The World Needs Strong Men
36.1K posts

The World Needs Strong Men
@EnterManhood
Bro's take on life. The world needs strong men 💪
United States of America Katılım Şubat 2018
1.8K Takip Edilen2.9K Takipçiler
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The World Needs Strong Men retweetledi
The World Needs Strong Men retweetledi

Life is a woman
treat her like a boring roommate,
she makes your life a living hell.
If you treat her like a lover and take her on a wild ride,
she hands you all the cheat codes babyy
Cole Jaczko@colejaczko
I’ve found the more you love life The more life will love you right back
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@NnPnemck @Yolo304741 Fuck Shawn Ryan. He sold out
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When Shawn Ryan tells his audience to surrender to the Democrat Party, remember this: the very state he lives in is significantly safer because of President Trump.
Yet he is willing to sacrifice Tennessee’s progress bc our military is fighting bad guys abroad.
It’s disgustingly cruel and selfish.
Do not let these assholes ever pretend to be America First. They aren’t.
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@Sc0tty_Boom @ReclaimD1 Not even a good insult. The only person embarrassing themselves is you, rat face. lol
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@EnterManhood @ReclaimD1 Bro the only thing a cringe lord like you fucks is your hand or pillow or blow up doll
Your lottery was prob a wet hole on a hambeast
Just stop embarrassing yourself
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@BRijswijk @IamTheImmortal Not divine?
Healing the sick?
Walking on water?
RESURRECTING after death? LOL
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@EnterManhood @IamTheImmortal It shows what people believed, not that he was divine. Also it seems youngsters the Bible on face value, I don’t…
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Didn’t mean to make so many of you mad I didn’t think religion was much of a thing anymore. Looked up on ChatGPT and I’m clearly not up to date on this stuff. So all of you telling me I’m low iq and have cte, which god should I pick? I’ll start looking through the 1000’s of them

Matt Brown@IamTheImmortal
How are people still tricked by this god stuff in 2026? I get it in 1026 when your entire world was a square mile in size. We see 13 billion light years in to the universe now and have science and technology. I don’t get it.
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@BRijswijk @IamTheImmortal You should present evidence for your POV, claiming my position is invalid.
The eyewitness accounts are recorded. Based on your logic, the American revolution, fall of Rome, and U.S. civil war are “hearsay” too
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@EnterManhood @IamTheImmortal Why should I present evidence? I didn’t make a claim.
The problem is that you don’t have eyewitness accounts, you got hearsay at best.
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Here you go, lazy.
First, the earliest sources we have are the New Testament documents, especially the Gospels and Paul’s letters. These are written within decades of Jesus’ life. Paul’s letters in particular are early, around 20–30 years after the crucifixion, and he’s already talking about Jesus as divine… not as some later legend that slowly grew.
Then you’ve got specific recorded claims. In John’s Gospel, Jesus uses “I am” statements multiple times. That’s not casual language. It’s tied directly to God’s name in Exodus. And the reaction matters. The people listening tried to stone Him for blasphemy. That tells you they understood exactly what He was claiming.
In Mark, which most scholars agree is the earliest Gospel, Jesus forgives sins directly. The religious leaders respond, “Who can forgive sins but God alone?” That’s key. The text highlights the claim, and then backs it with a miracle, healing the paralytic, as evidence of that authority.
Then there’s the trial accounts…Jesus is asked directly if He is the Son of God, and He responds by referencing Daniel’s “Son of Man” figure who sits at God’s right hand and comes with divine authority. The high priest calls it blasphemy. Again, the charge only makes sense if He’s claiming equality with God.
Now, outside the Bible, you’ve got early non-Christian sources confirming key facts. Tacitus, a Roman historian, confirms Jesus was executed under Pontius Pilate. Josephus, a Jewish historian, references Jesus and the early Christian movement. Pliny the Younger writes that Christians were singing to Christ “as to a god” very early on. So this belief in His divinity wasn’t a late invention , it shows up immediately.
The resurrection is the central recorded claim. Multiple independent accounts say the tomb was empty, and that people saw Him alive after death. You’ve got group appearances, not just individuals. And you’ve got the disciples going from hiding in fear to publicly preaching, even under threat of death. Historically, something happened that flipped them.
Also, early creeds. In 1 Corinthians 15, Paul quotes a creed about Jesus’ death and resurrection that scholars date to within just a few years of the event. That’s important because it shows the core belief was locked in very early.
So when you stack it all together, you’ve got early documents, consistent claims, hostile reactions that confirm what He was saying, external sources backing the timeline, and a movement that explodes based on the belief that He rose and is divine. It’s not just faith floating in the air. There’s a historical backbone to it, even if you choose to ignore it
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@EnterManhood @IamTheImmortal The number of people believing something, nor the strength or age of said belief doesn’t say anything about the truth of that belief.
Smart people can be wrong.
You presented no evidence, and definitely no evidence for your claims.
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🚨Woman currently pursuing her bachelor's degree in science education is sounding the alarm about America's public education system.
She asserts that what many liberals dismiss as a "conspiracy theory,” the idea that schools are indoctrinating children and teaching heavily skewed versions of history is in fact reality. According to her, the United States shapes its school curricula based on prevailing ideological views of history rather than objective truth.
History lessons, in particular, are frequently rewritten to advance a preferred narrative rather than to teach what actually happened. The deeper issue, she argues, lies with the teachers. Many have themselves been indoctrinated to view their role as turning students into "socialistic little heroes."
Adding to the concern, she notes how unsettling it is that significant portions of the curriculum trace back to publishing interests once owned or operated by Jeffrey Epstein's father-in-law.
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