By Larry Schweikart @ UncoverDC on 12/13/22
I want to take you back…
…to periods that reflected much of who we are, who we have become, and who we can be. Back to events that affected all of us today but were almost imperceptible to those living them. Perhaps with one exception. It was Christmas time. The nation had been at war for almost two years. Things had not gone well. News of early defeats had streamed into the nation’s Capital. Richard Rush wrote to his old friend John Adams about the mood in Washington D.C. in December 1813. The nation was fighting, to be sure:
“But it seems to fight for nothing but disaster and defeat . . . and disgrace. What, sir, should be done? The prospect looks black. It is awful. Is not another torrent rolling too fiercely upon us to be turned back? Where shall we find [leaders]? And may we not be doomed to pass yet another and another and another campaign in the school of affliction and disgrace? [I] am sick at heart at the view of our public affairs. Have we, sir, even seen worse times and survived them? And how?”
The aging ex-president John Adams agreed with Rush. “The times are too serious to write.” He didn’t know what prevented the White House—not called that yet—or the “proud Capitol” from becoming the headquarters of the British. The country, Adams said:
“Must have a winnowing, the chaff must be separated from the wheat. The real . . . genius and experience have been neglected [while] froth and ignorance have been promoted.” But, said the aged patriot, “don’t be discouraged. In our Revolution, we had seen infinitely more difficult and dangerous times.”
What stands out about that exchange—and Adams’s comment about the British being in the White House and the Capitol—is that it came just eight months before that very thing occurred. In August of 1814, British troops landed, and though badly outnumbered and utterly embarrassed, an army was sent to stop them at Bladensburg, New Jersey. They marched on to Washington, with the President, James Madison, on a horse just miles ahead of them. Indeed, the defeat at Bladensburg was so humiliating—referred to this day as the “Bladensburg Races”—that Madison couldn’t find his own Secretary of War, John Armstrong, who was in command of the army in the field.
As the War of 1812 neared its conclusion, British forces torched the White House, the Capitol, and nearly every other public building in Washington. In the darkness, Madison, Attorney General Richard Rush, and John Mason, having watched from a distance as American forces threw down their weapons and ran had ridden back to find the White House deserted.
Dolly Madison had left their supper on the table, then left at three in the morning carrying some papers, a few books, and the full portrait of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart. Everything else—silver, valuables, clothes, thousands of dollars worth of fine wines in the cellar—was abandoned.
Madison urged everyone out. The British were literally right behind them. According to one account, he “cooly mounted his horse and rode off to the ferry across the Potomac.” He needed to find Dolly, and he needed to find the army or what was left of it. Already the British were burning the Capitol and soon reached the White House and burned that. British General Cockburn planned to capture Madison and “carry him to England for a curiosity.”
Madison and his companions didn’t find Dolly across the river. She had left much earlier and, due to her husband’s unpopularity, had to disguise herself. At one tavern, she was refused admittance. When a friend offered her refuge at his country house, the cook refused to make coffee for her, saying, “I don heerd Mr. Madison and Mr. Armstrong done sold the country to the British.”
The President rode on to Great Falls and, not finding his wife there, continued during a vicious wind storm that only fanned the flames back in Washington. But then he learned that the Secretary of War and some of his army were at Rockville, Maryland, 15 miles north of Washington, so he rode there, only to find them gone to Baltimore. Having been in the saddle for 18 hours, Madison rode to Brookville—another 10 hours away, where finally he was able to sleep.
When he finally returned to the White House, it was “in ashes, not an inch, but its cracked and blackened walls remained.” Other public buildings were burned. Dead horses lay all over the grounds. The people were terrified. Many wanted to quit.
Mr. Madison wasn’t a quitter. He finally caught up to Secretary of War Armstrong—and fired him on the spot, throwing him out of Washington. In his stead, he appointed another great future president as the new Secretary of War, James Monroe. When Madison and Armstrong had both disappeared on horseback, Monroe simultaneously held the acting position of both President and Secretary of State. Now James Monroe was Secretary of War as well. He said, “I never went to bed for an entire month.”
As if to add one more coal to his head, a group of northeastern elites from the Federalist Party had come very close to forcing a secession by several states—right in the middle of a war against a foreign enemy.
And then, a quiet change. Sunlight, almost instantaneously. A peace treaty was negotiated in Belgium; General Andrew Jackson defeated a major British invasion at New Orleans, and just like that–-right around Christmas—Madison and the United States—had survived. The ensuing decade was called . . . the era of good feelings.
Jump ahead with me for 127 years…
My story does not take place at Christmas this time, but in the summer of an equally dark period, 1942, when America had been rocked by defeat after defeat in the Pacific by the Japanese. America’s Christmas in 1941 had been one of the bleakest in memory. People were still in shock over the attack at Pearl Harbor, over the fall of plucky Wake Island, and over the steady drumbeat of losses of General MacArthur’s men in the Philippines.
The key to everything was the Japanese navy, and the key to the navy was its strike force of four large aircraft carriers. At the time, the United States could only put to sea three, one of which, the Yorktown, was so badly damaged from a previous battle that it was being repaired while at sea in a frenzy of engineering and construction genius of 1400 men working around the clock.
Through superior codebreaking, the Americans, for once, knew where the Japanese would be—right off Midway Island—and when they would be there. But the Pacific Ocean is a big place. Being “in the vicinity” still can put you off by over a thousand miles. America’s carriers knew roughly where the Japanese fleet was—but not exactly. When the enemy finally showed up, the Americans sent over 100 aircraft from Midway Island. All these attackers failed to land a single bomb on a single enemy ship. But the force kept moving, and now the American carriers, themselves moving to intercept them, had to locate this fleet.
Armed with evidence of roughly where the Japanese were and generally in which direction they were moving, the American carriers launched nearly every ship-killing torpedo plane they could in the general direction of the enemy. The planes arrived haphazardly, completely out of normal practices for attacking ships. One by one, then several at a time, the American torpedo planes were shot down—more than 50 of them fell into the sea! Only three made it back to their carriers. Not one had scored a single hit.
This was indeed desperation. America was down to about thirty dive bombers against a fleet of 100 ships and at least 100 fighter planes. And the dive bombers had not been given clear coordinates as to where the carriers were. They were searching, like almost everyone else. They were low on fuel. No sign.
Then the smallest of changes…
At the outset of the battle, a single American submarine, the Nautilus, had found the Japanese fleet. It patiently worked its way inside the protective screen to fire three torpedoes at one carrier. Only one hit. It was a dud. Nautilus had utterly failed. Or had it?
A Japanese destroyer was on the Nautilus in minutes, forcing her under. The Nautilus ran. The destroyer followed. Hours later, the Japanese destroyer, convinced it had chased off the sub, turned and headed back for its main fleet and the carriers.
In the skies above, the desperate dive bombers, nearly at their maximum range of fuel, having failed to find the carriers all day, saw a single Japanese ship. A destroyer. This was unusual. It would normally be with a fleet. Was that where it was heading? Out of options, they followed. Soon, the horizon was dotted with Japanese warships and the four big carriers. And all the Japanese fighter planes? They were either out of gas or off chasing the hapless torpedo planes, men who had sacrificed themselves for this miraculous opportunity.
It was literally over in five minutes. Coming out of nowhere, American dive bombers so thoroughly damaged three of the carriers that the Japanese themselves had to finish them off, and the next day, a return visit sank the fourth. The War in the Pacific had been won—oh, it would demand an enormous amount of blood and treasure over more than three years to force Japan to surrender, but after Midway, they simply couldn’t win.
All because of a failed mission and a little change of a lone destroyer following the Nautilus.
I think about that submarine a lot. It failed spectacularly. Just like those courageous torpedo bombers who gave their lives, apparently for no reason. And yet. It was the Nautilis that enabled the dive bombers to find the carriers. It was the torpedo planes that pulled away the protection. It was nerdy, unseen codebreakers that had learned where the Japanese would be.
We may have had a difficult election, but no one knows what the ramifications of it will be. None of us know if we are the Nautilus, performing a task that appears to have failed, only to lay a brick in a massive foundation of victory. None of us know if we are with Mr. Madison, barely ahead of the barbarian hordes in August or walking back into glory at Christmas. But we know this. As John Adams says, we have seen worse times, and such times produce a winnowing.
And we know this. There are always quitters. Those never enter the history books as legends. Rather it is those who took us from the steam engine to the search engine, from the first step on the North Pole to the first footprint on the Moon, from mastering the Mississippi to navigating hyperspace and quantum physics. A handful of thuggish, mouth-breathing, World Economic Forum malcontent minions, backed by all the crypto from Sam Bankman-Fried’s funny-money computers and all the digitally-concocted money in Communist China, do not get the privilege of leading this nation. True genius is beyond them, true patriotism is anathema to them, and true goodness is repellant to them.
This season…
…celebrate what at the time was a seemingly small change that affected a tiny few. Another baby was born in the Middle East. Outside His family—and those who knew the prophecies—no one knew His Name. Yet the little change of His birth overturned the entire world, changed how we mark our calendars and gave hope to billions. One little change named Jesus the Messiah.
This Christmas, America merely awaits the new spirit of change, the spirit that demands not a return to yesterday but a march toward tomorrow. America yearns for both that spirit of good and the spirit of great. That spirit that says mediocrity is no longer acceptable, that decline is unavoidable, or that social decay is inevitable.
Instead, this new spirit of Christmas starts today. It starts here. It starts now. It starts in every heart and hearth, every home and RV, every mansion and apartment. Be a Nautilus. Do your job with courage and conviction, with certainty that even if you fail in what you think was your mission, you have played your part, that the Creator of the universe will play His. Your ripples are noticed. Your faith is rewarded. And your patriotism is appreciated. Celebrate the change of the world.
Merry Christmas, and God Bless America.











Morning All!
interesting open Filly!
we’re sitting at -8* currently.
we didn’t lose power overnight so the pipes didn’t freeze…small victory!
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Morning, Pat! That’s good news.
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Morning!
one of the neighbors called last night–he lives way downstate but just built a very pretty vacation/hunting place up here. he wanted us to let him know if the power went out–he would then contact the rest of the owners who hunt up here about their places…it’s a nice thing they do for one another…
but that didn’t happen.
how are you faring??
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Still here, still cold, but above zero….1 degree! LOL
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This seems appropriate here:
“It is dangerous to attribute to stupidity that which could be the result of malice or guile.” -Aubergine.
Republicons are evil…just a different brand of evil.
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“Better the devil you know…” Henry Blake, MASH
Morning Bill!
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Morning Pat! Merry Christmas 🎄🎄🎄🎄
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Merry Christmas to you as well!
do you have your dear wife’s gifts wrapped?
I’m only asking because my hubby does not. it is a Christmas eve tradition with him to wrap them on Christmas Eve…and i was curious if that was a “he” thing or a “man” thing…LOL
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Ah… not yet! 🤣
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ahhhh…another mystery solved!
thanks!
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The GOP aren’t incompetent – they are corrupt as hell.
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Hi GA!!
how did you make it thru the storm???
all okay?
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We didn’t have a storm – just unusually cold for early winter.
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well that’s good!
it hasn’t gotten above 0 all day!!
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Bless you – ! I thank GOD for you and Miss Filly and all the other Truth and Prayer Warriors that I have come to love.
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you are too kind!
we treasure you as well GA!!
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I am so glad they showed up and DID NOT stand and clap. if they had not gone, the optics would have been–look congress supports it overwhelmingly. (who would know to look in the crowd for their senator or rep?) this way they cannot claim it and demoralize everyone…this emphasizes your point above–the nautilus–small action…maybe starting something bigger…jmo
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Ginni Thomas was apparently NOT in the 1/6 unselect committee’s report and leftists are seething
https://twitchy.com/fuzzychimp-313137/2022/12/23/ginni-thomas-seems-to-be-missing-from-the-j6-report-leftists-freak-out/
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this confuses me. there are gay nightclubs, there are brothels, …none of which are taxpayer funded. what gives these deviants the right to ask for a taxpayer funded anything? you get the gov’t involved, there will be regulations, standards, equity training–which will all severely limit your income. if you believe in this business venture, invest your own $$ …all of this is sarcasm…what total freaks…
I did not watch the video, but i did see the picture of the idiots–carefully hiding their identities I noted.
https://citizenfreepress.com/breaking/mistress-demands-taxpayer-funded-sex-dungeon/
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i hope Filly didn’t lose power!
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I’m here – sun shining, no wind to speak of, up to 10 now. LM doing well, too. I’m thinking of moving him back to the patio today. Temps in the 40’s next week.
Working on a doc to send to my Sis.
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oh…do you think he will want to go? now that he’s tasted the good life with you???LOL
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Sucks to be him, eh? He’ll be fine, I’m sure. Back to patio cat.
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LOL…
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Just got my turkey breast in the oven and I’m making my stuffing…oh the smells in my kitchen!!!
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Yum!
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Since I’m in a reflective mood this morning, I got to thinking….yeah, yeah – I know! I’m always over-thinking things – I Yam Wut I Yam!
This word “judgmental”……what does it mean to be judgmental? Are we not, as sentient beings, judgmental in some aspect…at some level….all of our lives? Even animals are judgmental, most literally from birth, born with the instinct to judge their surroundings, and who and what is there that might harm them.
So do, we, as human beings – we just take a little longer to begin the learning process…we judge our circumstances, we judge the weather and the upcoming weather, we judge whether our vehicle is in good enough condition to drive, we judge whether another human being is safe to be around or whether they can be trusted, we judge whether we will have enough $$$ to make it to payday, and on and on and on and on. It never ends until we leave this earth. Being judgmental is required to survive life!!! Is it not?
Having said that, one person cannot judge what is best for the next person – I can make a judgment for myself whether or not I agree with the action taken, but I cannot judge the other person’s motivations or whether they are a good or a bad person overall. Except in very limited cases, of course – some actions are simply intolerable to anyone with a conscience.
What I can judge, as should everyone for themselves, is whether or not remaining in that person’s sphere of influence is good for ME and ME only. As we all do on a regular basis! So, no, I don’t mind at all being called judgmental – damned right I am!
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Pfftttt…I’m ready to strangle me a Blue Jay! That shithead! He perched on the side of the open seed feeder and proceeded to scoop the seed out of the feeder, back and forth, both sides, into the garden bed below…..then jumped up to the next bar and wiped his beak, as if “Job done!” And no, he didn’t jump down to eat the seed he’s just dumped!!!!
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WTH???????????????????
LOL…did he think he’d find bigger seed mixed in???
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I’m wondering if he was looking for black sunflower seeds….
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at our old place, they would do that to our feeders…toss the rest of the seed out looking for the bigger seeds…
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Well, I know there were sunflower seeds in it, as well as every other seed known to man, yet he didn’t eat a bit of it. After wiping his beak, he flew away and no other BJ’s have been seen. Like I said – they are the shitheads of the bird world! LOL
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LOL
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She’s not just complicit – she directed this movie!
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i wanna see her fry for her part in it!
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Oh, Pat….you still with us? Hope you still have power….you have got to watch this video – you can read the article first – it’s very long with a lot of details that are really interesting, I thought. The video link is also in the article.
“Christmas Eve, 1944”
Techno Fog
44 min ago
https://technofog.substack.com/p/christmas-eve-1944
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still here! we just had our Christmas dinner…and I just finished cleaning up all the dishes!
now I am free to eat leftovers and veg out watching Christmas dvds for the rest of the holiday weekend…after the 2 football games today hubby wants to watch…LOL
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Ah, yes….football…that bygone pleasure for me….meh. To think of how obsessed I was for years…..amazing what total lack of interest I have now. NASCAR, too…even horse racing. I watch the actual Derby, Preakness, Belmont themselves but very little of anything else. Seriously, pretty much all sports have been ruined for me these days.
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hubby watches 2 teams…Buffalo and the Eagles…I was always an Eagles fan and have many older signed Jerseys…(and a Manning one too!)
now? i can take it or leave it
but yeah–hubby and I watch the derbies!
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Huskers, of course, Redskins, Green Bay pretty much covers my favorites.
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Matt Taibbi has another Twitter Files
(when i clicked on the link, it’s a thread unrolled)
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1606701397109796866.html
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Awesome! I’m pretty sure that any time it says “threadreaderapp,” it is the unrolled thread. That’s what I always look for.
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yeah i get that…but at cfp, the headline is just Matt Taibbi dropping more twitter files…so I copied THAT link and when it posted, I saw it was the thread reader app…
too lazy to edit my post…LOL
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👍👍👍
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OK…I’ve checked the weather forecast….I will wait to let LM out until tomorrow afternoon, once I have moved the rest of the wood to the patio. Supposed to hit almost 30, with 13 mph wind, which isn’t bad at all. I was going to move his shelter back onto the patio until I looked at the 48 hr forecast – single digits during the day and negatives at night. So I’ve decided the shelter is staying in the garage and he will have to learn to come inside every day. I’ll get him trained – that’s where I’ll feed him.
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you have a kind heart!
hubby said maybe by the end of the coming week we will hit almost 40*
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hospital in Yuma AZ stuck with $20 MILLION in unpaid medical services for illegals that the state nor the federal gov’t intend to pay…and the public is misled about the services being rendered. the illegals are getting free dialysis, heart surgeries, neo natal care for MONTHS…
FTA
“People always think they’re coming in with coughs and colds, but that’s not really the case,” President Dr. Robert Transchel told “Fox & Friends” on Friday. “You have individuals come in that need dialysis, that need heart surgery, that need cardiac catheterization. We’ve had women come into our labor and delivery unit that have delivered infants that need to be in the neonatal ICU for sometimes months at a time.”
As of now, Transchel says neither Arizona or the U.S. federal government is offering to pay for the services the hospital has provided.
“It’s an unsustainable business model to have your expenses increased by an external entity consistently and increasingly without any concomitant revenue source,” he explained.
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/juliorosas/2022/12/23/yuma-hospital-straddled-with-20-million-bill-for-taking-care-of-illegal-immigrants-n2617525
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they do NOT know how to be civil–they do not BELONG HERE!
if a “guest” caused this much damaged to a home i allowed them to stay in, I would kick their damn asses out and sue them! send the ingrates home!
FTA
In March 2022, the Defense Department initially estimated the cost to “reset facilities, equipment, and consumables to pre-OAW conditions” were $326.6 million though those figures were later reduced by May, the UPI report sets out.
The auditors identified costs not allowable under rules for reimbursement including $25 million requested by Ramstein Air Base in Germany for damage to the airfield. However, $2.2 million was approved for equipment and consumable items for Ramstein Air Base.
“Air Force officials described tables, chairs, and cots broken by guests and tents and cots ruined by spray paint, human biological matter, and holes,” the report said.
The Air Force initially requested $150 million in repairs, reporting that at Joint Base McGuide-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey, “guests damaged facility water systems by forcing large items into pipes, causing clogs,” the report found.
“Air Force officials stated these clogged water systems were so excessive that the facility managers could not repair the clogs with conventional plumbing tools.”
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/12/23/afghan-refugees-leave-defense-department-with-270m-repair-bill/
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that lawyer one? dead on!!!!
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OUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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FFS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
the judge dismissed Kari Lake’s lawsuit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Another deep state judge. 🤬
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yup…I don’t see how he can say Kari didn’t prove anything…
he obviously is an ass.
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Reminds me of the quote from Oliver Twist: “If the law supposes that,” said Mr. Bumble, squeezing his hat emphatically in both hands, “the law is a ass — a idiot.”
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I am adding a short daily prayer to the board. I would invite each of you, if you wish, to also add one or maybe two of your own liking. I do not want to stifle anyone but please limit yourself to one or two religious postings. here’s one I found that I liked.

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