Watch how this story changes. Watch the inappropriate affect of some of the reported eye witnesses. Notice the interjection of the giggle. You have to wonder how this was allowed to be viewed as anything other than either rehearsed or directed.
About to head out to see Disclosure Day. I'll post a video response here and on YouTube tonight or tomorrow, in which I will also expose and refute Spielberg and his decades-long Antichristic crusade.
(Went to Mass & prayed the Rosary this AM. Full Armor of God is on.)
@VitaCatholica Not a red flag, can even be an ideal. But most trad Catholic adults today were not raised in a trad Catholic household where this would be a standard practice
@4everkandi Educate yourself. There are waiting lists for these children. Also, according to Pew research, pro-life and church groups are the majority among adoptive parents and foster parents. Easy to look up.
The New York Times reported (LINK below) that some prenatal genetic screenings are wrong nearly 80% of the time.
Not 8%. Nearly 80%.
Yet, families are handed these results in fear-filled moments and told to make life-or-death decisions about their children.
From Pew: Non-invasive genetic prenatal tests for 5 rare genetic conditions can return false positives 80% to 93% of the time. (LINK also below)
The best Trinity Sunday sermon that I have ever heard:
Priest took off maniple at altar and entered the pulpit for sermon. He said “In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.”
Then he left the pulpit, put on the maniple and led the people in the Nicene Creed.
Sermon Score: 10/10
@CoffinMedia@LisaMcKMir There are studies but the results aren't overwhelming, a few studies done in subsaharan Africa. Not compelling enough to have it done IMO.
https://t.co/dXA8OD0jfq
@evanwch I started finding out at 6 weeks by DNA test. Having many miscarriages, it was comforting to know the little one's gender, so we could name them ❤️