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#BREAKING: Ep. 236 is out now! Bill O’Reilly on Confronting Evil Peter Schweizer and Eric_Eggers welcomed Bill O'Reilly on this week's episode of The Drill Down Podcast to discuss his new book Confronting Evil amid the shocking assassination of Charlie Kirk. O’Reilly defines evil as deliberate harm without remorse...

45,526 views • 9 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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Bill O’Reilly shocks Jillian Michaels, tells her JB Pritzker is even WORSE than Gavin Newsom. Michaels couldn’t fathom anyone being worse than Newsom, but O’Reilly made the case. And he capped it off with a brutal insult at the end: “For more than a decade, thousands of poor people have been murdered, mostly on the south side of Chicago, 80% African American,” O’Reilly said, setting the stage. “They’ve been murdered by drug gangs, heavily armed younger black men who basically fight over turf. If you call the police on these gangs, they’ll kill you and your family, like the cartels in Mexico. These are unbelievably evil people,” he continued. “Pritzker has been governor [of Illinois], what, [6 and a half] years? He’s not done one thing to mitigate all of that murder. Not one thing. Yet when Trump offers another blanket of protection for those poor black people by sending federal authorities to Chicago, as he did in D.C., Pritzker calls him a Nazi.” O’Reilly called that willingness to let people die for political gain “evil.” “If that’s not evil, then I don’t know what evil is.” “I didn’t have enough room to put Pritzker on the cover of my book (Confronting Evil). He’s a LITTLE TOO HEFTY,” O’Reilly mocked. “I had to get Putin in there.” “But come on, how absurd is this? Even if you hate Trump, you would think that another layer of protection to cut down homicides in the south side of Chicago would be welcome? No,” O’Reilly said, clearly frustrated.

The Vigilant Fox 🦊

583,176 views • 9 months ago

So evil exists, God exists, God willed evil to exist. He didn’t create it, He couldn’t. He’s holy, holy, holy. But He didn’t prevent it The Problem of Evil — John MacArthur // March 17, 2007 You have to understand that this issue of the problem of evil is the big issue, the big one in even evangelical Christianity, as well as liberal Christianity – everybody trying to save God from this biblical definition. Let’s assume for a minute that God doesn’t have the power or willingly limited the power for a greater good, human freedom; or doesn’t have the knowledge. In any case, guess what; evil exists and God exists, and God has no power over evil, and evil dominates the world, and it is beyond His control. The universe is out of control; it’s out of control and the most crucial point. So just exactly how, may I ask you, is God all of a sudden going to get the knowledge of the future that He needs to bring this deal to an end, and how is He going to exercise the power to end it, and how is He going to overturn His immutable decision in the past to give the creature autonomy? How is God going to define the end of everything in the way the Bible says He defines it if He’s not even in control of it, because He will not or cannot exercise the power, or doesn’t have the knowledge? Maybe global warming has more power than God. So I ask you this: Which god would you like? Would you rather have a god trying to get control of evil or a God completely in control of it? It’s obvious. It’s heresy to say the world is full of evil apart from a predetermined plan and purpose by God far beyond the willy-nilly human choices. So evil exists, God exists, God willed evil to exist. He didn’t create it, He couldn’t. He’s holy, holy, holy. But He didn’t prevent it. It occurred in a rebellion against Him. But He willed and ordained that it occurred. In fact, if you study the Bible carefully, you can see many ways in which God designs to use evil things – natural evil, moral evil, supernatural evil – for His own purposes, even eternal evil, sometimes to bring fear and terror and conviction on the unregenerate, sometimes to bring chastisement and discipline on God’s people, sometimes to humble them. And in the case of Job, He turned Satan loose for horrendous evil in the life of Job. You remember that Jesus said to Peter one day, “Satan desires to have you that he may sift you like wheat”? Remember that, Luke 22? And if I’d had been Peter I’d have said, “Well, you told him no, right?” Jesus said, “Actually, I told him yes, have at him.” What? “So that when you’re converted, you can strengthen the brethren.” There’s a remedial purpose in this. “As you come through that difficulty and come out the other side, you’re going to be able to strengthen the brethren.”It was 2 Corinthians 12 where Paul says, “There was given me a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan.” A lot of discussion about what that is. Pretty clear. Messenger is aggelos. A satanic messenger is a what; a demon. I don’t think Paul had a demon in his life, I think that’s the demon that was leading the false teachers who were ripping and shredding the Corinthian church, and Paul prayed three times that it might be removed, and the Lord didn’t remove it. Why? He says twice in 2 Corinthians 12, “to keep me from exalting myself, to keep me from exalting myself.” If God so designs He will use a demon-led false teacher association to rip up a church to humble the pastor. He’s in control of all of that, of all of it.

Terri Green

16,778 views • 1 month ago

Edward McLaren's Bothelford's Gone could be set in many towns in Britain. It's the story of teenager Jack Grundon, whose parents divorce, raise him on screens, sedate him with ADHD medication, and subject him to a school system which exposes him to perversion and anti-white literature. Jack befriends Agatha, the victim of a Muslim grooming gang in Bothelford, and tries to rescue her from a forced marriage to one of her abusers. If the left has its Omnicause — a suite of seemingly unrelated issues like climate change, queer liberation, and Gaza, which algorithms and ideology present as one struggle — then Bothelford's Gone proves the right has an Omnicrisis. The existential issues facing Britain are sapping its population of the courage to turn the tide against entropy. ‘So evil,’ he said, lowly. ‘What am I supposed to call it? Evil. It is evil.’ What he didn’t say aloud, but felt shiver through his head against his own will, was the new fact that he had just realised: that he too was evil. He was evil and had been made to participate in evil in order to prevent him from fighting it. Jack didn’t feel this to be an exaggeration, and he knew—he just knew—on some level that this was a tactic of the chimera. A monster sits at the centre of Bothelford, like the drunk Arab disrespecting its war memorial. This egregore has a hypnotic television for a head and fangs dripping with blood. But that blood might pool into a Powellite halo behind Bothelford's quasi-pagon patron saint, Marine Emery, who calls for Englishmen to avenge their children and slay the monsters of modern Britain...

Connor Tomlinson

20,052 views • 4 days ago