Josh Far
1.1K posts


This Afroman trial is bar none the best content on the Internet right now
Valerie@queen__valerie_
They would have to remove me from the courtroom. 😭😭😭😭 #AfromanTrial
English

For 12 years, I was married to a conventionally “nice guy.”
He never hit me. Never cheated (or at least I didn’t know and we never had infidelity issues), he never even argued much.
He was calm. Quiet. Agreeable.
In the beginning I thought that meant I was safe, and I felt lucky to have him.
Because other women had worse right?
But this is exactly why the marriage eventually failed…
His “good guy” image meant he never led.
He never decided.
He never carried weight.
So I did. I had to step in and keep the boat rowing and afloat.
Financially. Emotionally. Strategically.
And eventually I was left tired, exhausted and resentful.
Because “nice” without initiative is passivity.
And passivity turns a wife into infrastructure.
I wasn’t married to a monster.
I was married to a passenger.
And I had to step off that car that was leading me to oblivion.
English

@DefiyantlyFree Stop trying to spin your dispensationalist ideology into a Catholic/Protestant rift. Plenty of Protestants believe covenant theology.
English

Dugin and company are trying to redefine Liberalism to mean Protestantism.
Protestantism built the United States of America.
The Puritans didn’t come to Massachusetts to build a liberal secular democracy. They came to build a covenant community under God. The Pilgrims weren’t reading Locke on the Mayflower they were reading Geneva Bibles.
When they wrote the Mayflower Compact, they were drawing on Reformed theology about covenants between God and his people, not Enlightenment political theory.
The separation of church and state is the single most Christian idea there is because Christ drew the line himself.
“Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s.”
That’s not Him bowing to secularism or retreating. That’s Him reminding us that that the state does not own your soul. That political power and spiritual authority are not the same thing. That no emperor, no king, no government gets to stand where God stands.
English

A woman complains that her husband won’t “step up” and take control. Tony Robbins counters by explaining that she doesn’t actually want leadership; she wants obedience (“doing whatever you want when you want it”).
He analyzes that she creates “fake problems” and drama to gain “Significance” and force her husband’s attention. Robbins argues that she creates chaos to feel important, whereas her husband finds significance through his work. He concludes with a blunt directive: for the relationship to survive, she needs to stop the constant criticism (“shut up”) and start honoring him as a man, rather than tearing him down to feel superior.
Thoughts? 💭 it amazes me how many women are convinced they know how to tell a man how to be man 👩
English

@JoeVorell @RealEmirHan @JoeVorell between this, and the Tim Allen Santa Clause movie, when the mom was gonna go full custody. Hollywood had us thinking dad could lose custody at the mom's whims.
English

@farlance @RealEmirHan Fuck now you are gonna have me reading this whole thread😂 this is a great show idea🔥
Fairview Park, OH 🇺🇸 English

In Mrs. Doubtfire, Sally Field’s character was one of the most insufferable ex wives ever. She divorced Robin Williams simply because he loved his kids and went overboard trying to make them happy with gifts. He never cheated, never treated anyone badly.
Emir Han@RealEmirHan
Name a character who technically isn't a villain but you consider to be one. I'll start:
English

The city’s woke nonsense.
The Over-the-Rhine neighborhood in Cincinnati, where Music Hall is located, was indeed primarily developed and built by German immigrants in the mid-to-late 19th century. Historical records indicate that most of the ornate brick buildings in OTR were constructed by German immigrants between the 1860s and 1880s, following waves of immigration from German-speaking regions after the 1848 revolutions.These immigrants formed a dense community north of the Miami and Erie Canal (nicknamed "the Rhine"), and their labor dominated the construction trades in the area during that era.
For Music Hall specifically, completed in 1878, the bricklaying contract was awarded to W.A. Megrue, a Cincinnati-born bricklayer and contractor who handled major projects like railroad depots and early apartment buildings. While the exact composition of his workforce isn't detailed in primary sources, the demographic context of 1870s Cincinnati suggests that skilled construction labor in OTR, including bricklaying, was predominantly performed by German immigrants or their descendants, who held a stronghold in the neighborhood's building trades.
African Americans did have a presence in Cincinnati's workforce by the 1870s, often in unskilled or semi-skilled roles like steamboat labor, longshoremen, servants, and general laborers, following migrations from the South post-Civil War. However, they were largely excluded from skilled trades like bricklaying, carpentry, and ironwork due to discrimination and occupational barriers. By 1890, records show virtually no Black workers in those categories in Cincinnati, with Black employment concentrated in service and manual labor sectors. Friends of Music Hall's "Under One Roof" series does reference African Americans. No primary sources specify widespread involvement of African American laborers in laying Music Hall's estimated 4 million bricks, and the historical labor patterns indicate their role was likely minimal compared to German immigrant workers.
City of Cincinnati@CityOfCincy
Black history runs deep at Music Hall. From Black laborers laying 4 million bricks to build this outstanding structure, to artists who broke barriers by performing on a stage that wasn’t always welcoming, their contributions helped shape a cultural landmark in the Queen City.
English

Full 2001 VH1 segment, glorifying Jeffrey Epstein while showing Epstein's allegiance with Bill Clinton and Kevin Spacey.
They also point out he has his own chemistry lab in the basement and world class scientists which he pays "20 Million dollars a year to perform WHATEVER experiments they want with Harvard professor!"
What could he possibly need a chemistry lab and Harvard professors for at $20 million a year, right there in Manhattan New York? Something to be distributed to elites in New York? 🤔
English

@iAnonPatriot @JoeVorell , so wait. The protesters are checking papers and profiling people based on looks now? Lol.
English














