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Found 4 results for "f89d5fa3cf671807d9b36299a20c9857" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous ID: yxvwuUC5United States /pol/510524611#510570624
7/16/2025, 10:55:48 PM
>>510525507
>lol so, like, I was drunk and stuff and then he was like "sleep in my bed" and I was like "ok"
>so there I was, spread eagle trying to get some quality shuteye, and this bald nigger tried to kiss me! Ew, I was like WTF!
>so then I kissed him back, but just for a minute
you should stop reading at this point. Not because the rest of the story is graphic, but because she admits to being a certified retard
Anonymous ID: 9/rZUaT5United States /pol/509554076#509555650
7/5/2025, 8:52:59 AM
>>509554076
You just KNOW that if a tall lanklet black man pulled up to the court, walked up to those blond cuties, and touched their butts, that they would just giggle and laugh right?
Anonymous ID: p7oQnzxjDenmark /pol/509429576#509429576
7/3/2025, 10:53:17 PM
I asked ChatGPT why India has such a high birth rate to save the white race. Here’s what it told me.


1. Early and Universal Marriage
Impact: Extremely high
Why: Women marrying young (often in teens) led to longer reproductive spans, increasing the likelihood of more children.
Context: Early marriage was culturally entrenched and nearly universal in many regions.

2. Lack of Access to Contraception and Family Planning
Impact: Very high
Why: Limited availability, knowledge, and social acceptance of contraceptive methods meant families had little control over the number of children they had.
Context: Family planning programs began in the 1950s but took decades to scale effectively.

3 . Low Female Education and Employment
Impact: High
Why: Women with limited education and few career prospects often became mothers earlier and more frequently.
Context: Education is closely linked with fertility reduction, and literacy rates among women were very low during this time.

4. Rural Agrarian Economy
Impact: Medium to high
Why: In rural economies, more children meant more hands to work on the farm, reinforcing high fertility.
Context: Over two-thirds of India's population lived in rural areas during the peak fertility period.

5. Weak Government Policies and Implementation (initially)
Impact: Medium
Why: Although India was the first country to adopt a national family planning program (1952), it lacked early effectiveness due to poor infrastructure, weak outreach, and resistance.
Context: It took until the late 1970s–1990s for fertility-related programs to show sustained impact.

6 . Limited Role of Mass Media and Public Awareness
Impact: Lower
Why: Mass communication about small families, contraceptive use, and women's rights was limited.
Context: Government campaigns promoting "Hum do, hamare do" ("We two, ours two") became more common only in later decades.
Anonymous ID: dbQArfZjItaly /pol/508773357#508773357
6/26/2025, 12:09:32 PM
I dislike the jews for what they are doing en palestine but if i had control of the army id do worse.