Lemuel

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Lemuel

Lemuel

@lemueldagger

On God's side

Joined Haziran 2013
494 Following323 Followers
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Lemuel
Lemuel@lemueldagger·
The purpose of life is to create beauty and destroy malevolence to the highest degree you can.
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C3
C3@C_3C_3·
Most popular new baby boy names in the UK: 2015: Oliver 2016: Oliver 2017: Oliver 2018: Oliver 2019: Oliver 2020: Oliver 2021: Noah 2022: Noah 2023: Muhammad 2024: Muhammad 2025: Muhammad Invaded. All planned. The West must be saved.
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Lebanon_John
Lebanon_John@Lebanon_John·
The UK government is satanic
Lebanon_John tweet media
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AC
AC@saveusculture·
Mass rape is the consistent story of Muslim expansion throughout all of history. Everywhere they go they rape the native peoples until there is nothing left of them and all is turned to a sea of brown retards. That is who they are. That is who they have always been.
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Megha
Megha@megha_lilly·
What you have to understand is that the majority of middle class British white women support the rape gang infrastructure. They’re far more concerned with accidentally sympathizing with “the lower class” than they are scandalized by child rape.
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J͎Λ͎Y͎
J͎Λ͎Y͎@TakeThiamine·
'Chloe' Throughout her early childhood, 'Chloe' was popular at school, performed well academically, and enjoyed an active social life. Although her parents separated when she was young, she describes her early upbringing as relatively stable. Following the separation, full custody of Chloe and her older brother was awarded to their father, despite his alcoholism. Her mother, on the other hand, was often absent from her life and became homeless following the separation. Chloe recalls a generally secure and supportive home environment under the care of her father. However, following his sudden death just before her tenth birthday, she moved in with her mother and her mother's new husband — a man she describes as a "paedophile" by whom she was sexually abused. Chloe's mother caught her husband assaulting Chloe on many occasions, but did little to stop it. On one occasion, Chloe's mother caught her husband in the shower with Chloe and instead of intervening, "she closed the door and walked out." At this time, Chloe was ten years old. The abuse soon escalated to rape. Chloe's stepfather supplied her with alcohol and cigarettes "to keep her quiet," and she began smoking cannabis. Around the same time, Chloe started truanting and spending time in the local town centre with a friend unsupervised. She describes groups of Muslim men, primarily Pakistanis, aged 20 to over 50 showing them attention, including wolf whistling and buying them alcohol. Many were taxi drivers who would take the girls into their cars and drive them around the town. At this stage, there was no sexual abuse, and although the men's behaviour was clearly inappropriate, Chloe and her friend — then in their final year of primary school — enjoyed being treated like adults. The grooming soon intensified. The provision of alcohol and takeaways was accompanied by emotional manipulation, with the men — many of whom were related to one another — presenting themselves as sympathetic friends to Chloe. Chloe describes this process as them "mapping out, are you a vulnerable person?" Physical contact, including kisses and massages, became increasingly common. Meanwhile, the abuse by her stepfather at home worsened, and her mother was all but absent as a guardian. At this time, Chloe had an aunt and uncle who lived nearby, and she often sought refuge with them. She had spent holidays with them during her earlier childhood, and felt that she could trust them. On one occasion, she had visited them while truanting, before returning home and spending the day there while her mother and stepfather were at work. To Chloe's surprise, her uncle arrived at her house unannounced an hour later, and she invited him inside. After a brief conversation, Chloe's uncle sexually assaulted her. Chloe resisted, and he relented and left. She told her mother about the assault, and her mother reported it to the police. The police accused Chloe of lying, and no further action was taken. Until this incident, she had regarded her uncle as "one of the best people in her life" — afterwards, there were no adults left that Chloe could confide in or seek support from. Increasingly isolated, she became more deeply involved with the groups of Muslim men she encountered in the town centre. One evening, Chloe's friend suggested that they travel to a nearby town where one of the men had a hotel room. They were picked up by the man — who was drunk and under the influence of drugs — and taken to the hotel. When they arrived, hotel staff saw them but did not intervene. In the room, the girls were given a potent strain of cannabis, which left Chloe — then eleven — "absolutely smashed." Chloe's friend was taken into another room by a group of men, and Chloe was groped by the man who remained. Chloe resisted, and he hit her. The man did not attempt to sexually assault her again, and instead threw the girls — both of whom were still intoxicated — out of the hotel and refused to drive them back to their home town. They were forced to walk. It was around midnight. Chloe did not want to go back to her home as she feared her mother would beat her for being out late, so stayed with her friend. In the early hours of the morning, Chloe was collected from her friend's house by the police after her mother reported her missing. Chloe lied to the police and her mother about where she had been. Chloe's mother "grounded" her for a month, meaning she was stuck at home with her predatory stepfather — a period she describes as "torture." After the month passed, Chloe arranged to see her friend, who boasted that she had a new boyfriend. Chloe left the house to meet her, and the girls were picked up by the "boyfriend" — who was in fact a 25-year-old Indian man. Initially, Chloe thought the man was nice — "posher" than the other men she had met in the town centre. He took Chloe and her friend to a shop where he purchased a bottle of vodka before picking up one of his friends and taking the girls to a secluded location. During the journey, the men began pressuring the girls for sex. Chloe refused, stating that she was on her period, but the men replied that it did not matter. Night was falling when they arrived, and the "boyfriend" took Chloe's friend out of the car, leaving Chloe alone with the other man. He proceeded to rape her on the back seats. This incident took place in 2003. In 2022, Chloe took the two men to court, but neither were found guilty. From this moment, Chloe's life spiralled. At twelve years old, she began drinking heavily, smoking large amounts of cannabis, and taking harder drugs including ecstasy — "anything to block it out of her mind." She would drink before school "just to get through the day" and her attendance dropped significantly. She and her friend would spend school hours in the town centre, "walking around until somebody picked them up in a car, somebody bought them alcohol or somebody gave them drugs." There were times when Chloe would be missing for up to three days, during which time she was passed between taxis, drugged, abused, and raped. In every case, the perpetrators were Muslim, and primarily Pakistani. On one occasion, Chloe was abducted by an abuser — who was driving drunk — and taken to a graveyard. He gave Chloe — still twelve years old — whiskey before forcing himself on her and raping her. He withdrew before ejaculation, and forced the empty whiskey bottle into Chloe's vagina, where it shattered. Chloe admitted herself to A&E, but no questions were asked about how she had sustained such an injury. She was examined, the glass was removed, and she was discharged. Chloe was questioned by police due to her absence on a number of occasions. Each time, she was asked where she had been, who she had been with, and what she had been doing. She replied that she had been having sex with adult males in cars. Rather than opening an investigation and pursuing her abusers, the police dismissed Chloe as a prostitute. They asked her whether she was consenting to the sexual activity and, despite Chloe telling them that she did not know the definition of the word "consent," they reported that she had been. The police found Chloe, as well as other missing children, in cars with the gang members on multiple occasions, but let the gang members go without so much as questioning them. On one occasion, Chloe was in the town centre and was identified as a missing child by a police officer who questioned where she had been. Chloe told this police officer about the full extent of the abuse, and the response of the police officer was that nothing could be done, and Chloe was let go. In response to her truancy and deteriorating behaviour, the school regularly placed Chloe in isolation and compelled her to attend additional after-school classes every day. This did little to improve her emotional state, and she continued to spend time with her friend and her friend's "boyfriend." This went on for a number of years. The "boyfriend" would supply the girls with alcohol and drugs, as well as introducing them to his friends, who were exclusively South Asian men. On one occasion, he took the girls to his place of work — a textiles factory — where he raped Chloe. By this time, Chloe had become so accustomed to her "lifestyle" of spending time with the Muslim gangs that she continued to do so without her friend. On one occasion, following another late return home, her mother "grounded" her for two months. Fearing further abuse from her stepfather, Chloe walked to a nearby social services office while her mother was at work and reported him. Chloe was interviewed by the social workers about the abuse, after which her mother and stepfather were arrested and questioned. Both denied that the abuse was taking place, and were released without charge. Chloe made further appeals to social services and was eventually removed from the house and placed in foster care. She lived with a couple who cared for several other foster children and, though she found them "snobby" and judgemental, found some semblance of stability with them — but it did not last long. She was still living in the same town, so when she went into the town centre — as she often did both alone and with the foster carers — the Muslim gangs would recognise and target her. She remained at the same school, and because she now lived further away, the foster carers paid for taxis to take her there. She would ask the taxi drivers to drop her near the school and, rather than attending, would walk to one of the neighbourhoods where the Muslim gangs spent their time. The gangs would take her into their taxis, ply her with drugs and alcohol, and sexually abuse her. Around the age of 13, Chloe disclosed to social services that she was being sexually abused by gangs of Muslim men. In response, social services did not intervene, but rather talked to Chloe about contraception and sexual health. One social worker started regularly taking Chloe to a sexual health clinic, where she was diagnosed with chlamydia in her throat and vagina, gonorrhea, genital warts, and pelvic inflammatory disease. Neither the social workers nor the clinic staff questioned or reported this. The police were aware of Chloe's activities, but instead of targeting those responsible for her abuse, they routinely failed to question them — let alone pursue further action — when Chloe was found in cars and houses with them. Chloe was soon moved to a different foster placement with a far more protective carer. On one occasion, a gang came to the foster home searching for Chloe, and the carer fought them in the street to protect her. Around the time Chloe turned 14, a social worker approached her about her ongoing sexual exploitation. This was one of the first times this had happened, and Chloe was relieved that her abuse was finally being addressed. However, rather than offering a solution, the social worker instead told Chloe that the producers of Emmerdale were looking for a young actress to play a victim of child sexual exploitation, and asked whether she would be interested in auditioning for the role given her experience. Following this exchange, Chloe — upset, angry, and in a state of disbelief — ran away from the foster home, and, after being abducted by a Muslim gang, was missing for six months. Over this period she was trafficked across the length and breadth of Britain. She was taken to "house after house" and raped and abused by "guy after guy after guy after guy." The men who abused her paid money to the gang, which treated her as little more than a commodity. She was reported missing and her photograph was shown on TV. Her abusers remarked on this — "you're that girl off the TV that's missing" — but her whereabouts were never reported to the police. Chloe describes a cycle of grooming, rape, and drug and alcohol abuse — this went on until, eventually, she was located by the police. When the police found her, she was in a car with a South Asian Muslim man. The man was let go without charge, and she was returned to her mother's house. Chloe's relationship with her mother had completely broken down by this point, so she continued to run away and her psychological state deteriorated further. Following another period of grooming and sexual exploitation by a Muslim gang, Chloe was taken into police custody and transported to a secure unit at a children's home. She describes the home as being like a prison. Every aspect of her life was controlled and surveilled, and she was routinely subjected to bodily examinations, including full cavity searches. Chloe found the experience highly traumatic. She remained there for 9 months, by which time she was almost 15. Social services determined that she was well enough to be released, and she was placed in foster care not far from where she had been living before. Chloe describes the new carers as a positive and encouraging presence in her life, and — in spite of her proximity to the sites of her abuse and exploitation — Chloe found stability and security living with them. She enrolled in a full-time hairdressing and beauty course at a nearby college, and for the next two years, Chloe describes her life as "fantastic." As Chloe approached her 18th birthday, social services notified her that the foster care would soon end. They identified a house for her and, after parting ways with her carer, she moved in and got a retail job to support herself. Despite having little experience taking care of herself, Chloe's life remained generally stable through this period. Eventually, Chloe reestablished contact with the friend whom she had been abused with as a young child. She invited her over to her house, and when she arrived, she was accompanied by a group of Muslim men — all of whom remembered Chloe from past abuse. Immediately, Chloe's life was thrown back into chaos. The men refused to leave, and — in Chloe's words — "it was no longer my quiet little house. It was their house." They smashed windows, kicked in doors, left the house an "absolute wreck," and sexually abused Chloe. One of the men — a previous abuser — pinned her down, pulled his trousers down, and "sat on her face," orally raping her on her own sofa as the rest of the gang watched. Chloe returned to drugs and alcohol to cope. Though she was still working in retail, her ability to work was rapidly declining. During one shift, one of her colleagues — someone she was friends with — jokingly pinched her bottom. Chloe, traumatised by the years of abuse, punched him in the face in the middle of the shop. She was brought before management and tried to argue her case, but was fired. Left with no income, Chloe spiralled further. The Muslim gang was still occupying her house, and, with nowhere else to go and no ability to remove them, she remained there with them. They routinely drugged, abused, and raped her, including with objects including soft drink cans, keys, and a baseball bat. Before long they started to pay her bills to consolidate their presence in her home. On a number of occasions, they brought young children into Chloe's house to abuse them. Chloe recalls a number of occasions when boys under the age of 18 from the Muslim community were pressured and bullied by their older friends and relatives into raping her. Chloe was forced to commit crimes, including insurance fraud and the holding of drugs. On one occasion she contacted the police to report an assault that was taking place in her house and, when they arrived, Chloe was threatened with arrest rather than the gang members as the property was registered in her name. One evening, an associate of the gang from a neighbouring town arrived at the house. A notorious sex trafficker, he soon began taking Chloe to bars and nightclubs in the surrounding area. There, he would spike her with heroin before handing her over to men who sexually assaulted and raped her. Chloe became addicted to opiates and her health deteriorated rapidly. She became anorexic, weighing just five stone (70 pounds) at the age of 18. The use of heroin was a method of control by the gang, as it left her with no ability to defend herself physically. Her daily existence became a relentless cycle of rape, exploitation, and violence. Eventually, a social worker visited Chloe and was shocked by both her appearance and the conditions in which she was living. Concerned for her welfare, she took Chloe to an addiction clinic, where tests revealed an extremely high concentration of opiates in her system. Chloe was prescribed medication to manage her opioid dependency and gradually weaned herself off the drugs. Around this time, Chloe reconnected with a childhood friend, and their friendship soon developed into a romantic relationship. Her boyfriend became aware of the ongoing abuse and, with the help of his father, paid off Chloe's remaining rent and moved her out of her squalid house. Chloe moved in with him, after which she got another job in retail. For a short period, Chloe's life was relatively stable — but, due to her unresolved trauma, she soon returned to drinking heavily, smoking cannabis, and gambling. Her workplace was close to her first foster home, and before long she came back into contact with members of the gang that had abused her at that time. The cycle of grooming, exploitation, and abuse soon resumed. Her relationship with her boyfriend broke down, and, out of desperation, she re-established contact with her mother — who had left her predatory husband — and soon moved back in with her. One night, Chloe was out with members of the gang and drinking heavily. Upon her return to her mother's house, her mother reported her to the police. The police arrested Chloe while she was changing into her pyjamas, and she was taken to the police station drunk and half-naked. She was kept in a cell until two am the following morning, at which point she was released. They did not provide her with any clothes or transportation back to her mother's house. She tried to contact her ex-boyfriend, but he did not respond. Chloe, then 19, was left stranded. She wandered around the neighbourhood for several hours before encountering a gang member who had previously abused her. Cold and desperate, she got into his car, and, for the following weeks, was trafficked across the country. Eventually, Chloe identified a new house to move into. Despite their dysfunctional relationship, her mother agreed to sign the rental agreement as Chloe's guarantor, as Chloe — then without income — knew she would not be able to afford the rent. After she moved in, she became aware of the fact that she was the only White British person in her neighbourhood. Every other resident was South Asian. As a result, the gangs discovered where she was living, and once again treated her house as if it was their own. The cycle of abuse continued, and Chloe's emotional state deteriorated significantly. Chloe was taken to hospital after a suicide attempt, and, while there, she discovered that she was pregnant. The father of the child — a Pakistani Muslim illegal migrant — moved into Chloe's home. Chloe was subsequently coerced into converting to Islam and forced into marriage, both to legitimise the pregnancy in the eyes of her abuser and to assist him in securing a visa. Chloe's behaviour became tightly controlled. She was forced to wear a hijab, she was prohibited from looking out the windows of her home, and, if she misbehaved in the eyes of her "husband," he would "beat her black and blue" — something that happened "every day." Chloe's child was born with multiple health problems, including a defective kidney, due to the deteriorated condition of Chloe's womb as a result of the sexual abuse. Nevertheless, becoming a mother gave Chloe a renewed determination to get her life back on track. She reported the father of her child to the police after he assaulted the child, and he was removed from the property. She stopped taking drugs. She was "focused," and, for the first time, the gangs left her alone. One evening, she went out with a friend who lived across the road. Chloe, now a mother, did not drink heavily, but her friend became heavily intoxicated. A group of Asian men started speaking to them, and offered to take Chloe and her friend home. Chloe was suspicious of them, but, for the sake of her friend, agreed. Instead of taking them home, however, they were taken to a hotel. Chloe, who was not drunk, protested, and encouraged her friend — who was "paralytic" — to leave with her. Chloe warned her friend about what she suspected was going to happen, but her friend refused to leave. Chloe, thinking of her daughter and seeking to protect herself, reluctantly left without her. The following day, Chloe's friend told Chloe that she had been raped by the men. This incident represented a turning point in Chloe's life. She decided that she needed to leave her home town for good and "get as far away from these Asian men as possible." By chance, she reconnected on Facebook with a man she had known in her early childhood — an old colleague of her mother who she describes as "one of the only adult men in my life who never harmed me or treated me badly." She told him about everything she had been through and her desire to leave. He lived in Scotland and she was invited to visit him for the weekend, which she did. After returning home, she sought support from Women's Aid, who managed to secure her a property in Scotland. With nothing but her daughter and a small bag, she left her home town, leaving a lifetime of abuse and exploitation behind, and moved to Scotland, where she resides to this day. Chloe personally knows at least twenty other girls from her area who were predated on by the Muslim gangs who abused her. The pattern was always the same: grooming, drugging, trafficking, abuse, and rape. Furthermore, Chloe describes being taken into mosques where imams would describe non-Muslims as "infidels" and preach that white women who dressed "inappropriately" were "free game." Chloe believes that the local police, social services, NHS, and government were all fully aware of what was happening, including the racialised nature of the crimes, but that they did not intervene for two reasons: because they "could not be bothered with the paperwork," and because "they did not want to be seen as racist." Chloe blames these bodies, and their "major push for diversity," for her abuse. Chloe says that "if I can save just even one more child, girl or boy, from going through any of this, then I've done my job."
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Lemuel
Lemuel@lemueldagger·
@Z4BTC_ We’re slaying feminism this and next decade. We’re the ones who have to do it.
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Lemuel
Lemuel@lemueldagger·
@Z4BTC_ Our generation needs to be made an example. +50% of women alone and old crying on TikTok because of their choices. We’re GenZ, the last generation that has to deal with these morally corrupt women. GenAlpha would go on a radical direction after seeing older women failures.
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Z’s Turning 🍊
We’ve been talking about Hoeflation, but it’s time to start talking about Whoreflation. If Hoeflation is men having to work 5x harder for women 20x worse, then Whoreflation is the normalization of gradually higher body counts. Somehow, we’ve normalized 10 bodies and even consider it low. Next it’ll be 15, 20, and so forth. At what point does it become too high?
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Dandalf
Dandalf@DanTalks1·
It's so obvious the reason they are pushing social media censorship worldwide is because they are petrified of people having access to information like the Islamic rape gangs. Where they cant censor. 🙏 @elonmusk giving us a proper platform to discuss this. Forever grateful.
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Lemuel
Lemuel@lemueldagger·
@KaiSchwemmer I’ve been +17 years hearing about women’s empathy and moral superiority. I saw my flaws and men’s flaws and assumed that was the case. I never imagined they were much more flawed than me and than men. Now I’m taking their power with righteousness.
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Lemuel
Lemuel@lemueldagger·
@redaction They think they’re justified in lying because men shouldn’t be mad about their body counts, so if you would be she is totally justified to avoid your “overblown reaction”. She lied to you and it’s your fault for being insecure.
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Lemuel
Lemuel@lemueldagger·
@TABYTCHI Never doom. White men can start killing at any point. Anonymous to avoid the police and totally organized.
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Taylor Day
Taylor Day@TABYTCHI·
The saddest thing about England is they can’t do anything about the rape gangs. They are already conquered people. They have no guns, cameras everywhere, their speech online or off is so monitored and controlled. It’ a small island easily locked down by their hostile government. No forces, no weapons, no element of surprise. And nobody is coming to liberate them. Cooked. 🥀
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Illimitable Man (IM)
Illimitable Man (IM)@SovereignIM·
If she is more obsessed with how she treats you rather than how you treat her, she is a special soul you should look after. Simply put: this is a woman with genuine empathy who really loves you and wants to pour light into you - she isn't just obsessed with how you make her feel.
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Illimitable Man (IM)
Illimitable Man (IM)@SovereignIM·
All they have done is taught you how to be scared. How to be anxious. How to be hesitant. How to hide, doubt and delay. Which is why sometimes you just need to say fuck safety and do it anyway, and if it goes wrong, then so be it, because at least you aimed for the stars, launched yourself at the heavens, and dared to risk yourself in a blaze of wondrous glory. You are brave. You have honoured your soul. You are beautiful.
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Lemuel
Lemuel@lemueldagger·
@C_3C_3 Their moral superiority is a farce, no one should be shamed by them anytime in the future. They have to be totally deprived of power.
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C3
C3@C_3C_3·
The Feminists sure are quiet about 250,000 UK girls being raped by Pakistani men. Weird!
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Makalaurë
Makalaurë@Elvish_Harper·
What's most striking is that any Muslim, really any non-white, no matter the authority or care of their position, will instantly join in the rape of any white girl who seems vulnerable. Police officers, doctors, social workers. This entire ethnic group is tainted and there truly are no "good ones." Gangrape specifically is common to the cultures God ordered exterminated in the Old Testament. Why? Because if it is possible for people to call up thirty coethnics to join in the rape of a random girl, it is impossible for any member of that ethnicity to be good. Someone would have to intervene. Someone would have to have a conscience. Pakistanis in Britain have demonstrated that none of them are good and none of them have consciences. They need to be eradicated completely, whatever that looks like. This would please God.
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10

The Rape Gang Inquiry Report. bit.ly/4uE5odw

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Aesthetica
Aesthetica@Anc_Aesthetics·
We don't talk enough about how evil social workers are. In the 2010s the industry became extremely woke. Worse than education. It's probably the most woke profession on the planet and no one knows about it because the victims are forgotten little White girls like this.
Lucy Brown@lucymarionbrown

Jesus Christ

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