better temperament than Hillary? (
6/1/16,
6/16)
9/26/16 - Did Trump support the invasion of Iraq? (
2/19/16, but
ask Hannity)
9/26/16 - Does Trump think climate change is a hoax? (
6/3/16)
9/25/16 - Trump
undeterred / A week of
fact checks
9/23/16 - Lyin' Ted
endorses Trump
9/21/16 - Hillary's
plan to help the poor
9/21/16 - And now an
introduction by Don King
9/20/16 - Donald Trump, Jr.
compares Syrian refugees to Skittles
9/17/16 - debate
prep
9/17/16 - Trump says Hillary's bodyguards should
disarm
9/15/16 - Trump
interrupted in church
9/14/16 - Trump the
haole, Obama the local
9/9/16 - Trump
criticizes U.S. policy on
Russian television
9/8/16 -
Commander-in-Chief forum
fact-check
9/5/16 - Why Trump
doesn't scare Scott Adams
9/2/16 - Trump
catches up to Clinton, but Clinton maintains lead in Electoral College
8/19/16 - Trump says he
regrets causing personal pain
8/19/16 - Paul Manafort
resigns
8/18/16 - O'Reilly and Beck
clash over Trump
8/14/16 - Trump against the
crooked media
8/11/16 - Trumps
hopes he'll win the presidency
8/10/16 - Trump calls Obama
the founder of ISIS,
literally /
fact check /
sarcasm?
8/10/16 - Morning Joe's
turnaround?
8/8/16 -
Fifty Republican security officials say Trump not qualified
8/4/16 - Melania's immigraton history
questioned
8/4/16 - Ivanka and Chelsea remains
friends
8/2/16 - The Donald afraid elections are
going to be rigged
8/2/16 - Trump says
Hillary unfit to serve
8/2/16 - Trump
doesn't care much about Warren Buffett, declines to counter-punch
8/1/16 - Warren Buffett
goes after Trump
8/1/16 - Koch
won't support either candidate
7/31/16 - Mark
Cuban endorses Clinton
7/27/16 - Michael Bloomberg says he
knows a con
7/27/16 -
North Korea calls Trump "a prescient presidential candidate" and a "wise politician" and describes Hillary as "thick-headed Hillary".
7/27/16 - Trump hopes
Russia can find Hillary's missing emails
7/25/16 - Trump now
leads Clinton according to
CNN poll
7/24/16 - Michael Bloomberg to
endorse Clinton
7/21/16 - Ted Cruz speaks at the RNC but
fails to endorse Trump
7/20/16 - the
sociopath and the end of civilization
7/19/16 - parts of Melania's speech
questioned
7/15/16 - Trump chooses Pence as
running mate
7/12/16 -
Historians on Donald Trump
7/2/16 -
MODAAK
6/29/16 - Nate Silver currently gives Trump a
20% chance (he also gave Trump a 2% chance of winning the GOP nomination).
6/25/16 -
George Will leaves GOP
6/23/16 - AP
fact-checks Trump / AP
fact check on Hillary
6/23/16 - More than 50
business executives, including several longtime Republicans, will endorse
Hillary Clinton for president on Thursday as her campaign seeks to capitalize on discomfort with Republican
Donald Trump.
6/23/16 -
Rumsfeld to vote for Trump
6/22/16 - "Hillary Clinton may be
the most corrupt person ever to seek the presidency of the United States," Trump told a small crowd of supporters at a hotel he owns in Manhattan, accusing her of having run the State Department "like her own personal hedge fund."
Trump read his speech from a teleprompter to curb his off-the-cuff comments but he pulled no punches. He said Clinton "has perfected the politics of personal profit and theft" and described her as "a world-class liar."
6/20/16 -
Corey Lewandowski fired
6/11/16 - Donald Trump on Saturday again took aim at Elizabeth Warren on Twitter, continuing the feud between the Republican presumptive nominee and Democratic senator from Massachusetts.
"Goofy Elizabeth Warren, sometimes referred to as Pocahontas, pretended to be a Native American in order to advance her career.
Very racist!" Trump tweeted.
"Pocahontas is at it again! Goofy Elizabeth Warren, one of the least productive U.S. Senators, has a nasty mouth. Hope she is V.P. choice." Trump tweeted in response on Friday.
6/11/16 - WASHINGTON — Former presidential candidate Mitt Romney seemed to imply Friday that electing Donald Trump president could worsen racism and bigotry in the United States, hurting the “heart and character of America.”
"I don't want to see a president of the United States saying things which change the character of the generations of Americans that are following,” Romney said. “Presidents have an impact on the nature of our nation, and
trickle-down racism, trickle-down bigotry, trickle-down misogyny, all these things are extraordinarily dangerous to the heart and character of America."
Trump, the presumptive presidential nominee, responded on his Twitter account Saturday by saying Romney “chocked like a dog” in his failed run for the presidency four years ago.
6/10/16 -
Delete your account 2
6/11/16 -
Delete your account
2/18/16 - Trump claims he can save up to
$300 billion a year on drugs [reiterated by Cramer today (12/7/16) on Mad Money]
No comments:
Post a Comment