Anonymous: Ima just have to keep dreaming of how perfect your snap is unless you do some kinda free show at some point haha. Jealous of the lot who have it!
Anonymous: 1. Your favorite position? 2. Do you like name calling in bed? If yes, then what? 3. Do you like being spanked? 4. Do you like having your hair pulled? 5. Where do you generally like your cum? 6. Fastest way to get you horny? 7. Ever had a creampie? 8. How was the last sex you had? 9. Ever had a threesome? 10. Do you want more such questions?
1. Doggy prob
2. Uhh idk never really tried it
3. Yes
4. Yes
5. Uh I don’t really care it’s what the guy prefers
Anonymous: I would message you but I'm an idiot, I just wish I had the spare money to buy your premium because I've followed you for years and can only imagine how perfect you look 😩
Anonymous: I would literally be in heaven if I could just make out with you then use your butt as a pillow while I play with your hair and tell you you’re pretty
Who wanna buy my premium for 30 dollars 😜 add pfaste and send money to google wallet frany12345@gmail.com or message me for alternate ways! also I think I’m gonna make a patreon
Once the talk of conspiracy theorists — the rich ingesting the blood of the young to foster longevity — is now a reality and an actual business in the United States. Not only is it a business but billionaires are actually admitting their interest in it. Now, even the mainstream media is reporting it.
Peter Thiel, the billionaire co-founder of PayPal and adviser to Donald Trump told Inc. magazine:
“I’m looking into parabiosis stuff, which I think is really interesting. This is where they did the young blood into older mice and they found that had a massive rejuvenating effect. I think there are a lot of these things that have been strangely under-explored.”
As Vanity Fair reports, Ambrosia, which buys its blood from blood banks, now has about 100 paying customers. Some are Silicon Valley technologists, like Thiel, though Karmazin stressed that tech types aren’t Ambrosia’s only clients and that anyone over 35 is eligible for its transfusions.
Aside from the gruesome historical and occult background of such practices, there is literally NO DATA that suggests the process even works.
“There‘s just no clinical evidence [that the treatment will be beneficial], and you‘re basically abusing people‘s trust and the public excitement around this,” Stanford University neuroscientist Tony Wyss-Coray, who conducted a 2014 study of young blood plasma in mice, told Science magazinelast summer, as reported by Vanity Fair.