On this day, October 31, 2025, I found the Black Knight Templars of the Fig Tree, whose mission is the feed as many hungry black children in America – and the World – as possible! Their mission will also be to protect all restaurants from black gangs and criminals. Too many great restaurants have shut their doors due to crime.
I call upon Safeway and Walmart to begin feeding hungry children of all races. I bid the leader of China to buy food and beef from American Farmers, and donate it to the Black Knight Templars so thy can perform the only Christian Duty left un-corrupted by the Evil Pro-Life Cult founded by Paul Weyrich and Bob Jones. With Red States ending Voting Rights, and with Christian groups abandoning aid for the sick, it is time to reverse the Supreme Court ban on Abortion. The Christian-right took over the Republican Party and made laws stating many good things are no longer the Business of Jesus, God, and the Christian Party. Mind your own business!
GET OUT OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY AND FORM YOUR OWN PARTY – IF FEEDING THE POOR AND HEALING THE SICK IS NO LONER YOUR BUSINESS!
YOU STEPPED OFF THE BAG! YOU’RE OUT!
I bid the keepers of the Holy Shroud dedicate it to feeding hungry children, and send it out into the world for a world tour.
China! Buy all the beef in Montana and donate it to restaurants who are making plans to fee hungry child! No hot dogs!
WHERE’S THE BEEF!
John Presco




I proved the Knights Templar own the Shroud of Turin via my Rougemont ancestors. I am doing a massive repair of my bloodline. I had a dream I would be in Jerusalem at the end of my life. I am forming a pilgrimage. I need help and protection.
It is 4:00 AM December 1, 2024. Five minutes ago I found an A1 image of the Shroud. I am going to halt the sale of the College of De Namur in Belmont – if I can!
John ‘The Nazarite’

I just found the Abbey Bellevaux where the Lords of Rougemont, and the Bishops of Besançon are buried. The Rougemonts were Knights Templar and owners of the Shroud of Turin as were the Lords of La Roche. Pons La Roche was the founder of Bellevaux where very possibly my Rougemont ancestors are buried. Pons is close kindred of the De Bar and Habsburg family. Why would the Habsburg keep their connection to the Knights Templar and Shroud of Turin a secret? The Habsburgs were ‘defenders of the Catholic faith’.

Relic of St. Francis on Pilgrimage
Red states are preparing for an end to the Voting Rights Act
An end to the Voting Rights Act would free up Southern states to dramatically overhaul their congressional map.

Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill, right, leaves the Supreme Court after giving arguments in the case drawing new congressional district boundaries, on Oct. 15 in Washington. | Cliff Owen/AP
By Andrew Howard10/28/2025 05:15 AM EDT
Some Republicans across the south are preparing to redraw their congressional maps to boot Democrats out of office — if the Supreme Court issues a ruling on a case gutting the Voting Rights Act in time for the midterms.
While such a decision is no sure thing, some states are nonetheless planning for the scenario. The potential scramble to redraw could completely reshape the midterms, and Democrats are already sounding the alarm. One Democratic group forecasted an ambitious 19 seat pickup for the GOP by dismantling majority Black and other majority-minority districts currently protected by the VRA, though that would be an extreme scenario where every possible state redistricts.00:49Top Stories from POLITICOSkip in 5s
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The Supreme Court’s looming ruling centers around Section 2 of the VRA, which has long been implemented by creating majority-minority districts. Those districts are almost entirely represented by Democrats, something that Republicans have long claimed gives the party an unfair advantage.
Were that portion of the VRA to be weakened or entirely invalidated by the court, it could open up the floodgates for redistricting, if not in time for 2026 than certainly for 2028.
In South Carolina, for example, top Republicans in the state are itching to draw out the state’s lone Democrat: Rep. Jim Clyburn.
“If we could have a clean sweep, I would love that,” South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, who is running for governor, told POLITICO.
Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) — also running for governor — is similarly hoping to eliminate Clyburn’s seat through redistricting, and he doesn’t see a reason to wait for a ruling.
“The White House should apply pressure to the weak-kneed South Carolina Legislature and the governor just as it has done in non-Section 2 states,” Norman wrote in a recent op-ed.
Democrats are pushing back, and they say recent comments from the GOP should influence the justices as they decide on the case.
“Many states across the South are already licking their chops to try and prepare to racially gerrymander maps as quickly as possible,” said John Bisognano, president of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee. “It is clear that there is a consistent and dramatic need for laws to be in place to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment and ensure that the racial gerrymandering or racial discrimination at large is not permitted in this country.”
In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis has repeatedly asserted that if the Supreme Court rules that states cannot consider race when drawing district lines, it will “necessitate new congressional redistricting” in the red state. He has previously suggested that seats in South Florida — where several districts have a significant number of Black and Hispanic voters — would need to be changed.
DeSantis, who under the state constitution has veto power over congressional maps, previously muscled into law changes that resulted in Republicans gaining a 20-8 edge. Florida Republican legislative leaders have suggested they are open to mid-decade redistricting and this summer state House Speaker Daniel Perez even signed off on creating a committee to consider changes.
Since then, however, there’s been little movement. Perez declined to comment earlier this month when directly asked if lawmakers are waiting for the high court to rule. Florida’s annual legislative session is scheduled to start in January. Legislators could have enough time to act ahead of the 2026 midterm elections since Florida’s primary isn’t until late August.
One caveat, however, is that Florida’s constitution prohibits drawing districts for partisan gain, and any major changes could trigger legal challenges. The state Supreme Court, where a majority was appointed by DeSantis, earlier this year upheld the current congressional map, a boon for the one-time presidential candidate.
In Louisiana — the state that is central to the case challenging the Voting Rights Act — Gov. Jeff Landry has called a special session to adjust the state’s primary date to give the most possible time for a redraw.
During oral arguments, the high court’s conservative justices seemed poised to weaken the law. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch appeared inclined to bar virtually any use of race in redistricting, suggesting that race-conscious district lines might be unconstitutional.
Watch: The Conversation
52:41
Jasmine Crockett on Trump, Marjorie Taylor Greene and Her Own Party | The Conversation
But even if they ultimately do strike down portions of the law, lawmakers will face a tight timeline to get new maps passed before the midterms. If a ruling drags into the summer, when some of the highest-profile cases are often decided, it could foreclose many states from redrawing lines.
Because the entire case is a rehearing from last term, some Republicans are optimistic that the court could rule sooner than later, setting off a rush to redistrict. If that’s not the case, there are still options for red state lawmakers looking to redistrict after the ruling comes down.
Moving back primaries, said one top Republican strategist granted anonymity to discuss strategy, would be the best way for states to redraw in time for the midterms. But it would take a lot of strong-arming to get lawmakers to alter their own election timelines, and the strategist warned that such a scenario is not very likely.
The White House has ramped up pressure on lawmakers in red states without Voting Rights Act limitations to redraw their maps, going as far as threatening a primary to New Hampshire Gov. Kelly Ayotte. But so far, according to one person familiar with the strategy, the White House has not started talking with lawmakers in states with VRA-protected seats.
But if the pressure in other states is any indication, if there is an opportunity to redraw, Trump and the White House expect lawmakers to take up the issue.
Already, the GOP has picked up seven seats across three states: Texas, Missouri and North Carolina.
Gary Fineout and Alec Hernández contributed to this report.
I am marrying Clarence Thomas, Pope Francis, to Bob Jones – forever! How about – Bringham Young? I will be posting on the RESTRICTED MARRIAGES ordained by religions who USE JESUS to divide people and pit them against one another. The War of the Religions have resulted in much death.
Samuel Jackson has pointed out the HYPOCRACY of Clarence Thomas in regards to mixed-race marriages.
John Presco
“Mary Miller went full on white supremacist on Saturday—then tried to backtrack. During a rally at The Adams County Fairgrounds in Quincy, Illinois, which was hosted by Donald Trump, Miller urged supporters to secure her re-election in Illinois’ 15th congressional district.
However, it didn’t take long for her to praise the former president for the role he played in the Supreme Court’s official decision—revealed Friday—to reverse a woman’s guaranteed right to abortion.
“President Trump, on behalf of all the MAGA patriots in America, I want to thank you for the historic victory for white life in the Supreme Court yesterday,” Miller stated. Her words were met with cheers and applause.
Republican Congresswoman Mary Miller Says Roe Ruling Is “Historic Victory For White Life” (msn.com)
Evangelicals Celebrate Confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh (theintercept.com)
AS THE SENATE prepared to vote to confirm Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court on Saturday afternoon, evangelical Christian leaders were gathered at a secretive retreat in North Carolina to plan the conservative movement’s path forward.
The Council for National Policy, which operates covertly and brings together faith-based conservatives to discuss political strategy, was holding a planning meeting in a second-floor ballroom at the Westin hotel in Charlotte when the Senate confirmed President Donald Trump’s second Supreme Court pick by a 50-48 vote.
After a tumultuous few weeks in which Kavanaugh was accused of sexual assault, the group had remained cautious until the final moments, several participants told The Intercept. Following the Senate’s procedural vote on Kavanaugh’s nomination on Friday, the CNP attendees gathered that evening during dinner to pray that victory was near.
Read Our Complete CoverageSupreme Privilege
Their prayers, it seems, were answered. Kavanaugh’s confirmation cemented a decadeslong push to cement a conservative majority on the high court, an objective long desired by the CNP.
The agenda for the event featured a veritable who’s who of Christian conservatives, including Ginni Thomas, the spouse of Justice Clarence Thomas; U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley; former Sen. Jim DeMint, the former president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank; pollster Frank Luntz; and Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, who is seeking a leadership role in the House after Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., retires this year.

Pope Francis presides over a mass celebrated by U.S. Cardinal Kevin Joseph Farrell in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican for the participants into the World Meeting of Families in Rome, Saturday, June 25, 2022. The World Meeting of Families was created by Pope John Paul II in 1994 and celebrated every three years since then in different cities. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
ROME (AP) — Pope Francis celebrated families Saturday and urged them to shun “selfish” decisions that are indifferent to life as he closed out a big Vatican rally a day after the U.S. Supreme Court ended constitutional protections for abortion.
Pope hails families, blasts ‘culture of waste’ after Roe | AP News
Bob Jones University Apologizes for Its Racist Past (jbhe.com)
”let’s review the racial history of Bob Jones University. The university’s founder, Bob Jones, was a fundamentalist evangelist who believed that the theory of evolution was an abomination. He called the pope the anti-Christ and dismissed Catholicism as a “Satanic counterfeit.” He once said, “I would rather see a saloon on every corner than a Catholic in the White House.” Jones Sr. was of the view that twentieth-century blacks should be grateful to whites for bringing their ancestors to this country as slaves. If this had not happened, Jones wrote in 1960, “they might still be over there in the jungles of Africa, unconverted.”
The Real Origins of the Religious Right – POLITICO Magazine
But the abortion myth quickly collapses under historical scrutiny. In fact, it wasn’t until 1979—a full six years after Roe—that evangelical leaders, at the behest of conservative activist Paul Weyrich, seized on abortion not for moral reasons, but as a rallying-cry to deny President Jimmy Carter a second term. Why? Because the anti-abortion crusade was more palatable than the religious right’s real motive: protecting segregated schools. So much for the new abolitionism.
Brigham Young[edit]
Main article: Blood atonement
On at least three occasions (1847,[48] 1852,[49] and 1865[50]) Smith’s successor Brigham Young publicly taught that the punishment for black–white interracial marriages was death, and the killing of a black–white interracial couple and their children as part of a blood atonement would be a blessing to them.[32]: 37, 39 [51] He further stated that interracial children are sterile “like a mule“, a teaching later repeated in a church magazine.[48][52] Young taught that the moment the church consents to white members having children with black individuals the church would go to destruction,[32]: 37 [53] and that, “Any man having one drop of the seed of Cane in him cannot hold the priesthood.”[54] Young also taught that people who had children with a black person would be cursed to the priesthood.[32]: 37
Interracial marriage and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints – Wikipedia
Instruction on mixed marriages, 18 March 1966 (vatican.va)
| Bob Jones |
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| When only seven years old and walking on a dirt road in Arkansas; the Arch Angel Gabriel appeared to Bob Jones on a white horse and blew a double silver trumpet in his face. He then threw an old bull skin mantle at Bob’s feet. Although fearful at the time he ran, however, many years later he returned to pick up that old mantle which is that of a Seer Prophet. Bob Jones is known as a contemporary prophet with a great love for the Lord Jesus and His truth. His prophesies have spanned over four decades as the Lord has enabled him to foretell earthquakes, tidal waves, comets, and weather patterns. Like Daniel who functioned at an incredible level, Bob has often told leaders their dreams and experiences, as well as the interpretation. After his death experience in 1975 God sent him back to minister to church leadership and reach the multitudes with His love, truth and equipping the saints with understanding of the spiritual gifts. God promised Bob that he would see the beginning of one billion souls coming into the kingdom in one great wave of the end time harvest. Bob moves with a clear revelatory gifting, accompanied by gifts of healing and miracles. |
Samuel L. Jackson Calls Out Clarence Thomas for Leaving Interracial Marriage Off List of Targets
Glenn Garner – Yesterday 2:42 PM
Samuel L. Jackson is weighing in on the fallout around the Supreme Court’s latest ruling.
The Academy Award honoree, 73, called out Justice Clarence Thomas‘ after Thomas suggested the court should reconsider other key decisions, including the 2015 case establishing the right to same-sex marriage, following the SCOTUS decision to overturn 1973’s Roe v. Wade and the constitutional right to abortion.
“How’s Uncle Clarence feeling about Overturning Loving v Virginia??!!” Jackson wrote Friday on Twitter, referring to the landmark 1967 ruling that found interracial marriage bans unconstitutional. Justice Thomas, 74, a Black man, has been married to wife Virginia Thomas, a white woman, since 1987.
Thomas, who was nominated by President George H. W. Bush as the second Black person to ever serve on the Supreme Court in 1991, wrote in a concurring opinion that SCOTUS should next “reconsider” the rulings that legalized birth control, sodomy and same-sex marriage.
“In future cases, we should reconsider all of this Court’s substantive due process precedents, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell. Because any substantive due process decision is ‘demonstrably erroneous,’ … we have a duty to ‘correct the error’ established in those precedents,” he said.
Related video: Clarence Thomas reflects on how ‘all heck broke loose’ following SCOTUS nomination
Jim Obergefell, one of the plaintiffs in the historic Obergefell v. Hodge case that guaranteed the right to marry to same-sex couples, said in a statement sent to PEOPLE that Thomas is “not the Supreme Deity.”
“Clarence Thomas is a Supreme Court justice appointed by humans, he is not the Supreme Deity. The millions of loving couples who have the right to marriage equality to form their own families do not need Clarence Thomas imposing his individual twisted morality upon them. If you want to see an error in judgment, Clarence Thomas, look in the mirror,” he said.
RELATED: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Opens Up About Being Raped in Her 20s: ‘I Felt So Alone’
U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren also called out Thomas in a tweet on Sunday: “Clarence Thomas made it clear: right-wing extremists aren’t stopping at abortion. They’re coming after marriage equality, contraception, & anyone who doesn’t live & look like their idea of the ideal American. But the Supreme Court won’t get the last word—the American people will.”
Friday’s 6-to-3 ruling reversed nearly 50 years of precedent, giving states the power to pass their own laws around abortion. Since the decision, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri and South Dakota have already banned abortion in their states, after putting “trigger bans” in place that governors enacted after the SCOTUS ruling.
RELATED VIDEO: Supreme Court Overturns Roe v. Wade, Eliminating the Constitutional Right to Abortion
RELATED: Megan Thee Stallion Calls Out SCOTUS, Texas’ Abortion Laws During Set: ‘Really Embarrassing Me’
Protests have since erupted around the country, and President Joe Biden has spoken out against the ruling, which he called the “realization of an extreme ideology and a tragic error by the Supreme Court.”
The decision comes after the SCOTUS opinion was leaked to Politico last month. A poll conducted by CNN has since found that 66 percent of Americans did not want Roe v. Wade to be overturned.
Bob Jones University Apologizes for Its Racist PastBob Jones University, the Bible college in Greenville, South Carolina, did not admit black students until the 1970s. Then, for a 30-year period, interracial dating was prohibited. Now the university has announced that its polices were wrong.Lost in the spectacular news accounts of the election of a black man as president of the United States is another event — this time in higher education — that stands as a milestone in racial progress. In an eloquent statement, Stephen Jones, great-grandson of the founder and the fourth president of Bob Jones University, has apologized for the institution’s racist past.President Jones stated, “For almost two centuries American Christianity, including BJU in its early stages, was characterized by the segregationist ethos of American culture. Consequently, for far too long, we allowed institutional policies regarding race to be shaped more directly by that ethos than by the principles and precepts of the Scriptures. We conformed to the culture rather than provide a clear Christian counterpoint to it.“In so doing, we failed to accurately represent the Lord and to fulfill the commandment to love others as ourselves. For these failures we are profoundly sorry. Though no known antagonism toward minorities or expressions of racism on a personal level have ever been tolerated on our campus, we allowed institutional policies to remain in place that were racially hurtful.”By way of background to this remarkable announcement let’s review the racial history of Bob Jones University.The university’s founder, Bob Jones, was a fundamentalist evangelist who believed that the theory of evolution was an abomination. He called the pope the anti-Christ and dismissed Catholicism as a “Satanic counterfeit.” He once said, “I would rather see a saloon on every corner than a Catholic in the White House.”Jones Sr. was of the view that twentieth-century blacks should be grateful to whites for bringing their ancestors to this country as slaves. If this had not happened, Jones wrote in 1960, “they might still be over there in the jungles of Africa, unconverted.” Integrationists, according to Jones, were wrongfully trying to eradicate natural boundaries that God himself had established.With the help of wealthy supporters, Bob Jones founded a college near Panama City, Florida, in 1926. Bibb Graves, who had just been elected governor of Alabama with the official backing of the Ku Klux Klan, gave the keynote address at the groundbreaking ceremony. When classes began in 1927, admission of students was officially restricted to members of the white race, a policy that persisted until 1971.Experiencing Depression-related financial difficulties in 1933, Bob Jones was forced to sell the Florida land and move his college to Cleveland, Tennessee. In 1936 a young Billy Graham entered the new Bob Jones College in Tennessee. But he quickly became disenchanted with its strict religious doctrine and social policies and transferred to Florida Bible Institute. In 1947 Bob Jones College moved once more, this time to its present site in Greenville, South Carolina. Now financially sound, the college began to offer master’s and doctoral degrees and assumed the designation of a university.When Bob Jones Jr., the son of the founder, became the institution’s president, he continued the institution’s policies of rabid bigotry. During his tenure he bestowed honorary degrees on George Wallace, Strom Thurmond, and Lester Maddox. When Pope Paul VI died in 1978, Bob Jones Jr. called him the “archpriest of Satan, a deceiver, and he has, like Judas, gone to his own place.”When Bob Jones III assumed the presidency of the institution in 1971, male students were required to wear jackets and ties to classes. Women were obliged to wear dresses or skirts. Rock music was prohibited on campus. Students were forbidden from attending movies. Students were not permitted to go on off-campus dates without a chaperone. On campus, the university maintained two “dating parlors” where students could meet to talk. Touching was not allowed and kissing was strictly prohibited even if the couple was engaged to be married. Male and female students were not permitted to speak to each other after 7 p.m. The campus was separated from the city of Greenville by an iron and barbed-wire fence.Under federal government pressure, Bob Jones University finally opened its doors to unmarried black students. But strict regulations were established by the university to prevent interracial dating. In 1976, during the administration of Gerald Ford, the policy on interracial dating resulted in the Internal Revenue Service’s revoking the tax-exempt status of Bob Jones University retroactive to 1970. The IRS demanded the payment of $490,000 in back taxes. The university appealed the ruling. Eventually, in 1981, the Supreme Court of the United States heard the case. The new Reagan administration initially supported the position of the university but, after a public outcry, switched sides. In 1983 the Supreme Court ruled against Bob Jones University in favor of the IRS by a vote of 8 to 1. The lone dissenter was late Chief Justice of the United States William Rehnquist.* On being advised of the decision of the Court, Bob Jones III ordered that the American flags on campus be flown at half-staff.In 1998 Jonathan Pait, a public relations spokesman for the university, explained the school’s prohibition against interracial dating: “God has separated people for his own purposes. He has erected barriers between the nations, not only land and sea barriers, but also ethnic, cultural, and language barriers. God has made people different from one another and intends those differences to remain. Bob Jones University is opposed to intermarriage of the races because it breaks down the barriers God has established.”In 2000 the university ended its official prohibition against interracial dating. Now eight years later, the university has admitted that its policies were wrong.This change of heart at Bob Jones University comes on the heels of recent good news about black enrollments at the nation’s other Bible colleges. JBHE’s database shows that in 1997 there were only nine Bible colleges where blacks made up 10 percent or more of total enrollments. Today there are 29 such schools.*William Rehnquist had a long history of opposition to the advancement of blacks. He opposed the 1954 Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education and as a young GOP pollwatcher in Arizona, Rehnquist was active in challenging black voters’ qualifications.For more on the racism of Rehnquist, see “The Racial Views of the Chief Justice of the United States,” JBHE, Number 23, Spring 1999, p. 72. |


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