Virtual Ministry Archive


 

HI !!! so what is it you need?


 

fucken goof stole all my chips


 

so are we or nah?


 

sucks your husband bought the wrong brand of cut wax beans what a fucking goof


 

Guard detail of jupiter royalty now is fucken lit


 

oh no way you saw all these weirdos at the bath house steam room high on ketamine?


 

ur boyfriend is always complaining about how big your sach or nuts are? lmao


 

crazy did not know you are in the twink FBI now-seeking out hot tail


 

nice that the gays made out there before the iranian navy tried defending it against being blown up by the US and israel


 

fuck your way to the top twinks become not an average twink slob


 

nice your husband has a big sach most guys just have microballs


 

LGBT skater boys are everywhere boys


 

oh did not know your neighbor likes cawk


 

nice to see the neptunian royalty at the hunger games this year they are all hot evocative princes


 

unless you charge $1Billion to your visa in debt unfortunately you are trapped here forever to wander sorry I dont make the rules buttercup


 


 











 










BREAKING🚨🏳️‍🌈 They met as novice nuns in Brazil in 2019, clashed immediately, survived a pandemic together, left the convent for their mental health, watched a Netflix movie one night in 2023 — and then everything changed. Francília Costa and Luiza Silvério first crossed paths inside a convent in Brazil. Costa had been raised by deeply religious grandparents and felt called to religious life. Silvério joined as a teenager searching for purpose and meaning. Their first impressions of each other? Silvério thought Costa was "an unbearable and stuck-up little nun." Costa simply didn't like Silvério either, though she couldn't quite explain why. Proximity changed everything. They became close friends, then something more complicated. Then the pandemic hit. Costa began suffering severe panic attacks inside the convent walls. Silvério fell into anxiety and depression after losing her grandmother. Both women started to question whether they could survive, spiritually and physically, in a life of strict religious enclosure. "Religious life is very beautiful, but you need physical and mental health," Costa said. "It is not enough only to pray or to have a vocation." In 2020, they made the decision together: they left the convent. Neither could afford to live alone on the outside, so they kept sharing a home. Two former nuns. Former enemies. Now just two women trying to figure out who they were without the habit. Then, one evening in 2023, they sat down and watched "Love In The Villa" on Netflix. It's a rom-com about two strangers who hate each other, get thrown together in a rented Italian villa, and fall in love. Costa looked over at Silvério and realized: this is her story too. She admitted her feelings out loud. Silvério kissed her. They got married in 2025. At their wedding, they posed with an image of Our Lady Aparecida, the patron saint of Brazil. "Maybe we do not have a photo at the altar of a church, but we have one with Our Lady Aparecida," Silvério said. "For us, she represents gratitude, intercession and the consecration of our family to God." They now share their story openly online, talking about faith, sexuality, and life after the cloister. "Our sexuality and our faith should not be separated," Costa said, "because they are part of us."


 

sorry but donald is not 80 yrs old he is more closer to 50 and has enacted immortality so all talk of him dying or wasting away into nothing are propaganda to collect info on the derangement syndrome they invented but yeah very few of us will actually have freedoms in the NWO


 

🚨 A 600-TON steel fighting cage is sitting on the South Lawn of the White House right now. Trump owns stock in the UFC's parent company. And the DOJ just told a federal judge: the people suing us just have bad taste. This Sunday, June 14, which is both Flag Day and Donald Trump's 80th birthday, the White House is hosting UFC Freedom 250 on the South Lawn. A massive 92-foot-tall steel arch nicknamed "The Claw" has already been constructed on the grounds. The Lincoln Memorial, one of the most sacred monuments in America, will host the weigh-ins. Over $60 million has been spent. The UFC claims 120,000 people will attend across the White House lawn and the Ellipse. The UFC's CEO is Dana White, one of Trump's closest allies and a top campaign surrogate. Trump has been promoting the fight for months. And his financial disclosures show he purchased roughly $50,000 in stock in TKO Group Holdings, the UFC's parent company, in March, right as he was publicly hyping the event. A watchdog group called the Public Integrity Project filed a federal lawsuit on Saturday on behalf of two Virginia residents: a Vietnam War veteran and a civic activist. They argue the event violates National Park Service regulations that prohibit sporting events on federal park land, that erecting a permanent-adjacent structure like The Claw requires congressional approval, and that no environmental review was ever conducted. Then the DOJ filed its response. The Justice Department told U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta, an Obama appointee, that the plaintiffs simply want to "exercise a heckler's veto" because they find the sights and sounds of UFC "hideous" and "disgusting." The DOJ said the solution was simple: they could "avert their gazes for the weekend." It also warned the judge that blocking the fight could endanger the health of the 14 fighters involved due to prolonged weight cutting. The judge has not yet ruled. Plaintiffs want a decision by Thursday. The fight is Sunday. To be clear: the President of the United States is using the people's house as a private commercial sports venue, collects stock in the company running it, and the DOJ's defense is essentially "look away if you don't like it."



THEY WILL NOT CANCEL IT IT IS THE COMING OF THE FIGHT TO THE DEATH HUNGER GAMES THAT THEY will usher in the NWO