Happy Birthday!

eMeetUp

Message ME Back - Right Here

Leanna is turning 43 today and loves Pottery!

Another thing we might like to try is blindfolding you and telling you exactly what we want you to do. We might tell you to kiss us, lick us, suck us, fuck us, whatever we want. We might even like to tie you up and tease you until you're begging us to fuck you. The key is to be open-minded and willing to try new things

Flirt With Women

1965 Bartlett Avenue
Farmington Hills, MI 48335

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“Fellow Service members, Veterans, and all Americans, TIME TO WAKE UP!” Livelsberger wrote. “We are being led by weak and feckless leadership who only serve to enrich themselves.” The explosion’s timing and apparent symbolism led some people to speculate that he chose a Cybertruck—Elon Musk’s crown jewel of a vehicle—and blew it up in front of a Trump hotel because he opposed the president-elect and his new top ally. Livelsberger’s note paints a different—and perhaps muddier—picture, however. “Why did I personally do it now?” he wrote. “I needed to cleanse my mind of the brothers I’ve lost and relieve myself of the burden of the lives I took.” Livelsberger was the explosion’s only fatality, but seven bystanders were injured in the New Year’s Day blast



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32ojvK8bJGpCxeeNubgADCip A leading EU official has denied taking a softer approach to Big Tech, citing a “very clear legal basis” for regulators and pointing to several ongoing investigations into the likes of social media platform X and Meta . The FT reported earlier this week that the EU was reassessing investigations into Apple , Google and Meta — a process that could ultimately lead to the European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, scaling back or changing the focus of their probes. However, speaking to CNBC on Thursday, Henna Virkkunen, the European Commission’s executive vice president for tech sovereignty, pushed back. “We have our Digital Service Act that came into force a little bit more than one year ago, and there is several formal proceedings going on against, we can say, all the big platforms: Meta platforms, Instagram, Facebook, also on X and with TikTok,” Virkkunen said. “We are continuing the work, so there is not any new decisions made. So we are doing the investigations [to see] if they are complying with our rules,” she said. The Digital Services Act or DSA, which came into full effect in 2024, gives EU institutions the power to regulate Big Tech in a bid to prevent illegal and harmful activities online, and clamp down on disinformation. Despite these new powers, however, there are growing questions about how the EU is actually going to enforce the rules, particularly in the aftermath of President-elect Donald Trump’s return to the White House. “It remains to be seen what the EU will do, as some investigations have gone further than others, but it is also clear that U.S. tech companies will try to use the Trump administration to push back on EU rules,” Dexter Thillien, lead analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, told CNBC. It comes as the tech industry attempts to cozy up to Trump ahead of his second term as president. Tesla’s Elon Musk, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Zuckerberg will attend Trump’s inauguration next week, according to NBC news. Meta’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg last week, meanwhile, called on the incoming U.S. president to look at the EU’s approach to Big Tech, saying the way the bloc applies competition rules is “almost like a tariff.” EU official Virkkunen is one of a new team of politicians that began their work as members of the EU’s executive arm in December. Until now, the bloc has been considered a leader of tech regulation and has opened the door to several probes into the behavior of Big Tech companies. When asked if she was considering taking a softer approach to the sector, Virkkunen said: “We [have a] very clear legal basis and regulation rules in Europe, and of course, now we are fully enforcing those rules.” Virkkunen did not say whether she was feeling pressure as a result of Trump’s return to the White House. Instead, she said, “all companies, whether American, European or Chinese, have to respect the EU’s regulations.”