AVZ Discussion 2022

JAG

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Pretty good day considering the bots at the end of the day, so remember to......

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Winenut

GO AVZ!!!!
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LEFOOL

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Frank

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Kinshasa halts Chinese energy ambitions

To develop its energy-intensive economy, China needs African cobalt, especially Congolese.

However, analyzes the “Wall Street Journal”, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) returns to the mining contracts signed with China, deemed too unfair.

For more than a decade, Chinese companies have spent billions of dollars buying up American and European mining companies in the Democratic Republic of Congo's cobalt belt – the world's richest source of a mineral that has become essential to the transition to cleaner energy.

However, this good momentum may not last: a court has ordered one of the largest of them to temporarily cede control of one of its mines.

It takes between 5 and 15 kilos of cobalt to manufacture the battery of a single electric vehicle, even if Tesla and other manufacturers are currently looking to do without this material.

Cobalt boosts the charge rate and has a stabilizing effect, which prolongs battery life and prevents cathode corrosion, a phenomenon which can cause fire.

Congo achieved 70% of global cobalt production last year and Chinese investors control the same proportion of production.

Demand is growing rapidly, and the United States fears being left behind.

The Biden government sent a team to Kinshasa, the capital, earlier this year to meet with Congolese leaders to find a way to secure access to the silver-gray metal in the United States.

Daleep Singh, a deputy national security adviser, denounced the "opacity" of Chinese mining contracts and the exploitation of the country's resources by generations of investors.

Congo is pushing for a bigger share of the market and is beginning to oppose the development of Chinese economic presence in Africa.

At the beginning of March, the Lubumbashi Commercial Court withdrew the management of the Tenke Fungurume mine, in the vast province of Lualaba, from China Molybdenum, a company listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, to entrust it to a provisional administrator for six months.

Gécamines, a Congolese state-owned company that owns a 20% stake in the mine, had accused them of underreporting reserves in order to save millions of dollars in royalties.

China Molybdenum, which bought the mine for $2.6 billion from Freeport McMoRan Inc in 2016, has offered an out-of-court settlement and hopes to see the matter resolved quickly.


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*To remind,

China Molybdenum Co. endorsed the involvement of an independent third-party to resolve its dispute with Democratic Republic of Congo over new royalty payments for its massive Tenke copper and cobalt mine, according to a statement posted on the company’s website Wednesday.

Congo announced Tuesday that state-owned miner Gecamines would suspend its court case against China Moly’s Tenke Fungurume Mining SA while the two sides try to negotiate a deal.

Last month, a Congolese court appointed a temporary administrator to run the mine after Gecamines accused China Moly of refusing to share technical information about the project, including the size of its mineral reserves.

Tenke is one of the world’s most important sources of cobalt, a mineral used in electric car batteries. Last year, the mine produced 209,100 metric tons of copper and 18,500 tons of cobalt, according to China Moly.

The company plans to produce as much as 267,000 tons of copper and 20,500 tons of cobalt in 2022.

In its statement, the Shanghai and Hong Kong-listed company said it agreed with a government proposal to engage “an internationally recognized third-party to conduct an assessment for a definitive solution to the additional royalty payment.”

“This will facilitate the expedited resolution of dispute within the contractual agreements and further strengthen our confidence in investing in the DRC,” Sun Ruiwen, China Moly’s Chief Executive Officer, said, according to the statement.

China Moly is pushing ahead with plans to expand Tenke and develop its Kisanfu copper and cobalt project this year.


The DRC has the world’s largest reserves of cobalt, a key ingredient in electric vehicle batteries, and the Tenke mine is one of its biggest employers, with around 7,000 workers and contractors.


ALL the mining experience required with excellent outcomes in the DRC.

CHINA MOLYBDENUM

15% AVZ first right.

Additional project partner.

Felix meeting was with CATH and CMOC.

PASBOZ​



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Food for thought on the Road to Manono :unsure:
 
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Frank

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The Office Lol GIF by MOODMAN

Good one mate......:ROFLMAO:
Some People i know would be Happy with a Pet Chameleon who Digs Pink Floyd rather than a Little Red Corvette 🚘 ;)🦎

 
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CHB

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Hopefully a good day today given the US lead.
 
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JAG

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Could Elon Musk actually be considering a factory in DRC? Comments in bold in article.

Source: https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/te...-burdens-dr-congo-brings-to-eac-table-3769482

The East AfricanNews
East Africa Opportunities and burdens DR Congo brings to EAC table

MONDAY APRIL 04 2022

Summary
DR Congo, EAC’s newest member, has a rich portfolio of precious metals and natural resources that its partners can’t wait to avail themselves of. But the road to Kinshasa is treacherous and heavily mined.

It has cobalt, gold, diamond, aluminium, copper and other precious minerals; 95 million people, numerous water bodies, vast farmland, rich biodiversity, and the world’s second-largest rain forest.

The resource portfolio of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the newest member of the East African Community, is impressive and unmatched in the region.

It has cobalt, gold, diamond, aluminium, copper and other precious minerals; 95 million people, numerous water bodies, vast farmland, rich biodiversity, and the world’s second-largest rain forest.

On its accession to the bloc on March 29, during an extraordinary Heads of State Summit, DR Congo’s President Félix Tshisekedi promised to optimise the exploitation of these economic assets in collaboration with his new partners.

That was music to the ears of many citizens and corporations of the EAC, who have been salivating at the opportunities Kinshasa brings to the table.

For instance, energy transition is one of the hottest areas of investment and, given the global challenges related to the development of industries, many states are seeking to create wealth based on this transition.

Congo’s mineral reserves, added to the hydroelectric power potential of the giant Inga dam — an Agenda 2063 flagship project meant to contribute to the East African Power Pool — are assets for which Kinshasa is being wooed the world over. And now the EAC has the dibs on ventures around this transition.

The DRC is the world’s leading producer of cobalt, used in the manufacture of batteries. It is also the world's fourth-largest producer of copper, used in the assembly of electric cars and the infrastructure of most renewable energy sources. Lithium deposits, estimated at over 130 million tonnes, are also present in the southeast.

minerals

In the Fourth Industrial Revolution, Kinshasa plays a central role in the provision of raw materials, without which important technological components would not exist.

Congo has most of the mineral ores that produce key components in making computer chips and electric vehicles, technologies that are powering the drive to the future. In a typical computer, copper and gold are key components used in making the monitor, printed circuit boards and chips.

Cobalt constitutes 6.45 percent of the materials that make electric vehicle batteries while copper constitutes 25.8 percent. Jointly, copper and cobalt constitute more than a third of EV batteries.

DRC is rich in these minerals, producing 68 percent of the world’s cobalt — the largest globally — and over 1.8 million tonnes of copper annually.

In an earlier interview with The EastAfrican, Equity Group CEO James Mwangi said they were seeking Tesla boss Elon Musk to establish a plant in DRC to avail himself of the raw materials and add value at the source.

“The global commodity prices of the raw materials that the DRC produces are at an all-time high. The world is going green, and the biggest driver is demand for green locomotive energy. Now 70 percent of coltan and cobalt comes from the DRC, and the highest copper quality in the world, accounting for 30 percent of the world’s supply. So we can see as demand picks up, as the world wants to have zero transport-linked emissions by 2030, the demand can only go up, and prices can only go up because of constrained supply,” he said.

Uranium, a key fuel in nuclear plants and nuclear fission, is found in eight locations in the South Kivu and Katanga provinces in the south.

In 2020, these minerals accounted for $17.8 billion, about 91 percent of DRC’s total exports, and 36 percent of the country’s GDP that year.

Intra-trade
The admission of the DRC into the EAC, with a population of 95 million people, has been hailed as a game-changer in a region where intra-trade, infrastructure development, health and food security suffered shocks due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The new EAC now offers a combined market-driven economy of 266 million people and a GDP of $243 billion.

DRC, sub-Sahara’s largest country, will also be EAC’s largest. It brings her French heritage and, together with Rwanda and Burundi, gives EAC a new identity: Africa’s largest Francophone bloc.

Connectivity

The trade potential of this is significant.

With this bloc now stretching from the Indian Ocean in the East to the Atlantic in the west, the DRC presents the potential to open the Indian Ocean to the Atlantic Trade Corridor and link the region to Central Africa, North Africa, and other continental sub-regions.

In return, the DRC will benefit from the EAC Common Market and Customs frameworks, with easier and seamless access to the markets and seaports of Kenya and Tanzania at cheaper rates.

During the admission summit, Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu emphasised the importance of Kinshasa in terms of infrastructure development.

While referring to the planned construction of the railway from Tanzania to Burundi and by extension to the DRC, President Samia observed that the entry of Congo has the potential to spur much more development in the region.

“Connecting the DRC railway network with the EAC will provide an opportunity for increasing access to EAC markets and reducing the cost of intra-regional trade,” she said.

Trade and investment

More cargo is expected to shift from the Northern Corridor to the Central Corridor. Truckers are weighing their options on which route to use to ferry goods to the vast DRC.

The Central Corridor, which is 1,300km long, begins at the Port of Dar es Salaam and serves Tanzania, Zambia, Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda and Eastern DRC.

The Northern Corridor, 1,700km long, starts at the Port of Mombasa and serves Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, eastern DRC and South Sudan.

DRC’s entry means integrating the EAC’s trade infrastructure, intermodal connectivity, one-stop border posts, and systems to reduce trade time and costs.

“With lower tariffs on goods and the removal of trading restrictions among partner states, we anticipate that goods and services will move more freely. With a larger market, manufacturers in the EAC will benefit from economies of scale, making them increasingly efficient and competitive,” said Peter Mathuki, EAC Secretary-General.

The private sector says Congo’s admission is a milestone in the transformation of the bloc into the most attractive trade and investment destination in Africa.

According to the East African Business Council, EAC’s exports to the DRC have averaged 13.5 percent in the last seven years to 2020. In 2018, the value of imported goods into the DRC stood at $7.4 billion against exports of $855.4 million.

“Following this milestone, trade is set to increase immensely, as DRC shares its borders with five EAC partner states. We call for the improvement of regional infrastructure connectivity plus the implementation of EAC commitments to unlock trade opportunities,” said the council’s CEO John Bosco Kalisa.

The Congolese expect a lot from the region. “The benefits expected from the EAC membership is the multiple administrative facilities, the reduction of charges and the increase in commercial and economic activities of citizens as well as the facilitation of their mobility between our countries; the reduction of Customs tariffs for goods received in the ports of Mombasa and Dar es Salaam,” said President Tshisekedi.

“We expect economic dividends and other benefits from this EAC,” said Sardou Kabongo, a 39-year-old Congolese.

“The EAC is said to be the most integrated sub-regional organisation on the continent. If this membership will impact the price of certain goods and services — notably the cost of transport — we welcome it. We must also learn not only to buy cheaply but also to produce, otherwise, we will remain a market for the other six members of this organisation,” Fiston Oleko, a 34-year-old Kinshasa resident, told The EastAfrican.

Fidèle Kitsa, 35, a resident of Goma in North Kivu on the border with Rwanda, said the DRC’s membership “is a good thing” because it will facilitate trade.

“Travellers will no longer have to pay for a visa, so it will be easier. As for goods, it will help to reduce taxes and, in turn, bring down the price of certain products on the market,” he said.

The EAC is reviewing the Common Market Protocol to spur intra-regional trade, which has stagnated at around 15 percent. The Heads of State Summit will review the protocol in a retreat before this year’s summit this month.

Explaining the rationale of the review, Kevit Desai, Principal Secretary in Kenya’s Ministry of EAC and Regional Development, who chairs the EAC PSs committee reviewing the CMP, said: “We want to review the CMP for everything from transport and logistics to the need for interconnectivity to market systems, to sector-based thinking, to promotion of innovation, technology, e-commerce and so on, which did not exist when we wrote the CMP about 12 years ago.”

Continental market

Roselyne Omondi, associate director of research at the Horn Institute says that, like Tanzania, DRC is a Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) member state and its entry into the EAC strengthens the EAC-SADC bridge, bolsters ongoing bilateral negotiations for a Grand Free Trade Area between EAC, SADC and Comesa.

Even before its admission, EAC countries had already signed bilateral deals with Kinshasa. For example, Uganda and Rwanda are already constructing three roads into eastern DRC to ease business and increase trade and investment between them.

In the region, Uganda is the second largest exporter to Congo, after Rwanda. Uganda mainly sells cement, cooking oil, rice, sugar and tubes and pipes. It also exports food and traders hope Congo will provide market for products such as food, spirits, textiles, plastics and others.

Read: Uganda, Rwanda paying Tshisekedi a king's ransom to access DRC

In the last quarter of 2021, DRC accounted for 96 percent of Rwanda’s total re-exports, covering food and live animals ($ 39.87 million), mineral fuels and lubricants ($ 33.55 million), according to Rwanda’s Institute of Statistics.

Rwanda’s total exports with EAC member countries, which represent 4.7 percent, rose by 32.9 percent in value, standing at $72.3 million in 2021. Imports from EAC increased by 6.4 percent, according to central bank figures.

Trade experts from across the continent under the Akademiya2063 think tank, who recently met in Kigali to discuss the regional trade outlook, said 40 percent of the region’s trade costs are attributable to transport, high cost of electricity and gaps in trade facilitation.

Although regional countries and trade partners have succeeded in eliminating some non-tariff barriers, it has had little impact on trade costs, a burden o en shouldered by the consumer.

“It is more expensive to transport avocado from Kigali to DRC by air compared with transporting it to Dubai. A lot needs to be done at a bilateral level to address these issues if the cost of trade is to be brought down,” Claude Bizimana, CEO of National Agricultural Export Development Board told the meeting.

“DRC is bringing a large mass of consumers and producers to join the bloc. This spells much more expanded trade fortunes for the region,” said Ousmane Badiane, chairperson of Akademiya2063.

Patience Mutesi, country director of TradeMark East Africa, said DRC has only had bilateral agreements with EAC member states, and these have limited its traders from enjoying some benefits.

“There are trade frameworks that traders for DRC will enjoy after joining the bloc. For instance, small traders will be exempted from duties while trading across the bloc. For a Rwandan trader to take goods to DRC the $20 CEPGL levy will no longer be applicable,” she said.

Congo has five immigration and tax bodies, which traders say encourages corruption.

Many analysts say the Congo’s EAC membership was long overdue.

“Majority of the countries in this Community border us. We share populations, languages, customs and natural environment. We have been engaged in significant economic exchanges for several decades,” said President Tshisekedi.

“In fact, the Congolese have always been part of East Africa. All that remained was to formalise this membership in an organised structure and to integrate into a sub-regional development dynamic.” Nicaise Kibel Bel, a Goma-based security expert said Kinshasa has been “a distant city for the people of the east of the country compared with Kampala, Kigali or Nairobi.”

“Trade is more with neighbouring countries than with Kinshasa. It was in our best interest to join the EAC,” he said.

Akilimali Chomachoma, a journalist also based in Goma, supported Bel’s argument: “To travel from Goma to Kinshasa city and back, you have to spend more than $450 on aeroplane tickets, while to travel to Rwanda from Goma, you just need $5, and $75 to get to Kampala from Goma.”

Cutting bureaucracy

Some provinces in the DRC have easier access by road to East African countries, while to reach Kinshasa and other western provinces, the only way is by air.

Mr Chomachoma noted that, for importers of products from East African countries, “This is another step in reducing bureaucracy and costs”.

But, for Daddy Saleh, a professor of economics, DRC’s membership will negatively impact local industries in the long term. Saleh told The EastAfrican that, given the nature of the Congolese economy, where almost everything is imported, local industries will face competition that could undermine local productivity.

“On the production side, we are below the regional average. We have few distribution structures, from a logistical point of view. In my opinion, the Congolese economy is not yet ready to join the EAC. In the current state, in the long term, this will inevitably destroy our production capacity. The other countries in the Community will produce at a lower cost than us. As a result, our products will not find a market,” Mr Saleh said.

Economic dividend, other benefits of DR Congo entry

Remy Zahiga a Congolese climate activist, in an article published in IPS, acknowledges the role Congo Basin plays in sub-Saharan Africa, in keeping droughts and extreme heatwaves at bay.

The Congo Basin forest has more than 600 tree species and 10,000 animal species, including forest elephants, lowland gorillas, bonobos, and okapi. Its vegetation is estimated to contain between 25-30 billion tonnes of carbon, equivalent to about four years of global anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide.

Congo is home to some of unique indigenous cultures and geographical phenomena not found anywhere else in the world, making it a significant tourist destination.

Kinshasa, the largest city in Africa, is famed as the “New York of Africa” for its large population. Fun is spelt out in its streets, with epic street art culture, boat rides, shore barbeque joints, and the Marche des voleurs (City Market), all of which hypnotise visitors with fun and colour.

The Lola ya Bonobo (Friends of Bonobo) in the southern suburbs of Kinshasa is the world’s only sanctuary for orphaned bonobos, a rare breed of apes, and the most visited part of the city.

Away from the capital, the Kahuzi Biega National Park in South Kivu Province, the Nyiragongo volcano near Goma, Lake Kivu, and the Zongo Falls are some of the tourist attractions.

Even before its entry into the EAC, DRC had been contributing a significant number of tourists to the region.

According to the UN World Tourism Organisation, 48 percent of non-resident tourists into Rwanda in 2019 were from the DRC, above tourism arrivals from all East African countries combined.

Kenya’s Tourism Cabinet Secretary Najib Balala told The EastAfrican of plans to woo Congolese tourists into Kenya, now that travel restrictions will be no more.

“We plan to send a team to DRC to assess the market there, their interests, and purchasing power, just to see how we can utilise this opportunity to increase Congolese visitors to Kenya,” Mr Balala said.

Recently, the EAC adopted French as the third official language after English and Kiswahili. “The Secretariat has developed a proposal for simultaneous translation into Kiswahili and French in EAC statutory meetings,” said Dr Mathuki.

Unending conflict

DRC has been tagged a ‘problem child’. Despite its wealth, it is one of the poorest and most underdeveloped countries in Africa.

With a population of 95.241 million, according to the IMF, its GDP is projected to reach $50.1 billion in 2022.

Congo’s natural resources appear to be more of a curse than a blessing, as they bring no substantial gains to its economy or citizens.

Until recently, most of DRC’s main copper and cobalt mines were controlled by private entities, mostly owned by Israeli businessman Dan Gertler, who allegedly acquired the mining rights in corrupt dealings with former president Joseph Kabila, at the expense of the state and the Congolese people.

The unending conflict has consistently ravaged the country, claiming the lives of more than five million people, driving millions more into starvation and exposing them to diseases, and has resulted in a violation of human rights, where millions of women and girls have been raped.

The conflict has claimed the na – nation’s political and economic stability to the benefit of international conglomerates that have interests in the country’s natural wealth.

Roselyne Omondi, associate director of research at the HORN Institute, in a blog this week, said becoming EAC’s newest member “will not suddenly melt away the socioeconomic and geopolitical problems that plague DRC.”

“DRC’s inability to improve its development outcomes sufficiently despite rising commodity prices and her expanded production capacity could point to poor economic management, geopolitical interference, and protracted political crises. To be clear, DRC’s entry into the EAC will not introduce anything that its six current members are not already accustomed to.

“With or without DRC, armed militant groups, terrorism, illegal migration, political turbulence, underdeveloped economies, youth unemployment, poverty, and poor infrastructure are realities that EAC has contended with...

However, it will recalibrate the bloc’s peace and security considerations,” she wrote.

More than 100 militia groups are active in eastern DRC. The change in the Allied Democratic Force’s identity from a militia group into a militia-terror group has also complicated DRC’s security challenges.

The DRC is the Great Lakes Region’s poster child for sustained conflict and insecurity across its vast territory, especially in the volatile eastern Congo provinces of Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu.

Lydia Wanyoto, a former East African Legislative Assembly MP from Uganda, says it is time to tackle the well-documented Congo security issue before it spreads into the region now that the bloc guarantees Congolese free movement of persons.

“What Uganda is doing is the right thing, to take care of the insecurity in Congo,” she said, referring to the deployment of Uganda Peoples Defence Forces in Ituri and North Kivu provinces in November 2021, to fight the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) terrorist group.
 
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JAG

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Hopefully we follow the Green trend.....:):)

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JAG

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BRICK

Where’s Zeebot 😶‍🌫️
and... now the predictable dump after yesterday!
 
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Samus

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Something has happened, market shitting the bed across my watch list.
 
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JAG

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mrtoad

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Was mostly silent over at HC for many years (got in around 6c). To be honest I owe a lot to you regular posters - it is a strange to say this to "strangers", but this stock has been life changing for me. So, thank you.

And I'm staying for the divvies.
 
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BRICK

Where’s Zeebot 😶‍🌫️
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Retrobyte

Hates a beer
Lebanon govt announced the country is bankrupt
 
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Samus

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One thing is for sure the sheep are easily spooked. Never ceases to amaze.
 
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John25

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One thing is for sure the sheep are easily spooked. Never ceases to amaze.
Spooked ..... mine are running like scared bastards
 

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Frank

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and... now the predictable dump after yesterday!

*Speaking of "Dumps" wasn't that long ago we had Doozy :oops: :poop: :eek:


AVZ 05-April-22.png


All part of the "Fun & Games" on the ASX / AVZ Roller Coaster :sick:

#roller-coaster.png


Hang onto your AVZ Caps Chaps and don't let em' go🧢
 
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BRICK

Where’s Zeebot 😶‍🌫️
*Speaking of "Dumps" wasn't that long ago we had Doozy :oops: :poop: :eek:


View attachment 3789

All part of the "Fun & Games" on the ASX / AVZ Roller Coaster :sick:

View attachment 3790

Hang onto your AVZ Caps Chaps and don't let em' go🧢
Yeah sheesh that was a doozi hey. but, im balls deep and holding on! wooo hoooo
 
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