Nearly 100 years ago, the Ku Klux Klan attacked Jason Whitlock’s great-grandfather’s home in Kentucky.
They dragged his grandfather out of the house, beat him, and took him to the lynching tree. His grandmother witnessed the entire assault. However, unknown to the attackers, Whitlock’s grandfather was a Freemason and was using hand signals that only a fellow Mason could understand.
A Klan member recognized the hand gestures and opposed the killing, and he was spared and fled with his family to Indianapolis.
His grandmother was understandably afraid of white people for decades to come, but she was able to overcome that fear and embrace Jesus Christ.
“It’s a reminder of a time long ago, when black women expressed themselves and defined their identity through their faith, not through politics,” Whitlock recalled.
Today, black women no longer believe in Jesus Christ, but follow what Whitlock calls the “tragic religion of black girls.”
He believes that women like Sheryl Swoopes, who has consistently dissed Caitlin Clark, a white star in a league and sport dominated by black lesbians, truly embody this cult.
“This is a cult that rejects Jesus and would rather die than be deprogrammed,” Whitlock said. “They would rather die than give up the power they’ve gained through this ‘black girl tragedy’ religion.”
One of the main arguments constantly made by those who preach this religion is that they are the only victims and need everyone else to lift them up while they tear them down.
Former President Donald Trump was ambushed by one of the cult members as he was explaining the policy changes he had made as president to help the black community.
“Mr. President, I want you to answer a question about your comments and why you believe black people can trust you for another four years,” a reporter interrupted him.
Trump then called himself the best president for black people since Abraham Lincoln and criticized her for being 35 minutes late.
“That’s the dragon’s energy. We all have to get used to it when we’re hit with the stupidity, the rudeness, the hostility of the cultists,” Whitlock says. “That woman is a lunatic.”
“If we are not willing to stand up to them, American society and culture as a whole will become even more committed to their cult mentality and worldview,” he continued, adding, “It’s a cult. They would rather die than be deprogrammed. They are destroying this country.”
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