Young Christian man. Gen Z. Marvel & DC fan. I try to love everyone as best I can. Jesus is my Savior, King, and God. Both the Left and the Right are wrong.
I’m noticing a theme… everything Zionists have accused Russia of, Israel is actually involved in.
An Israeli citizen, Ori Solomon, was operating illegal bio labs in Las Vegas.
Now we learn Israel is interfering in elections.
Color me shocked.
Bolshevism became Zionism.
The Israelis coerced a confession out of this autistic child. No lawyer. He doesn’t understand what’s being said. He’s suffering from a concussion and skull fracture.
The Israelis interrogator slaps him on his concussed head.
They then shove him in a hole, in solitary confinement, for half of his life, for over a decade, a few days of solitary confinement is a recognised war crime.
He develops schizophrenia and amnesia due to contant torture, beatings and isolation.
This is the fate of so many children.
Israel is the only “country” on earth that has a system specifically designed to do this. Hundreds of children a year.
This is one of the most brutal apartheids in history.
Ahmad Manasra. Remember his name.
@WomenReadWomen That certainly is a big part of it but why would they even do those things if they didn’t have a Postmodern understanding of how they view the world?
They have to have the worldview first before they do any of those things no?
Because beliefs precedes actions.
Being Catholic is the most Extreme, most Radical, most Conservative, most Traditional natural reality of our human being. We defer to the Vicar of Christ on Earth.
Stop badmouthing the Pope; accept his teachings in faith 🕊️
Christian Zionism is Israel centered,
Not Jesus Christ centered.
1) Christ is made subordinate to 1948 political Israel, supposedly fulfilling prophecies to hasten His return
2) Apostate Israel then becomes the object of hope, meaning, and devotion, rather than Christ Himself
I just signed a legally binding contract under penalty of perjury.
The terms are simple: if I break any one of my promises as Florida Governor, I cannot run for re-election.
Politicians in both parties have lied to us. That ends with me.
Owlman is so much better than The Batman Who Laughs as an “evil Batman” archetype in literally every single way. It’s not even close.
The Batman Who Laughs is uninspired and unoriginal.
He’s so damn boring.
Owlman is the TRUE evil Batman archetype.
This is Ivy.
She was born without hands and forearms.
But her mother REFUSED to kill her in an abortion.
Vanessa McLeod felt devastated when she learned that her unborn baby was disabled.
The medical specialists only added to her fears when they suggested she have an abortion. She said they made her “feel guilty” for wanting her baby, and she began to doubt her ability to care for a child with special needs.
Vanessa knew she could not abort her daughter, Ivy, and her husband’s and parents’ encouragement helped more than anything else.
“I was still paralyzed with fear and worry for the remainder of my pregnancy, but my perspective began to shift,” she said. “Things just started to make sense, they started to fit. It felt right. I felt like the Universe chose me, out of millions of mothers, to be Ivy’s mom.”
She said she was 19 weeks pregnant when she found out that there was something wrong with her daughter.
She said her husband was away on a work trip, so her mother went along to her ultrasound appointment. Though it took longer than usual, she said they did not think anything was wrong.
The next day, however, her midwife called with the bad news. Her mother and father went with her to meet the midwife to learn more.
As Vanessa says:
“From the moment my midwife called me, up until we arrived at her office, I don’t think I stopped crying. I was terrified I was going to lose this baby. As my mom and I sat in the parking lot of my midwife’s office, preparing to go in, my mom looked at me and said, ‘Vaness, whatever it is, we’ll get through it.'"
The first thing the midwife mentioned was the possibility of a cleft lip, McLeod remembered.
“I began to feel hope. Was that all? Just something small, something cosmetic? … But there was more,” she wrote.
The midwife told her that the baby showed signs of heart problems and a femur that was curved and shorter than the other. Last, she told McLeod that her unborn baby did not have hands or forearms.
“This felt like a punch to the gut,” she recalled. “It stole my breath. It keeled me over and the sobs tore out of me, and visions of my perfect little baby shattered.”
However, her father left the office with words of encouragement: “’She’s going to be a blessing to our family. I think our family needs someone like her. She is going to teach us so much.’”
A short time later, she and her husband went to Vancouver Children’s Hospital to meet with specialists about their daughter’s condition. What happened was not what the McLeods expected.
She wrote:
I thought that meant we were getting answers that day — that the doctors could tell me why this happened, what caused it, and what the next step was. But the appointments were severely disappointing in that regard, and if anything, the doctors created more questions for us than answers, and tainted that whole experience with so much negativity. I wish with all my heart that appointment had gone differently. That someone had told us it would be okay. That someone had told us how beautiful and perfect our little girl would be, that she would smile and giggle and live a life filled with so much love. I wish I knew then what I know now. I wish I could take away all the worry, pain, fear, and heartbreak I felt. Instead, we got news of doom. All hope was taken away.
She said she felt shocked when the doctors suggested that they abort their baby girl.
Though McLeod said she supports abortion, she never considered having an abortion herself.
“When my husband and I started to express that we wanted to keep her, the medical geneticist said, briskly and brutally, ‘But think about her quality of life. She’s going to have no hands,’” she remembered.
But her husband reassured her that they would make it work.
“’I’ll do whatever I have to do to take care of her,’” he told her. “’I’ll build her anything. I want her. I’ll do whatever it takes. I’ll take care of her for the rest of her life.’”
His words gave her hope.
A few months later, Ivy arrived, premature but beautiful – and absolutely valuable.
“The moment I birthed her and held her in my arms, I felt so much peace,” her mother said. “And when she opened her eyes and looked at me for the very first time, I knew she was exactly where she was meant to be.”
McLeod said she wants to the world to know that her daughter is valuable, no matter what she looks like or what she is able to do.
“Some people have blue eyes, some have green. Some have blonde hair, some have brown. Some are born with hands, some without,” she said. “And I hope I can always impart to her that her life has meaning, has value, and will always be filled with so much love, regardless of her appearance or abilities.”
This girl's father tried to kill her mother. A stranger stepped in to shield her, and was killed. The father went to prison, mother turned to drugs. She found Jesus eventually -- through family love and youth retreat -- but struggles to forgive.
"And sometimes I look up to heaven and ask God, 'Where were you when I was a little girl?' Holy Father, how can I forgive my father for almost leaving me without a mother? How can I truly be reconciled with God?"
Pope Leo said the scope of the question should be broadened:
"Should we ask 'where was God'? Or should we ask ourselves about humanity, about how we are sometimes prisoners of evil, resorting to violence against others? How is it that we fail to cultivate love and respect for others’ dignity and freedom? So many crime reports, even today, reflect a toxic climate in family relationships marked by abuse and oppression and, in particular, by violence against women, which unfortunately often leads to femicide."
"We cannot attribute to God what has been entrusted to our responsibility; we cannot imagine that God, from on high, will automatically respond to our needs or miraculously prevent evil from happening."
"He has given us his own Spirit, precisely so that love may be the key to all our human relationships. If violence exists, if selfishness prevails, if even love among family members turns into hatred, we must question the dynamics of our society, the culture of
individualism and the temptation of violence — but not God."
On forgiveness, he said:
"Above all, we must seek forgiveness from the Lord. We must continually ask the Lord — perhaps for our entire lives — to expand the space of love within us,
precisely where we have been wounded, that he can help us reconcile with ourselves and with that
part of our past that has been marked by suffering, so that he may slowly transform resentment into
mercy and compassion."
"This is a long journey," the pope said, "and a process that requires great patience. It is an effort we must make, both on a personal level and through other means of support and inner reconciliation."
"We must not lose heart: we move forward in small steps toward forgiveness. Reconciliation with the past is gradual. Above all, we must not think that forgiveness always and in every case means returning to the previous situation or having a close relationship with those who have hurt us, especially when there was violence. We can maintain a good disposition of heart toward the person, reject all forms of hatred or revenge, strive to repair the relationship as much as possible and perhaps pray for him or her. This helps us to enter more and more into the dynamic of forgiveness and to be reconciled with God and with others."
Video: Vatican Media
Pope Leo has CONDEMNED human traffickers who profit from migration into Europe:
'I wish to address a clear message to those who take advantage of people’s desperation, to those who organize death routes, traffic in human beings, withhold documents, exploit workers, threaten women, deceive families and turn the suffering of others into a business.
Stop. Repent.
The tears and blood of these brothers and sisters cry out to God, and their suffering reaches him. The money wrested from the vulnerability of the poor will bring neither peace, nor honor, nor a future'
@poperespecter1 Absolutely Pope Respecter. I love how you are loyal to Christ and his Church over any political party or movement and don’t do partisan politics.
I appreciate how you always call out both sides.
Pope Leo's views on immigration should be completely non-controversial. He says he is against open borders. Countries have a right to decide who enters. Mass immigration is a problem to be solved. People should stay in their own countries. But that if people do come, they should be treated like human beings with dignity. He also says if they come, they should learn the language and respect the laws.
But because people's brains are broken by American politics they cannot understand this nuance.