Published on 2025/05/08
THE POWER OF THE PHALLUS
The phallus is like a king’s scepter— a symbol of power and dignity. Whoever holds the phallus, holds control over the rest.
Here, power isn’t asked for. It’s worn.
The strap-on isn’t just a toy; it’s a declaration of authority— a crown strapped between the thighs. And when one woman wears it, the others submit, kneel, worship.
It’s not just about physical dominance— it’s about presence, energy, and who’s in charge.
A woman with the phallus has the voice, the rhythm, and the final word.
And the others know it.
Welcome to the phallocracy.
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– Of course, boss, I’m working on it. You’ll have it on your desk Monday, no doubt.
Published on 2025/05/08
YOU’LL BURN IN HELL
david
Hell isn't a place. It's an idea. One of the most powerful we've ever created.
There’s no underground map to it. No coordinates, no proof. And yet, it has lived inside our heads for millennia—burning flames, eternal punishment, screams, darkness, souls falling into an endless abyss. A pit reserved for those who stray from the path.
But where did this all come from? Why did humans need to imagine a place so terrifying?
Even early religions had their own “dark realms” for the dead. In Sumerian mythology, the underworld was grey and inescapable. In Greek myth, the worst were sent to Tartarus. But it was with monotheistic religions—especially Christianity—that hell became a full-blown machine of fear.
Theologically, it was invented as a solution: if there's a just and good God, there must be consequences for evil. If there’s heaven, there must be hell. Light and shadow. Reward and punishment. What started as divine justice soon became a tool for control: obey… or burn.
For centuries, hell shaped behavior. For the powerful, it was an excuse to maintain order. For artists, it was chaos on a canvas. For believers, it was a place to avoid at all costs. And for many, just a way to make sense of guilt, pain, and fear.
Because that’s what hell really is: a reflection of our deepest fears. Fear of failure. Fear of hurting others. Fear of not being enough. Fear of never being forgiven. And that’s its power—it doesn’t need to exist to shake us.
Today, we still picture it with flames, demons, and souls dragged into the abyss. Not because we believe in it literally, but because we all know what it feels like to burn from the inside.
The videos you’re about to watch, all created with AI, aren’t here to convince you hell is real. They’re just here to remind you that the fear of it definitely is.
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If companies get to pick “employee of the month,” I should get to pick “boobs of the day.” And today, we have a clear winner.