Popular Posts Today

Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

CAW continue contract negotiations with GM and Chrysler

Written By empapat on Kamis, 20 September 2012 | 01.47

Photo Credit: Aaron Lynett , National Post

TORONTO - GM and Chrysler remain at the bargaining table with the Canadian Auto Workers Union as the two sides try to forge a contract settlement.

CAW president Ken Lewenza sounded a positive note yesterday by saying he's optimistic the union will be able to reach agreements with both automakers.

He noted that while there are still a "number of challenging issues to work through," the talks will continue as long as progress is made at the bargaining table.

The CAW and Ford came to terms on Monday and the automaker's Canadian workers will vote on the package this weekend.

The union hopes to use the Ford deal as a framework for an agreement with GM and Chrysler.

The Ford deal contains no base wage increases and pension plans will remain the same for existing employees.

Each worker will get $2,000 a year in the second, third and fourth years to cover cost-of-living increases, and a $3,000 ratification bonus.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Canada/caw+continue+contract+negotiations+with+gm+and+chrysler/6442718750/story.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
01.47 | 0 komentar | Read More

NHL cancels all 61 pre-season games

Photo Credit: Jacques Bossinot , The Canadian Press

TORONTO - The National Hockey League has announced the first on-ice casualties arising from its lockout.

The league has cancelled all pre-season games to the end of this month -- a total of 61 games.

Also affected is the Hockeyville game between Toronto and the Columbus Blue Jackets set for October 2nd in Belleville, Ontario.

It has been set back by one year.

It could be only a matter of time before the league starts cancelling regular season games, which are due to start October 11th.

With the lockout into its fifth day, no negotiations are planned between the NHL and the players' union.

Against that backdrop, some players are heading to Europe.

Jason Spezza of the Ottawa Senators signed a deal with a Swiss team, while Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals is going home to Russia to play in the KHL.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Canada/nhl+cancels+all+61+pre-season+games/6442718761/story.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
01.47 | 0 komentar | Read More

Space shuttle Endeavour makes pit stop in Houston en route to California for permanent display

Space shuttle Endeavour flies over Ellington Field atop the shuttle aircraft carrier Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012, in Houston. Endeavour is making a final trek across the country to the California Science Center in Los Angeles, where it will be permanently displayed. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Space shuttle Endeavour flies over Ellington Field atop the shuttle aircraft carrier Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012, in Houston. Endeavour is making a final trek across the country to the California Science Center in Los Angeles, where it will be permanently displayed. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

HOUSTON - The space shuttle Endeavour is scheduled to leave Houston early Thursday after giving locals a brief glimpse of what might have been.

Hundreds lined the streets and crowded the airport Wednesday to see the retired shuttle land before it was to head to California where it will be permanently displayed, a fact that doesn't sit well with many Houston residents who feel Space City was cheated out of an artifact that should have been theirs to keep.

"I think that it's the worst thing that they can do, rotten all the way," said 84-year-old Mary Weiss, clinging to her walker just before Endeavour landed after flying low over Gulf Coast towns, New Orleans and then downtown Houston and its airports.

Space City, partly made famous by Tom Hanks when he uttered the line "Houston, we have a problem" in the movie "Apollo 13," has long tied its fortune to a mix of oil and NASA. Astronauts train in the humid, mosquito-ridden city, and many call it home years after they retire. The Johnson Space Center and an adjacent museum hug Galveston Bay.

Houston's bid for a shuttle was rejected after the White House retired the fleet last summer to spend more time and money on reaching destinations, such as Mars and asteroids. Instead, Houston got a replica that used to be displayed at the Kennedy Space Center.

"The one we're getting is a toy. An important toy, but a toy nonetheless," said Scott Rush.

Still, people came out in droves Wednesday, waving American flags and toting space shuttle toys, cameras and cellphones.

Back-to-back delays in the ferry flight resulted in one day being cut from the Houston visit. After landing, the Endeavour rolled slowly in front of the cheering crowd. It circled and preened like a runway model, giving awed spectators an opportunity to take pictures from a variety of angles.

"I want to go on it," said 3-year-old Joshua Lee as he headed to the landing area with his mother and grandmother.

Joshua's mother, Jacqueline Lee, viewed the landing as an educational opportunity.

"I don't know if he'll get to see this again," Lee said.

Around sunrise Thursday, the shuttle was scheduled to leave Houston, riding piggyback on a jumbo jet. It's booked to stop at Biggs Army Airfield in El Paso, Texas, before heading to NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, California. After spending a night there, the shuttle will head to Los Angeles International Airport on Friday.

In mid-October, Endeavour will be transported down city streets to the California Science Center, its permanent home.

NASA still plays a large role in Houston, and astronaut Clayton Anderson, who lived on the International Space Station from June to November 2007, encouraged people to focus on a new era of space exploration.

"The shuttles are a wonderful legacy, a huge part of Houston, but now it's time to look to the future," said Anderson, who lives in the Houston suburb of League City.

This is the last flight for a space shuttle. Atlantis will remain at Kennedy for display, and Discovery is already at the Smithsonian Institution, parked at a hangar in Virginia since April.

Endeavour - the replacement for the destroyed Challenger shuttle - made its debut in 1992 and flew 25 times before it was retired. It logged 123 million miles in space and circled Earth nearly 4,700 times.

---

Ramit Plushnick-Masti can be followed on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP  --

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Canada/space+shuttle+endeavour+makes+pit+stop+in+houston+en+route+to+california+for+permanent+display/6442718742/story.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
01.47 | 0 komentar | Read More

New PQ government has minister responsible for making Quebec more independent

Written By empapat on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 20.46

QUEBEC - The newly installed Parti Quebecois government wasted no time showing its sovereigntist stripes by appointing, on its first day in office, a minister responsible for advancing the cause of Quebec independence.

A unique new portfolio of minister for "sovereigntist government" was among the cabinet titles handed out as Premier Pauline Marois took office and introduced her ministry Wednesday.

The man with that title has a doctorate in constitutional law and knows the rest of Canada far better than most Pequistes: 35-year-old Alexandre Cloutier worked as a clerk at the Supreme Court of Canada and lectured at the University of Ottawa, in addition to studying at Cambridge University in the U.K.

Cloutier's mission: loosen Quebec's ties to Canada.

The party has promised to introduce policies that could butt up against Canadian constitutional law, confront the federal government for a transfer of powers, and use each case as evidence of how Quebec would be better off on its own.

"It is becoming apparent to us that remaining a province of Canada has become an unacceptable risk for Quebec," Marois said as she introduced her cabinet, with the Canadian flag once again gone from the Red Room in the provincial legislature as it is whenever the PQ holds office.

"It is imperative to advance with force our interests, to promote our identity — not as a province but as a nation."

She said Quebec is no better, or worse, than other provinces — it's just different.

And she will argue that on a variety of issues, from economics to culture, the interests of Canada and Quebec are irreconcilable. She said Wednesday that her government intends to "protect each parcel of sovereignty" that Quebec already enjoys and will seek to acquire more.

In his first news scrum as a minister, Cloutier was tight-lipped about his plans. He said he would have more to say over the coming days about his portfolio, which includes intergovernmental affairs.

Asked what tone he would adopt when dealing with the federal government he replied: "The tone? The tone will depend on the issue, and on the answers we get."

It's unclear how much the PQ can achieve with only a minority government. Cloutier conceded as much, saying he would seek federal-provincial files where the PQ could work with opposition parties.

He didn't cite any examples but the gun registry, the environment, natural-resources policy, crime and transfer payments are areas where Quebec political parties share similar views and might have stark differences with the Harper Conservatives.

Cloutier won't be the only minister working on independence-related files.

Two of the hottest, most politically sensitive, portfolios will go to Bernard Drainville, the former Quebec City bureau chief of Radio-Canada, the French-language CBC.

He will be responsible for introducing an idea that he personally spearheaded, of allowing referendums by popular initiative. It's unclear how much teeth the plan will have, given that the PQ appeared to water it down slightly during the campaign.

Drainville will also lead a ministerial committee on so-called identity issues. The party promises to create a Charter of Secularism that would set limits on religious headwear being worn by public servants, and introduce a "Quebec citizenship" that people would have to get to run for public office.

He will be joined in cabinet by an old colleague — a man who followed him into Radio-Canada's Quebec City bureau as a political analyst.

Pierre Duchesne covered the emotionally charged tuition debate several months ago when he was still a TV journalist. He is now the PQ cabinet minister tasked with scrapping the tuition hikes and holding a summit on education funding.

Marois became the 30th Quebec premier and the first woman to hold the job. She is now the fifth female premier of a Canadian province or territory.

The daughter of a garage mechanic and a teacher, Marois has held a number of powerful political roles in a 30-year career that has seen her run most of the largest provincial departments.

There were numerous bumps on the road to high office, including a leadership mutiny. Then, when her election win finally arrived, it was marred by tragedy. Marois had to be whisked off the stage during her victory speech when a gunman approached the assembly hall and shot two people, killing a stage technician.

The accused shooter emerged again on Wednesday to cast a shadow over a happy moment for Marois. Richard Henry Bain, the suspect, called radio stations from his detention centre to share his theories about how Montreal should become its own province.

Marois was held to a minority in the Sept. 4 vote; her margin of victory was less than one percentage point in the popular vote and four seats in the legislature.

That minority status makes it all but impossible for her PQ government to hold an independence referendum.

However, with a plurality of seats in the legislature, control of ministries, and with her main Liberal opponent in the throes of a leadership race, Marois could seek to advance other parts of her agenda.

She has already called tougher language laws a central priority, while adding that she will seek consensus with opposition parties where possible.

Her appointments sent a mixed message on language.

Marois' best-known and most aggressive spokesman on language policy was placed in a role that, on the surface, gives him only peripheral involvement in the file.

Jean-Francois Lisee, another former journalist who advised past PQ premiers, will be responsible for international affairs. But he will also be minister responsible for Montreal — the scene of the vast majority of language disputes in the province.

Marois also tasked Lisee, who has been extremely vocal about the need for more stringent language laws, with the role of building bridges with Quebec Anglos.

The environment portfolio went to Daniel Breton, who once helped spearhead Quebec's Green party. A more junior environmental role will go to Scott McKay, who led that Green party.

The people appointed to economic roles are less well-known.

In the runup to the swearing-in, some pundits had observed that at a time of global uncertainty the economy might become the PQ's Achilles heel.

Nicolas Marceau, an economist and university professor, is Quebec's new finance minister.

Marceau, 48, a professor at Universite du Quebec a Montreal since 1996, was first elected to the legislature in 2009. He has a PhD from Queen's University in Kingston and has served as an academic for most of his professional career. He previously held the role of finance critic.

A former colleague, fellow economist and university professor, Stephen Gordon, praised Marceau and suggested he should not be underestimated.

"Quebec now has the government with the best economic mind at Finance," Gordon tweeted. "Nicolas Marceau is very sharp."

He will be tested — quickly and often.

The Harper Tories appear willing to poke holes in the PQ's economic credibility. The federal government has, like a mantra in recent days, repeated that Quebecers and other Canadians don't feel like talking about constitutional issues and would rather focus on the economy.

One federal minister, Quebec lieutenant Christian Paradis, even held a news conference last week where he accused the PQ of hurting the economy by abandoning the controversial asbestos industry.

The federal government has repeatedly pointed to the narrow vote result as evidence that Quebecers don't want to squabble about constitutional issues and would rather focus on the economy.

Paradis appears poised to battle the PQ again if the new government makes good on its promise to push for a transfer of control over Quebec's share of the Employment Insurance program. The program used to be run by individual provinces, decades ago.

But Paradis said this week that EI is a federal responsibility and will remain that way.

-With files by Alexander Panetta in Montreal

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Canada/new+pq+government+has+minister+responsible+for+making+quebec+more+independent/6442717861/story.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
20.46 | 0 komentar | Read More

Female Mounties feel there is little consequence for sexual harassment: report(2)

VANCOUVER - Female Mounties are afraid to come forward with allegations of sexual harassment and bullying on the job because they don't have faith their complaints will be taken seriously and they believe it will be them — not the problem officers — who will ultimately be punished, an internal RCMP report has found.

The report, conducted in response to a number of high-profile allegations of sexual harassment, details the results of focus groups involving 426 RCMP officers and employees from B.C., many of whom told their own stories of being bullied, belittled and in some cases sexually harassed and assaulted by colleagues and superiors.

Those same officers said the force and its senior officers are ill-equipped or even unwilling to properly deal with the problem.

"There was an overwhelming perception, based on personal observations, that there are no consequences for the harasser other than having to transfer and/or be promoted," says the report, obtained through access-to-information laws.

"This perception of no 'real' consequences left participants feeling that coming forward was not worth it. . . . Overall, the participants felt the consequences for filing a harassment complaint outweighed the complaint itself."

But Insp. Carol Bradley, the team leader for the B.C. RCMP Respectful Workplace Action Plan, said the report concluded harassment wasn't rampant but was a problem.

"We agree that any amount of harassment is not acceptable," said Bradley.

Bradley said the report was a result of a pro-active initiative by Deputy Commissioner Craig Callens, the commander of the force in British Columbia, who sought the opinions and concerns of employees.

It also follows a string of lawsuits and media reports involving sexual harassment.

The most widely reported case involves Cpl. Catherine Galliford, a former media relations officer who detailed years of abuse she says left her with post-traumatic stress. The RCMP has denied her allegations.

The internal report, completed in April by Simmie Smith, an RCMP diversity strategist in B.C., suggests gender-based harassment was common among the women who participated in the focus groups.

Participants recalled a range of problems, including aggressive male supervisors, cases in which women were assigned to menial tasks and ignored in meetings, sexual innuendo, inappropriate touching and indecent exposure.

If they or their colleagues attempted to complain, the participants said, they often faced retribution. They believed their careers would suffer and they risked being transferred to new jobs or locations as their superiors targeted them, not the offending officers, to deal with the problem, the report said.

Participants attributed the problem to an "old boys' club" mentality they said permeates the force, in which officers with connections "never have to worry about being held accountable."

"I would never report harassment," one participant said during the focus groups. "I have seen what happens to those who have and their life was made hell by those in management positions who have used their authority to intimidate."

"We wear a bulletproof vest to protect ourselves from the bad guys out there," another participant said, "but really we need to be wearing the vest to protect ourselves from the bad guys inside our own organization."

At the same time, the report reveals a widespread belief within the force that such complaints, and the media coverage of them, have been exaggerated and blown out of proportion.

Indeed, the report notes statistics related to complaints don't show significant numbers of harassment cases. But the report suggests that discrepancy is likely due to the fact that women aren't reporting abuse when it happens.

"The result is a significant failure to report incidents and an unwillingness to discuss the issues with supervisors or management," says the report.

"This failure has, in turn, resulted in the release of a pent-up need to have the issues addressed. This, in part, seems to explain the recent spate of revelations to the media."

The report makes a number of recommendations, including the creation of a dedicated unit to investigate harassment complaints.

In response to the report, Callens, announced the creation of a 100-member team dedicated to investigating harassment complaints.

"I acknowledge, without reservation, that we have some issues that we need to deal with," he said when he announced the team in April.

"I'm committed to ensuring that we take the type of action that our employees deserve."

The report also recommends the creation of a system to track complaints and identify the worst offenders, improved resources for officers who are considering filing a complaint, and new anti-harassment education programs for officers and civilian members of the RCMP.

Bradley said the RCMP is glad so many employees came forward and shared their concerns and solutions.

"We're developing a respectful workplace action plan and we have a number of initiatives that are intended and designed to address the concerns of employees, and, in fact, contain many of the suggestions they made for improvement," she said.

Since Galliford made her complaints public, several other Mounties have also come forward with similar allegations in lawsuits of their own.

Those cases include a class-action lawsuit that is making its way through the courts. That suit was launched by Janet Merlo, who alleges she suffered through 19 years of harassment and discrimination during her career at the detachment in Nanaimo, B.C.

None of the allegations in any of the lawsuits have been proven in court.

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Canada/female+mounties+feel+there+is+little+consequence+for+sexual+harassment+report2/6442718685/story.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
20.46 | 0 komentar | Read More

Unlikely but possible: Stanley Cup awarded despite season-long lockout

MONTREAL - If the NHL's latest labour dispute wipes out the entire season, a man responsible for guarding the Stanley Cup says he would be free to deliver the trophy to the winner of another competition.

It's a scenario that might tickle the imagination of some Canadian hockey fans while appearing blasphemous to others — the idea that an amateur contest, junior league or international tournament might vie for that piece of the national heritage.

But long before the NHL, and even longer before the league's labour wars and myriad attempts to save its struggling sunbelt franchises, the trophy was intended as a gift to be presented to the top hockey team in the Dominion of Canada.

Unlike during the season-killing 2004-05 lockout, which saw the Cup shelved for a year, the legal door is open this time for the trustees to allow non-NHL teams compete to slurp bubbly from Lord Stanley's Mug.

Just don't hold your breath.

The Cup trustees have the power to make it happen but don't want to go there, one said in an interview.

"It's just not going to happen," Brian O'Neill, a Stanley Cup trustee and former NHL vice-president, told The Canadian Press.

"The Stanley Cup should be awarded to the top National Hockey League team, which has been determined to be the top league in the world...

"Anything less than that would demean the trophy."

The Stanley Cup does not belong to the NHL.

Created in Sheffield, England, the Cup was originally presented to the Canadian people in 1892 as a gift from then-governor general Lord Stanley — the representative to this country of Queen Victoria.

Control of the Cup was eventually handed over to the NHL under a 1947 agreement between trustees and the league, which was revised in 2000. It declared the trophy could not be awarded to a non-NHL team in the event of a lost season.

A couple of hockey fans launched a legal challenge during the 2004-05 lockout to amend this aspect of the agreement between trustees and the NHL, leading to an out-of-court settlement a year later.

The two Toronto beer-league hockey players didn't want to see the Cup gather dust due to the squabbles of millionaires.

The settlement says nothing prevents trustees from awarding the trophy to a non-NHL team in a year the league fails to hold a competition to determine a winner. There are no obligations, however, placed on trustees to share the prize.

"Any year in which the NHL fails to field a competition... it's open to the trustees to award the Cup to a non-NHL team," said Toronto lawyer Tim Gilbert, who argued the case on behalf of the pickup hockey players.

O'Neill, who shares responsibility of the trophy with fellow trustee Ian (Scotty) Morrison, said despite changes to the agreement, nobody outside the NHL will raise the Cup.

"A National Hockey League winner will win the Stanley Cup, there's nobody else that's going to get it," said the Hall of Famer, adding the NHL also remains free to give the trophy back.

"The league can give up the trophy any time they want. That's all part of the agreement, too. And turn it back over to the trustees."

That, however, is unlikely to happen.

One expert, who has studied the Stanley Cup in the realm of property law, says the NHL will do what it can to keep its hands on the trophy.

"The NHL is going to use everything in its power to maintain control over one of (its most powerful), if not its most powerful, assets," said Jeremy de Beer, an associate law professor at the University of Ottawa.

He said the league also has a trademark on the image and name of the trophy, but he believes those could be taken away.

"That could be challenged on the grounds that the Stanley Cup is affiliated with the office of the Governor General of Canada," he said.

"It's conceivable that you could actually invalidate the NHL's trademarks."

Angered over the prospect of another lengthy lockout, some diehards have made rumblings online about launching legal action against the NHL to take back the trophy. If the NHL doesn't have a season, they want to see someone else win the Stanley Cup.

Since 1893, only two situations have prevented the Cup from being awarded: the lockout in 2005 and the Spanish flu outbreak in 1919.

"NHL: Do the right thing and make the Stanley Cup a 'challenge cup' again," wrote one Twitter user, Ian McGrath. "You're clearly incompetent."

Advocates of the idea say an open challenge could be held for the Cup similar to those of the late 1800s and early 1900s, when amateur teams from across the country battled it out.

But not all fans were on board with the idea of awarding the trophy to a non-NHL team.

With the season still a few weeks away, there's hope NHL teams will vie for the Stanley Cup during the 2012-13 season.

"There's so much tradition with the Cup I don't think it's worth starting another championship or something like that," said longtime hockey fan Steve Araki, after buying Montreal Canadiens gear recently at the team's boutique.

For his part, de Beer wouldn't be surprised to see another legal challenge if the lockout continues for any considerable length of time.

"If only because there is so much resentment or frustration on behalf of the fans," he said.

"It's one of the few ways the Canadian public can try and exercise some control or some influence over what's happening."

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Canada/unlikely+but+possible+stanley+cup+awarded+despite+season-long+lockout/6442718635/story.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
17.48 | 0 komentar | Read More

Liberals want MP pension reform bill separate from budget

Liberal MP Marc Garneau rises during Question Period in the House of Commons in Ottawa;Thursday March 15;2012.

Liberal MP Marc Garneau rises during Question Period in the House of Commons in Ottawa;Thursday March 15;2012.

Photo Credit: Adrian Wyld , THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES

OTTAWA - Opposition MPs support slashing their generous pensions but they fear the Harper government is plotting a way to compel them to vote against any reforms to the gold-plated plan.

Reforms to the parliamentary pension plan are expected to be included in a second omnibus budget implementation bill to be introduced shortly.

But if the bill is hundreds of pages long and includes an array of controversial measures — like the first budget bill last spring — New Democrats and Liberals would have little choice but to vote against it.

And they suspect that's the whole point.

They believe the pension reforms will be stuffed into an unpalatable budget bill precisely so that Conservatives can accuse opposition MPs of refusing to share the pain of Canadians, whose retirement savings have taken a big hit over the past few years and who are being asked to wait until 67 to collect old age security.

Liberal House leader Marc Garneau says his party will support any and all measures to trim MPs' pensions and he's challenging the government to produce a separate bill so that MPs can have a clear vote on the matter without other issues intruding.

"If Canadians need to suck it up, so do we. Liberals are ready for it," Garneau told the Commons on Wednesday.

"I challenge the prime minister to commit today to that reform in the form of a single, stand-alone bill that is not mixed in with other bills ... so that Liberals can unequivocally vote for it."

Treasury Board president Tony Clement ignored the challenge as he thanked Garneau for his "exuberance" on pension reform. Clement suggested the one-time astronaut and potential Liberal leadership contender "must be ready for takeoff on some project of his own."

A committee of Conservative backbenchers is crafting the pensions reforms, which are expected to include boosting MPs' contribution rate to 50 per cent from 14 per cent and raising the age of eligibility to 65 from 55.

Unlike the Liberals who've signalled their intention to support whatever the Tories come up with, sight unseen, New Democrats are taking more of a wait-and-see approach.

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair said his party is "more than willing" to reform the pension plan but it should be done by an independent, blue-ribbon panel rather than by MPs, who are in an obvious conflict of interest.

"We'll see what they do. If it's something that's objective and a bit at arm's length, we know that they're not playing a game with it," Mulcair said.

"And if they try to embed it in a 700-page bill that's doing a whole bunch of other things that they know darn well that we'll never be able to vote for, we'll know that it's about a political game again for the Conservatives."

At the same time the government is preparing to scale back parliamentary pensions, the cap on MPs' salaries, which have been frozen since 2010, is set to be lifted in 2013-14.

Mulcair said that issue too should be decided by an independent panel of experts.

However, deputy Liberal leader Ralph Goodale said any increase in MPs' salaries would be inappropriate.

"As long as the international circumstances remain as difficult as they are, as long as public servants are being laid off and old age pensions are being cut back, all of the other austerity measures coming into effect, it would seem to me a pretty hard sell that members of Parliament should see an increase in their salaries."

© The Canadian Press, 2012

20 Sep, 2012


-
Source: http://www.globalnews.ca/Canada/liberals+want+mp+pension+reform+bill+separate+from+budget/6442718593/story.html
--
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
17.48 | 0 komentar | Read More
Techie Blogger