How I was able to recover from 8.4M people mocking my face

ICXCLuvr

ICXCLuvr

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Some of you may or may not have seen my face. If you have Twitter you probably have. 8.4 million fucking views. What helped me is god. I pray to him everyday. Also, knowing that most of them are just bitter because of what I said, not my face itself🤷🏻

Anyways if you ever find yourself in a situation like this keep your head up!:feelsokman:
 
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Ohh so that’s where the context is from i knew u looked familiar
 
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Some of you may or may not have seen my face. If you have Twitter you probably have. 8.4 million fucking views. What helped me is god. I pray to him everyday. Also, knowing that most of them are just bitter because of what I said, not my face itself🤷🏻

Anyways if you ever find yourself in a situation like this keep your head up!:feelsokman:

mirin brother
 
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Honestly respect you for this
 
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Oh and you’re one of those black haters
 
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Some of you may or may not have seen my face. If you have Twitter you probably have. 8.4 million fucking views. What helped me is god. I pray to him everyday. Also, knowing that most of them are just bitter because of what I said, not my face itself🤷🏻

Anyways if you ever find yourself in a situation like this keep your head up!:feelsokman:

Also remnember the hate never comes from above.
 
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:ROFLMAO:
 
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Is that really you
 
Bro obviously but at the end of the day who cares when I’ll be in heaven?
The phrase "love the foreigner as you love yourself" is a profound ethical and spiritual mandate found in the ancient biblical texts. Most famously recorded in Leviticus 19:34, it directs communities to treat newcomers as native-born citizens, rooted in the empathetic reminder that "you were foreigners in the land of Egypt".This principle bridges justice, empathy, and hospitality across a variety of traditions and teachings:Biblical Foundation: The verse commands, "The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself..." It establishes that local strangers are to be fully integrated and protected under the same laws of compassion as anyone else.The Golden Rule: Echoing the earlier commandment to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Leviticus 19:18), it expands the definition of "neighbor" to include the vulnerable, the immigrant, and the outsider.Historical Empathy: The text grounds its moral weight in shared history. Because the Israelites understood the pain, displacement, and vulnerability of being strangers in a foreign land (Egypt), they were instructed to eliminate prejudice and welcome others with open arms.The passage highlights the universal importance of empathy, underscoring that human dignity is not defined by origin, status, or native citizenship, but by our shared humanity.If you would like to explore this topic further, let me know if you want me to:Share more historical and cultural context behind the passageProvide examples of how this passage is interpreted and practiced by various faith traditionsCompare these scriptures with similar teachings in other philosophical or ethical frameworks
 
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Bro obviously but at the end of the day who cares when I’ll be in heaven?
heaven wont accept you with that slav shit nose
 
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its fully the black albino ass nose you have btw
 
  • Hmm...
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The phrase "love the foreigner as you love yourself" is a profound ethical and spiritual mandate found in the ancient biblical texts. Most famously recorded in Leviticus 19:34, it directs communities to treat newcomers as native-born citizens, rooted in the empathetic reminder that "you were foreigners in the land of Egypt".This principle bridges justice, empathy, and hospitality across a variety of traditions and teachings:Biblical Foundation: The verse commands, "The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself..." It establishes that local strangers are to be fully integrated and protected under the same laws of compassion as anyone else.The Golden Rule: Echoing the earlier commandment to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Leviticus 19:18), it expands the definition of "neighbor" to include the vulnerable, the immigrant, and the outsider.Historical Empathy: The text grounds its moral weight in shared history. Because the Israelites understood the pain, displacement, and vulnerability of being strangers in a foreign land (Egypt), they were instructed to eliminate prejudice and welcome others with open arms.The passage highlights the universal importance of empathy, underscoring that human dignity is not defined by origin, status, or native citizenship, but by our shared humanity.If you would like to explore this topic further, let me know if you want me to:Share more historical and cultural context behind the passageProvide examples of how this passage is interpreted and practiced by various faith traditionsCompare these scriptures with similar teachings in other philosophical or ethical frameworks
I ignore that part
 
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it’s just ugly sheboons crying lol
 
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Seen u on TikTok
 
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me on my way to pick and choose what parts of the bible i believe in despite claiming to be christian:
Stfu. Parts of the Bible were edited by the government so that they can sell an egalitarian narrative to the masses. That’s why there’s a sudden shift from old to New Testament. I don’t believe in that shit. God knows the white race is best.
 
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its a sin not to follow all of God's commands,you're going to hell like all racists:redpill:
No I’m not, ethnics are cursed and are going to hell from the mark of Cain.
 
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i like niggers
 
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They work very fast
 
 
me too but im not retarded
 
im fucking caging bro
 
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Some of you may or may not have seen my face. If you have Twitter you probably have. 8.4 million fucking views. What helped me is god. I pray to him everyday. Also, knowing that most of them are just bitter because of what I said, not my face itself🤷🏻

Anyways if you ever find yourself in a situation like this keep your head up!:feelsokman:

nigga you look like a globulous neanderthal
 
1780611486331
 
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u brought this on to yourself
 
The phrase "love the foreigner as you love yourself" is a profound ethical and spiritual mandate found in the ancient biblical texts. Most famously recorded in Leviticus 19:34, it directs communities to treat newcomers as native-born citizens, rooted in the empathetic reminder that "you were foreigners in the land of Egypt".This principle bridges justice, empathy, and hospitality across a variety of traditions and teachings:Biblical Foundation: The verse commands, "The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself..." It establishes that local strangers are to be fully integrated and protected under the same laws of compassion as anyone else.The Golden Rule: Echoing the earlier commandment to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Leviticus 19:18), it expands the definition of "neighbor" to include the vulnerable, the immigrant, and the outsider.Historical Empathy: The text grounds its moral weight in shared history. Because the Israelites understood the pain, displacement, and vulnerability of being strangers in a foreign land (Egypt), they were instructed to eliminate prejudice and welcome others with open arms.The passage highlights the universal importance of empathy, underscoring that human dignity is not defined by origin, status, or native citizenship, but by our shared humanity.If you would like to explore this topic further, let me know if you want me to:Share more historical and cultural context behind the passageProvide examples of how this passage is interpreted and practiced by various faith traditionsCompare these scriptures with similar teachings in other philosophical or ethical frameworks
Doesn’t give niggers a free pass to be low iq apes. Christianity also encourages punishing criminals. Stop pretending you’re hated just for muh skin color. You are hated because most of you are garbage human beings, useless, violent and low iq with the shittiest culture ever
 
hitler wouldn't let you breed bro
Story pin image
 
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people are so cruel, this only proves once again the bp

keep going on brotherr, you'll ascend and shut their mouths
 

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