Manipulation

All posts tagged Manipulation

Very Few Souls Left

Published February 19, 2026 by tindertender

Human Vril Drones

Published February 19, 2026 by tindertender

https://youtube.com/@donaldmarshallofficial?si=SfmuhQ6GL3DnARL4

80% of the Caucasians are Clones?

Published February 19, 2026 by tindertender

Son of a Beeeeee!!!! 80% of the population are clones? No wonder the blokes and Jezzi’s are so friggen soulless and cruel.

Mutha fukkas

Published February 19, 2026 by tindertender


https://www.facebook.com/share/r/17vS82HSME/?mibextid=wwXIfr

The Genova Crisis

Published February 19, 2026 by tindertender

On the 18th of February I heard unseen masculines speak about the Genova Crisis. All I found was information about a strike at the ship yard. “Dock workers do not work for war” was their apparent slogan.

That didn’t really seem like it could have been called a crisis, until I saw this…..

Forbidden Knowledge

Published February 16, 2026 by tindertender

I’ve recently heard the curators interdimensional guide talking about “forbidden knowledge”. Could it be they were speaking of this? Are they upset Grok translated this “Forbidden” book?

Legally Trans Human

Published February 15, 2026 by tindertender

The document he’s reading appears to have been scrubbed from the Internet.
AI Augmentation.

https://www.threads.com/@true_story__la/post/DUxaf-0FctH?xmt=AQF02_rmdPdWYSYNqXvZhKGkoYxDJJWZQNbpmn9nH3PbmFBeSbennxrZvRz1kBreaUCuZMs&slof=1

The Devils Look Just Like Us and They Call Themselves Leaders

Published February 7, 2026 by tindertender

836 years ago, the Jews of the English city of Norwich were convicted of the ritual murder of the Catholic child William of Norwich. Another widely documented blood libel.

Getting rid of human rights and freedom of speech? Get rid of individual property rights?

Dangers of Astral Sex ~ Dream Lover Tag and Harvest Program

Published February 1, 2026 by tindertender

These vampiric nasties don’t even need to introduce themselves in order to “tag” and claim a womb for harvest. All it takes is a “dream” with a dream “lover”.

You will never know most who draw off your womb if you are entertaining Dream lovers or masterbating.

They instigate masterbation dreams while folks sleep and use the “O” to cast the illusion an actual sexxual encounter occurred.

They use it to forge marriage contracts in the astral. A false priest forges a contract vowing they witnessed consummation. It’s one of their favorite ways to “harvest” a male or female. It’s why they see most all women as prostitures.

They feel that if a woman (or male) is isolated and single, they can do whatever they want with their spirit and energy in the astral space, in the dream space.

Edit: someone accused me of “pushing fear for entertainment” and stated they were led to leave the channel. I did not share this “personal experience and testimony” to “push fear”. I shared it in the hopes people can train themselves to wake up during such attempt to harvest, and stop feeding the unseen beast. Of course those who are sensitive may glitch regarding this truth. I mean no offense. This is very serious. More serious than most understand.

She Was 14 When They Sold Her

Published February 1, 2026 by tindertender

She was 14 when they sold her to a stranger—but the choice she made on her wedding night changed everything. This is the story of survival, steel, and the kind of courage that reshapes destiny.

[Author’s note: While specific details of this individual remain unverified, the following represents the reality faced by countless young women in the American frontier during the 1860s-1870s, when child marriages were legal and women’s autonomy was often negotiated by men.]

The year was 1867, somewhere in the vast American West where marriage contracts were signed like property deeds and daughters were bargaining chips.

She was fourteen years old when her father shook hands with a man who could have been her grandfather. Silver coins changed hands. A wedding date was announced. Her entire future was determined in a conversation she wasn’t allowed to attend.

They gave her a white dress that didn’t fit. They told her to smile. They said she was lucky.

She didn’t feel lucky. She felt trapped.

But here’s what her father and her husband-to-be didn’t understand: desperation doesn’t make people weak. It makes them dangerous. And cornered animals don’t surrender—they fight.

On her wedding night, while the household slept off celebration whiskey, she made the decision that would define everything that followed.

No goodbye note. No second thoughts. No looking back.

Just a mule from the stable, a stolen knife, the clothes on her back, and the kind of determination that transforms terror into action.

The frontier was merciless to runaways, especially young women alone. The cold cut through her thin dress like razors. Hunger became her constant shadow. Every town was a risk—someone might recognize her, might return her to the husband who owned her by law.

But survival is the greatest teacher.

She learned to trap rabbits. She learned to shoot straight. She learned to make herself invisible when strangers rode past. She learned that being underestimated was sometimes the best protection.

For months, she worked cattle ranches under borrowed names, her hands transforming from soft and pampered to calloused and capable. Her arms grew strong from hauling water. Her back grew straight from refusing to break.

Every sunrise she survived was proof of something: she was stronger than the men who’d traded her like livestock.

Every meal she earned herself tasted like freedom.
Every skill she mastered was another lock on the door to the life they’d planned for her.

Five years of grit, sweat, and absolute refusal to surrender led her to an opportunity most people said was impossible.

A blacksmith—an older man who’d lost his sons to war and his wife to illness—took a chance on her. Maybe he saw something in her desperation. Maybe he just needed help and didn’t care about convention.

She never gave him reason to regret it.

Her hammer strikes found rhythm. The forge became her meditation. The heat that would drive others away felt like purification. She learned to read metal like people read books—how it moved when heated, when it was ready to shape, when to strike and when to wait.

The work was brutal. The heat was suffocating. The burns were constant.

She’d never been happier.

When the old blacksmith died, he left her his tools, his forge, and his reputation. She was nineteen years old.

She opened her own smithy in a town that didn’t know her history. The sign outside read simply: “Metalwork. All jobs considered.”

Something shifted in that community.

The same men who’d insisted women belonged in kitchens or brothels or marriage beds found themselves waiting in line for her craftsmanship. Her horseshoes didn’t break after one season. Her metalwork didn’t bend under pressure. Her repairs lasted longer than the original construction.

Her reputation didn’t need defending. Her work spoke louder than gossip.

Word spread across three counties: there’s a woman blacksmith who won’t take payment until you’re satisfied, and she’s never had to refund a single coin.

They say her father heard the stories. They say he rode past her shop once—saw the sparks flying like stars against the darkness, heard the hammer singing like thunder against the anvil, watched the smoke rising from the forge like a signal fire.

They say he kept riding.

Because what could he say to her? The daughter he’d sold was gone. The woman standing in that forge, covered in soot and sweat and success, owed him nothing.

She never married. Never apologized. Never softened her hands again.

She never forgot where she came from, but she refused—absolutely refused—to let that beginning dictate her ending.

Because here’s what her story teaches us:
Your worth isn’t determined by people who see you as currency. Your story doesn’t end where someone else’s greed begins. The only prison that truly holds you is the one you accept as permanent.

Freedom isn’t handed over in signed documents or legal declarations. Real freedom—the kind that can’t be revoked by law or custom or opinion—is forged in fire, one decision at a time, by hands that refuse to stay soft and hearts that refuse to stay broken.

The girl who was sold at fourteen didn’t become a victim. She became a blacksmith. She became her own rescue. She became proof that the future is not written by the people who tried to own your past.
Sometimes the bravest thing you can do is survive the story they wrote for you.

And then pick up the hammer and forge your own ending.

One strike at a time.