@hulosunhayati: #hülyamizgin #hülyamizginvideoları #hülyamizginnn #hülyamizgin6 #hülyamizginyedek1 #hülyamizginailesi #fyp #kefetteyiz #kesfet #viral #tiktoktürkiye @HÜLYA❤️🥰MIZGIN @HÜLYA❤️MİZGİN #mekoşhülya

Hülyaninhayati
Hülyaninhayati
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Monday 20 November 2023 15:57:01 GMT
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_b6nsu
𝐁𝐞𝐧𝐬𝐮 :
en sevdığım ıkılı hülya esra mekoş 😭❤️
2023-11-21 20:15:08
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tugceuuunalll
Tuğçe Ünal :
hepsini abdi hira yiyor
2023-11-21 05:01:50
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gskfs08
Zeki Öztaş :
Slm Hülya abla nasılsın iyi misin abla mekoşa aşık oldun galiba ablacığım
2023-11-20 23:56:07
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done5merakli
Döne :
💜💜💜
2023-11-20 16:05:00
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Did you know that the UK has the worst paternity leave offer in Europe? Campaigners have attached lifesize model babies in slings to bronze statues of men across central London and called on the government to improve the country’s parental leave options. Activists from the new group, the Dad Shift, attached the dolls to statues of the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the actors Laurence Olivier and Gene Kelly and the footballers Thierry Henry and Tony Adams, in an attempt to focus attention on the importance of father-baby bonding. Campaigners are asking for “parental leave that is affordable for people to take, gives a substantial allowance of time, and supports equality among parents”. “Proper parental leave for fathers and co-parents is good for mothers, good for babies, good for fathers and good for society too. Countries with six or more weeks’ paternity leave have a gender pay gap that’s 4% smaller … meaning change can help grow the economy while helping British families,” says an open letter the group plans to deliver to the prime minister later this month. The UK offers only two statutory weeks of leave for new father’s, paid at £184.03 a week. As a result, recent research found one in three UK fathers took no paternity leave after the birth of their child, and one in two families where the fathers took paternity leave reported struggling financially afterwards. In contrast, countries such as Spain offer 16 weeks of paid paternity leave, which is the same length as maternity leave, while in Sweden parents, including LGBTQ+ and adoptive parents, are entitled to half each of 480 days of paid parental leave. Japan allows up to 52 weeks of paid paternity leave, which is one of the most generous paternity leave systems in the world. However, only 30% of new fathers took it in 2023, according to the government – an increase from 2.3% in 2014. In comparison, countries including the US and New Zealand don't have any national statutory paid paternity leave, while the average among OECD nations is 10.4 days. Find out more about what the Dad Shift is asking for by heading to the link in bio. Photographs by: Graeme Robertson
Did you know that the UK has the worst paternity leave offer in Europe? Campaigners have attached lifesize model babies in slings to bronze statues of men across central London and called on the government to improve the country’s parental leave options. Activists from the new group, the Dad Shift, attached the dolls to statues of the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the actors Laurence Olivier and Gene Kelly and the footballers Thierry Henry and Tony Adams, in an attempt to focus attention on the importance of father-baby bonding. Campaigners are asking for “parental leave that is affordable for people to take, gives a substantial allowance of time, and supports equality among parents”. “Proper parental leave for fathers and co-parents is good for mothers, good for babies, good for fathers and good for society too. Countries with six or more weeks’ paternity leave have a gender pay gap that’s 4% smaller … meaning change can help grow the economy while helping British families,” says an open letter the group plans to deliver to the prime minister later this month. The UK offers only two statutory weeks of leave for new father’s, paid at £184.03 a week. As a result, recent research found one in three UK fathers took no paternity leave after the birth of their child, and one in two families where the fathers took paternity leave reported struggling financially afterwards. In contrast, countries such as Spain offer 16 weeks of paid paternity leave, which is the same length as maternity leave, while in Sweden parents, including LGBTQ+ and adoptive parents, are entitled to half each of 480 days of paid parental leave. Japan allows up to 52 weeks of paid paternity leave, which is one of the most generous paternity leave systems in the world. However, only 30% of new fathers took it in 2023, according to the government – an increase from 2.3% in 2014. In comparison, countries including the US and New Zealand don't have any national statutory paid paternity leave, while the average among OECD nations is 10.4 days. Find out more about what the Dad Shift is asking for by heading to the link in bio. Photographs by: Graeme Robertson
What is your reaction after the US House of Representatives voted with bipartisan, overwhelming support to pass a bill that could lead to a US ban against TikTok??? This is a major challenge to one of the world’s most popular social media apps. The bill would prohibit TikTok from US app stores — the US is one of TikTok’s biggest markets, used by roughly 170 million Americans — unless the social media platform is spun off from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance.  It’s not yet clear what the future of the bill will be in the US Senate. The House vote was 352 to 65, with 50 Democrats and 15 Republicans voting in opposition. Lawmakers supportive of the bill have argued TikTok poses a national security threat because the Chinese government could use its intelligence laws against ByteDance, forcing it to hand over the data of US app users. The push to pass the bill came up against headwinds from several different political directions: former US President Donald Trump, who was once a proponent of banning the platform, has since equivocated on his position, while Democrats are facing pressure from young progressives among whom TikTok remains a preferred social media platform. TikTok creators and Beijing have responded angrily to the upcoming vote, with China’s foreign ministry calling it an “act of bullying.” Four Democratic House members joined the TikTok creators for a press conference on the Capitol grounds yesterday afternoon opposing the bill. “Any ban on TikTok is not just banning the freedom of expression. You are literally causing huge harm to our national economy,” said Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.). Similarly, Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) said: “Not only am I a no, I’m a hell no,” on the TikTok bill. One of the TikTokkers on the Hill was Dani Morin, a TikTok creator who is a child safety advocate and owner of a women’s breastfeeding clothing line. “People have found a way to have a voice where maybe they haven’t before,” said Morin, who advocates for safer children’s products after she lost her child to a dangerous baby product seven years ago.  #savetiktok #digitaldiplomacy
What is your reaction after the US House of Representatives voted with bipartisan, overwhelming support to pass a bill that could lead to a US ban against TikTok??? This is a major challenge to one of the world’s most popular social media apps. The bill would prohibit TikTok from US app stores — the US is one of TikTok’s biggest markets, used by roughly 170 million Americans — unless the social media platform is spun off from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance. It’s not yet clear what the future of the bill will be in the US Senate. The House vote was 352 to 65, with 50 Democrats and 15 Republicans voting in opposition. Lawmakers supportive of the bill have argued TikTok poses a national security threat because the Chinese government could use its intelligence laws against ByteDance, forcing it to hand over the data of US app users. The push to pass the bill came up against headwinds from several different political directions: former US President Donald Trump, who was once a proponent of banning the platform, has since equivocated on his position, while Democrats are facing pressure from young progressives among whom TikTok remains a preferred social media platform. TikTok creators and Beijing have responded angrily to the upcoming vote, with China’s foreign ministry calling it an “act of bullying.” Four Democratic House members joined the TikTok creators for a press conference on the Capitol grounds yesterday afternoon opposing the bill. “Any ban on TikTok is not just banning the freedom of expression. You are literally causing huge harm to our national economy,” said Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.). Similarly, Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) said: “Not only am I a no, I’m a hell no,” on the TikTok bill. One of the TikTokkers on the Hill was Dani Morin, a TikTok creator who is a child safety advocate and owner of a women’s breastfeeding clothing line. “People have found a way to have a voice where maybe they haven’t before,” said Morin, who advocates for safer children’s products after she lost her child to a dangerous baby product seven years ago. #savetiktok #digitaldiplomacy

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