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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
34 w

Trump, a product made from the moral bankruptcy of the Democratic Party
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Trump, a product made from the moral bankruptcy of the Democratic Party

by Hugo Dionísio, Strategic Culture: Immigration, abortion, wokism, the Ukrainian war, eternal wars, reindustrialization and protectionism. With the exception of abortion and Wokism (identitarianism), which are matters concerned with each one’s conscience rather than about structural policy, they all represent, in some way, some of the most brutal consequences of neoliberalism in the U.S., and […]
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BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
34 w

ONE More Interesting Election Tidbit That We Can't Let Fall Through The Cracks...
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ONE More Interesting Election Tidbit That We Can't Let Fall Through The Cracks...

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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
34 w

From the Last Lynching to a Multiethnic Merger in Missouri
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From the Last Lynching to a Multiethnic Merger in Missouri

The last lynching of a black man in Missouri happened on a Sunday. During church. In front of a church. The victim was Cleo Wright, who allegedly broke into a house where two white women were staying around 1:00 a.m. on Sunday. During the attack, one of them—Grace Sturgeon—was slashed deeply across the abdomen and three of her fingers were nearly taken off. Soon after, police found Wright spattered with blood and carrying a bloody knife. He said he’d been in a fight with another man but, after a struggle, he was arrested and taken to jail. By late morning, an angry mob had gathered, some joining in when they saw the commotion on their way to church. The mob shoved their way into the jailhouse, grabbed Wright, dragged him behind a car through the African American side of town, then doused him with gasoline and burned his body in front of two black churches. The Smith Chapel building is at the corner of Osage and Young Streets in Sikeston, Missouri / Courtesy of Google Maps One of those churches was Smith Chapel United Methodist. At first, pastor J. B. Ross thought the smoke was a burning car. He ignored it and kept on preaching until someone came in from the street with the news of what was happening. Most of the lynchers who were later named didn’t attend church, though one had been baptized at the 1,000-member First Baptist Church several years earlier. Later, one of the police officers also joined the congregation. About 20 years after Wright’s death, members of First Baptist started Trinity Baptist. Ten years later, the Trinity congregation called a pastor with a heart for racial reconciliation. Thirty years later, they called a pastor and his wife whose adopted African American sons sparked an even deeper desire for a gospel-preaching, multiethnic congregation. Across town, at Smith Chapel, the congregation was also calling a pastor who longed for a biblically faithful, racially diverse church. In 2017, the two pastors connected, and they eventually led their churches through a merger. Today, the congregation worships in the little chapel a few hundred feet from where Wright was killed. Together, they sing, serve, and have broken ground on an ambitious $4.5 million community center for their underresourced neighborhood. “God sees the beginning and the end,” pastor Kenny King said. “This is what he does—more than we can ask or imagine.” Kenny King King was born in Sikeston and grew up going to Smith Chapel. But when he left for college in 1997, he didn’t plan to return to either one. That’s not too hard to understand—with a population of 16,000, Sikeston doesn’t offer a lot of economic opportunities for an ambitious young black man. The poverty rate for black residents is nearly 37 percent, more than three times higher than the national number for all races. On top of that, Sikeston is unusually violent—the rate of murders, rapes, robberies, and assaults regularly soars above the national average. Smith Chapel also wasn’t appealing to King. Kenny and Yolanda King / Courtesy of Kenny King’s Facebook page “When I was in college, I became an anti-theist,” he said. “I hated the idea of God and of religion. It seemed odd to me that bad things happen to good people and good things happen to bad people. I didn’t like that, so I rebelled against it.” But King’s logical mind also knew that evolution couldn’t explain the complicated beauty of the natural world. And if there was a God, it followed that humans should work to be good enough to please him. So after college, he told God he’d go to church just as soon as he got his life together. When a couple years passed and King was no closer to getting his life together, he submitted it to the Lord. He spent the next few years at an Evangelical Free church in the suburbs of St. Louis, reading Francis Chan, Tim Keller, and John Piper and learning how to lead small groups, be an elder, and plant a church. “I didn’t want to go back to Sikeston at all,” King said. “But God, in his sense of humor, gave me a calling to Sikeston.” This became especially clear after Michael Brown was killed in Ferguson, just 15 minutes from where King lived. “Sikeston has a sordid history when it comes to race relations, and I felt like the town needed a diverse church,” King said. One of his favorite things about his St. Louis congregation, besides the solid theology, was the racial diversity. “If the church can’t be together, then how is the world going to be together?” he reasoned. “If we believe Christ is the hope of the world, the church should lead the way in reconciliation.” Got it, King thought. The Lord will use me to plant a diverse church that will give him glory and show people the beauty of Christian unity. But that wasn’t what happened. Smith Chapel UMC King had barely gathered a core church planting team when the pastor at Smith Chapel retired. Never large, the church had shrunk to about 25 weekly attendees. The congregation asked if he’d consider filling it. King, who didn’t want an all-black church and didn’t agree with Methodist theology, said he’d think about it. “I went through the process basically trying to sabotage myself,” he said. “I was really honest and blunt about how I felt about the denomination and the church. I thought there was no way anybody would want me there, and I could go back to church planting.” He told them he believed in the Bible’s inerrancy, in complementarianism, and in believer’s baptism. A few months later, Smith Chapel called him to be their pastor. “At a certain point I realized this is something God wants to happen,” King said. “Maybe I’d have an Isaiah ministry of preaching judgment or something. Maybe I’d close the doors. I didn’t like that idea, but if that’s what God was doing, I’d do it.” He was just as straightforward in the pulpit as he was in the candidate interviews. Smith Chapel congregants volunteering at Feed My Starving Children in May 2017 / Courtesy of Kenny King’s Facebook page “My first series was systematic theology—the basics of the faith, who God is, what the Bible is, how we’re supposed to feel about the Word of God,” King said. After that, he began preaching through Matthew. “We got rid of the extra-curriculum that came from the denomination and studied the Word,” King said. “The people soaked it up.” Next, King knew he was going to have to deal with the mainline United Methodist Church (UMC). The church of John and Charles Wesley was rapidly losing its theology and its members. Trying to figure out what exactly was going on, King joined some regional committees. “I found the problem was more deeply rooted than I could’ve imagined,” he said. “I could preach the Word and uproot some of the falsities my congregation holds to. But while I can probably turn a fishing boat, I can’t turn an aircraft carrier.” Smith Chapel, which had been planted by the UMC in 1923, was going to have to figure out a way out. Trinity Baptist Across town, pastor William Marshall came to Trinity Baptist Church fresh out of seminary. It wasn’t an easy transition—the previous pastor had served for 30 years. William and his wife, Glenna, were from out of town. And the couple was just beginning a struggle with infertility. “I didn’t know what I was doing half the time,” Marshall said. Trinity, which had about 100 members when he arrived, began to shrink, especially when it became clear Marshall was preaching longer sermons than the previous pastor and wanted to have communion every week. About eight years later, when he attempted to slowly move the church toward a plurality of elders, some saw it as a power move. Attendance shrank even more. In 2005, 27-year-old William Marshall and his wife, Glenna, moved to Sikeston / Courtesy of Glenna Marshall’s Instagram page “The first 10 years were really hard,” he said. “I couldn’t go to Walmart without running into ex–church members.” But while his church was contracting, his family was expanding. In 2008, the Marshalls adopted an African American baby boy named Isaiah. Seven years later, they adopted Ian, who is biracial. Marshall started to notice the lingering segregation in Sikeston—the white pastors’ group was separate from the black pastors’ gathering. At the local school, white fans and black fans sat on opposite ends of the bleachers during basketball games. But his biggest worry as a new father wasn’t that his boy wouldn’t know where to sit in the bleachers, or even that he might be unfairly pulled over by the cops or discriminated against at work. “I didn’t want Isaiah to think Christianity was a white man’s religion,” said Marshall, who felt this so deeply it still makes him cry a little. But what could he do? He was the white pastor of a predominately white church. William, Glenna, Isaiah, and Ian Marshall / Courtesy of William Marshall “I began to pray, Lord, I don’t even know how to address this or what to do.” At the same time, Trinity was beginning to hold evangelistic meetings in the parks around Sikeston. On Sunday nights, members would light up a grill, walk around the neighborhood, and invite people for free hot dogs and a church service. “We’d have some food, a brief gospel conversation, and some songs people love,” Marshall said. “When we went to the park on the west end of Sikeston—which is the African American community park—we had such a good response that we decided to go there all the time instead of rotating around.” In fact, the response was so good that one summer Trinity hosted a VBS in that park. But the location wasn’t a natural fit—it was “about as far away from our church building as you could get and still be in Sikeston,” Marshall said. “I began praying for a church in the neighborhood that we could partner with.” Fields of Faith In 2017, the local Fellowship of Christian Athletes asked King if he’d speak at their Fields of Faith youth conference. He preached on Ephesians 2. “I saw the speaker was a black man, and I was like, Oh, man, I’m interested,” said Marshall, who brought some of the Trinity youth group to the event. “He’s quoting Francis Chan, and I’m leaning in. I’m like, What does this guy believe about the gospel? And it was solid.” Marshall wasn’t even in the parking lot before he pulled out his phone. “On my way back to the car, I was looking him up on Facebook,” he said. “I sent him a message—‘Hey, I’m a pastor in town and heard you at Fields of Faith. Let’s get lunch together.’” Kenny said sure. Everything Happens at Lunch At their first lunch, Marshall asked King which church he served. “Smith Chapel United Methodist Church,” King said. Well, that’s the end of that, thought Marshall, surprised and disappointed. Maybe King wouldn’t be the ministry friend he was hoping for. Marshall tried again: “In order for your church to be healthy, what needs to happen?” From left to right: William Marshall, elder Lucas Polk, Tyrone White, Barry Wallace, and Kenny King at T4G in 2022 / Courtesy of Kenny King’s Facebook page King didn’t even hesitate. “We need to leave the denomination.” OK, this guy is who I thought he was, Marshall thought. They started meeting monthly for lunch, talking about theology, ideas for ministry, and preaching. King talked about the process of buying his building from the UMC. Marshall talked about the revitalization process of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC)—because Trinity was small, they’d offered to be guinea pigs for some new ideas. One of the ideas was merging with another church. Immediately, Marshall had thought of King. When he ran the idea past a church member, expecting him to laugh, the man told him it would be “incredible.” So a few weeks later, again at lunch, he threw the idea at King. “What are you going to do after you leave the UMC?” Marshall asked him. And then, “What would you think about merging with us?” He was nervous to say it. But if King said it was ridiculous, Marshall figured they’d just laugh and keep eating their barbecue. King didn’t say no. Is this God’s way of giving me the diverse church I desired in Sikeston? he thought. Probably not. He was already pushing his people out of their denomination. There was no way they were going to merge with a Southern Baptist congregation. “Let me ask my church,” he said. Tyrone White Tyrone White was born into the Smith Chapel family, but that doesn’t mean he spent all his Sundays in church. “I went to the Marine Corps in 1981, and when I came back I was a street guy,” he said. “I was all about the world.” Though he was drinking a lot of alcohol, doing a lot of drugs, and sleeping with a lot of women, White felt he was a pretty good person. After all, he hadn’t killed anybody. Tyrone White and Glenna Marshall in 2024 / Courtesy of Glenna Marshall He was 51 when he seemed to hear a voice in his head: This is no longer fun for you. “I’m thinking I’m tweaking,” he said. “But it happened again: This is no fun for you.” White knew that wasn’t his idea—he’d always scorned the boring lives of husbands and wives who worked jobs, ate dinner together, and went to church. But the voice was right; his life was no longer fun. “I told myself I’ve got to stop doing cocaine, but I can still drink,” White said. “But God took the taste out of my mouth. To this day I haven’t had a drink or a snort of cocaine.” White began reading the Our Daily Bread devotional, then the Bible. He began sitting in the back—and then the front—of Smith Chapel listening to King preach. “I wasn’t trying to change,” he said. “God changed me.” One thing the new version of White did was walk the track in the YMCA in the mornings. He liked the white guy who checked him in, because he was always singing gospel songs. But at first, he was scared of the other white guy with a beard who walked the track at the same time he did. “I see white men with a beard, and I think biker KKK,” he said. But, White continued, “He spoke kindly to me.” The man’s name was Barry Wallace, and the two struck up an early morning, walking-and-talking friendship. So when King started talking about merging with a white church, White was game. And when the two congregations tried worshiping together, White was ecstatic. “These people come to our church, and there is Barry Wallace,” he said. “And the white guy at reception was William the pastor. My mouth dropped open. I was dumbfounded. I was singing in my heart.” White was probably the most enthusiastic about the merger. But the rest of the people weren’t far behind. Enthusiasm for Change “I was totally shocked by how open the people were,” King said. “I’m always wondering in the back of my mind if they’re saying things because I’m saying them, and they don’t want to come against the pastor. . . . But they were excited about it. We do a prayer meeting every Tuesday morning, and we had the most participation during that time.” He explained to them the history of the SBC, which was formed in 1845 to support slavery but has since publicly repented. His congregation asked if they were bearing fruit in keeping with repentance. He said he thought they were. “There was a church merge in Iowa a little before we merged,” King said. “I printed out that story and gave copies to everybody. It was very encouraging for them. And I’d been preaching from the Word of God about how the church should look, so their hearts were bent towards it.” Meanwhile, in a meeting at Trinity, deacon Brandon Blankenship stood up and chronicled the ways God had been preparing them—from the previous pastor’s love of racial reconciliation to Isaiah and Ian to the outreach in the West End. “It was almost like the whole room had our blinders taken off,” Marshall said. “There was almost an audible sigh, where we went, ‘Yes. That’s what the Lord’s been doing.’” Neither congregation wasted time messing around. The first official conversation about merging was in June, and in mid-September, the two churches launched as Grace Bible Fellowship. For the first six months, everything was great. COVID-19 It made sense for Smith Chapel’s congregation to drive over to Trinity. The larger sanctuary could seat 300, and there was plenty of space for parking and rooms for children’s programming. The merge was unusual enough to make the news, and people were curious. “Community people were coming—people we’d never seen before,” said Grace Bible Fellowship member Christie Rodgers. “They wanted to see what this was all about. Then it was March of 2020, and all of that ended.” Grace Bible Fellowship’s first service together in Trinity’s building / Courtesy of Kenny King For many churches, 2020 was was a hard year for church unity. You might expect the fights to be exponentially worse at a brand-new merger of a black church and a white church, coming from two different denominations, with different feelings about masks and risks and death rates, in a town with an ugly racial history. Instead, “it felt like a congregation who trusted its leadership would work through things and communicate,” Blankenship said. “I don’t think there was really any question—we were going to do whatever our leadership thought was best.” The leaders, for their part, kept preaching through the Bible. “The pastors didn’t make it about social issues,” Rodgers said. “They said ‘Love each other’ and ‘How are we going to love each other?’” Together, they socially distanced, checked on each other, and packed meals to hand out from the church building once a week. “Our people understood the gravity of what we were doing, and we didn’t want to bring disrepute to Christ’s name,” King said. Eerily Similar If the COVID-19 unity was surprising, so was the ease of combining the worship services. In general, black churches and white churches have different preaching and singing styles. But Smith Chapel wasn’t typical. “We didn’t get up and do clapping and stuff,” White said. “We were Methodist. Our music was from the hymnal. We didn’t have that rocking beat like most black Baptists have.” Glenna and William Marshall with Kenny and Yolanda King / Courtesy of Grace Bible Fellowship’s Facebook page When Marshall made a list of the top 25 favorite songs from each congregation, more than half were the same. The pastors’ preaching habits were also oddly similar. “It was really weird,” Marshall said. “We’d even use the same phrases. The very first time Kenny preached at Trinity, everybody’s looking at me like, Did you tell him to say that?” Not only did the two pastors agree on major issues such as biblical inerrancy and the doctrine of God and salvation, but they also agreed on a plurality of elders, the gifts of the Spirit, and church membership. “We had to work hard to find tertiary issues we disagreed on,” Marshall said. So even though you’d never predict it, everything at Grace Bible Fellowship was going smoothly. The brand-new congregation had weathered a global pandemic and national racial unrest with barely a peep. They’d seamlessly joined their worship services. They had more paid-off property than they needed. But something wasn’t quite right. Grace Bible Fellowship Both halves of Grace Bible Fellowship wanted to minister in the West End. But the merger hadn’t actually helped with that. “The last thing I wanted to do was take a good, faithful, Bible-preaching church out of the West End,” Marshall said. “We began to say, ‘What do we do now?’” It was easy to dream: the congregation wanted to build a place in the West End where they could not only worship on Sunday but also host after-school tutoring programs, run a food ministry, and let neighborhood kids play basketball during the week. That was going to cost a lot of money, which Grace Bible Fellowship didn’t have. But they did have property. They had the Trinity building appraised. Then they hired a realtor, who told them it was hard to sell a church building and that it might take more than a year. “Before we got Trinity even listed, another church offered us more than it appraised for,” King said. With the money from the property—plus a sizable grant—Grace Bible Fellowship bought land and broke ground on a new church and community center in the West End. The project should be complete by September 2025. Grace Bible Fellowship’s first meeting in Smith Chapel in June 2024 / Courtesy of Kenny King Until then, the congregation meets in Smith Chapel, which is only three blocks away. “On that first Sunday, we realized we can hear one another singing so much better in the confined space,” King said. “It was so glorious—everybody was blown away from the time that first song rang out. We all looked at one another, or went into full arms-up, looking to heaven.” The singing is so loud that Rodgers wonders if people passing by outside can hear them. “You just feel close—a happy closeness,” she said. She can’t wait to share that with the neighbors. “We’re looking forward to being able to really invite the community in,” Rodgers said. “We’re constantly inviting them to worship with us now, but sometimes you need to be able to draw them in with other things too.” “We want to sit down next to somebody watching their kid playing basketball and ask if they want to come back for church on Sunday—and bring the kids,” Marshall said. Rendering of the completed Grace Community Center / Courtesy of Grace Community Center The neighbors are already looking forward to the possibilities—a gym, laundry facilities, a daycare. It’s a huge accomplishment for a church that has 70 weekly attendees, counting kids. “You want to be where God is moving,” Blankenship said. “You don’t want to ever limit what God can do. You want to be open and receptive, because if you trust in him, he’ll take you places you never even dreamed of. That’s a good lesson for all of us.” “It is all God,” White said. “God is doing a marvelous work in us and through us—and he will do it until the end.”
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
34 w

4 Pitfalls in Women’s Ministry Leadership
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4 Pitfalls in Women’s Ministry Leadership

My leadership journey began as the firstborn with two younger sisters. I held their hands to cross the street and told them what to do. I can’t remember a time when I didn’t feel responsible for people or for advancing ideas. In college, my friends called me the go-to girl—“If you want something done, go to Karen.” I fed on the verbal affirmation of my external giftedness, but eventually, this revealed a vacuum of internal substance. The years brought many up-front leadership opportunities at school and church, eventually culminating in a vocation in women’s ministry. Along the way, I realized I wasn’t leading anyone when I functioned as the go-to girl. When I tried to do it all, I wasn’t focusing on the primary goal of servant leadership—making disciples. Eventually, my immature leadership made me a desperate leader. I ran to Jesus, praying, “Help me rest in you and place my confidence in your record of righteousness. Forgive me for relying on my own strength and abilities.” Thankfully, God’s power is made perfect in weak, needy, and dependent leaders (2 Cor. 12:9). As I sought to grow as a servant leader, I had to confront my misguided notions of what leadership should look like, and I came to recognize common pitfalls we can stumble into as women’s ministry leaders. Misconceptions and Motivations When I tried to do it all, I wasn’t focusing on the primary goal of servant leadership—making disciples. Most of us have taken our ideas about leadership from culture or the corporate world. But biblical leadership is radically different. It’s not synonymous with authority or decision-making. It has little to do with a title or a role. It’s upside down. It holds within it the potential to be life-giving or life-taking. Biblical leadership is servant leadership, and servant leadership isn’t a popular methodology—it’s a glorious invitation to become more like Jesus. While there’s no formula for servant leadership, I offer four personal pitfalls I’ve had to repent of to the Lord and others over the years. 1. Position-Oriented Position-oriented leadership is shaped by the leader’s title rather than by the group’s purposes. I was young when I started in women’s ministry, and I naively compensated for my lack of experience by finding power in my official position or title. I was rarely team-focused or collaborative in my approach because, in pride, I thought I knew better. Usually, when a hierarchical culture exists, structure trumps leadership development, and the leader lacks outside perspective and accountability. 2. Personality-Driven Personality-driven leadership revolves around the leader’s strengths. I fancied myself an extrovert who loved the sound of my own voice. You don’t know you’ve fostered a territorial spirit about “your ministry” until someone tries to suggest a new person or plan. My insecurity and pride meant others had few opportunities to offer ideas or use their gifts. I didn’t know I’d fostered this type of leadership until I moved to a new church, and I got a phone call from a member of my former church saying, “We’re not sure how we’ll move forward without you; no one is stepping up to lead as you did.” That’s a big leadership red flag. 3. Consumer-Based Consumer-based leadership is fueled by the demands of the people we serve. At first glance, taking a survey at the beginning of a ministry year seems like a good idea. Let’s listen and make plans to give the women what they want. A hard-earned leadership lesson is that you can’t please everyone. Fulfilling this consumeristic approach is exhausting and impossible. We’re tempted to make decisions based on felt needs or the latest, hottest trend, rather than providing the gospel classroom that’ll foster spiritual formation. Ultimately, God’s glory and purposes take a back seat to trying to meet the desires of individuals and special interest groups. 4. Productivity-Motivated Productivity-motivated leadership prioritizes tasks before people. My clipboard and pen are never out of reach. I like to make a list and check every box. People might pat me on the back for getting things done, but efficiency should never trump community and discipleship. I’ve often fallen prey to the hamster-wheel idol of producing bigger and better results. Who has time to delegate when it seems quicker and more effective to do it myself? This leadership posture is fueled by perpetual forward motion, so we often overlook opportunities to witness God’s grace and the Spirit’s work. Leadership That Lasts Leadership has everything to do with where we fix our eyes. Are your eyes fixed on Christ and making disciples, or are other pressing matters and motivations distracting you? Fruitful women’s ministry leadership invests in the only two things in life that last forever: God’s Word and God’s people. A servant leader lifts the eyes of those following her to Christ and sacrificially leads them in light of eternity. Life-giving servant leadership is the sacred, holy privilege of participating with the Spirit’s transformative work in those we get to serve as we walk them home.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
34 w

Why Liturgy Matters
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Why Liturgy Matters

Liturgy is all the rage—or it’s not considered at all. In this episode of The Everyday Pastor, Matt Smethurst and Ligon Duncan discuss the importance of a deliberate order of service, or liturgy, for Sunday worship. God summons us into his presence by his Word, and we respond by his grace. But what does this mean practically for what you do—and don’t—include in your Sunday services?
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YubNub News
YubNub News
34 w

Israel-Hamas cease-fire negotiations are on hold
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Israel-Hamas cease-fire negotiations are on hold

Qatar pauses cease-fire negotiations between Israel and Hamas, saying they’re not serious about stopping the war. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reacts to an outburst of antisemetic violence…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
34 w

How Gaza Saved America
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How Gaza Saved America

The work of my organization, the Vulnerable People Project, is to stand with the vulnerable at their darkest moments. It’s our honor and privilege to bring aid and comfort to these brave people in impossible…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
34 w

Why Harris Lost
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Why Harris Lost

This was an angry election; none of that “which candidate would you rather have a beer with” stuff here. Trump is an angry man representing angry constituents. Harris was angry that things were not…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

Teen Hospitalized in First Human Bird Flu Case in Canada
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Teen Hospitalized in First Human Bird Flu Case in Canada

Officials are investigating the source.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

Democrats Provide Great Comic Relief Following Loss
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Democrats Provide Great Comic Relief Following Loss

Democrats Provide Great Comic Relief Following Loss
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