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Luke Hart ✝️
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Luke Hart ✝️
@LukeHart_
✝️ | Father | Football | Boxing
United Kingdom Katılım Ocak 2013
337 Takip Edilen489 Takipçiler
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

Noelia’s euthanasia for depression, at just 25 years old, took place in her room at Sant Camil Hospital at 6 p.m. in Barcelona.
Her final wishes were to be elegantly dressed with light makeup. She also requested to be alone when she died.
Doctors injected a toxin into her veins and she stopped breathing.
A rape victim who was failed by her own country.
Rest in peace angel. 🙏

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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

dear algorithm, please show this tweet only to people who are going to win by the end of the year no matter what
Johan@Adityapandeydev
"It takes one big win to cancel all the losses. Just one win."
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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

Dear Heavenly Father, as I stand at the doorway of 2026, I come before You in the name of Jesus Christ. Before this new year fully unfolds, I place my life, my family, my work, and my future into Your hands. Go before me, and destroy every plan of darkness set against my life.
By the authority of Jesus, every curse that tried to follow me from previous years is stopped here. Every negative word, every repeated pattern, every hidden plan meant to delay my progress or steal my peace is cancelled now. What was sent to weaken me will not enter 2026 with me.
Cover my home with Your presence.
Guard my steps with Your wisdom.
Order my days with Your peace.
I declare that 2026 will not be marked by struggle, but by direction; not by heaviness, but by freedom; not by curses, but by the blessing of God.
Lord, I will not keep this prayer to myself. I promise to share this prayer with at least one person today. In the victorious name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
Type “God is great” to disappoint the enemy!
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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

Evidently, Britain’s family court system discriminates against men, and we need to start talking about it.
Thousands of loving fathers are being pushed out of their children’s lives - not because they are unfit, not because they have done anything wrong, but because the system is built on outdated and inaccurate assumptions.
If a relationship breaks down, the default assumption of the family courts is still overwhelmingly that mum is the primary parent and dad is a visitor - someone to be slotted in every other weekend, maybe a Wednesday evening if he’s lucky. I get so many messages about it, from depressed and angry fathers. It's grim.
How is that in the best interests of the child? It’s not. A child needs his/her dad.
Fathers are waiting months to get a hearing, with false allegations wiping a dad out of the child’s life entirely. Contact reduced based on somebody’s word, often from an ex-partner where clearly emotions are running high. Is that fair? I think not.
It costs a FORTUNE. So what, a father can see his son or daughter? Tens of thousands of pounds, fighting for access. I can only imagine what these men are going through. It’s horrific.
The entire system is built on the idea that fathers are less essential.
I passionately disagree. Children need their fathers.
None of this is anti-woman, and of course there are men (as there are women) who should not be in their children’s lives - but the system has massively overcompensated and thousands of decent dads are suffering because of it.
Good fathers are being treated like criminals or inconveniences, often bled financially dry when there is not even proper contact with the child.
The system needs an overhaul. I am pushing for change in Parliament.
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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

⏰ COMPETITION TIME ‼️
🎟️ We have 2⃣ 𝗙𝗟𝗢𝗢𝗥 𝗦𝗘𝗔𝗧𝗦 to giveaway to 1⃣ lucky follower to see the rematch between @ChrisEubankJr and @ConorNigel on Saturday at @SpursStadium 👊
⏳ Competition ends: Thursday 13th November @ 7pm👊
#EubankBenn2 #Competition

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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

I want to champion British dads. Because how does modern Britain view fatherhood? Too often the answer is secondary, optional, even inconvenient.
For decades, the role of dads has been insidiously downplayed. The message has been clear - you’re there if it’s convenient, but the system will easily get by without you.
A father’s presence shapes a child’s world. Children with an involved father are often more confident, more secure, and far less likely to end up in trouble later in life. Not always, obviously - this is not to downplay the incredible work of single mums.
Nobody does it perfectly, but we should not underestimate the positive influence a good dad has on their children - the fact so many children have no active father is a dire shame.
We need a complete reset of how fathers are treated by the system, a system which sidelines men at every stage - very much including through the courts and in terms of access to the child following a separation. A child needs his or her parents, and the system shouldn’t pick sides based on outdated assumptions. The process needs revising to give responsible dads a much greater say.
If we are to restore Britain, we must restore the family - and that starts by recognising the father’s role as equal, vital, and irreplaceable. Through reforming family courts, promoting shared parenting, and changing the tone. I can’t even recall ever hearing another politician talk about the need for a fairer deal for dads...
Just because a bloke might not show it, it doesn’t mean he doesn’t feel the heaviest weight of responsibility. Most dads just go about it a different way to the mum, and that’s fine. But don’t think fathers don’t care, because they do. Exceptions exist, as with anything, but the vast majority of dads want to be the best father they can for their children.
Nobody is downplaying the role of the mother, obviously, before all the feminists get stroppy with me. Again. But I am going to highlight the positive impact a father plays in a child’s life, and it’s one that should be encouraged and enabled. It’s a debate we need to have.
I won’t be scaling the Tate dressed as Batman, but I plan to use my platform in Parliament to further highlight the vital importance of British fathers. There are numerous politicians championing mums, and I fully support them.
But I want to unapologetically champion dads.
As a country, we must once again treat fatherhood as the highest calling a man can have.
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Any players looking for a club on a Sunday this is the one for you, great club ❤️
Marlborough FC@eaton_fc
Marlborough FC are still looking to improve their squad for the rest of the season... Looking for players who will improve us and be consistently available on Sunday mornings. Great bunch of lads, great pub and unbelievably great gaffer... 👀 #upthemarley
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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

The Truth About The Family Courts! #fyp #x #Fathers4Justice #fathers4justice #dads #fathers #fathersrights #dadrights
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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

If this ever needed saying again..
If you’re struggling. Fucking speak to someone.
#RickyHatton
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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi
Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

Tyrese Gibson’s daughter, the one his ex wife “took away” and demanded an exorbitant amount of child support for, she’s now 18 and guess what?
She’s made it clear she no longer wants any involvement with her mother.
According to her, her mother tried to turn her against her dad but as she grew closer to him, she realised he’s an amazing man.
Child support has officially ended and this young woman has decided to stand by her father despite her mother’s efforts to alienate him. ❤️♻️

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Luke Hart ✝️ retweetledi

Learned helplessness happens when someone has been trapped in abuse or coercive control for so long that they begin to believe nothing they do will change their situation. Every attempt to stand up or resist has been punished, so the mind adapts by shutting down and expecting failure. Over time, even when choices or escape routes appear, survivors may feel too powerless to act because the abuse has conditioned them to think they can’t survive on their own. It’s not weakness—it’s a survival response—but it takes time and healing to relearn that your actions do matter and that freedom is possible.
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