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  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.

Trump dispenses with trials, orders military strike on alleged Venezuelan drug-trafficking boat (Now up to 2, 3, 4...)

So does the military in interpreting this as still engaging. But this is not how you framed things. You kept framing this as a couple of people in peril and that those in peril should be saved.
Yes.
You already qualified this as a boating accident.
No.
Or you have not detingusihed the difference between a mere civilian boating accident and terrorist putting themselves in peril because of their terrorist activity and being lawfully stopped. If they end up in peril that is completely different to a civilian boating accident.
No, they are still to be rescued.
We don't know because during combat there are many times when the first strike does not complete the job and it has been determined that a second or third strike is needed. All the while those who survived regardless of what they are doing or if their vehicle is half destroyed are in peril.

Because they are in the act of being stopped. Just the act of stopping these evil people puts them in peril and being in peril does not mean we should not complete the job if it is deemed that this is an ongoing threat that needs to be completely stopped.
They were hanging on a capsized boat.
But what your doing is disregarding all that context to isolate the situation and then use this as a strawman for moral outrage.
It is because the context doesn't make it right. It is never right to kill those shipwrecked.
But you exclude the context and are making judgements on this.
Yes, because I don't think the fact that they are drug runners is relevant to if they deserve to be struck again.
If killing two terrorist who are in peril because they themselves put themselves in that situation and were in peril as a result and were then despite being in peril were still trying to engage in continuing the same thing that they were being stopped for. Gathering the drugs even to be collected and then sent on their way to kill Americans.

When you add all that context and possibility because we don't know and you certainly don't know. All you have done is repeated narratives from people know don't know as the intel is only available to certain people.
Both Tom Cotton and Adam Smith agreed on that the boat was capsized.
The point is you are creating a context by dismissing all that possibility to make it a certain way that you have assumed without the facts.
The only fact needed is that their boat was incapacitated.
No I am talking about other incidents on attacking terrorists by past administrations. There are plenty of examples of second and third strikes on terrorist targets and where survivors were in peril as part of completing the mission.
And it is relevant how?
The framing of whether it is justified or not is about whether the targets were innocents in an innocent situation or guilty and part of a situation that justified the action. Of course its relevant. You keep saying they were just a couple of innocents smuggling drugs to feed their family on the weekend.
Quote me saying they were innocent or stop lying.
Assuming they were not up to anything and just innocently hanging around waiting to get resscued. You don't know that. But you keep assuming and framing things this way.
Quote me saying they were innocent or stop lying

Hum, I am glad you said you feel this as feelings are not a good indication of what is right and wrong.

I love it how armchair soldiers can make these armchair claims. So if those in the live action in the fog or war determine that the same radioing through and gathering the poison to continue their mission was still trying to engage and they needed to stop that mission altogether. If others (feel) this is the right thing to do. Is that feeling ok like your feeling.
Let's take it to court and see.
Hum you keep saying they were just innocent people in the water that the military commander should not have killed.
Quote me saying they were innocent or stop lying.
By saying they "should" not be killed you are already qualifying their action as wrong.
Did I use should?
Like "should" lol. For example "Everyone that is in peril at sea, should be helped".

Thats sad. If the drug trade coming into the US is now been deemed a national secuirity issue and the Narco has been deemed terrorist does that make a difference.

Because then your claim would be "terrorist or fisherman, makes no difference to me'. The difference being if we know its just a fishermans boat capsized in an accident and the two fisherman are in the water in peril that this is a classic case of saving them. When they go to radio through or do actions we know its innocent as they are just fishermen.
No, you fish them up regardless.
But when its terrorist who never play by rules and every action is about maintaining their mission and defying the law to continue to push their terror. Its a completely different situation the military are facing compared to the Coast Guard.

Have you been part of the military facing terrorists.
I've been part of the navy yes. Helping people in peril at sea. Facing drug runners no, since that is a police, coast guard and customs matter.
As we can see you just acknowledge that these moral complaints are your feelings or as you said IMO. So therefore this is about how people see morals and what they believe is moral. So when people protest their moral feelings that what happened was immoral. They can say what justification do you have when we feel you were completely immoral in allowing the drug boats and problem on the streets to continue and get worse killing 1,000s.
I don't advocate for allowing the drug boats do anything, it is the second strike I have the most problem with. Have the flow of cocaine even diminished since these strikes began?
It also means that if your moral complaint is a feeling then those who disagree have just as much right to how they feel that says it was the right then to do to save lives.
Of course. I'm certain there are many people that sadly think it is ok to blow narco-terrorists up if they are without a vessel at sea.
So either way a moral wrong is being done. Its a moral dilemma not only between different moral feelings about the situation and which way to go. But also "which way to go fullstop" as far as the ultimnate moral truth. Is it more immoral to allow 1,000s to die on the streets by not stopping the boats and all the crime and chaos that it causes not only for Americans but the Venezuelans with this sudden and firm action.
This is a false dilemma, the second strike saved no extra lives in the US or Venezuela.
As opposed to the slow and traditional ways which have never worked and allowed 1,000s to unnecessarily die considering lives are already being saved right now and will continue to be saved as well as all the other benefits in reducing crime ect.
What reduced crime and the peak of the opioid epidemic had already been passed in 2023?
This is a national and generational moral issue that has now been highlighted.

But your the one ussing it as a solution. As the moral thing to do. That this way is better.

But its different now. Its become a major national an dinternation issue along with immigration, crime, gangs, terrorism ect. Often all this is intertwined and thats the issue.

That as time has gone by its become more an international and national case of safety and security for the future of the US. Because the fall out is becoming bigger and the associated problems have spread and the entire system has been undermined.

Were you not just dismissing all the context of a military scenario combating terrorist to a couple of blokes fishing.
No, I know that the US calls them narco-terrorists. It is still not acceptable to observe them for 40-50 minutes with them not righting their boat and then strike them again.
You said its irrelevant as to whether it was drug smugglers (terrorists) and fishermen.
Yes, you help first and let the courts figure out culpability.
And now it has been assessed this this will not work as far as the organised criminal and terror activities of the Narcos. A Narco State in operation to import drugs to the US with connections to crime and terrorist groups.

Allowing illegals in allows the same kind of people who are importanting the drugs. The same mentality and organised crime and terror against the US.

Thats why I keep saying I think you need to understand the Narcos targeting in the context of the bigger safety and security issues that have been identified which shows this is all connected.

Its been the slack and soft approach to the US security and safety to begin with that has allowed all this to get out of hand. Thats why I think its crazy that some are attacking immigration officers who are actually getting these criminals and terrorrist out of the US. Its almost like they want to save the very criminals and terrorist who are killing Americans. Its insanity.

Yet people are accusing Hegseth or murder and war crimes. The usual suspects jumping the gun to create false narratives at every opportunity to get Trump and his admin. Actually some Dems were accusing Trump himself of muder. I guess that goes with Nazi and all the rest.
Take it up with them, not me.
And other people think its even worse that these terrorist export poison to kill 1,000s and destroy the US society.A
I think I have said enough on this. I don't think its worth any more comment until more info comes out. I think we are probably more in common than we thing. JUst a different perspective of where the line is. But I think we have similar moral principles.
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Love codified in the Ten Commandments

The New Covenant - what changed- I say we let God define what that change is? Did He say anywhere He would write all new laws that there was an issue with God's Laws written by the Holy Spirit, the Ten Commandments? Where is that verse? He said His Law is perfect Psa19:7 Holy, Just and Good Rom7:12

Was it predicted the Jesus would destroy His Holy commandments and get rid of them? What does Scripture say?

Isa 21 The Lord is well pleased for his righteousness' sake; he will magnify the law, and make it honourable.

Why do so many people insist Jesus failed and what He was prophesized to do, make His law larger, not smaller.

This is what God said changed.

Heb 8:6 But now He has obtained a more excellent ministry, inasmuch as He is also Mediator of a better covenant, which was established on better promises.

The promises changed not God's holy laws if we are to believe Him at His word

The whole New Covenant was established on better promises. Is it a better promise to start worshipping others gods or a better promise to vain His holy name or steal from our neighbor and lie to them? I do not believe this is what God had in mind why He never once said the New Covenant is established on better/new laws, this is man adding to God's words when He did not.

Instead what He did say....

Heb 8:10 For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put My laws in their mind and write them on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.

God said He would put HIS LAWS in the hearts and minds of His New Covenant believers. This was stated in Jeremiah verbatim so it would have to be God's Laws that they knew of.


Do we define God's Laws or does God? I am going with God.

What are God's laws- He said this right in the Ten Commandments

Exo 20:6 but showing mercy to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My commandments.
Deut 4:13 So He declared to you His covenant which He commanded you to perform, the Ten Commandments; and He wrote them on two tablets of stone.

So to remove the "He" in these verses and replace with our words as if we are to tell God, those are not your laws, we know better than you, I do not believe is a good idea, but He does give us free will and it will all be corrected soon enough.

The Ten Commandments is His written and spoken Testimony, the" Ten Words" that Jesus used interchangeable as the Word of God and we see this parallel of God's commandments and the word of God in many NT references.

In regards to James2:11 not being about the Ten Commandments, one is not being honest with the Test and not allowing the Scriptures to define Itself.

1 John3:4 Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law: for sin is the transgression of the law.
James 2:11 For He who said, “Do not commit adultery,” also said, “Do not murder.” Now if you do not commit adultery, but you do murder, you have become a transgressor of the law.

James is only quoting and contrasting what "He said- God said) in His Ten Commandments- breaking one we break them all and become a transgressor of the law or sinner.

We can lean on our own understanding and remove the authority of God and replace it with our own reasoning and feelings but in the end, one will only hurt themselves. Only the Testimony of God is under His mercy seat, where He says Himself He shows mercy to those who love Him and keep His commandments Exo20:6 If we cover our sins Pro28:13 which we do when we refuse to allow God to define it which He did, than at the end our sins will not be in His Temple, under His mercy seat where justice and mercy will come together soon. God's mercy seat is His attornment seat and what we learned in the earthy temple about the forgiveness of sins with the blood of animal sacrifices in the law of Moses was only a shadow pointing to God's salvation in His Holy Temple. There is a standard man will be Judged by He tells us plainly Rev11:18-19 James2:11-12 Exo31:18 John12:48 but if we don't believe what God says, not more one can do but pray one will hopefully do so because its too late Rev22:11
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The End Time Puzzle

It's a bit like our view of God. There are about 8.2 billion people in the world today but with our democratic Western experience, we think God is going to accept 8.2 billion different personal interpretations of what He is really like.

We'll find out that when it comes to revelation (and the final judgment at the end of time), God is not a democrat.
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Does Open Carry Cause Problems?

Just that thought alone could be enough to deter them from committing a crime or causing harm to someone without any gun ever actually being used.
I think it far more likely that it would encourage someone with ill intent to carry a gun to deal with potential victims who may carry a gun.
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B flat B♭

I’ve given you that many times before but you just ignore it. Let’s start with the reflectors. How did they get to the moon?
Yes, as I said to Apple Sky in Post 2431: "Besides, if your answer to every piece of evidence for the moon landings, or against the earth being flat is to call it "fake" or "lies", what is the point of the pages and pages of discussion?" She doesn't even believe the Christian testimony of an astronaut who was converted after visiting the moon, so I am left wondering what evidence she would accept.
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Weekly homilies

Homily, Tuesday December 9 2025



Isaiah 40:1-11

"Like a shepherd he feeds his flock; in his arms he gathers the lambs, Carrying them in his bosom, leading the ewes with care."



God nourishes us with his Spirit, who is intelligence; he gathers us in joy and offers the Love of his Heart.



Matthew 18:12-14



Human beings rejoice when they place themselves in the Heart of God and receive his joy.



Biblical texts: NAB-RE

Normand Thomas.
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Why we are not supposed to keep the Sabbath

There is only one prerequisite on how we enter the rest. If you enter the rest, you also cease from the works
You keep conflating works of the Law and physical and economic labor. You are also conflating resting in God’s salvation and resting from labor. This was pointed out before. You are also missing the idea in Exodus that the Israelites were freed from the yoke of slavery in Egypt. Resting from labor is a sign of that freedom. If you are a slave to your employer and forced to work on Saturday, or if you are a slave to debt (bonded laborer), you may have to work on Saturday, but you are not free.
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I have a question and I’m confused

The answer was the same as before: LCMS, WELS, ELS. The reason it gave for excluding the SDA was, and I quote:

”Their version of “sola scriptura” is not the Reformation doctrine but a materially modified form in which the prophetic authority of Ellen G. White:
• is universally accepted
• shapes doctrine
• serves as an interpretive lens
• is effectively non-optional
This creates what theologians call a functional additional canon, even if not formally stated.”
This is not true unless one does not believe God in His word of giving prophets in the last days to help His end time people. I can quote many Scriptures on this.

Second- the Bible is what rules our doctrine and even what EGW taught. EGW brings everyone back to Scripture.

“The Bible and the Bible alone, is our rule of faith” Counsels on Sabbath School Work, 84.

“The Bible is a perfect, and complete revelation. It is our only rule of faith and practice” A Word to the Little Flock, 13.


Its why most SDA's only use Scripture to defend our doctrines, the ones who mainly brings up EGW are those trying to make an argument against the SDA church instead of defending their own doctrine from Scripture and than instead point to traditions over the Holy Word of God.
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With Respect...in Fellowship

I am a High Church Anglican, married for over twenty years to a man who survived severe mistreatment at a Catholic boarding school run by The Society of Jesus in the 1950's. My husband has been offerred an in person apology from the current Provincial Superior, and he is intending to travel to London to meet him on the 19th of December, in order to receive it.

My husband and I would both appreciate the prayers of any Catholic members of Christian Forums regarding this meeting, for his protection (and my own) as we prepare and travel, and especially for his first encounter with any Jesuit since he left school. I will be going to London with him, but he has said that he wishes to actually experience the meeting alone. This is the bravest thing I believe I have ever personally witnessed someone doing for the Christian faith, and I trust that some who are seeing this post can understand how I hope my life partner will feel Jesus' love and see true recognition of past wrongs.

No judgement of your Church is intended by this post, my own has as much to be ashamed of in terms of letting God down over children entrusted to it's care.

Dear Pete Hegseth, I’m Grateful the Japanese Navy Spared My Grandfather’s Life

Here you go:


The words "Mexican Navy", "seizes", and "Pacific Ocean" are confusing me.
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Is Hell Annihilationism or Eternal Torment

That is your private opinion.


May look at Point 4 on this link - "God Is Fear"? 10 Signs That Your Church is Becoming A Cult — #Christianity #Jesus #Bible — Dr. Eitan Bar | Bible Scholar .


No avoiding people or face disciplinary measures then.

Agreed.
I'm not sure what you believe about tithes and offering in the Church, but I can tell you that God takes this Church ordinance very seriously. He actually killed a man and his wife, "Ananias and his wife Sapphira", for holding back some of the money they were supposed to give to the Church.

The link you refer to is about cults and sects, it has nothing to do with the Church (the Body of Christ). Nobody in my local Church would dare hold back the money that is allocated for Gods work.
We all give cheerfully and sacrificially. Our Pastor is a full time Minister, He is on a generous salary, because he has four children with another on the way. He also has a mortgage on his house so it's incumbent on all of us to support him and his family financially.

Gods Word tells us that a labourer is worthy of his wages, we are blessed to have a such a highly qualified Minister. He is a Professor of Theology and He is also a Bible Scholar, so he deserves a generous salary to live a comfortable life. God is pleased with our generous giving, and He has blessed our Church with growth. We are looking at building a much bigger Church building as we have outgrown our current one.

We don't avoid people, but we don't have any fellowship with the world or those who hold to unbiblical theology. We actually sacrifice our time to reach out the the community in our area, we go door knocking to share the gospel with as many as we can.
We're not seeking to recruit anyone or convert anyone, as that's Gods work. All we do is share the gospel (which is the power to save). Most turn us away very quickly because they hate the truth of the gospel, but every now and then someone responds in faith and they are eventually converted and joined to the Church.

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Why is the Immaculate Conception patroness of the United States?

Mary, under her title of the Immaculate Conception, has been patroness of the United States since the mid-19th century. But her protection of the nation dates back to its earliest history.

One of the first Catholic churches in what is now the United States was dedicated to the Immaculate Conception in 1584: the now-Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Jacksonville, Florida.

John Carroll, the first bishop in the United States, had a great devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary. In 1792, he placed the Diocese of Baltimore — which encompassed the 13 colonies of the young republic — under her protection.

Over the next 50 years, seven more dioceses were created, including New Orleans, Boston, Chicago, and Oregon City.

Continued below.

What is ‘papal infallibility?’ CNA explains an often-misunderstood Church teaching

On Dec. 8 the Catholic Church celebrates the solemnity of the Immaculate Conception — a paramount feast in the Church’s liturgical calendar and one that indirectly touches on a regularly misunderstood but important piece of Church dogma.

The solemnity is the patronal feast of the United States and marks the recognition of the Blessed Mother’s freedom from original sin, which the Church teaches she was granted from the moment of conception.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states that Mary was “redeemed from the moment of her conception” (No. 491) in order “to be able to give the free assent of her faith to the announcement of her vocation” (No. 490).

The dogma was disputed and challenged by Protestants over the centuries, leading Pope Pius IX to affirm it in his 1854 encyclical Ineffabilis Deus, stating unequivocally that Mary “was endowed with the grace of the Holy Spirit and preserved from original sin” upon her conception.

Continued below.

Another look at the moon landing.

The Moon and Her Glory

Just as the Sun is set in motion in Genesis 1:16, so is its little
buddy: the Moon. She (and here I use this gender-pronoun
loosely) is a great and wonderful thing that floats along in the sky
and tells you what day of the month it is. She gives off her own
light and she cools the plane. She rules over the night, just as the
Sun rules over the day, yet we can often see her during the
daytime, illuminated (not reflectively) by herself... Waxing.

By Paul Harty
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Celebrities calling for convicted terrorist's release shows their moral character, watchdog says

The founder of an antisemitism watchdog group condemned actors Mark Ruffalo, Benedict Cumberbatch and the hundreds of celebrities who signed a petition demanding that Israel release Marwan Barghouti, a convicted terrorist found guilty of orchestrating multiple attacks that killed Israeli civilians.

The "Free Marwan" campaign is calling for the United Nations and world governments to "actively seek" Barghouti's release from Israeli prison, alleging in the petition that the political figure and terror leader faces "violent mistreatment and denial of legal rights whilst imprisoned."

Over 200 public figures, in addition to Ruffalo and Cumberbatch, have signed the petition, including musician Paul Simon, author Margaret Atwood and actor Sir Ian McKellen.

According to Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Barghouti is associated with the Fatah terrorist organization, having served as the leader of the Al-Aqsa Brigades, which carried out thousands of terror attacks against Israel between September 2000 and April 2002.

"Just as we wouldn't expect a counterterrorism expert to win an Oscar or Grammy, no one should listen to celebrities' opinions on a mass murderer and arch terrorist," StopAntisemitism founder and executive director Liora Rez told The Christian Post.

Continued below.

The primary cause of America's social-justice violence

A year has passed since Luigi Mangione allegedly pulled the trigger on UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. When arrested, Mangione received a tidal wave of sympathy that emanated everywhere from online forums and social media to the streets of Manhattan. People across the country celebrated the accused killer as a quasi-folk hero who struck a blow against what they saw as the vile institution of American healthcare.

Ed Davis, a former Boston police commissioner who led the police response to the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, saw the outpouring of support for Mangione and remarked, “I’ve been shocked by it. It’s actually troubling to see it, and I really am surprised that people are reacting that way considering the tragic loss here and the violence of what happened.”

The support for Mangione hasn’t cooled down over the past year, as evidenced by a $1.4 million crowd-sourced legal defense fund and the continued displays of public support that appeared at his court hearings this month. Jeff Goodwin, a New York University professor who studies social movements, said, “He had the chutzpah to actually do something spectacular, which certain people find attractive and courageous.”

I’m not the only one disturbed by people describing murder as being “spectacular” and “attractive” — Heather Mac Donald, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, stated: “The only question after the assassination and its immediate celebration is: What the heck is going on with America’s moral compass?”

Mangione’s celebrators brought to my mind what Paul spoke about centuries ago: “They were fully aware of God’s death penalty for these crimes, yet they went right ahead and did them anyway and encouraged others to do them, too” (Rom. 1:32).

Someone else who sees this in our culture is Croatian theologian Miroslav Volf, who makes a connection with a disbelief in God and the kind of social justice violence we see when he writes: “Most people who insist on God’s ‘nonviolence’ cannot resist using violence themselves (or tacitly sanctioning its use by others).”

Volf then makes an excellent point when he notes the important distinction between Christianity and the secular culture’s methods for pursuing justice: “The practice of non-violence requires belief in divine vengeance.”

Think about that.

Continued below.

The rise and fall of Christian nationalism

“By any objective, scientific standard, blacks are not fully human.”

“Adolf Hitler was a Christian prince.”

“It was evil to permit women to vote.”

“You can have either a civilization or blacks — but not both. What must be done is obvious.”

“Jews and blacks are both a problem.”

“It should be illegal for women to work outside the home.”

“Tolerance for the Jews is apostasy before God.”

“Adolf Hitler is in Paradise.”

Thesestatements — and many, many more like them — were posted on X over the past few years by Corey Mahler, a self-identified “Christian nationalist,” who is co-host of the Stone Choir podcast.

Last week, Mahler’s podcast was recommended by Gab CEO Andrew Torba as the “#1 Christian Nationalist podcast in the world” on his new website ChristianNationalist.com. More concerning still was the fact that Torba’s website was immediately praised by Christian nationalist pastors like Joel Webbon and Brian Sauvé, whose ministries were also recommended on the site.

How did Christian nationalism go from an ambiguous pejorative invoked primarily by progressives, to a small but growing movement among Reformed Evangelicals, to a repository for gutter racism, misogyny, and antisemitism? The story is complicated.

Christian nationalism as vague pejorative

Continued below.

Why Christians are more frustrated than ever and desperately need discernment

Set aside any distinctly political topic or person for a moment, if you can.

If you’re a 40-year-old (or over) Evangelical like me, you’ve probably seen and heard so much about who Christians are in the last 20 years, and much of it has been hogwash. I know this personally, having spent nearly a decade in the media, and I have seen from the inside how these distortions and cartoonishly Ned Flanders caricatures are generated in real time.

Before the proliferation of social media platforms, many legacy media narratives that sincere, theologically orthodox believers faced were, and still are, beyond tiresome. While I can't speak for everyone, many Christians have been intensely frustrated that no matter how graciously they tried to explain where they were coming from, they were routinely misrepresented in the press, and they’ve often felt as though they were neither heard nor understood. And to be sure, I’m not defending truly evil people within churches and ministries who are ravenous wolves (Matthew 7:15) in sheep’s clothing, who should be exposed.

But I was wrong about something that I’ve believed for a while. Maybe partially wrong, but still wrong. As the world rapidly changes, it's important to be honest about what I've seen previously but now see more clearly.

Continued below.

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