![]() The Interrogator crouches down behind Quiet rimming her asshole. Quiet sits on a bench with her wrists tied up in the air while her feet are tied to the bench as the horse, Brute, face fucks her mouth with his huge dong. And he doesn't stop there, as he fucks all the way through Quiet's body he even simultaneously fucks the Interrogator, thrusting out of Quiet's ass into both the Interrogator's pussy & ass at different points, very nice! In this animation AnimoPron finally goes back to his roots doing an ATWT (All The Way Through) animation where in this case the horse's cock penetrates Quiet's mouth & eventually goes all the way through her body until it comes out the other side out of her ass and then fucks her whole body. Kilgallon notes that one of his primary sources of discomfort on the mayoral campaign trail was “how those who opposed him didn’t share his measured approach to the debate.This is a Breaking The Quiet (MGSV) animation starring Quiet & The Interrogator from 3D artist, AnimoPron. My husband and Collins talked about that as the two big brown guys in matching linen jackets at an event before Christmas. Read in concert with this watch, a 2022 Tagata Pasifika interview after his family received death threats, it’s clear his family was his “whole world”. Stuff’s Steve Kilgallon also writes beautifully about Collins, noting his acute awareness of being a big brown guy with a preference for hoodies and basketball singlets who dressed carefully in public because “if you’ve got to dress a certain way for people to feel okay, and have a conversation, that’s the reality of it”. He makes many observations in his tribute, but Collins’s love for his kids and his motivation for being involved in politics stand out right now. The Herald’s Simon Wilson spent time on the mayoral campaign trail with Collins. Collins became an Auckland councillor and ran for mayor of the city before entering parliament for the Greens just four months ago. Thomas, who first met Collins at university, describes him as exuding charisma and being “marked out as a future leader” even back then. Toby Manhire, Annabelle Lee-Mather and Ben Thomas spend the last part of the pod talking about Collins. Our politics podcast, Gone by Lunchtime, was mid-record when the news broke yesterday. He appeared on Holmes in 1999, making the case for joining student associations at a time when many were shifting away from compulsory membership. Marked as a future leader, motivated by his kidsĬollins first emerged as a student politician. Collins wasn’t looking around for the next chat as people of status sometimes do but looked to be deep in conversation. ![]() I observed that interview at Waitangi while queuing for fry bread. She notes he spent his life being a bridge between Pacific people and the whole of Aotearoa, sharing that as his goal with her at Waitangi two weeks ago. ![]() For Chapman, the instant familiarity felt between Pacific people doing public-facing jobs made the bridge to familiarity very short when they met. Mad Chapman has penned an extraordinary obituary for Collins, sharing a defining anecdote about his brief stint at Auckland Grammar. Collins was a master of words in the most oratorical sense of the word, but, as RNZ’s Jo Moir writes, he also had an “ability to connect people and at times break tension with just a few words.” From those who knew and worked with Collins and those who’ve summarised his life and death for the wider public, the words are sincere and dignified exemplars of our capacity to craft meaning and publicly share and express emotion. Pointing to the words of others following the shocking and profoundly sad death of Green MP Fa’anānā Efeso Collins yesterday is all that’s required. There are days in this job where I’m working hard to string things together, filling space with rapidly acquired interpretations, summaries and my own words. ![]()
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