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When Power Demands Worship!

When Power Demands Worship!

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Now let’s talk about something even more dangerous. The merging of political power and divine endorsement. We’ve heard rhetoric from supporters and sometimes from Trump himself suggesting divine favor, destiny, even protection. There are people who speak as if Jesus Christ personally endorses a political candidate. Let me be clear. Faith is sacred. But when political loyalty starts dressing itself up as divine approval when criticism becomes heresy that’s not religion. That’s idolatry. And history is filled with leaders who wrapped themselves in God-language to shield themselves from accountability. If your political hero needs to be portrayed as chosen by heaven in order to survive criticism, what does that say about the strength of his record?


Now let’s move into darker territory. There are ongoing public questions surrounding the Epstein case and the transparency of federal investigations. The Department of Justice has acknowledged withholding certain materials due to their graphic and sensitive nature. That has fueled distrust. People want answers. They want names. They want accountability. And when politicians dismiss those concerns with phrases like “forget about it” or “move on,” that doesn’t restore trust. It deepens suspicion. But we need to separate verified facts from viral claims. The Epstein case revealed a network of wealth and influence that operated in moral darkness for years. That’s real. But in an age of social media amplification, accusations can spread faster than evidence. Demand transparency. Demand accountability. But demand proof. Because if we abandon standards of evidence, we don’t expose corruption we create chaos. Now let’s talk about media pressure. When reports surface that interviews aren’t aired and critics aren’t platformed because networks fear regulatory retaliation that is a red flag. A free press does not ask permission from politicians. If any administration Republican or Democrat uses federal agencies to intimidate media companies, that’s authoritarian behavior. Period. It doesn’t matter whose side you’re on. And let’s talk about Texas. Texas is changing. Demographics are shifting. Younger voters are organizing. Political maps that were once static are now competitive. When political power feels threatened, it doesn’t always respond with better ideas. Sometimes it responds with control. If your ideas can survive scrutiny, you welcome interviews. If they can’t, you silence critics. And when intimidation works once, it becomes strategy.

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