Why Can't They See Who Donald Trump Is? The Antichrist Schema

Why Can't They See Who Donald Trump Is? The Antichrist Schema

Guaranteed, people are being saved by witnessing who Trump truly is. That's a good thing, more people in the Kingdom, some saved through fear. Pre - conceieved ideas about who the antichrist is or what you have been taught repeatedly will only serve to confuse you when he arrives and is in your face on a daily basis. Right in front of the world but they cannot discern good from evil. The depth of what this man is and does is 10000% more than any man who may fit the picture of THE antichrist. I didn't mean his aunt labels him a Narc, I meant his niece. Read what a schema is below Schema (psychology, in short): A schema is a mental framework your brain uses to organize information and predict how the world works. It’s like a shortcut map for understanding people, situations, or ideas. How schemas develop Formed through experience, repetition, culture, and teaching Built early, then reinforced every time something fits the pattern Help the brain work faster and with less effort Why schemas are hard to break The brain prefers efficiency and certainty We notice information that confirms the schema and ignore or explain away evidence that doesn’t (confirmation bias) Changing a schema takes mental effort, emotional safety, and repeated contradictory experiences Why evidence alone often isn’t enough New evidence may feel threatening or confusing People may reinterpret evidence to fit the existing schema Strong schemas are often tied to identity or emotion, not just facts Bottom line: Schemas help us function efficiently—but once formed, they resist change because the brain values consistency over accuracy. do some example like horses vs pony and so forth, seeing who you thought was good but they are bad Here are compact, clear examples that show how schemas work and why they’re hard to break: 1. Horses vs. ponies (size schema) Schema formed: “Horses are big; ponies are small.” Problem: Some ponies are larger than small horses. Why it sticks: When you see a large pony, your brain still labels it “horse” because size is the shortcut you learned first. 2. “Good person” → later turns out harmful (character schema) Schema formed: “They’re kind, helpful, trustworthy.” Contradictory evidence: They lie, manipulate, or hurt others. Why it sticks: The brain explains it away (“They were stressed,” “That’s not the real them”) because changing the schema means admitting you were wrong—and possibly unsafe. 3. Dogs are friendly (experience schema) Schema formed: All dogs you met were gentle. Contradictory evidence: One dog bites. Why it sticks: You label it an “exception” instead of updating the whole schema. 4. Authority = safe (social schema) Schema formed: Teachers, leaders, or professionals protect people. Contradictory evidence: One abuses power. Why it sticks: Admitting authority can be harmful threatens a deep sense of order and safety. 5. Smart people don’t make bad choices (trait schema) Schema formed: Intelligence = good judgment. Contradictory evidence: A smart person behaves recklessly or cruelly. Why it sticks: The brain separates traits (“They’re smart, just flawed”) instead of revising the whole picture. Key takeaway: When evidence conflicts with a schema, the brain usually relabels the evidence, not the schema—because changing the schema costs more mentally and emotionally. Prayers - [email protected] please let me know if you don't want your name read, not the last name. I read everyone's name for now on unless specified. #theantichrist #worthlesssheppard #sonofperdition #DonaldTrump