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Baseball legends, Emotional Covid manipulation; Mormon Prophecy

  • Broadcast in Lifestyle
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Jane introduces the episode with the White horse prophecy of Joseph Smith that an LDS elder must obtain office of the presidency and restore the Constitution.  We then go on to talk of the news of the day.  John talks about metaphors of Baseball and their legends.  We discuss the movie "Green Brook" and how Black musicians and athletes were banned in certain hotels, mainly in the South.  We then discuss real estate expenses, high housing prices.  Jon and Jane discuss their personal goals and aspirations.  Both of us pitch in on how Covid restrictions have limited individual's ability to question their own life choices, even where they work and how they function in public and we reveal what the government's agenda is and what they are hiding from us.

Since United States Senator Orrin Hatch, a faithful Mormon, announced his candidacy in 1999 for the office of President of the United States, there has been growing interest in how he views the U.S. Constitution and one of Joseph Smith's little known prophecies. In the Salt Lake Tribune, Nov. 11, 1999, there was an article titled, "Did Hatch Allude To LDS Prophecy?" The article stated:

Sen. Orrin Hatch has denied his Republican presidential campaign is motivated by a longing to fulfill an obscure Mormon myth. But during an interview with a Mormon Church-owned radio station this week he borrowed the exact phrasing of the apocalyptic belief.

According to the so-called "White Horse Prophecy," the U.S. Constitution will be hanging by a thread and a church elder from Zion will ride in on a metaphorical white horse and save it.

Rush Limbaugh died Wednesday.

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