Anonymous ID: 41c756 Aug. 31, 2025, 4:37 a.m. No.23530669   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1036 >>1132 >>1174

MAZE

@mazemoore

In 2019 Erin Burnett wanted to make sure that there was no way for Paul Manafort to escape the seriousness of the mortgage fraud charges.

 

In 2025 it's mortgage fraud, really?

 

This is CNN.

 

2:46 PM · Aug 30, 2025

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1M

Views

 

Really hate going to his twitter page. He always has the receipts neatly organized and it is sure to angry up the blood

https://x.com/mazemoore/status/1961863228448719019

Anonymous ID: 41c756 Aug. 31, 2025, 5:23 a.m. No.23530714   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0797

Carlo Acutis 

 

Carlo Acutis was born in London but raised in Milan. He had a great love for Jesus and Mary from a young age. His mother remembers that, at age four, he would pick flowers to present to a statue of Mary. He would also kiss Jesus on the crucifix.

 

As Carlo grew, so did his devotion. He received his First Communion at the age of seven, and from that time on he said the Rosary every day and went to daily Mass.

 

Carlo was extremely bright and eventually found his passion in computer programming. He combined this love with his love of Christ in the Eucharist. This inspired him to create a website cataloging Eucharistic miracles around the world.

 

“The Eucharist is my highway to heaven,” Carlo said. He rightly understood that the Eucharist transforms lives and gives a foretaste of heaven.

 

When not programming, Carlo was a normal kid having fun with his friends. But he was always encouraging them to do the right thing, to speak kindly, and to help others. He and his mother would volunteer with the homeless, taking them blankets and food, and he would encourage his friends to join them. Carlo also taught catechism classes at his church.

 

Carlo went to confession regularly and kept a journal of his behaviors, noting what he could do better.

 

At 15, Carlo fell ill and thought he had the flu. However, his sickness didn’t improve, so his parents took him to the doctor. They were told that he had an aggressive form of leukemia. It was an illness that would quickly take his life.

 

Though Carlo was in a lot of pain and knew that he would soon die, he offered up those sufferings for the Church and Pope Benedict.

 

He told his mother: “I die happy because I did not spend my life wasting my time on things not pleasing to God.”

 

Just a week after his family received the diagnosis—on October 12, 2006—Carlo died.

 

People—strangers and friends alike—packed the church for his funeral. They told story after story of how his witness changed their lives.

 

Blessed Carlo Acutis pray for our youth.