You would have thought Mark Grenon of the Genesis II Chuch of Health and Healing was a trustworthy guy.
Does this look like the face of liar to you?
Like the guys who pay girls to deplete their bank account to get off.

Or people who’s finances are tied up in Bored Apes.
Or million dollar bettors who pay $100,000 for Stu Feiner’s CFB Season Pass.
None of it makes sense.

How do these people walk around every day.
Maybe I’m the sucker for not taking advantage of these people.
I have a small following now.

There has to be a rich moron or two amongst my 40k Twitter followers.
Maybe I should be selling my picks.
I could cook up a miracle potion out of tea leaves.

Claim that it increases your brain power, sex drive, and makes you have good tweets.
But I shouldn’t victim shame the people who purchased this miracle bleach.
I don’t want to shame them.
The Bored Ape people though…
I’m trying to decide how much this Mark Grenon character knew what he was doing.
We can’t entirely rule out the possibility that he’s equally as dumb as his followers.
There’s a non-zero chance that Mark truly believed drinking bleach was a legitimate method of killing disease.
Maybe he thought he was a real life scientist on the verge of saving humanity.
It’s either that or he’s just pure evil.
He at least could have put some good drugs in there along with the death juice.
Perhaps a dollop of heroin or something that they could make his follower’s slow death slightly more enjoyable.
I did take a gander at the Genesis II Church of Health and Healing Facebook page.
There was a major red flag.
The church appears to have relied heavily on memes.
you’re free to never trust a church that memes.
Especially churches that use vaguely threatening “God wants you to keep your mouth shut” memes.
Ask anybody who’s survived a cult.
Or anybody who’s dabbled in the Catholic church.
If you’re being told to keep quiet, something bad is happening.
So I’m pretty this guy was pure evil.
Despite his very convincing posts.