@ndiayeloofficiel: @Demba War degeullll li🎉😍

NDIAYE LO BOUROI✪🇸🇳
NDIAYE LO BOUROI✪🇸🇳
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Region: SN
Tuesday 17 September 2024 18:34:03 GMT
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dalalfaour136780
dalalfaour136780 :
Yo
2024-09-18 01:07:23
0
hassan_le_roi
Fils de Mbour 🎥 :
Ndiaye lo republier sama vidéo svp🙏🥰
2024-09-17 18:38:44
4
user9288846100398
beug serigne touba rek🕌 :
dg yéré bi nice na trop diokh mako bokk ♥️
2024-09-18 02:22:37
1
modoupogba1
dofou Serigne saliou :
Ndiaye seull
2024-09-17 18:36:44
1
diop.cana.le.roi
♨️ DIOP CANA LE ROI 👑 :
sama papa waye 🥰
2024-09-30 16:32:16
0
ahmadalo.bissness18
ahmada lo bissness.londam :
c demba golo mais pas demba warr
2024-09-18 09:43:35
0
mbayec4123
mbaye Cissé :
brom xol bou rafétt leu. nala diam sonal frère 💪💪💪
2024-09-18 01:05:02
0
bambasowf3s
Bamba F3s brm wally la togal :
Wally la tongal ni sah 😂😂😂😂
2024-09-17 23:51:24
0
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Is this season even realistic?? TikTok is barreling toward a ban in the United States as soon as next weekend, with the Supreme Court signaling Friday no likely reprieve for the Chinese-owned video app. That raises the odds that President-elect Donald Trump is the popular platform’s best hope for survival — and leaves TikTok hawks bracing for his next move. “The one thing about President-elect Trump: You just don’t know what he’s going to do,” said Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-Virginia), one of the most prominent backers of the ban-or-sale law Congress passed last year. “But the law is the law.” At stake is the fate of a social media platform used by 170 million U.S. users and hailed by supporters as a bastion of free expression. Government officials from both parties, meanwhile, have pilloried TikTok as a potential vehicle for Chinese spying and influence-peddling. Meanwhile, firefighters are working to contain three active blazes in the Los Angeles area ahead of a predicted return of winds that stoked devastating wildfires that have burned an area bigger than San Francisco and killed at least 24 people. A red flag warning is in place for parts of the city and county, with wind gusts of up to 70 mph forecast between 4 a.m. Tuesday and noon Wednesday — strong enough to potentially cause “explosive fire growth,” according to National Weather Service officials. The Weather Service on Monday widened the area facing a “particularly dangerous situation” red flag warning. Caption from articles by Cristiano Lima-Strong, Daniel Wu, Reis Thebault, Joanna Slater, Maegan Vazquez, Mariana Alfaro and Ben Brasch.
Is this season even realistic?? TikTok is barreling toward a ban in the United States as soon as next weekend, with the Supreme Court signaling Friday no likely reprieve for the Chinese-owned video app. That raises the odds that President-elect Donald Trump is the popular platform’s best hope for survival — and leaves TikTok hawks bracing for his next move. “The one thing about President-elect Trump: You just don’t know what he’s going to do,” said Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-Virginia), one of the most prominent backers of the ban-or-sale law Congress passed last year. “But the law is the law.” At stake is the fate of a social media platform used by 170 million U.S. users and hailed by supporters as a bastion of free expression. Government officials from both parties, meanwhile, have pilloried TikTok as a potential vehicle for Chinese spying and influence-peddling. Meanwhile, firefighters are working to contain three active blazes in the Los Angeles area ahead of a predicted return of winds that stoked devastating wildfires that have burned an area bigger than San Francisco and killed at least 24 people. A red flag warning is in place for parts of the city and county, with wind gusts of up to 70 mph forecast between 4 a.m. Tuesday and noon Wednesday — strong enough to potentially cause “explosive fire growth,” according to National Weather Service officials. The Weather Service on Monday widened the area facing a “particularly dangerous situation” red flag warning. Caption from articles by Cristiano Lima-Strong, Daniel Wu, Reis Thebault, Joanna Slater, Maegan Vazquez, Mariana Alfaro and Ben Brasch.

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