Our lives of convenience have ugly consequences. Especially to the children in our wombs; but also to the ones who escape abortion and enter our little worlds of entitlement. To the same extent that we devalue the lives of the unborn, we overvalue the expertise in the "health" industry. We voluntarily take our young children to be infused with more than forty dangerous vaccines, and we fail to see that we are the ones putting them at risk of autism, and we fail to see how our selfishness refuses any disruption to the perfect life we demand. And we're somehow proud of our immaturity.
X user Anise wrote:
"Hung out with a group of women aged 35-45 tonight & all had 0-2 children. We talked about why the childless ones had no kids & why the ones with 2 stopped at 2. Three fourths of them had concerns over having a severely autistic child. “I’ve got 2 perfect kids, don’t want to take my chances,” was the most common reason. Or the ones with severely autistic family members had decided to have no children & cited their fear of being saddled for life with the responsibility of caring for a high needs handicapped person. Interesting. I suspect this is more common than just my friends."
"The resurrection is the pinpoint of my belief that Jesus did rise from the grave so that we may live."
"I worship a God that defeats evil... And we worship a God that wins in the end."
"Faith, quite honestly, is the true mark of a Christian life."
"The Bible is not up to date. It’s ahead of time."
“A man may be as poor as Lazarus, as hated as Mordecai, as sick as Hezekiah, as lonely as Elijah, but while his hand of faith can keep its hold on God, none of his outward afflictions can prevent his being numbered among the blessed.”
Charles Spurgeon
...after eating that hamburger infected with the mRNA vaccines forced on the cattle herd.
And make sure you use the new secret mRNA floss.
From the publication Nature Biomedical Engineering:
“Flossing may be good for more than getting your dentist off your back—one day, it may also protect you from the flu. In an unorthodox approach to needle-free vaccines, researchers have developed a special kind of floss that can deliver proteins and inactive viruses to...gumlines and trigger immune responses that protect against infectious disease."