THE NFL STRIKES A DEAL WITH LUCIFERIAN MUSIC STAR JAY-Z USING THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE TO PROMOTE SOCIAL JUSTICE PROGRAM ‘INSPIRE CHANGE’ by Geoffrey Grider for Now The End Begins
“I’m black. That’s my world,” Jay-Z said at his offices in Manhattan. If he didn’t do business with wealthy business interests who he may disagree with politically, he added, “then I couldn’t have any TV shows. I couldn’t put my platform on TV because I’m sure someone who owns the broadcast network has supported someone who I don’t believe should be in office.” “I can’t control, no one can control the world that we live in currently and people’s choice to vote self interests,” the hip-hop icon added, referring to “very, very rich people.”
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell championed Jay-Z’s ability to connect with younger fans that the league needs to both secure its future audience and make a broader cultural impact.
About 12 years ago, I started noticing that one of the songs that the NFL on its Monday Night football program started playing was AC/DC’s ‘Highway To Hell‘, needless to say I switched channels or left the room when that was happening. Flash-forward to 2019, and we have the NFL announcing its new social justice program ‘Inspire Change‘, and they have partnered with Luciferian hip-hop mogul Jay-Z to bring it about. I wonder, is this a good thing or a bad thing, hmm? 🤔 Let’s take a look and see if we can figure it out.
“Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.” John 8:44 (KJV)
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When we first reported on Jay-Z back in 2013, we showed you him wearing a shirt that read ‘Do What Thou Wilt‘, the official motto of satanist Aleister Crowley. In that article we also showed you how his iconic apparel line, Rocawear, was shot through with OTO imagery such as the ‘all seeing eye’ in a triangle, the ‘eye of Horus’ (an ancient Egyptian symbol frequently referenced in occult texts) and the head of Baphomet (the horned, androgynous idol of Western occultism). More recently, in our article on Hollywood, the music industry and satanism, we showed you the tremendous push to normalize satanism through music and movies that is happening right now.
What an incredible paradigm shift this is from the the NFL of the 1970’s where the cameras would show someone holding a John 3:16 sign up after nearly every point. Something that would, in 1990, help lead me to the foot of the cross and find salvation in Jesus Christ. No John 3:16 signs in the 21st century NFL, now we have Jay-Z and his wife Beyonce who admits to demon possession while performing on stage.
NFL Taps Jay-Z for Social-Justice Issues—and Entertainment Offerings
FROM THE WSJ: The NFL has struck a broad alliance with Jay-Z in which the rapper will both help the league with one of its thorniest problems—smoothing out continuing tensions with players over social-justice issues—and expand the NFL’s entertainment offerings, including the Super Bowl halftime show and other creative projects.
The NFL and Roc Nation, the entertainment company founded by Jay-Z, have launched a partnership in which Jay Z will take a prominent role in a social-justice program the league launched last year at a time when it was still roiled by controversy over player protests during the national anthem started by Colin Kaepernick.
The parties said Roc Nation will also expand and play an integral role in the NFL’s entertainment operations—not just the halftime show, but also the production and distribution of other new football-related content together on streaming services. That could include original music, in addition to podcasts for players to voice their opinions on social and cultural issues that are important to them. Front Office Sport first reported an NFL-Roc Nation partnership.
Inspire Change’s stated goals are promoting education and economic advancement, improving police and community relations, and enacting criminal-justice reform. The initiative was started in partnership with the Players Coalition, which was founded by a group of players seeking to enact social reform, and has supported charities and causes across the country. Patriots owner Robert Kraft was among the key figures in bringing the partnership with Roc Nation together.