The app for independent voices

Sunday tips for truth educational video:

Marjoe (1972) 1 hr 28 min PG

tubitv.com/movies/31254…

also here:

justwatch.com/us/movie/…

Note: Marjoe is a 1972 documentary about Marjoe Gortner, who was a promoter of one of these fake, man-made “Abrahamic” political groups disguised as some kind of different, honest cultures or religions for many years. Growing up Gortner had been encouraged by his parents to promote one of the versions of the man-made political group “Christianity”, which is the first divide and conquer offshoot label from a political group disguised as some kind of honest, different religion or cultures known as "Judaism," and in reality has always been a "Jewish" hoax. "Islam" is the second divide and conquer, man-made religion label offshoot from the “Judaism” political scam and came many years after that. Then there are the other fake, man-made religions, and their variants. This award-winning documentary chronicles the story of a "firebrand evangelical preacher" who got tired of wigging himself, much less children and other people, out on purpose. Thankfully, he realized how wrong it is to put your supposed personal man-made religion book views of God above your common sense, or above any other people, and becomes honest about it and admits wholeheartedly and humorously that he was always a fraud doing it.

Another possible version of this in real life, is some people who may have been coerced into acting this way on purpose, but were convinced that yes it's an obvious scam, but that it’s a worthwhile and harmless obvious scam, somehow. When in fact that is not, and has never been, the case, but their stories were not documented for us like this man up and did for us here. Hugh Ross Gortner was born in 1944 to Vernon Gortner, a third-generation "evangelical minister," and his wife Marge. The fake label "Marjoe" is a combination of the names “Mary” and “Joseph,” as in a couple of the characters from one of these man-made political books that was disguised as some kind of real, honest religions. At four years old, Hugh was highlighted by so-called “Life Magazine” and was claimed to be popular in the U.S. over the radio, by whoever and whatever they were that broadcasted that over the radio in America

🦖

Jun 1
at
4:07 PM
Relevant people

Log in or sign up

Join the most interesting and insightful discussions.