A viewer asks: “Was listening to some more Lions talk, and an old time Lion’s beat reporter, Mike O’Hara shared a story he was reminded of when he first heard about the knee injury to C.J. Gardner-Johnson. He recalled a running back the Lions drafted in the second round in 2012 – Mikel Leshoure. Leshoure was a top prospect, never fumbled even once in college, could block, run, catch, could do it all. On the second play of the first day of training camp during a non-tackling drill, he had “light” contact with a defensive player and tore his Achilles tendon. He was gone for the year, and when he returned from the injury, was never the same – which is often the case. This also just SCREAMS “targeting” – especially when you consider the severity of the injury occurring during a play where by all rights and measures, such a serious injury has astronomically LITTLE chance of occurring. That seems to be a theme of some these injuries. Some of the most severe seem to occur with the most innocuous and unthreatening of physical movements. What can Creator tell us about this injury more than a decade ago?”191 views0 answers0 votes
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The dating scene is especially problematic, and even deeply traumatic, for single mothers of all ages. With the divorce rate above 50%, along with the huge number of births happening out of wedlock, it’s reaching the point where more children are being raised by single mothers than are being raised by married cohabiting biological parents. Overwhelmingly, most single men, and more often than that, the more desirable single men, want nothing to do with a single mother. Men, by and large, would rather not raise another man’s children and need to be really incentivized to do so. This is a problem that just seems to keep getting worse, not better. What is Creator’s perspective?168 views0 answers0 votes
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And if things weren’t bad enough, there is the problem of the “alpha male” most women find attractive—tall, dark and handsome, confident and wealthy. Except it seems a great many women misconstrue genuine narcissism for confidence. The result is that the “qualified guy” many modern women are chasing, holding out for, and compromising themselves for, turns out to be an abusive “bad boy” who ultimately treats them inconsiderately, cheats on them with other women, and even abuses them. From his perspective, he has almost endless numbers of attractive women literally lining up and competing for him, so he has little incentive to treat any of them as special. This composite character even has a name, specifically, “Chad Chaddington.” Chad might literally date more than one woman in the same evening, sleep with most on the first date, and never consider committing to anyone. As a result, he leaves in his wake scores of “alpha widows” who can never get over being spurned by Chad and who therefore have a hard time finding any other “beta” men attractive. What is Creator’s perspective?175 views0 answers0 votes