Wait, what kinda lies? The blind one doesn't die, the one who dies is the missed one, at the end of the last chapter she touches her eyebrow, something that the crazy one always did. I had to re-watch the last chapter on Youtube because you had me confused
What do you mean what kind of lies? It's not like I lied about her surviving. I saw the novela 20 years ago. I knew she had survive but I forgot which one of the sisters had died
CD9
Jesse & Joy
León Larregui
Mon Laferte Paty Cantú
Paty Cantú ganó el EMA para Mejor Artista mexicana pensé que cd9 iba a ganar pero que bueno que esos plagiadores de 1D perdieron contra la reina del pop
Someone said you want to expand the liberal map? Move there Young people move away from places like Iowa, not to there
At least Arizona gave GOP a run for their money and got rid of Arpaio We just need to get more voters there energized and it could flip in the near future.
mi pinche vecino asiático estaba celebrando en la mañana, pero el pendejo no trabaja y nomas vende drogas. el es exactamente el tipo de persona que Trump estaba diciendo que no quiere aquí.
Texas, her wig getting pulled a bit. "Game on...the sequel" HA.
Quote:
The country's most populous swing county turned a shade bluer Tuesday, when Hillary Clinton trounced Donald Trump in Harris County despite trailing nationally.
Clinton's commanding victory here is a watershed moment for local Democrats who have struggled mightily to translate recent demographic shifts into gains at the ballot box.
It also is seen, by some, as a harbinger of potential political change across Texas.
"This progression in Harris County ... happened earlier, sooner, and stronger than I at least had predicted," said former Harris County Democratic Party Chair Gerry Birnberg, who served from 2003 - 2011. "We replicated 2008 and 2012 and carried it to the next level. You don't have to be a Ph.D. in math to plot this one out on the graph and see where it's going."
Texas Southern University political scientist Jay Aiyer said. "Are we seeing the beginning of that demographic shift that's been written about for a very long time as an inevitability?"
An ethnic breakdown of Election Day voters was not immediately available, but the county's early voting returns already point to steep Hispanic turnout gains.
Seventeen percent of Harris County's in-person early voters have a Spanish surname, up from 11 percent in 2012, according to Hector de Leon, director of communications and voter outreach for the county clerk. Overall, voters with a Spanish surname cast 15 percent of the vote four years ago.
"We've been slowly chipping away at the deficit in Latino voter participation," said Crystal Zermeño, director electoral strategy for the Texas Organizing Project.
The challenge for TOP, which aims to boost minority turnout, has been converting emotion into votes.