@yoonedenwife: Maknae came to the rescue #themaknaehastobeanidol#bongtaeyoon#maknae #angst #manhwaidol

Lily🍀📚
Lily🍀📚
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Wednesday 17 June 2026 22:54:32 GMT
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hqxzy
️ :
I was so surprised when this guy had a sad backstory about his yucky aunt cus i genuinely thought this one was one of the more fluffy idol manhwas
2026-06-17 23:56:23
47
cutegyupup
GyuGyuPuppy :
is this manhwa ongoing? I saw somewhere people said it got dropped..
2026-06-26 12:26:27
5
peohney
cake hotdog fries mcdo :
IS THIS GOOD i started on the first chapter but i got too busy to continue
2026-06-29 03:41:43
0
princess.oyindah8
princess oyindah :
omd maknae has to be an idol that was my first idol manhwa 💜🥰
2026-06-19 07:43:49
8
caaaaiii1
casssaanddraaii :
MY BABY TAEYOONNN😭😭💔💔
2026-06-28 11:21:30
1
kipilipidipi
Farting Tom :
Love you for this
2026-06-21 04:33:43
1
seusouppp
Sam?! :
I love and hate you for this bro omg
2026-06-21 07:56:48
1
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Should SNAP Pay For Soda? Rep Brandon Gill GRILLS Witness Sugary Drinks KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — A federal judge in Washington, D.C. blocked five states' efforts to keep people from buying soda and candy with Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program funds. According to the filing in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Iowa, Nebraska, West Virginia, Colorado and Tennessee submitted requests to the Department of Agriculture to conduct "pilot projects" between April and August 2025 in an attempt to remove soda and candy from the federal definition of 'food.' Five SNAP recipients with specific medical needs sued, arguing the restrictions denied foods or drinks they relied on, with no exceptions. The recipient included Amanda Johnson who has a 19-year-old woman who was diagnosed with autism, obsessive-compulsive disorder, an intellectual disability and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder. She said all but two of the foods her daughter can eat would be banned under the program. "The medical instruction that Ms. Johnson and her daughter have been given are that her daughter should be ... basically give her whatever she will eat because she needs to eat," said Senior Attorney for the National Center for Law and Economic Justice Katharine Deabler-Meadows, who represented Johnson and the other plaintiffs. "If she doesn't, she'll get very sick, she'll have to be hospitalized." The USDA approved Tennessee's waiver in Dec. 2025. The project was scheduled to go into effect on July 31. The state's goal was "to promote healthier eating habits." The judge issued a summary judgment in favor of the SNAP recipients, saying the USDA did not have the statutory authority to approve these kinds of waivers under the statute that they cited. The judge also found the USDA did not follow procedures that are required by its own regulations.

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