“Nathan Reynolds”

For at least 7 years now, a person who calls himself “Nathan Reynolds” has been on the internet, telling people that he is descended from ancient Nephilim. According to the Bible, the Nephilim were completely wiped out by the flood but never mind that. “Nathan” claims that his entire ancestry are descendants of the Nephilim, and a lot of very well-meaning people believe him.

I first discovered “Nathan” a few months ago, and I didn’t know what to think of him. His story is wild, but he is a great storyteller and his seeming enthusiasm for Christ is compelling. He often appears with his wife “Chelsea.” They both come across as very wholesome and immensely likeable. So much so, that the idea that their whole story might be a total lie is beyond horrifying.

But it seems that their whole story is a total lie, with a fascinating twist: “Nathan and Chelsea” are not your run of the mill con artists. “Nathan Reynolds” bears a striking resemblance to David Rothschild. And “Chelsea” looks exactly like David Rothschild’s wife. Which makes a horrifying lie even far more horrifying: Nathan and Chelsea are not your run of the mill grifters. They aren’t telling a tall tale to make a few badly needed dollars: they don’t need the money. They are doing this just for the fun of it.

As if anybody needed more proof the Rothschilds are evil. I have to hand it to both of them, though: they are superb actors. When I look at them, I don’t know whether to laugh or scream. How can people be so wicked?

17 thoughts on ““Nathan Reynolds”

  1. I don’t understand how people who have never worked an honest day in their lives and know nothing at all about anything become influencers. Especially in contradiction to the fact that I possess the low density-no demand skill sets much needed right now by the American public yet go begging for attention only to give them a free plan and get back to the back nine.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. 1st miracle was both getting on our blog and being able to comment.

        It’s like 1% of the time it seems. I just get frustrated and quit for days if not weeks.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. I believe it was Nietzsche who said people who don’t believe in God will believe anything. We are living through the proof that he knew what he was talking about more often than not.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The thing is, “Nathan and Chelsea” come across as both likeable and sympathetic. They both present themselves as victims of extreme trauma, especially “Nathan.” They play on the compassion of their audience. It really is very wicked stuff.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. You are just making my point in your words.

        In my words: The majority of people will always choose to be lied to and manipulated over listening to the truth.

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Thing is, there are people who really are born into Satanic, abusive families, and they have a hard time getting people to believe what has happened to them. So, when a couple of Rothschild con artists come along and make up a huge story about it, they are doing severe harm to real victims.

      The people who are falling for this are in many cases people who genuinely want to help real survivors of abuse. smh.

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