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The fictional premise of Star Trek (1966-) is that the presence of aliens amongst the worlds not of Earth, were accepted. Actor Michael Dorn as Lt. Worf, a male Klingon, for example, is in make-up, and doesn't give birth to aliens. Consequently, 1965's Femina Miss India beauty contest winner, actress Persis Khambatta, possessed by the alien, V'Ger, in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) represents women being mocked, while trying to make contact with traces of their own futa races. However, men's alien knows where it came from, which is why women are its pod bods denied knowledge of its futa…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The fictional premise of Star Trek (1966-) is that the presence of aliens amongst the worlds not of Earth, were accepted. Actor Michael Dorn as Lt. Worf, a male Klingon, for example, is in make-up, and doesn't give birth to aliens. Consequently, 1965's Femina Miss India beauty contest winner, actress Persis Khambatta, possessed by the alien, V'Ger, in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) represents women being mocked, while trying to make contact with traces of their own futa races. However, men's alien knows where it came from, which is why women are its pod bods denied knowledge of its futa race's potential for expanding its role as a dad's bag. Moreover, women are per se human, because they can fertilize their own host wombs, whereas men devour the contents in war, etc., and don't have host wombs, that is, it isn't their fut, whereas women need it to run, or they're food.
Autorenporträt
As a member of the American Fellowship Church (AFC), the Universal Life Church (ULC), and the Full Gospel Businessmen's Fellowship International (FGBMFI), Dr Robin Bright has been bringing the light of Christianity to the world since he was a bulb.