Uncle Esau's World

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Uncle Esau's World

El Cheeko

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"jews" and "gentiles" ... this mofo oughtta just come out as an evangelical.

Whites killing whites ... who benefits ?

Ukraine has "jew" problem ?

Russia doesn't ?

PUT DOWN THE CRACK PIPE.

THERE IS NO POLITICAL SOLUTION.

"jews" INVENTED POLITICS.

IDENTITY IS THE SOLUTION.

LEVEL UP.

How many times do you allow a crack pipe to be shoved in your face until you call it CRACK ?

Level up.

TWO
HUNDRED
MILLION
man army ...

WHO can field such an army ?
We should welcome them ?
Are THESE the saviors of civilization ?

Bullet to the brain DOES CURE A HEADACHE ...

but ...

IS DEATH what we should seek ?

LEVEL UP.

Charlton Heston
Ava Gardner 😍

Pooty and Kim

Those terrible Ukranians rained bomblets on the merrymaking land thieves.

It's not very nice to kick invaders out of your house ... it's not hospitable.

Ben Hodges

East vs West global war shaping up.

Only identity stops it.

Yep ... Vanguard and BlackRock are top share holders in John Deere ... squeezing blood out of turnips ... these fuckers oughtta be tarred and feathered.

Endless gaggles of middle men ... living on the backs of real working men.

"Intellectual Property" is a "jewish" concept ... 1000%,

Thanks Big g. 👍

Thanks Big g. 👍

tiktok@angloisrael3

Thanks 𝕯𝖗𝖆𝖜𝖉𝖞 𝕮𝖑𝖆𝖓

Putin:

"Just give me more than what I've already violently stolen ... then we can call it a day ... I will resume violent theft later."

Trump:

"Sounds good to me."

Dennis Hopper and Christopher Walken.

Tammy Wynette back in the day SON !!! 🔥🔥🔥

She picked cotton in Mississippi !!!

Virginia Wynette Pugh (Tammy Wynette), the country star known for her song "Stand By Your Man" and her achingly vulnerable singing voice, also possessed a toughness and determination.

Wynette reached the top of the country music world but her personal life brought terrible low points.

"No other female country singer conveyed the emotion of heartbreak like Tammy Wynette," states a website dedicated to the singer. "She endeared herself to millions by singing about topics of everyday life – divorce, loneliness, parenting, passion. Her tearful singing style was the voice of every heartbreak a woman has ever known. Perhaps it's that Tammy herself lived through such tumultuous times that she could convey the emotion of such weighty topics."

Tammy Wynette was born in 1942 in rural Itawamba County, Mississippi. Her father died when she was very young, and her mother remarried, leaving her to be raised by her grandparents. At age 7, she began working long days picking cotton with her family, a lesson in hard work she never forgot. Even after Wynette found fame as a singer, she kept a crystal bowl full of cotton in her home to remind herself of those days in the cotton field.

Wynette married Euple Byrd in 1960 at age 18. A construction worker, Byrd had trouble keeping a job so the couple moved from place to place. But Wynette never shied away from hard work and held a variety of jobs, including as a waitress, shoe-factory employee, cocktail waitress, and hair stylist before making her name in country music. In fact, the practical Wynette renewed her cosmetology license every year until her death, just in case she ever had to go back to earning a living as a beautician.

Wynette had two daughters with Byrd by the time she was 20—Gwendolyn and Jacquelyn—and then left him while she was pregnant with their third daughter, Tina, who developed spinal meningitis not long after her birth. By now living in Alabama, Wynette worked as a hairdresser after getting up at 4 a.m. every morning to sing on the "Country Boy Eddie" TV show for a local station.

In 1966, Wynette and her daughters moved to Nashville so she could try to land a recording contract. Given her lack of experience in the music business, the move was a very risky decision, especially with three little girls dependent on her, but Wynette eventually signed a deal with Epic Records and took the stage name "Tammy Wynette." She married songwriter Don Chapel in 1967.

With Epic's backing, Wynette's risk-taking paid off. As Rolling Stone put it, "She came out of the gate with a barrage of successful singles, beginning with Johnny Paycheck's 'Apartment #9' in 1967 and peaking with her 1969 number-one hit, 'Stand By Your Man.'"

The year 1969 was a huge one for Wynette. She released her Greatest Hits, Volume 1, which became the first album by a female country singer to be certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America, according to Rolling Stone. Wynette also joined the Grand Ole Opry, cementing her country-star status. And she married fellow country star George Jones, beginning a long singing collaboration that continued even after the couple parted ways. Their duets included the No. 1 country hits "Near You" and "Golden Ring." Wynette and Jones had a daughter, Tamala Georgette, the year after they married. Unfortunately, their stormy relationship and Jones' well-documented alcoholism led to their divorce in 1975.

Wynette married two more times, first to businessman Michael Tomlin in 1977 (they split after only 44 days), then, in 1978, to singer-songwriter George Richey, who served as her manager in the 1980s. The union, which lasted until her death in 1998, was an abusive one, according to Wynette's daughter Georgette.

Shortly after they married, Wynette claimed she had been the victim of a kidnapping attempt, and even had a large bruise on her face to prove it. Yet, decades later, Georgette Jones wrote in her memoir The Three of Us: Growing Up With Tammy and George that she believed the story was a coverup designed to the truth that Richey had beaten Wynette.

Georgette wrote that Richey "tried very hard to separate mom from her family and friends so he could be the only person she could turn to. I think she felt like she had no choice and it was too difficult to fight."

Wynette suffered from a variety of health problems for much of her life, including chronic intestinal pain, and underwent multiple surgeries. But she always managed to work through the pain, with an increasing dependence on painkillers, unfortunately. Georgette Jones believed Richey, by encouraging Wynette's use of drugs, was indirectly responsible for her death.

Wynette died in her sleep at her home in Nashville in 1998. The cause of death was reported as a blood clot in her lungs. She was just 55.

William Potter Gale

Thanks to Big g.

Ukraine no longer hobbled.

It's a fair fight now.

Let's see how the invaders like having their war machine dismantled at the source.

General Ben Hodges

Watch as Mr. Bond enjoys Bollinger 69 with voluptuous Dr. Good Head.

More entertaining than Trump circus.

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Created 3 years ago.

804 videos

Category None

"jews" are Esau.

John 18: 33-36

33 Then Pilate entered into the judgment hall again, and called Yahshua, and said unto him, Art thou the King of the Judeans ?

34 Yahshua answered him, Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me ?

35 Pilate answered, Am I a Judean ? Thine own nation and the chief priests have delivered thee unto me: what hast thou done ?

36 Yahshua answered, My kingdom is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, that I should not be delivered to the Judeans: but now is my kingdom not from hence.