The devil doesn’t just lie outright—because lies can often be recognized and dismissed. Instead, deceit is more insidious. It’s about taking fragments of truth and weaponizing them. A negative truth repeated out of context or without balance can overshadow a person's sense of hope, perspective, and progress.
It’s like planting seeds of despair—over time, they grow into mental traps. The truth, which is supposed to set us free, becomes a prison when stripped of context, forgiveness, or the possibility of change.
For instance, being reminded of a personal failure over and over might be true, but without the opportunity to move past it, that truth becomes toxic. The antidote, then, isn’t to deny the truth but to reshape it—to reframe it with understanding, growth, and hope.
Maybe the devil’s power lies in his ability to make us forget the whole story, focusing only on the parts that hurt.
Someone on another social site said Cumia was randomly attacked by a black woman on the street and has been in a rampage since. I think he talked about it in the radio show.
GO AHEAD!!
DOWN VOTE ME ALL YOU WANT!
IF blaming me as the black man MAKES YOU FEEL BETTER.
GO AHEAD!
Tell your friends it's ThePhantom's fault!
See how helpful that is.
Cumia is Italian and is stereotyping the criminality of a specific group? LULZ.
lol.
These guys are just clowns.
I use to think the devil was the father of lies.
The devil doesn’t just lie outright—because lies can often be recognized and dismissed. Instead, deceit is more insidious. It’s about taking fragments of truth and weaponizing them. A negative truth repeated out of context or without balance can overshadow a person's sense of hope, perspective, and progress.
It’s like planting seeds of despair—over time, they grow into mental traps. The truth, which is supposed to set us free, becomes a prison when stripped of context, forgiveness, or the possibility of change.
For instance, being reminded of a personal failure over and over might be true, but without the opportunity to move past it, that truth becomes toxic. The antidote, then, isn’t to deny the truth but to reshape it—to reframe it with understanding, growth, and hope.
Maybe the devil’s power lies in his ability to make us forget the whole story, focusing only on the parts that hurt.
Someone on another social site said Cumia was randomly attacked by a black woman on the street and has been in a rampage since. I think he talked about it in the radio show.
I hate that happened to him.
He doesn't have realistic solutions to fix the problem.
I remember that Trump once said. "80 percent of our crime would go away if we defeated the drug cartels"