Posts Tagged ‘teachers pet’

A Girl & Her Teddy Bear

April 24th, 2013

My Horny Little Teddybear

A girl always loves her teddy bear, I will let you guys into a secret us girls have kept since forever. I know you men like to think you are our first love but you all have only been our second love coz our teddy bear’s you to it. Have you always wondered why us girls love our teddy bears and stuff toys? You want to know why? Because they feel great between our legs when we rub our little cunny against there soft fur. Mmm it getting me wet now thinking of my teddy bear, I love the way he just knows what to do as I rub my wet pussy against him as he lies between my legs. I love this hot photo set for the memories it brought back to me and on my website TeraLee.com this hot photo set with matching video is called My Teddybear;-0)

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Bedroom Tease

February 23rd, 2013

Do I Turn You On? Tera Lee Is The Tease

Some people say I am a tease but I will let you be the judge of that I think all women who are comfortable with their sexuality know how to tease, I think that is the power god gave us women over man. Men are primal they think with their cock and balls and lady when you realize that then you truly will have power over your man;-) On my website TeraLee.com this sexy photo set with matching video is called Bedroom Tease and trust me ladies I know how to tease so I know I have the power;-)

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Tease You All Night Long

March 19th, 2012

Smack That Ass

This sexy photo is from my photo set that is on my website TeraLee.com that is simple called Lounge room Tease, most people who know will say that I am a tease and a flirt:-) I just cannot help it, god has endowed us women with some assets that men do not have and I think it is a wastes if we do not use them to our advantage:-)

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Burgundy Dress & Little Black Panties

February 25th, 2012

My Little Black Panties Are Showing

I look so sweet and innocent in this beautiful photo, I love this burgundy dress and will often wear it shopping. It is more like a sun dress that you would wear to the beach or swimming, normally it is something you would find sexy but when I am wearing it and I am in a playful mood then it does look sexy on me. Can you see my little panties that are just starting to show as I straighten one of my legs out? I love being a model and I love both men and women looking at me with lust in their eyes, it gets me wet, real quick:-) On my website TeraLee.com this photo set that also has a matching HOT video that goes with it is called Burgundy & Black. Burgundy because of the dress and black for my little black thong panties that I wear but not for long as you will see when you view the completed photo set or video:-)

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Tera Lee’s Philippines History Lesson 6

April 26th, 2011

Tera Lee Super Hot History Teacher

La Solidaridad & La Liga Filipina


La Liga Filipina

In 1892, Jose Rizal (full name: Jose Protacio Mercado Rizal y Alonzo) returned to the Philippines and proposed the establishment of a civic organization called “La Liga Filipina.” On July 3, 1892, the following were elected as its officers: Ambrosio Salvador, president: Agustin dela Rosa, fiscal; Bonifacio Arevalo, treasurer; and Deodato Arellano, secretary. Rizal functioned as its adviser.

La Liga Filipina aimed to:


Unite the whole country
Protect and assist all members
Fight violence and injustice
Support education
Study and implement reforms

La Liga Filipina had no intention of rising up in arms against the government; but the Spanish officials still felt threatened. On July 6, 1892 only three days after La Liga Filipina’s establishment, Jose Rizal was secretly arrested. The next day, Governor General Eulogio Despujol ordered Rizal’s deportation to Dapitan, a small, secluded town in Zamboanga.
La Liga Filipina’s membership was active in the beginning; but later, they began to drift apart. The rich members wanted to continue supporting the Propaganda Movement; but the others seemed to have lost all hope that reforms could still be granted. Andres Bonifacio was one of those who believed that the only way to achieve meaningful change was through a bloody revolution.

La Solidaridad

In order to help achieve its goals, the Propaganda Movement put up its own newspaper, called La Solidaridad. The Soli, as the reformists fondly called their official organ, came out once every two weeks. The first issue saw print was published on November 15, 1895.
The Solidaridad’s first editor was Graciano Lopez Jaena. Marcelo H. del Pilar took over in October 1889. Del Pilar managed the Soli until it stopped publication due to lack of funds.


Why the Propaganda Movement Failed
The propaganda movement did not succeed in its pursuit of reforms. The colonial government did not agree to any of its demands. Spain itself was undergoing a lot of internal problems all that time, which could explain why the mother country failed to heed the Filipino’s petitions. The friars, on the other hand, were at the height of their power and displayed even more arrogance in flaunting their influence. They had neither the time nor the desire to listen to the voice of the people.
Many of the reformists showed a deep love for their country, although they still failed to maintain a united front. Because most of them belonged to the upper middle class, they had to exercise caution in order to safeguard their wealth and other private interests. Personal differences and petty quarrels, apart from the lack of funds, were also a hindrance to the movements success. Lastly, no other strong and charismatic leader emerged from the group aside from Jose Rizal.

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Tera Lee-Philippine History Lesson 5

April 15th, 2011

Tera Lee-Sexy History Teacher

The Death of Gomburza & The Propaganda Movement

Fathers Gomez, Burgos and Zamora, Filipino Martyrs In February 17, 1872, Fathers Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos and Jocinto Zamora (Gomburza), all Filipino priest, was executed by the Spanish colonizers on charges of subversion. The charges against Fathers Gomez, Burgos and Zamora was their alleged complicity in the uprising of workers at the Cavite Naval Yard. The death of Gomburza awakened strong feelings of anger and resentment among the Filipinos. They questioned Spanish authorities and demanded reforms. The martyrdom of the three priests apparently helped to inspire the organization of the Propaganda Movement, which aimed to seek reforms and inform Spain of the abuses of its colonial government.

The illustrados led the Filipinos’ quest for reforms. Because of their education and newly acquired wealth, they felt more confident about voicing out popular grievances. However, since the illustrados themselves were a result of the changes that the Spanish government had been slowly implementing, the group could not really push very hard for the reforms it wanted. The illustrados did not succeeded in easing the sufferings of the Filipinos; but from this group arose another faction called the intelligentsia.  The intelligentsia also wanted reforms; but they were more systematic and used a peaceful means called the Propaganda Movement.

Goals of the Propaganda Movement: Members of the Propaganda Movement were called propagandists or reformists. They worked inside and outside the Philippines. Their objectives were to seek:

Recognition of the Philippines as a province of Spain

Equal status for both Filipinos and Spaniards

Philippine representation in the Spanish Cortes

Secularization of Philippine parishes.

Recognition of human rights

The Propaganda Movement never asked for Philippine independence because its members believed that once Spain realized the pitiful state of the country, the Spaniards would implement the changes the Filipinos were seeking.

The Propagandists: The Filipinos in Europe were much more active in seeking reforms than those in Manila. They could be divided into three groups: The first included Filipinos who had been exiled to the Marianas Islands in 1872 after being implicated in the Cavite Mutiny. After two many years in the Marianas, they proceeded to Madrid and Barcelona because they could no longer return Noli Me Tangere Book by Jose Rizalto the Philippines. The second group consisted of illustrados in the Philippines who had been sent to Europe for their education. The third group was composed of Filipinos who had fled their country to avoid punishment for a crime, or simply because they could not stand Spanish atrocities any longer. Still, not all Filipinos living in Spain were members of the Propaganda Movement. Jose Rizal, Graciano Lopez Jaena and Marcelo H. del Pilar were it most prominent members.

Lopez Jaena was a brilliant orator who wrote such pieces as “Fray Botod,” “Esperanza,” and “La Hija del Fraile,” which all criticized the abuses of Spanish friars in the Philippines. Del Pilar was an excellent writer and speaker who put up the newspaper Diarion Tagalog in 1882. His favorite topic was the friars. Some of his most popular writings included “Caiingat Cayo“, “Dasalan at Tocsohan,” and “Ang Sampung Kautusan ng mga Prayle“. “Caingat Cayo” was a pamphlet answering the criticisms received by Jose Rizal’s novel Noli Me Tangere. “Dasalan…” was parody of the prayer books used by the Church, while “Ang Sampung Kautusan…” was a satirical take on the Ten Commandments, which highly ridiculed the Spanish friars.

Jose Rizal was recognized as the great novelist of the Propaganda Movement. He was the first Filipino become famous for his written works. He wrote a poem entitled “Sa Aking mga Kababata” when he was only eight years old. His novels, Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo, clearly depicted the sufferings of the Filipinos and the rampant abuses committed by the friars in the colony. Because of his criticisms of the government and the friars, Rizal made a lot of enemies. He was executed at Bagumbayan (later renamed Luneta Park and now called Rizal Park) on December 30, 1896.

The writings produced by the Propaganda Movement inspired Andres Bonifacio and other radicals to establish the Katipunan and set the Philippine Revolution in place. Continue to La Solidaridad & La Liga Filipina.

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