"Divine Bitches 11" contains three very hard, very sexy fem dom scenes and it really is hard to beat (heh) Kink's Divine Bitches site when it comes to fem dom excellence and truth to the play within the scenes. If you have not tried this series or site before, consider this your permission and encouragement to start.
The cast here includesMona Wales,Aiden StarrandLorelei Lee withJay Wimp,Lance HartandArtemis Faux and the running time of the main feature is two hours and twenty-two minutes. Wales is one amazing top in her scene with Wimp. It is her first time topping him and she scratches her initials into his chest, flogs and whips him and has him dress in drag for his pegging.
It's an intense scene and Wimp is thoroughly made into a girly bitch by Wales. Lee enjoys newbie sub Faux in their scene with plenty of rope bondage and torment as Lee happily breaks him in this, his second-ever scene. Starr pulls Hart aside from anUpper Floor party to peg his ass and generally punish him for being unworthy of her gaze with edge play and other torment.
The only DVD extras are a still gallery and a bio of Kink founder Peter Acworth. That's really not a great value given the price of the disc so I would say to click right here to go watch this instead.
Evil Angel performer/directorJonni Darkko's latest release is upon us and it looks soooooo good. I have, apparently, been a very good girl so far this year so he sent me this exclusive gallery to share with you all. This, ladies and gents is"POV Juggfuckers 6". Damn, I love everything about tit fucking and this series celebrates it gorgeously. Darkko's kink when it comes to this is just so much fun to enjoy.
It starsRomi Rain,Nina Elle,Heather Vahn,Noelle Eastonand super sweetAlyssa Lynn (check out her upcoming interview this week) all getting enjoyed by Darkko's hands, mouth and ridiculously fortunate dick. The gallery is of the Vahn and Lynn scenes but well, there most definitely is a hell of a lot more to see. I love how much spit and milk and all the other fluid that end up slicking up these epic big jugs here. So pretty. So please, do enjoy this gallery but yeah, I would go watch this movie too.
RABAT: Videos showing a crowd attacking a presumed homosexual in public inMoroccobecause of his appearance triggered fresh controversy Tuesday over social intolerance in the conservative Muslim country.
The website Goud posted a three-minute video of the man trying in vain to take shelter in a taxi to escape angry youths in the central city of Fez.
His appearance in what looked like a white dress and his gait had upset the youths, it said.
The man is seen in the video collapsing to the ground under an avalanche of blows from an expanding circle of youths.
He finally gets to his feet, clothes torn, and tries of take cover in a shop before a policeman appears and holds up his gun to disperse the crowd.
In a widening debate on social media, Le360 website compared the scene to the "barbarity" of theISISmilitant group which carries out public executions in Syria.
Goud, for its part, said the man could face legal action over homosexuality, which is illegal in the conservative North African state.
Morocco's human rights association, contacted by AFP, said the victim of the assault was to appear in court later Tuesday, although there was no immediate confirmation from the interior ministry.
After a string of controversies over homosexuality, two men were jailed for four months on June 19 for kissing in public in Rabat.
They were convicted of an "affront to public decency" and an "unnatural act with a person of the same sex."
Homosexual activity is punishable in Morocco by up to three years in jail and a divisive law - known as Article 489 - has been the subject of several protests, including a recent topless demonstration by feminist group Femen in the Moroccan capital.
Earlier in June, weekly magazine Maroc Hebdo was forced to withdraw its latest edition featuring a front cover headline asking: "Should we burn gays?"
Another French-language weekly, Tel Quel, has published an editorial appearing to support the decriminalization of homosexuality.
"Homosexuals are not deviant nor sick," it wrote. "Consensual love between two adults is not a crime."
Human Rights Watch has called on the kingdom to drop its controversial anti-homosexuality law.
During former Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt's Almedal speech last year arrested several FEMEN activists in Fredrik Reinfeldt's speech after being exposed breasts and tried to get up on stage.Swedish founder Jenny Wenhammar was one of those arrested but she was released later that night.
This year, she is back in Almedalen and tells how she was sought by several policemen during the Centre Party leader Annie Lööf's speech.
- I was sitting on the other side of the pond during the century.There were at least six pieces that surrounded me and sat down and asked if I knew them.I did not but they said they recognized me.They said they would sit there with me and asked some questions, she says.
What, they asked?
- They asked if something should happen, and when I replied that of course I would not answer it if it were not so, says Wenhammar.
Had you thought of doing something during the speech?
- The preamble true for me to watch and see how it works in a relaxed atmosphere for another time, she says.
Do you have any planned activity?
- I would not say.
Wenhammar previously been active in the Green Party, says she is in Visby mainly for personal reasons.She has nothing against police actions, but react to the security level.
- Actually, I think it is too low security here.No metal detectors, but it is based on their förkoll, she says.
Police confirm that "civilian units" contacted activists from FEMEN.
- We have met the activists but to encircle we have not done.But we have been out and talked to them and said hello and so on during treviga conditions, says Peter Matilainen, police chief Almedalen.
Why do you do it?
- FEMEN made after a rally last year and we know that they are here.Then we say hey, we are here we.There was nothing more to it, but it was a nice conversation, he says.
To prevent unauthorized get to the scene has various forms of security - both uniformed and civilian personnel.
Do you have indications that it will happen from Femens hold?
- Are they in place perhaps the thought of doing any kind of manifestation, and we must deal with it then.It could be a completely peaceful demonstration.Then we help them with it, he says.
North Korea claims it has discovered a wonder drug that can be used to treat AIDS, Ebola and MERS infections.
The Korea Central News Agency announced Friday that Pugang Pharmaceutical Company had formulated a vaccine called "Kumdang-2", which is derived from ginseng grown together with rare earth elements.
The news report makes the claim that the injectable drug is "highly effective" in fighting and treating the MERS virus and other infectious illnesses.
It was also claimed in the report that there were people injected with the wonder drug who then became immune to the diseases. It claims those people did not contract any infectious illnesses even after travelling to diseases-stricken areas.
According to the Washington Post, the Korean news agency released a photo of the medicine, which appears to be packaged in glass vials and placed in a gold box.
In addition to AIDS, MERS and Ebola, North Korean scientists claimed that Kumdang-2 could treat different types of cancer. However, they did not give any details on which types of cancer or any details of any medical studies that back such claims.
Dr. Jon Sung-hun, director of Pugang Pharmaceutical Company, said that the injection is a "strong-immune activator" and has the reputation of preventing various malignant outbreaks.
The drug also has awebsite where it cites drug studies and tests performed on HIV-positive patients in Africa.
According to the website, Kumdang-2 was first developed in 1996 and then used to combat the bird flu outbreak in 2006.
Moreover, the official page also claims that the drug received positive feedback from each drug trial participant, with 56% of them reporting that they had been completely cured, and the 44% of others saying they had observed improvement in their conditions.
Kumdang-2 dosing must begiven gradually, the website describes. One or two ampules should be given on the first day and then gradual increase of dosage will follow.
The website also states that if patients feel completely recovered after taking the vaccine, treatment can be discontinued. In contrast, if there is no feeling of recovery, patients can extend the period of treatment.
Outside of the North Korean agency reports and the website, there has been no other kind of official verification from other scientists or experts that the drug has been so amazingly successful.
GULFPORT -- A federal grand jury has indicted a member of the Army National Guard and his wife in a federal drug conspiracy accusing them of selling synthetic narcotics, anti-anxiety medication, the club drug Ecstasy and other drugs shipped to them from other countries, court records show.
David Cooper, 44, and Regina Cooper, 48, both of Gulfport, were indicted on one count each of conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance and attempt to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance and four counts each of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance. The alleged crimes occurred between December 2012 and May.
The drugs were synthetic narcotics similar to spice or bath salts, Ecstasy and the anti-anxiety drug Xanax.
During a initial hearing in early June, a Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics agent said evidence indicates David Cooper was receiving large shipments of narcotics at his home from countries such as India, Pakistan and China.
A year's worth of emails and text messages found at the Coopers' home indicated the synthetic narcotics were being distributed to some military members because synthetic drugs do no show up in drug tests.
Authorities first arrested the Coopers in May after a package addressed to David Cooper containing a white powdery substance was intercepted at a New York airport.
A controlled delivery of the package was made, and the Coopers' home was searched.
Authorities seized a large amount of different kinds of synthetic drugs, 300 doses of alprazolam and 1,100 grams of Ecstasy. They also found a recipe for making Xanax.
The Coopers were out of jail on bond on the state charges when they were picked up in early June in the federal case.
The MBN agent testified a review of David Cooper's text messages and emails indicated he continued to communicate with his drug contacts after he was released on bond on the state charges and appeared to still be distributing synthetic drugs.
In addition, the agent said, a video recovered shows David Cooper manufacturing a controlled substance himself. On the video is a small child and on the audio, David Cooper can be heard complaining about his pill press not working correctly.
During the investigation, authorities also seized label makers, a heat sealer, a pill press, empty capsules, postal-tracking receipts and documents related to buying and selling illegal narcotics and empty shipping boxes.
The Coopers are due in court Tuesday for an initial court appearance.
Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2015/06/27/6297491_army-national-guard-member-wife.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy
KITIGAN ZIBI ANISHINABEG FIRST NATION, Quebec — Jay Odjick’s affinity for comics started early. He bought his first Spider-Man comic book for 20 cents at the age of four. And it wasn’t long before he felt the pull to write stories of his own.
“My mother says I started writing my own comic stories when I was around five,” Odjick said. “But the caveat I always add is that my mother doesn’t say I started writing good stories.”
Odjick has steadily improved his skills over the years. Now 39, he’s the creator of “Kagagi,” a graphic novel that’s professionally published and distributed across North America.
Like many graphic novels, “Kagagi” includes evil villains and superhuman powers. But what makes this comic book unique is that the characters and the storyline are deeply rooted in Algonquin culture.
Odjick, who is from the Kitigan Zibi Anishnabeg Algonquin First Nation in Quebec, is one of a growing number of indigenous writers and artists who are jumping into the billion-dollar comics industry. Many bring their own life experiences and cultural traditions to their stories. And critics say their work is starting to reshape the way indigenous people are portrayed in this popular medium.
I thought it was really important that I create heroes that young Natives could relate to.
Jon Proudstar, comic book artist
In “Kagagi,” Odjick’s culture plays a central role from the very beginning, as the storyline springboards off of the Algonquin legend of Windigo, the story of an evil creature with the power to possess humans and turn them into cannibals.
The victims become “kind of like zombies,” Odjick said. And the only person who can stop the Windigo? A 16-year old Anishnabe boy with superhuman strength and the ability to fly.
An animated version of “Kagagi” currently airs on the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, a cable channel whose programming reaches about 10 million households throughout Canada. Each episode is broadcast in both English and Algonquin.
In a world where many indigenous tribes struggle to maintain their language, Odjick says he is excited about the opportunity to help preserve part of his culture “I’m not an educator,” he says, “but we can present language in a way that’s entertaining to [kids].”
Finding new heroes
According to Michael Sheyahshe, author of “Native Americans In Comic Books,” Odjick’s celebration of Native culture is a long way from how Native Americans were portrayed in comics when the medium first rose to popularity.
Sheyahshe, who is a member of the Caddo Nation in Oklahoma, says when comic books first began seeing major commercial success in the 1940s, Native Americans were only written as diminutive one-dimensional characters and often portrayed as a threat to white protagonists.
By the 1960s and 1970s, though, Native characters began to play a more centralized role in storylines as various civil rights movements took hold throughout the United States. Sheyahshe cites Marvel’s Red Wolf, a nine-issue series that featured the publishing house’s first Native American superhero, as an example.
Still, Sheyahshe says that in that time period, almost none of the Native characters were the main heroes. “They’re the helpers. They did what they were supposed to,” he said. “[The heroes] couldn’t have gotten the job done without them, but [Native characters] didn’t have series of their own.”
Sheyahshe says it has only been in recent years that he’s begun to notice Native artists producing comic books starring Native characters. One of the first on the scene was Jon Proudstar’s 1996 series “Tribal Force,” a story about five young people granted supernatural powers in order to protect their land from being destroyed by the government.
Proudstar said he also takes great pride in his attention to detail. He didn’t just stick with characters from his own community near Tucson, Arizona. Each of his characters comes from a different tribe, and he spent a lot of time making sure their cultures were accurately and respectfully depicted.
“I knew very little about the Hunkpapa Sioux,” he says, “So I went to a couple of people who are Hunkpapa and asked them about their communities, what’s important to them.” His White Calf Buffalo Woman is one result of this research. After Proudstar learned that depictions of the White Calf Buffalo Woman are among the culture's most sacred images, he adapted her character to appear in the book as only a silhouette.
Proudstar said seeing Native American stereotypes and inaccuracies continue to show up in comic books was a big motivation for his work. But Proudstar also wanted to create a universe in which heroes face the same challenges that many Native kids face today, like living with the effects of fetal alcohol syndrome and child molestation, problems that occur at higher rates in many Native communities than in the general U.S. population.
“I thought it was really important that I create heroes that young Natives could relate to,” Proudstar said. “I wanted to create heroes that taught these kids that they’ve got extra value because they suffered through that and survived.”
Reflecting reality
While larger publishers like Marvel and DC have been releasing more comic books with Native characters in the past few years, some have critiqued these books for presenting stereotypes, as many Native characters are still depicted with loincloths and feathers.
But according to Sheyahshe, indigenous comic book consumers are starting to demand better representations of the world around them, and a growing number of Native artists are providing them. “There has been a low-level explosion of Native comic books” since about 2010, he said.
Though many writers self-publish and distribute their work within their local communities, there are also a handful of small and medium-sized comic book presses with national distribution networks that carry the work of Native artists.
Toronto-based Alternative History Comics is one of them. In June it released “Moonshot,” a collection of indigenous comics by 18 Native writers and artists from a variety of different cultures. Included are both traditional indigenous stories and adaptations of tribal legends set in the future and in space.
“This is something indigenous writers and artists had been wanting for a long time,” company president Andy Stanleigh said. “A lot of people are saying, ‘Finally’.”
“Moonshot” is the first book Stanleigh has published that contains stories from indigenous cultures with Native protagonists. He said the venture brought new considerations with it, especially when it comes to stories that had only been passed down orally. He explained that while some were easy to translate, others required explicit permission from elders to tell the story in a visual format.
Stanleigh, who is not of indigenous ancestry, said he pursued the book because he wanted to see more comics featuring Native characters that aren’t fraught with stereotypes.
“I can’t say with 100 percent certainty that it’s going to sell,” he said. “But I wouldn’t have started this project if we didn’t think it was something that was going to be big.”
For “Moonshot” contributor Arigon Starr, the growing presence of indigenous artists in comics just makes sense. “We’re all storytellers,” she said, “whether we choose to do this in artwork or in music or in comic books.”
There also seem to be more venues for their work. Broadband Internet and greater visibility for comics have helped people jump into the industry with greater ease. Unlike a generation ago, he believes many young Native people today actually feel as if they can become comic book writers. This, he said, is a good thing, because after so many years of being excluded or misrepresented, “we need to tell our own stories.”