If you don’t think radical ideology can threaten this country, you weren’t watching the transgender movement.
In barely a decade we went from biology being a settled fact to being told gender identity overrides it, that kids can decide their own sex, and that anyone who hesitated was a bigot. It started as a fringe academic idea. Then it was in the schools, the hospitals, the boardrooms, and the government.
It didn’t take a majority. It took a small, disciplined movement that knew which buttons to push, compassion, victimhood, the fear of being called cruel. And it worked.
That’s the part to sit with. It was never about one issue. It’s proof that a determined movement can rewrite an entire society faster than anyone thinks possible. If it happened once, it can happen again.
Pay attention….
@spencerpratt Rules are strictly for the taxpayers who fund his salary. I’m sure his personal central air unit is working completely overtime to keep his climate-controlled rent controlled home nice and frosty.
@TheOfficerTatum Holding a Senate seat while completely incapacitated and hidden from the public is a profound violation of constitutional duty. The voters deserve real answers immediately.
@libsoftiktok Watching the media look directly at a biological male with an arsenal of weapons and call him a woman to protect a narrative is genuinely unhinged behavior.
Meet Said Abdelrazek:
An Egyptian Christian convert imprisoned in Egypt for refusing to renounce his faith.
In 2016, Said left Islam and became a Christian. Since then, his supporters say he’s paid an unimaginable price. They say he was forced to divorce his wife, separated from his son, tortured, and eventually arrested after attempting to update his government ID to reflect his Christian faith.
Today, he remains behind bars on terrorism charges. His supporters allege he has been denied food and medical care and subjected to brutal abuse because he refuses to abandon his faith.
You don’t have to share someone’s beliefs to defend their right to hold them. No one should be imprisoned, tortured, or persecuted simply for choosing a different religion.
Please share Said’s story, pray for him if you’re willing, and sign the attached petition calling for his release.
Meet Said Abdelrazek:
An Egyptian Christian convert imprisoned in Egypt for refusing to renounce his faith.
In 2016, Said left Islam and became a Christian. Since then, his supporters say he’s paid an unimaginable price. They say he was forced to divorce his wife, separated from his son, tortured, and eventually arrested after attempting to update his government ID to reflect his Christian faith.
Today, he remains behind bars on terrorism charges. His supporters allege he has been denied food and medical care and subjected to brutal abuse because he refuses to abandon his faith.
You don’t have to share someone’s beliefs to defend their right to hold them. No one should be imprisoned, tortured, or persecuted simply for choosing a different religion.
Please share Said’s story, pray for him if you’re willing, and sign the attached petition calling for his release.
@stoolpresidente Don't worry, I'm sure the government officials making these rules have their own office thermostats set exactly to 78 degrees too. They definitely practice what they preach.
📢 Announcement
@The_Watch_Floor is now under new management, mine. The podcast will be on a brief hiatus and will be back soon with the need to know information, geopolitical analysis, and conversations that matter.
In the meantime, get out and enjoy America's 250th with your family and friends. Have a safe and happy Independence Day, and I'll see you back on the show soon.
@StephenM You do not believe in citizenship, correct. They believe in geography. Stand in the right spot for 30 seconds and you’ve earned what my ancestors built over generations. No.
@Xlovehermadly I think that there is a conversation to be had about religious freedom and tolerance. As a nation, we have become too comfortable with bashing Christian values. Even though our foundation wa built on them.
I’ve noticed that the most successful immigrants are usually the ones deeply grateful for the United States. Maybe the ungrateful ones should try trading their complaints for that same mindset.
Just saying….
No. They came here legally and love the country.
I think there is a stronger case for you…
You swore an oath in 2020, and have spend the years since shitting on America: “abolish ICE,” Trump worse than terrorists, endless anti-US foreign policy rants.
Naturalization requires “attachment to Constitution” & good moral character.
You’re a serial America-hater who holds UK passport.
I’ve noticed that the most successful immigrants are usually the ones deeply grateful for the United States. Maybe the ungrateful ones should try trading their complaints for that same mindset.
Just saying….