
Kim Hafner and the Hafners, played into the hands of Russian Trolls. I have to consider if Kim was paid money. She launched a cyber-attack against me when she contacted my daughter. Kim is a cyber-bully. I see her as a Psychic Deadener, a five hundred pound Psychic Muffler that smeared – with lard – my third eye. I am famous for having a dream about the Oakland Fire, four days before it broke out. I have battled Russian Trolls on the web going back three years ago. The point is ANY obstacle you can put in THEIR WAY, is a help. If they believe I have psychic powers, then I can mess with their heads.
The other possibility is the Hafners are pro-Putin Evangelicals. I suspect this is the case. They are helping Putin defeat our secular Democracy. Kim went ballistic when I mentioned Herbert Armstrong, who made prophecies against Russia. To restore KORE to the air, and connect it to RADIO LONDON, is huge, because some scholars believe it was Beatlemania that brought down the Iron Curtain.
I woud say many Russian are aware of my posts on the Roza Mira ‘The Rose of the World’ and want me to stop broadcasting on a psychic level. This is why I launch ‘Dark Daughter’ at the Russian Trolls. Are there ‘Dark Daughters’?
Note the energy field around my head. A bolt of lightening his a tall tower in Russia. I will now redirect their psychic attacks into 500 pounds of blubber.
John Presco 007
A spectacular lightshow has been captured on video, showing lightning bolts strike the spire of the Lakhta Center skyscraper in St. Petersburg, Russia. The city was hit by a powerful thunderstorm on Saturday evening.
Videos recorded by residents show huge bright bolts of lightning as they come down, hitting the top of Europe’s tallest building, cascading around the structure, surrounded by dark skies.
https://www.rt.com/news/438070-lakhta-center-lightning-show/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_W._Armstrong


Herbert W. Armstrong (July 31, 1892 – January 16, 1986) founded the Radio Church of God which was incorporated October 21, 1933 and was renamed Worldwide Church of God on June 1, 1968, as well as starting Ambassador College (later Ambassador University) October 8, 1947. He was an early pioneer of radio and tele-evangelism, first taking to the airwaves on January 7, 1934 from the 100-watt station KORE Eugene, Oregon. Armstrong preached what he claimed was the comprehensive combination of doctrines in the entire Bible, in the light of the New Covenant scriptures, which he maintained came directly from the Bible.[3] These theological doctrines and teachings have been referred to as Armstrongism by non-adherents. His teachings included the interpretation of biblical prophecy in light of British Israelism,[4] and required observance of parts of the Mosaic Law including seventh-day Sabbath, dietary prohibitions, and the covenant law “Holy Days“.
Armstrong proclaimed that behind contemporary world events loomed various Biblical prophecies. In late 1951, Dr. Herman Hoeh (a then recent graduate of Ambassador College) said, with conviction, that Mr. Armstrong was “an apostle”, one sent forth with the same commission as the early disciples were given, to preach the good news message. Armstrong often said that, like John the Baptist (Elijah), he was a voice preaching in a spiritual wilderness of religious confusion. For this reason he was considered to be both an “Apostle” and end-time “Elijah” proclaiming as God’s representative the Gospel of God‘s Kingdom to the World[5] before the return of Jesus Christ. He also founded the Ambassador International Cultural Foundation, which promoted the arts, humanities, and humanitarian projects.[6] Through his role with the foundation, Armstrong and his advisers met with heads of governments in various nations, for which he described himself as an “ambassador without portfolio for world peace.”[7]
In the years after Armstrong’s death in 1986, Worldwide Church of God leaders came to the conclusion that many of his doctrines were not biblical.[8] These doctrines were subsequently rejected and the church is now in full agreement with the statement of faith of the National Association of Evangelicals. In light of these doctrinal changes, in April 2009, the denomination changed its name to Grace Communion International (GCI) to better reflect its New Testament, grace-centered teaching.
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