Mac

3.7K posts

Mac banner
Mac

Mac

@MackEquilibrium

God-fearing servant. Critical thinking. Capable of assembling matter & ideas. Solver of gravity. *Seeking Web Dev / API's* for Kingdom work. https://t.co/WPkJSQNSIZ

US Katılım Şubat 2025
3.7K Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
I realize that there will only be 1.25 people that will ever see this post but maybe this will hit you like it did me…! A couple of years ago, I was driving in my neighborhood. It’s not an 'outreach' part of town so this seemed very out of character... So here is this church with a banner hanging on the building and it said something like this… HEADLINE: ‘COME VISIT US’ (Something like that, maybe it was for service or an event) But what stood out was below the headline and what pierced my heart was this: SUBHEAD: ‘Everyone Welcome, NO, SERIOUSLY, EVERYONE IS WELCOME!’ There’s a lot more to say but I’ll leave it at this for now… WHY do we need to say SERIOUSLY… EVERYONE IS WELCOME? (kudos to the church / elders who created this!) Questions: Is Christianity so clinical and sanitized that NOT everyone would feel welcome? WHAT does this say about how we practice Christianity in our communities? WHAT does this say about the ‘Church’ and how the world sees us? What does this say about us as believers / Christians? A lot to ponder here and I welcome hearing everyone’s thoughts (all 1.25 of you! LOL) If this speaks to you like it did me, please repost or steal the picture / story… Hopefully as followers of Christ, we will look inside ourselves and ask the questions; Christ chose the losers, misfits and broken of the world and He changed the world in THREE YEARS. · Why isn’t the world clamoring to know Christ the King of the Universe? · What can we do better? BTW – this is NOT a picture of the actual church or banner – it’s a VERY bad example of using Grok to create a meme for a post. But you get the idea.
Mac tweet media
English
1
1
4
205
Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
Muslim woman at University of Houston in Texas says Egypt is a much better country than America “I'm a woman in an Islamic State. I've lived in Egypt my entire life. I just moved here 2 years ago. Genuinely, my life there, infinitely better than my life here. Infinitely better — It's way more fun. I feel way safer. Way safer. I've never had to walk out at night and think, "Oh, I should have pepper spray on me." Never. Ever. There's no place where you would go in like Cairo, Alexandria, whatever, where you'd feel actually unsafe” She’s asked about Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Would she be safe there to walking around as a woman. She says she doesn’t know Maybe she should go back and live in Egypt because let me remind you of the laws there Shaw Law family laws for Muslims - Men have unilateral talaq (divorce) rights; women must go through courts - Inheritance: Women generally receive half the share of male relatives. - Muslim women cannot marry non-Muslim men but Muslim men can marry Christians and Jewish women - Polygamy is permitted for men - Blasphemy / “Contempt of Religion” Laws that criminalizes ridiculing, insulting, or showing contempt for the “heavenly religions” Penalty: Up to 5 years in prison plus fines - De Facto Criminalization of Homosexuality. Laws 10/1961 and Penal Code provisions on “debauchery,” “public indecency,” and “immorality” are used Up to 3 years per charge can stack to longer sentences, plus fines. Police reportedly use dating apps for entrapment LGBT individuals face arrests are prosecutions - Extreme Protest Laws - Requires advance notification to police for gatherings of 10+ people. - Gives authorities broad power to ban, reroute, or disperse protests on vague “national security” or “public order” grounds. - Effectively bans most peaceful demonstrations
English
3.6K
1.6K
4.9K
311.9K
Mac retweetledi
Casey Babb
Casey Babb@DrCaseyBabb·
In Toronto, a young Jewish girl named Esther has been missing for over a week. To make matters worse, people have been ripping down posters about her disappearance, just like they did with the hostage posters after 10/7—one of the more appalling things I've ever seen in my life.
Casey Babb tweet mediaCasey Babb tweet media
English
405
3.5K
12.2K
382.6K
Mac retweetledi
Kyle Becker
Kyle Becker@kylenabecker·
Western Civilization didn't flourish because "white males" stopped other groups from succeeding. The West thrived because of rational thought, individual rights, and free enterprise. "White males" that invented the steam engine, electric generation, the combustion engine, flight, and space exploration did not do so because they "stole" the ideas of minorities. These inventions helped lift mankind out of ignorance and hardship, improving the quality of life for all of humanity. "White males" didn't oppress the entire world, they helped make it a better place. "White males" didn't oppress everyone's rights, they invented the idea of rights and paid in blood to liberate tens of millions of people. "White males" didn't invent slavery, they ended it. "White males" didn't invent tyranny, they devised a form of government to end it. Destroying Western Civilization isn't about empowering groups that were "oppressed." It is about tearing down civilization itself so that globalist parasites can rule over all of us.
Nancy C@NC7983

@robertsepehr @Greene_Thoughts @BreitbartNews Why isn’t dismantling white male focused societal conventions not a good deal? Why isn’t giving groups, such as women and no -whites more opportunities to maximize their potential. Why is aiming for diversity in groups making decisions bad, as they clearly come up with better2)

English
1.8K
11.5K
50.9K
42.7M
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
There is no comparison between this world, often writhing in evil, sadness and pain and Eternity with our mighty Creator…! This is a short run here. What? 70, 80, 90 years if we’re really unlucky. Soooo glad to go home! Looking forward to meeting my Brothers and Sisters at home. 1C2:9 >> FF >>
5 Solas@5Solas

English
0
0
0
18
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
@MrPitbull07 I read John Walsh’s book about this and his life and it changed me forever. Never stop fighting.
English
0
1
13
787
Mr PitBull Stories
Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07·
In 1981, 6-year-old Adam Walsh was abducted from a department store in Hollywood, Florida. His case shocked the nation and became a turning point in how missing children cases were handled across the United States. In the years that followed, Adam’s parents, John and Revé Walsh, dedicated themselves to improving child protection efforts and supporting families facing similar tragedies. At a time when missing children’s cases were often poorly coordinated and families felt completely alone, John and Revé turned unimaginable grief into action. Instead of disappearing from public life, they became fierce advocates for missing and exploited children across North America. Together, they helped establish the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, creating resources, national databases, victim support systems, and public awareness campaigns that continue helping families to this day. John Walsh went on to host America’s Most Wanted, a television program that transformed viewers into active participants in helping solve crimes and locate fugitives. Over the years, the show helped law enforcement capture hundreds of dangerous offenders and assisted in recovering missing children. Revé Walsh worked tirelessly behind the scenes supporting families who suddenly found themselves living every parent’s worst nightmare. What began with answering letters from grieving families in the garage of their Florida home grew into a movement that changed child protection efforts across the United States. Their advocacy also helped inspire major legislative changes, including missing children databases, improved coordination between agencies, and child safety initiatives still used today. The Walsh family could have allowed tragedy to destroy them. Instead, they chose to fight for other families — ensuring that missing children would no longer be ignored. Today, we remember Adam Walsh and honor John and Revé Walsh for the lasting impact of their work. Through decades of advocacy, they helped transform child protection efforts and brought hope and support to families across the country.
Mr PitBull Stories tweet media
English
30
169
903
23.4K
Raw Combat
Raw Combat@Raw_Combat_·
A thug assaulted a 73-year-old man in an elevator right in front of his wife... but he had no idea who he was messing with, and learned the hard way.
English
193
1.4K
26.2K
1.1M
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
@kat_maryb @DKParker14 What do you call a doctor that barely graduated at the bottom of their class…? Doctor.
English
0
0
0
26
Kat
Kat@kat_maryb·
I don't trust any doctor under the age of 45 cause of DEI. I said what I said
English
264
110
2K
26K
jezz
jezz@JezziiB·
The average age of entry into prostitution is 13.5 years, and the average age of the client is 40 years. After this, do you still claim that prostitution is a "woman's choice"?
English
60
1.7K
11.5K
76.4K
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
@JezziiB IDK about the sexiest part (LOL) but I know Iit goes both ways. Not out of anger. Not out of spite or hate. Integrity. Self respect.
English
0
0
0
110
jezz
jezz@JezziiB·
The sexiest revenge is neverrrrrrrrrrrrrrr letting them have access to you again. Not out of bitterness, not to prove a point, but because some people only understand your value after they lose the privilege of reaching you. Let them remember the version of you they mishandled while you become someone they no longer qualify to touch.
English
5
22
73
1.9K
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
His speech at the Sorbonne in Paris, part of which is now known as ‘Man in the Arena’ symbolizes much of what he believed and how he thought. Character. Strength. Hope… Today, this strength has largely dissolved in the acidity of pride and selfishness. Soon. Goodbye cruel world.
English
0
0
0
13
Marta Hucall
Marta Hucall@rst42915·
President_Theodore_Roosevelt Theodore Roosevelt, age 42, became the youngest president in the nation’s history. He brought new excitement and power to the presidency, as he briskly led Congress and the American public toward progressive reforms and an aggressive foreign policy. He took the view that the president as a “steward of the people” should take whatever action necessary for the public good unless expressly forbidden by law or the Constitution. "I did not usurp power," he wrote in 1913, “but I did greatly broaden the use of executive power." As a leader of the progressive movement, he championed his "Square Deal" domestic policies, which called for fairness for all citizens, breaking bad trusts, regulating railroads, and pure food and drugs.
Marta Hucall tweet media
English
2
0
13
1.2K
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
@ly43475 @Rainmaker1973 This is the world we live in. From my measly, pathetic mind, I think no one will ever know the sacrifice and care… But in reality, God knows. God always knows.
English
0
0
0
2
Terry LaForest Lynch
Terry LaForest Lynch@ly43475·
@Rainmaker1973 The year before Irene Sendler died, she was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. She was overlooked. Instead Al Gore got the prize for a poorly written fictional film masquerading as a documentary.
English
8
29
304
11.1K
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
In the autumn of 1942, a slight, 32-year-old Polish social worker named Irena Sendler passed through the gates of the Warsaw Ghetto with a carpenter’s toolbox in her arms. Beneath the hammers and nails lay a drugged six-month-old infant, breathing softly, utterly silent. One cry would have meant instant death for both of them. Irena smiled at the guards; they waved her through. They never suspected that this quiet woman would repeat the journey 2,499 more times. The ghetto was a slow-motion extermination. Starvation, disease, and random murder stalked every street. Jewish parents faced a choice no human being should ever have to make: keep their child and watch them waste away, or hand them to a stranger who promised a chance—however thin—at life. Irena came officially to inspect for typhus. In reality, she came to steal children from death. Babies left in toolboxes or ambulances under false bottoms. Toddlers sedated and tucked into potato sacks. Older children led by the hand through the stinking, lightless sewers while German boots marched overhead. “Not a sound,” she whispered as rats scurried past their feet. She knew that the rescued children would be given new names, new religions, new families. Their pasts would vanish unless someone remembered. So, on fragile scraps of tissue paper, Irena wrote each child’s real name, their parents’ names, and their new hiding place. She rolled the papers tight, slipped them into glass jars, and buried them beneath an apple tree in a neighbor’s garden. If she were caught and killed, the truth might still survive. She was caught. On October 20, 1943, the Gestapo kicked in her door. They took her to Pawiak Prison and demanded the list. When she refused, they smashed both her legs with iron bars. Then her feet. Then her arms. For weeks the beatings continued. She never spoke. They scheduled her execution. On the appointed morning, guards dragged the broken woman from her cell. Instead of a firing squad, she found herself outside the prison walls—alive. The Polish underground council Żegota had bribed a guard to mark her file “shot while trying to escape.” Officially dead, Irena Sendler limped back into the shadows to keep working.When the war finally ended, the first thing she did was dig up the jars under the apple tree. She spent years trying to return the children—now scattered across convents, farms, and foster homes—to whatever family might remain. Almost no parents had survived. But the children had. Because of her, 2,500 Jewish boys and girls lived to grow up, to marry, to have children and grandchildren of their own—an entire secret branch of the human family tree that the Nazis never managed to cut down.For decades her story stayed buried deeper than the jars themselves. Then, in 1999, four high-school girls in rural Kansas stumbled across a brief mention of her name. They found the old woman still living quietly in Warsaw and brought her courage back into the light. Journalists called her the greatest rescuer of the Holocaust. Irena only shook her head.“I could have saved more,” she said. “That regret follows me to the grave.”Irena Sendler—armed with nothing but a ghetto work permit, a toolbox, and a refusal to look away—proved that even in the heart of the worst evil humanity has ever devised, one determined person can still keep the darkness from winning completely.
Massimo tweet media
English
81
1.6K
6.8K
241.6K
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
No words…
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

In the autumn of 1942, a slight, 32-year-old Polish social worker named Irena Sendler passed through the gates of the Warsaw Ghetto with a carpenter’s toolbox in her arms. Beneath the hammers and nails lay a drugged six-month-old infant, breathing softly, utterly silent. One cry would have meant instant death for both of them. Irena smiled at the guards; they waved her through. They never suspected that this quiet woman would repeat the journey 2,499 more times. The ghetto was a slow-motion extermination. Starvation, disease, and random murder stalked every street. Jewish parents faced a choice no human being should ever have to make: keep their child and watch them waste away, or hand them to a stranger who promised a chance—however thin—at life. Irena came officially to inspect for typhus. In reality, she came to steal children from death. Babies left in toolboxes or ambulances under false bottoms. Toddlers sedated and tucked into potato sacks. Older children led by the hand through the stinking, lightless sewers while German boots marched overhead. “Not a sound,” she whispered as rats scurried past their feet. She knew that the rescued children would be given new names, new religions, new families. Their pasts would vanish unless someone remembered. So, on fragile scraps of tissue paper, Irena wrote each child’s real name, their parents’ names, and their new hiding place. She rolled the papers tight, slipped them into glass jars, and buried them beneath an apple tree in a neighbor’s garden. If she were caught and killed, the truth might still survive. She was caught. On October 20, 1943, the Gestapo kicked in her door. They took her to Pawiak Prison and demanded the list. When she refused, they smashed both her legs with iron bars. Then her feet. Then her arms. For weeks the beatings continued. She never spoke. They scheduled her execution. On the appointed morning, guards dragged the broken woman from her cell. Instead of a firing squad, she found herself outside the prison walls—alive. The Polish underground council Żegota had bribed a guard to mark her file “shot while trying to escape.” Officially dead, Irena Sendler limped back into the shadows to keep working.When the war finally ended, the first thing she did was dig up the jars under the apple tree. She spent years trying to return the children—now scattered across convents, farms, and foster homes—to whatever family might remain. Almost no parents had survived. But the children had. Because of her, 2,500 Jewish boys and girls lived to grow up, to marry, to have children and grandchildren of their own—an entire secret branch of the human family tree that the Nazis never managed to cut down.For decades her story stayed buried deeper than the jars themselves. Then, in 1999, four high-school girls in rural Kansas stumbled across a brief mention of her name. They found the old woman still living quietly in Warsaw and brought her courage back into the light. Journalists called her the greatest rescuer of the Holocaust. Irena only shook her head.“I could have saved more,” she said. “That regret follows me to the grave.”Irena Sendler—armed with nothing but a ghetto work permit, a toolbox, and a refusal to look away—proved that even in the heart of the worst evil humanity has ever devised, one determined person can still keep the darkness from winning completely.

English
0
0
2
47
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
Excruciating
English
0
0
0
10
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
@newstart_2024 Truly gut-wrenching. Unspeakable pain to watch this happen.
English
0
0
1
132
Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
The most heartbreaking moment in domestic violence work isn’t the escape — it’s when she wants to go back. James Sexton, a divorce attorney who does heavy pro bono work with abuse victims, shared this on Lisa Bilyeu’s podcast. He gets them out safely with orders of protection and custody... then the abuser (often a narcissist, a master of manipulation) calls, cries, promises to change, and suddenly she’s ready to forgive everything. He used to snap in frustration. Now he says: “I’m worried, but it’s your choice. I’ll still be here if it goes wrong.” He refuses to become another controller in her life. That part really got to me. The manipulation runs so deep, and the emotional pull is devastatingly strong. Getting out is tactical. Staying out is deeply human, and respecting her agency might be what actually breaks the cycle. The real lesson? Narcissists are tacticians. That’s a gift to some degree, they’re incredibly good at manipulating people. So you have to get ahead of that. You have to figure out how to control for it.
English
6
23
121
11.2K
Mac
Mac@MackEquilibrium·
This is why people with values and any degree of integrity, cannot be bought. For those, compromise is far, far, far worse than death. Making this person a high-value target because they stand in the way of the vengeful. They see them as enemies that MUST be vanquished at any and all costs. The steadfast enrage vengeance in others. Evidently there are far fewer of those with strength, values and integrity than those who feed on vengeance. The UK police rounding up Facebook ‘dissenters’ are winning evil brownie points and future assignments as the equivalent of Nazi guards… The vindication they (ANYONE) allows themselves to believe because they are ‘just doing my job’ is a sin that will, assuredly drag them away from repentance with pride and into hell.
English
0
0
0
3
Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Jordan Peterson gave a raw, unflinching answer when asked why he fears weakness. He said weakness isn’t just harmless — it’s dangerous. When you make yourself weak through deceit, avoidance, or refusing to take responsibility, life hits you harder. That unnecessary suffering turns into bitterness, and bitterness easily becomes vengefulness. From there, he warned, “there is no limit.” Drawing from his deep study of 20th-century totalitarianism and the psychology of cruelty (from Auschwitz guards to school shooters), Peterson explained that weakness transforms people into something that can no longer bear existence — and that path leads to very dark places. It’s a sobering reminder that avoiding discomfort today often creates far greater monsters tomorrow. What do you think — is Peterson right that weakness is the root of much deeper evil, or does this view go too far?
English
47
295
1.4K
83.3K
Mac retweetledi
Farm Girl Carrie 👩‍🌾
Farm Girl Carrie 👩‍🌾@FarmGirlCarrie·
Remember the reason for Memorial Day… 🙏♥️🇺🇸🫡
English
520
4.7K
14.2K
98.6K
Mac retweetledi
Luke Slywaker
Luke Slywaker@LukeSlywaker·
On Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 pm a tragedy took place not far from where I live, in Escondido, CA. One of the most patriotic souls in San Diego County, 69 year old Kerry Sheron was knocked out then had his face stomped in repeatedly while replacing one of the many American flags adorning his humble home. He is on life support, and will not survive. Tonight a prayer vigil was held in his honor. His wife Maria is facing the most difficult choice of her life right now. Pray for her 🙏🏼
English
647
3.4K
11.9K
349.3K
Mac retweetledi
The Best
The Best@TheBestqueenx·
The result after hours of engineering calculations. 😂😂
English
453
2.3K
26.8K
724.6K