When people say "I'd do anything for my child," everyone praises them, but when a parent risks crossing a border to save their child from war, poverty, or danger, suddenly they're treated like criminals.
Sharing private letters from your dead husband for the express purpose of fundraising is as tasteless as it is classless and I am without patience for those pretending otherwise.
There is nothing beautiful about this. It is shameless emotional-manipulation for money, made worse by the fact that these e-mails are not even authored by her.
Stop. This is exhausting. You pulled out because of bad ticket sales. For the same reason TPFaith had to “reschedule” the Pastor’s Summit and various other events quietly.
People don’t believe you and don’t line up for you because you struggle to tell the truth about even the most basic facts. Where is the video of Charlie appointing you as CEO weeks before his death?
The Secret Service sits above your security team. Were there actually a viable threat, the Vice President would not have continued the event. Your closest threat is the shit Public Relations team you hired that continues to operate under the delusion that they are smarter than the public.
They aren’t.
@omgsidewalks Cheaters cheat because they are cheaters. Breaking up or divorce is always an option. Please stop green lighting dishonest behaviors in order to shift blame.
🚨🚨 THEY’RE QUIETLY ADMITTING IT NOW: A “ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME” STORM IS ABOUT TO HIT HALF THE U.S. - AND IT COULD TURN CATASTROPHIC
"This is gonna be one of those storms you probably remember for much of your life."
Matt Randolph, a renowned energy expert and Forbes energy contributor, breaks down a forecast that was dismissed all week… until every major model converged.
He says this isn’t “just a snowstorm.”
It’s an infrastructure event: below-zero temperatures, heavy snow, and an ice zone calling for up to THREE INCHES OF ICE.
“There’s gonna be loss of life.”
“The grid’s gonna fail. Refineries are gonna shut down.
Water systems are gonna shut down.”
Then the part most people aren’t hearing:
“If you’re in the affected area, you should plan to be without power for at least a week, maybe a month.”
At that level, roads turn to glass and emergency services won’t be able to reach you. No ambulances. No fire trucks. No emergency services will be able to help.
Randolph compares it to Texas 2021 and says this could be colder, wider, and harder to recover from.
Where are you located, and are you actually prepared to be without power for 7–30 days?