Sexual abuse of little children is one of most vile, disgusting violations one person can commit against another.

A close second is falsely accusing someone of child sexual abuse for financial gain.

Not only does this kind of false accuser abuse the very concept of “victimhood” by turning it upside down and abusing/victimizing others in a horrible way, they also make a mockery of actual abuse victims who have truly and terribly suffered.

What could be more selfish, twisted, and evil than that?

Worse yet, these abusers know full well that their false accusations are literally deadly – those falsely accused of child sexual abuse often commit suicide if the accusation “sticks” at all.

Since these false accusations are often used in the court system, they sometimes result in the incarceration of their targets. Once incarcerated, those labeled falsely as “child sex abusers” are so poorly viewed by even the prison/jail population as to often be informally sentenced to death by fellow inmates.

This is how deadly serious false accusations of child sexual abuse can be.

We all know this.

We all inherently know that lying about something as vile as child sexual abuse for any reason at all is pure evil. So what then when the lie is spun for the sake of personal financial gain?

Or to build a “ministry”?

Yet these are just the kinds of false claims that were made by two sisters who decided to blow up their marriages at the same time, with both of them leaning hard into false accusations of child sex abuse as a way to pervert justice, destroy their husbands, and rake in serious financial benefits in the process.

As if the story isn’t already bizarre enough, these sisters, Holly Buss and Chelsea Monroe, had their false accusations amplified and promoted by supposedly conservative, Bible-believing Reformed Presbyterian churches and “ministries”.

What the hell is going on here?

Which “Reformed Presbyterian” leaders are trampling truth, mocking Christ, and playing as if they’re little gods while destroying families and cranking out the next generation of Woke disciples to populate and promote their “ministries”?

And why are rank and file “Reformed Presbyterians” eager to fund their efforts?

We’re going to find out.

This video dives into that story and asks some important questions along the way:

Why are those who abuse justice in such a serious way often rewarded and almost never punished for these deadly serious abuses?

Why do some “abuse victim advocate” groups actually promote and encourage false claims of abuse?

Why are many of the worst offenders marketed as “Christian ministries”?

Why do Reformed Presbyterians seem to be particularly into this approach?

If we keep a registry of sex abusers, shouldn’t we also have a registry of those who have been found to make false claims of child sex abuse?

And what about organizations found to promote the use of such claims?

Shouldn’t they be registered and exposed, too?

These are some of the subjects covered in the first video release at Red Pill Christian.

The basic idea behind Red Pill Christian (RPC) is to promote engagement on what’s become known as “red pill” topics, but from a Christian perspective.

Sadly, I have been provided with a most excellent reference point to launch this effort a little early and with a lot less polish than originally planned.

While the goal is to use RPC as a tool to focus on all sorts of “red pill” topics, and I had planned to begin the channel with a rollout of a new podcast at the end of the month, a providentially cool (yet painful) curveball came in the form of a 2+ hour video interview that dropped about a week ago. This interview encapsulated so much of the worst of what Woke “Reformed Presbyterian” leaders are creating, promoting, and even funding, that I had to take the time to do a real-time, live recording of a first reaction and commentary on the whole thing.

When I started, I knew it would be important, but I wondered if it would just be a dud. By the time I finished, I realized that there was much more valuable info to cover and explore than I had imagined possible before going in.

The video is incredibly long, but the first 20 minutes will give a clear sense of things for those who don’t have hours to invest.

Here’s a link: