Teenage brothers expose life growing up in a polygamous family
Lifestyle by Claire Hubble, The Sun 21st Jan 2021 8:26 AM A teenager and his two brothers have revealed what it s like to live in a family of 150, while their dad has a staggering 27 wives. Merlin Blackmore, 19, comes from Canada s largest polygamist family and has spoken out about his unusual upbringing on TikTok. Merlin and his two brothers, Murray, also 19, and Warren 21, are the sons of 64-year-old Winston Blackmore, leader of the giant Mormon family in the town of Bountiful, British Columbia, Merlin Blackmore, 19, has spoken out about what it was like to grow up in a polymerous cult with 27 mums and 150 siblings. Picture: TikTok/merlins.life
The coastal town of Marblehead, in Essex County, Massachusetts, is a charming and historical seaside hamlet of rustic old buildings and quaint little streets that dates back to the days of the pilgrims from the Mayflower, who established a tiny fishing settlement here in 1626. Originally the land itself had long been inhabited by the Naumkeag tribe of the Pawtucket confederation. With a long tradition of fishing and the sailors of Marblehead credited with being the forerunners of the United States Navy, it had gone on in present times to be a mecca for boating, sailing, and kayaking, drawing in people from all over the world. Yet beyond its calm and peaceful coastal atmosphere and idyllic historical buildings there are strange tales of mystique and magic tied to this place, as Marblehead was once supposedly home to a very powerful wizard who held the area’s people in the grip of both awe and fear.
An NBC analyst and
On Tuesday, amid a conversation with guest Nikole Hannah-Jones,
WaPo man Eugene Robinson asked how “we start [the] process.”
The procedure involves a sort of mad religious group.
Here’s how Eugene characterized the work cut out for the country:
“We have, there are millions of Americans almost all white, almost all Republicans who somehow need to be deprogrammed.”
.@nhannahjones: The “white labor force” votes “against their own economic interests because it means they are still above … Muslims, Latinos and black Americans” pic.twitter.com/ck1KpzWLp2
That’s a tall order according to
The New York Times, 74 million people voted for the incumbent.