2:00 American history
Marine empire
3:00 China, Rome and Iran are empires.
Roman Conquest
4:00 America is the New Rome.
5:00 Diplomacy not threats
Current American Pope
6:00 Getting Americans to give up the First Amendment.
Christian Amendment in Samoa.
7:00 Christians refuse to discuss the Trinity.
8:00 The American people
Antisemites
9:00 Jews are the mechanical rabbit.
The unofficial religions of America:
- Liberalism
- Feminism AKA Woke AKA Intersectionality
- Neo-liberalism
- Neoconservatism
- AA
- Antisemitism
- Islamophobia
10:00 Step 4 of the 12 Steps
BRAVE
A moral inventory is a reflective, introspective process used primarily in 12-step recovery programs (specifically Step 4) to honestly assess one’s beliefs, actions, behaviors, and character defects against a moral or ethical framework. It involves taking a searching and fearless look at one’s past to identify patterns of resentment, fear, guilt, and selfishness that have contributed to addiction or harmful behaviors.Key Components and PurposeSelf-Examination: It requires listing resentments, fears, wrongdoings, and character defects (such as pride, envy, or dishonesty) while also acknowledging strengths and virtues.Accountability: The goal is not self-judgment or shame, but rather gaining clarity, self-awareness, and accountability for how one’s actions have impacted themselves and others.Foundation for Change: By identifying these patterns, individuals can understand the root causes of their struggles, make amends, and develop healthier coping mechanisms for long-term recovery.
Common FormatsVarious structured approaches exist to guide this inventory, including:The Big Book Method: A four-column list focusing on resentments, detailing who/what is resented, why, how it affected one’s life (pride, pocketbook, etc.), and the underlying selfishness or fear involved.The Four Absolutes: An older Oxford Group method evaluating life against ideals of Honesty, Purity, Unselfishness, and Love.Hazelden Guide: A four-part inventory covering resentments, guilt/shame, fear, and pride/warmth, focusing on discovering mistaken beliefs behind behaviors.General Template: Many modern worksheets encourage listing past actions, their ethical implications, the people affected, and the emotions/motives behind them.
Completing this step is considered a critical part of addiction recovery, fostering emotional healing and providing a roadmap for personal transformation and improved relationships.
13:00 Education and Sharing Day
14:00 The Noahide laws
15:00 US foreign policy
16:00 Jews, Muslims and Noahides
17:00 Prayers
18:00 Moral inventory
20:00 Hypocrites who call themselves Jews and Muslims
21:00 Reincarnation
22:00 Purgatory/barzakh
23:00 Reincarnation is like grade retention of re-sitting an examination
25:00 The right religion to choose if you want to get to heaven ASAP
27:00 Representative democracy
28:00 George Washington's farewell speech
Mike Malzahn
29:00 American husbands and fathers
31:00 Do Jews want gentiles to worship Jesus?
32:00 Thomas Jefferson excluded the Pauline Epistles
33:00 Muslims are respectful of Jesus and Mary.
34:00 Pacifist Christians
Hidden idolatry
35:00 Hypocrites are the internal enemies of any religious group.
37:00 Blaming everything on Jews
38:00 Porn and usury
Political economy
39:00 Erev rav are Jewish hypocrites.
40:00 Codifying our religious principles
41:00 Tidying up the Room of the Republic
43:00 Christians repenting of 1700 years of idolatry and blasphemy
44:00 The political economy after the banning of usury
45:00 Treating unmarried as sex offenders and its one year period of grace
46:00 Supporting marriage as LGBT
47:00 Americans making a searching and fearless moral inventory of themselves
48:00 Brave New Americans moved by facts and logic rejecting lies, nonsense and immorality.
49:00 American Christians confronted with their idolatry would have to adopt Secular Koranism with American Characteristics and submit to the logic of obeying God's laws in the book of rules that supports the First Amendment with quran.com/2/256
No comments:
Post a Comment