CN Morning Rundown: Massive Fireball Rips Across This State
Here’s a quick summary of the top stories on cn.mycharisma.com:
Massive Fireball Rips Across This State
An incredible fireball shot across the sky in North Carolina last week
“There were many reports of at least 5 fireballs seen over the United States last night,” NASA states. “The largest grouping of eyewitness accounts – over 80 – is associated with an event that occurred at 7:40 pm Eastern Daylight Time.
“An analysis of these accounts shows that the meteor skimmed the coast of North Carolina, becoming visible 48 miles above the ocean off Camp Lejeune, moving northeast at 32,000 miles per hour. It disintegrated 28 miles above Morehead City, after traveling 26 miles through Earth’s upper atmosphere.”
New York Governor Takes on Christ’s Position and Calls for Her Adherents to be Her Apostles
Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul, who took over for the ousted Andrew Cuomo as governor of New York in August, confidently but almost defiantly told a group gathered at the Christian Cultural Center in Brooklyn recently that many Americans are not listening to what God desires when it comes to the COVID-19 vaccine. She proceeded to call for those in attendance to become her apostles.
While many have not taken the shot for various reasons and are being persecuted and even fired from their jobs for refusing to accept the vaccine, Kochul blatantly says that “the vaccine is from God to us and we must say, ‘thank you God’ for it, while hinting that those who have not taken the shot are not “smart.”
“I say to the young people out there, God let you survive this pandemic because He wants you to do great things someday,” Hochul says. “He let you live through this when so many other people did not. But how do we keep more people alive? We are not through this pandemic. I wish we were.
Superstar Singer Convicted After Decades of Molesting Minors
Superstar singer R. Kelly (whose real name is Robert Sylvester Kelly), was found guilty Monday on all nine counts with which he was charged. Those included “racketeering and violations of the Mann Act, which prohibits the transport of ‘any woman or girl’ across state lines for any ‘immoral purpose.'”
Acting Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis said, “Today’s guilty verdict forever brands R. Kelley as a predator, who used his fame and fortune to prey on the young, the vulnerable and the voiceless for his own sexual gratification.”
Kelly, 54, came into stardom with his 1996 hit, “I Believe I Can Fly,” a cut that appeared on the Space Jam soundtrack. {eoa}
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