👉🏻 https://x.com/ericldaugh/status/2011956224393191464
👉🏻 https://nitter.net/ericldaugh/status/2011956224393191464
🚨 HOLY SMOKES. The Trump admin is creating a database of ALL leftist insurrectionists attacking ICE and will be broadcasting their name and face
They’re also gonna contact employers
TOM HOMAN: “We’re gonna MAKE ‘EM FAMOUS!” 🔥🔥 x.com/Acyn/status/20…
“We're going to let their employers and their neighborhoods and their schools know who these people are. I bet you a lot of their employers don’t know what they are doing!”
I LOVE THIS IDEA!
God is with each and all of us; even those who do evil who cannot or will not repent. IMO, the biggest frustration to deal with is being unable to help others, including family, because they cannot accept or reject the premise be it belief in God or other things like alternative medicine. The Covid genocide was and is difficult for me.
Me, too. One of my sons got the jab and several update jabs and promptly got cancer. He seems to have beaten it with a lot of painful cancer industry procedures, but he doesn't feel good most of the time. I tried to tell him, and I found out he was on the other side of the fence. He and his wife actually voted for Hillary, condemning Trump for one single offhand remark while ignoring the mountain of evidence that Hillary was a monster. My own son. I felt like a failure.
I can't think about it. I just pray for him. Standing in the gap, as it were. I did have previous experience with brainwashed people, I just never expected it in him. My dad was a closet communist, probably from going to college in the 1920s, and it was impossible to move him off his talking points. If you started to make sense in a dinner argument, he would just raise the volume, and we would have shouting for dessert. (My mom had a list of topics that were not to be mentioned in the interest of peace.)
All things considered, my dad was actually quite a brilliant man, but being brilliant means that you can also brilliantly deny what you don't want to believe. He could never admit when he was wrong, even when he suspected it might be the case.