RFK Jr. caught on camera walking into airplane bathroom BAREFOOT
Most of the time when people are photographed barefoot, they’re either by the pool, on the beach, taking a yoga class, or doing something we probably don’t want to know about.
They’re rarely, if ever, on airplanes.
Except if they’re RFK Jr. Apparently, he doesn’t wear shoes (or socks) on commercial aircraft.
He was recently photographed walking down the aisle of an American Airlines flight into the bathroom wearing absolutely nothing on his feet.
You may be wondering how credible the photograph is, considering we do live in a day and age of Photoshop, AI, and deepfakes, and you’d be right to be skeptical.
However, the picture was taken by Justin Haskins, co-author of Glenn Beck’s latest book, "Dark Future,” and a repeat guest on Allie Beth Stuckey’s show.
That’s how we know “this is a genuine picture,” says Allie, who jokingly calls herself the “air travel czar,” given her rigid rules when it comes to flying commercially.
Shortly after the “incident,” Allie released the following statement on Instagram:
While this is obviously humorous, walking barefoot down an airplane aisle is no laughing matter. Going barefoot in public can expose you to any number of germs, fungal infections, and sharp objects (and crumbs, obviously). That said, keep your shoes on when you're out in public – Stay safe, Blaze News readers.
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Kat Von D on her renunciation of paganism: 'I just want Jesus'
In case you weren’t aware, tattoo artist and TV personality from "LA Ink" Kat Von D has had a spiritual awakening — one that has resulted in her renouncing all paganism and embracing evangelical Christianity.
Recently, she joined Allie Beth Stuckey on "Relatable" to tell the story behind her radical transformation.
While this may surprise many, Von D was “born in a literal third world country” to “missionary Christians,” and yet that time “was one of the most abundant times” in her life, she says.
However, despite being raised “with God in [her] household” and reading "the Bible twice” in her early teens, Von D “ended up straying.”
“I ended up being a pretty wild teenager and leaving home at the age of 14 ... and putting my parents through a literal hell,” she told Allie.
After being sent to what she calls “a lockdown facility” and “boarding school” around age 16, Von D started drinking to cope with the trauma, which she says was “the beginning of [her] addiction.”
By age 21, Von D, who was already starring in "Miami Ink," had become “a full-blown alcoholic” and was “introduced to drugs.”
After years of struggling with addiction, she eventually got clean and started “wanting to fix" herself, which led to the discovery of “New Age stuff.” However, she was “never in a cult,” “never a witch,” and “definitely not a satanist,” despite what the rumors say.
“I was trying to find answers in the wrong places,” she said, and while “transcendental meditation,” seeking an obscure “higher power,” and reciting a “mantra” helped for a while, these practices were “short-lived Band-Aids on a sinking ship.”
Eventually, she threw away all her “self-help” books — everything from witchcraft books to texts on meditation and yoga.
“Breathing techniques,” “spell work,” and “nature worship ... they're just crutches; they're not really my answer,” Von D said. “I just want Jesus.”
To hear how Kat Von D came to renounce paganism in exchange for Jesus, watch the video below.
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Man conceived through rape EXPOSES Planned Parenthood's RACIST roots
Ryan and Bethany Bomberger co-founded the Radiance Foundation to fight to show the world the value and purpose of every life — but it has not been without resistance.
“I remember being told to my face in a debate at Harvard that basically, I should have been aborted,” Ryan tells Allie Beth Stuckey.
Ryan’s mother conceived him through rape, yet he was given a chance to live. “I am that fringe case. I’m the 1% that’s used 100% of the time to justify abortion, and I thank God for a courageous birth mom who not only gave me the gift of life but gave me the gift of adoption.”
Their fight to show mothers that there are options other than abortion took an interesting turn when the Radiance Foundation was sued by the NAACP.
The foundation was the first organization to launch public ad campaigns targeting the disproportionate impact of abortion in the black community. The campaigns featured 60 billboards across San Francisco that read “Black and Beautiful. TooManyAborted.com.”
The ad campaign was not only meant to illuminate just how tragic abortion has been for the black community but to call out Planned Parenthood’s eugenic past and unaltered and elitist DNA.
“We were just bashed,” Ryan tells Stuckey. “We were denounced by a group that I grew up revering: NAACP. They called our campaign horribly racist and that it gave the false impression that Planned Parenthood kills black babies.”
“That was the first moment when I realized civil rights had gone wrong,” he adds.
This is when Ryan decided to write an article titled “The National Association for the Abortion of Colored People” — and when the NAACP decided to sue.
Ryan “never thought it would even go to court, because hello, brown guy exercising, you know, civil rights, free speech.”
However, what’s obvious to Ryan and Bethany isn’t so obvious to everyone else — especially other activists.
“I mean, they say on one hand ‘Black Lives Matter,’ but then they are standing in solidarity with the leading killer of black lives,” Ryan says, adding, “We’ve been calling that out for years. We’ve been extolling the truth that black lives matter, that every single life created in the image of God — which is all of us — matters.”
Not only do these activists seem unaware of the blatant hypocrisy that is essentially the foundation of their ideology, but the very foundation of Planned Parenthood has extremely racist roots.
“Let’s look at the history of Planned Parenthood, let’s look at the history of Margaret Sanger. Let’s look at how specifically anti-black eugenics was tied into the very foundation, the very fabric of Planned Parenthood,” Stuckey says.
While Margaret Sanger was an admitted white supremacist, Ryan notes that Planned Parenthood has gotten worse than it was when it was run by her.
“It’s interesting,” he adds, “because you hear people make the argument, ‘Well, Planned Parenthood’s not the same today as it was during Margaret Sanger’s days.’ And I’m like, actually it wasn’t as evil. It wasn’t quite as evil. It’s worse now because they’re actually killing millions of human beings.”
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Trans man discloses the HORRIFYING reality of gender transition surgery: 'I've lost absolutely everything'
Scott Newgent is a 47-year-old transgender man and the founder of TReVoices, where she is an outspoken advocate against child transgender “treatments.”
Newgent found herself in a vulnerable position when her Catholic wife began to joke that Newgent was a man born in a woman’s body, and the two decided to see a transgender therapist.
“I started to think, wow, what would my life have been like if I was born a male?” Newgent tells Allie Beth Stuckey.
But she wasn’t born a male, and now children who are much more vulnerable than she was are being affected.
“42% of these boys would grow up to be, you know, homosexual males or same-sex attracted,” she tells Stuckey.
“We have a society that thinks that transgenderism and homosexuality are the same thing.”
“There’s no study that says it’s beneficial for these kids. There’s seven studies that came out and said they were beneficial — all been retracted or modified,” Newgent explains.
However, Newgent wasn’t privy to all the information she has now and chose to begin medically transitioning just weeks after she met with the transgender therapist.
Now it’s left her with health complications.
“It was wow, I wonder if I was born in the wrong body. Next week, therapist. Next week, hormones. Next week, appointment for the plastic surgeon for the top surgery. Four weeks later I had my first surgery,” she tells Stuckey.
In the eight years since she began her medical transition at age 42, she’s had seven surgeries.
“I’ve had a pulmonary embolism, I’ve had a stress-induced heart attack, I have had a reoccurring infection, I mean, to the end I had an IV sick tube or picc tube or whatever in my heart,” she explains, but that’s not all she’s suffered.
“I have a handicapped arm for life, I had a ligament protruding through it, I’ve had sepsis, I’ve lost my house, my car, my home. Everything, I’ve lost absolutely everything.”
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The left has been coming for your children for nearly a century
Although the phrase “we’re coming for your children” went viral during this year’s Pride Month, the concept is not new.
In fact, Liz Wheeler, author of “Hide Your Children: Exposing the Marxists Behind the Attack on America's Kids,” says that “the left has been trying to re-engineer our society” for a very long time – “nearly a century.”
“Unfortunately, they’ve been quite successful,” she tells Allie Beth Stuckey.
“They have captured … four out of the five major foundational cultural institutions,” including the media, the education system, several religious institutions, the law, “and they’ve just about destroyed the nuclear family as well,” Liz laments.
“There is one element of the nuclear family left standing, [and] that's children,” she says, “which probably explains why the left has set their target on our children.”
“Why the children?” asks Allie.
“Communists and marxists have focused on trying to destroy the nuclear family for a long time” because “the nuclear family has always been the bulwark against evil; it's always been the institution around which society was properly engineered,” Liz explains.
In order to deconstruct the nuclear family, each pillar must fall – those pillars being man, woman, marriage, sex, and children.
When you consider how the left has villainized masculinity, fanned the flames of toxic feminism, succeeded in radically decreasing marriage rates, encouraged recreational sex, and is now indoctrinating children, you can clearly see the calculated attack on the nuclear family.
“Marxists understand that if they can radically alienate children from parents, if they can destroy parental rights, if they can cause children to willingly turn against their parents, then what is the purpose of a nuclear family?” asks Liz.
So how do we stop this? How do we protect our kids from a society that seeks to destroy them?
Although many look to conservative leaders to fix this issue, Liz says the answer is not to be found in the Republican Party. To hear her full analysis, watch the video below.
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Rape cover-ups, missing people, and forced abortions: The dark truth of Scientology
For those who don’t know what exactly Scientology is, you’re not alone. When you break it down, you’ll find that it’s an incredibly complex system. Part religion, part business, part cult, Scientology was invented by a man named L. Ron Hubbard in 1954.
The origins of the religious movement are quite shady as well. Before the Church of Scientology was founded, Hubbard first developed a set of therapeutic principles he called Dianetics, but the organization he created to promote these ideas went bankrupt. Many believe that Hubbard then founded the Church of Scientology as a way to recharacterize Dianetics as a religion in order to avoid paying taxes. From the get-go, Scientology was intended to be a lucrative endeavor.
But where there is worship of money, there, too, you find darkness and depravity. Allie Beth Stuckey invites Jeremiah Roberts and Andrew Soncrant, hosts of the podcast "Cultish," to the show to “peel back the layers” of Scientology and evaluate what’s really going on beneath the surface.
“Around 1967 after L. Ron Hubbard had established the Church of Scientology, the IRS … revoked its tax-exempt status” after it became clear that Hubbard “wanted to utilize a religion as a way to obtain wealth.”
This sparked a cycle of revenge that involved “5,000 members of the Church of Scientology … actively involved on multiple different fronts in the government, not just the Internal Revenue Service ... trying to obtain documents, trying to forge documents” in order to “get their tax-exempt status back.”
“It’s a pretty wild story of infiltration,” says Roberts.
To hear the bizarre story of how a cult amalgamated with the federal government and resulted in kidnappings, forced abortions, and rape cover-ups, among other horrors, watch the video below.
Want more from Allie Beth Stuckey?
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LGBTQ activists are attempting to redefine infertility so that same-sex couples get medical coverage for surrogacy and IVF
They’ve already deconstructed gender, villainized motherhood, and made up some fun new pronouns, so why not go ahead and add “redefine infertility” to the list?
Allie Beth Stuckey and guest Katy Faust, founder and director of Them Before Us, discuss exactly what the Alphabet Mafia is doing to undermine and redefine infertility.
“California and other blue states are trying to redefine infertility to include gay couples that cannot have a child biologically so that insurance companies would then be forced to cover things like surrogacy for two men who want a child,” says Allie.
“The medical definition of infertility is unprotected heterosexual sex for 12 months that doesn't result in a pregnancy or live birth,” Katy explains, “and now what they're saying is … no matter how much unprotected sex the same-sex couple has, they are never going to be able to produce a child” and “what biology cannot accomplish, the law needs to provide.”
The indisputable truth is that same-sex couples “will never medically be able to be diagnosed as infertile because they're not participating in the activity that would lead doctors to conclude that infertility is the problem, and yet they want the same kind of access, and they want the same insurance coverage,” Katy tells Allie.
According to the feelings > logic state of California, “it's discriminatory for heterosexual couples to be able to be designated as infertile and then receive coverage from their insurance companies,” so in the name of DEI, they intend to “redefine what infertility means.”
“So now the California bill and similar other bills across the country are seeking to define infertility as not a medical status but really a relational status,” says Katy, so people can be deemed infertile because of “the relationship [they’re in] or…because [they’re] not in a relationship at all.”
“What are some of the repercussions of green-lighting a bill like this?” asks Allie.
“The California bill specifically said insurance companies can't discontinue services and there is in essence unlimited supply of IVF transfers,” says Katy, “and we already have a situation in this country where we've got one million frozen embryos in storage right now, and oftentimes the only thing that keeps that in check is cost.”
However, with “insurance funded IVF transfers … why limit the number of embryos that you're going to create?”
“It is only going to increase the amount of children who are suffering indefinitely in a freezer or who are going to perish in the gauntlet that children have to undergo between freezer and implantation and then ultimately birth,” says Katy.
Further, “it is going to massively increase the number of children that are screened for sex or for … potential genetic markers that don't seem as desirable to the adults; in essence, it is going to contribute to the increased commodification of children where they are thawed and discarded, donated to research, or spend their life forever in a freezer,” she explains.
To hear their full conversation, watch the video below.
Want more from Allie Beth Stuckey?
To enjoy more of Allie’s upbeat and in-depth coverage of culture, news, and theology from a Christian, conservative perspective, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.