Friday, June 24, 2016

As it was in the Days of Lot

On FET. no one was willing to touch the subject of Islam in general with a ten-foot pole, for some reason.  Other than the posts  made about the Muslim hoards invading Europe, nobody said a word.

Good people cringe, as rightly they should, at the very mention, of some of these things.  No one wants to talk about them.

In the video I posted yesterday, at about the 10min mark, Dave Hodges and Doug Hagman tried,  but could not bring themselves to speak openly of what Doug finally stammered around and delicately called 'female mutilation',   a crime so monstrous, so evil, so cruel, so awful that anyone knowing about it, ought to be up in arms about it; yet people are speechless, don't have the words, don't know what to say.  They look the other way.

That the Islamic working definition of 'homosexual' differs greatly in meaning and context from that understood by the rest of us,  is an important point, as was said. 

However, the more important point about that,  which I want to make absolutely clear , is that in Islamic culture, both genders, of all ages,  are routinely exposed to the experience of, and therefore the psychological, physical and spiritual effects of,   being brutally sodomized by a dominant male who is esteemed for his heinous  actions.

There is a consequence to the experience of sodomization  which,  however distasteful and unpleasant, must be addressed.

The damage being done, and the danger posed to humanity by the practitioners of sodomy,  is far greater than we could have previously even suspected in our worst nightmares.  

It is necessary that we understand what is actually going on here.

Luke 17:28

“Likewise also as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold, they planted, they builded;”

King James Version (KJV)


I next want to re-post the Demonic Narcissist video.  

Demonic narcissists are everywhere, in our governments, our industries, in our neighborhoods, in the house next door, in our own families.

Quite frankly, we didn't see them coming. We didn't recognize the behavior. We didn't know what we were looking at. And we learned the hard way who and what they were.  In some cases, we were hurt almost irreparably by them.   We didn't know what hit us.  



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