@haiyenchillne: A1(Combo 2-3) Áo thun thể thao #dothethao #quanaothethao #aoquanthethao #aothunthethao #aothun

Hải Yến Chill
Hải Yến Chill
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Region: VN
Monday 27 April 2026 14:35:10 GMT
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vietellll
THÀNH PHỐ MANG TÊN BÁC :
AI
2026-04-28 13:01:03
8
trungcon1185
🔞 Trung con 🔞 :
Xem từ 8/5 nay 9/6 vẫn còn xem
2026-06-09 12:54:50
1
ht.333
𖢧𖦙ᶦ 𖢧𖦙ᵒ̛ :
M62 55kg mang sz gì b
2026-06-22 08:05:50
1
tun.vit38
Tuấn Việt :
m63 47kg
2026-06-07 16:31:05
1
vuvanquang2710
Quang Bê :
Nắng mặc được k
2026-06-01 02:27:14
1
dominhthoai
Đỗ Minh Thoại :
62 kg 1m62 zs nào
2026-05-23 04:36:02
1
buttaolysm
DVTbụttaolỳ :
Đẹp
2026-05-11 12:26:31
1
vonhatanh850
Hai hòn dái cô đơn :
Xin nốt link quần ạ
2026-05-27 09:57:51
1
_no1_tamlle
_no1_tamlle :
bà này dthuong quá
2026-05-24 08:18:18
1
hginc863
hginc863 :
èo
2026-05-05 15:41:22
1
youngboisitinh34
🪬pu :
AI
2026-05-08 05:58:14
1
canh.nguyen6572
Canh Nguyen :
cô ấy có vẻ đang ngại 😂😂😂
2026-05-13 01:55:44
1
maitrang6296
❤️Mai Trang❤️ :
M75 nặng 73kg mặc sz gi
2026-05-01 02:58:04
1
anh.ch.gi4
Anh chú già 💚!!! :
Đấy đi tập ăn mặc vậy có phải dễ thương không
2026-05-07 23:36:10
1
gia.huy4675
Gia Huy :
hãy bên a người nha
2026-05-05 05:16:16
1
tieumyanh6789
Mỹ Anh💋 :
Chốt đơn
2026-04-30 10:12:52
1
phmcthnh5
phmcthnh5 :
Ai
2026-05-02 10:26:11
1
thichanlon69
Người đẹp có củ khoai 200 mét :
AI
2026-05-10 16:13:57
1
thuan_6677
𝐍𝐠 𝐃𝐮𝐲 𝐓𝐡𝐮𝐚̣̂𝐧🐬🐬 :
Trông ngộ nghĩnh vãi
2026-04-29 11:29:56
3
quocviet_900
Đầy em chông ! :
có set cả bộ như e mặc ko
2026-05-13 06:17:44
1
manhphuong71
Nguyễn Mạnh Phương :
Ai phải k
2026-06-13 02:36:16
0
kietkythuat
kiệt kỹ thuật :
Gì vậy bà
2026-04-28 15:48:20
2
bilet_anami_al_
🐷🍌_Chuối_🍌🐷 :
Kiểu vẫn còn ngại nhỉ 🤭
2026-05-11 04:47:13
1
thienlong0105
Bi Trần :
Nhìn đơn giản mà bánh cuốn quá thể
2026-05-08 05:41:21
1
vannoi1998
Tất cả chỉ là giả dối :
bán áo mà người đẹp quá
2026-04-30 05:17:25
2
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Other Videos

Chile's fertility rate is 1.14. That's lower than Japan, Italy, or Spain. The lowest in Latin America. Births dropped 29 percent in a single decade. So naturally, people want to fix it with money. Jose Antonio Kast, the conservative running in Chile's 2025 presidential race, has introduced a pronatal package called Plan Renace Chile with financial incentives for families. On the other side, Chile's Minister of Women and Gender Equity, Antonia Orellana, told a reporter the demographic shift should be understood as hard-won gains in women's autonomy, not a crisis. One side says pay people to have kids. The other says this is liberation. But according to this analysis, both sides share a hidden premise: they treat fertility as something that responds to incentives. The problem is the operating system the state installed in 1981 when economists trained at the University of Chicago replaced Chile's shared pension with individual private accounts. Then came student loans repayable over twenty years. Then private health, private childcare. For forty years, every major life decision ran through a pricing engine. And when you ask a woman raised in that system why she doesn't want kids, she answers in financial terms. Tamara Guzmán, a married physiotherapist in her forties, said her friends who are mothers look exhausted and stressed. They pay for nannies, kindergarten, diapers, milk. If she earned more, she said, she might think about it. Hungary, Singapore, and South Korea have collectively spent tens of billions of dollars on pronatal subsidies. None of those programs has moved a fertility rate by more than a fraction. The subsidies aren't too small. They operate inside the same vocabulary that produced the decline. You cannot pay people to exit a worldview by giving them more money inside it. The money is the worldview. Chile didn't create a fertility problem. It created a worldview problem with a fertility symptom. And the receipt has already printed.
Chile's fertility rate is 1.14. That's lower than Japan, Italy, or Spain. The lowest in Latin America. Births dropped 29 percent in a single decade. So naturally, people want to fix it with money. Jose Antonio Kast, the conservative running in Chile's 2025 presidential race, has introduced a pronatal package called Plan Renace Chile with financial incentives for families. On the other side, Chile's Minister of Women and Gender Equity, Antonia Orellana, told a reporter the demographic shift should be understood as hard-won gains in women's autonomy, not a crisis. One side says pay people to have kids. The other says this is liberation. But according to this analysis, both sides share a hidden premise: they treat fertility as something that responds to incentives. The problem is the operating system the state installed in 1981 when economists trained at the University of Chicago replaced Chile's shared pension with individual private accounts. Then came student loans repayable over twenty years. Then private health, private childcare. For forty years, every major life decision ran through a pricing engine. And when you ask a woman raised in that system why she doesn't want kids, she answers in financial terms. Tamara Guzmán, a married physiotherapist in her forties, said her friends who are mothers look exhausted and stressed. They pay for nannies, kindergarten, diapers, milk. If she earned more, she said, she might think about it. Hungary, Singapore, and South Korea have collectively spent tens of billions of dollars on pronatal subsidies. None of those programs has moved a fertility rate by more than a fraction. The subsidies aren't too small. They operate inside the same vocabulary that produced the decline. You cannot pay people to exit a worldview by giving them more money inside it. The money is the worldview. Chile didn't create a fertility problem. It created a worldview problem with a fertility symptom. And the receipt has already printed.

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