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Sign of the Cross @LSNCatholic - Pray for the repose of the soul of Thomas Nelson, founder of Tan Books.
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TAN Books @TANBooks
Dear Friends of TAN,
It is with deep sorrow that I share the news of the passing of Thomas A. Nelson, the founder of TAN Books.
TAN Books began humbly. Out of the trunk of his car, Thomas sold his very first title, The Secret of the Rosary—a book that, to this day, remains one of TAN’s bestsellers. From that single volume grew a publishing house dedicated to defending the Faith and handing on the traditions of the Church. Under his leadership, TAN became known for reprinting the classics of Catholic spirituality, defending the traditional liturgy, preserving the Douay-Rheims Bible, and restoring to circulation countless works of the saints that might otherwise have been lost.
My family and I were honored to take up the mantle of TAN in 2008. Over the years, my admiration for Thomas has only grown, as I have come to recognize more fully the courage and foresight he had in preserving the treasures of Catholic tradition.
Tom received the Last Sacraments and the Apostolic Pardon, and he died wearing the Brown Scapular and the Miraculous Medal. During his incapacitation, he had often been consoled by an image of Our Mother of Good Counsel by Sarullo. Please join me in praying for the repose of the soul of Thomas A. Nelson.
In Christ,
Conor Gallagher
CEO, TAN Books
https://x.com/LSNCatholic/status/1957903214466200041

Simon Ateba @simonateba - Although Donald John Trump often tries to deceive the masses with many words, the reason he was found liable for fraud in New York was because, as Letitia James told the court, when Trump went to the bank to seek loans, he would inflate the value of his “assets.” But when it came time to pay taxes, he would deflate the value of those same “assets.” That’s why the court called it fraud and ordered him to pay back millions of dollars.
Of course, the state would probably never have looked so closely at his books if politics were not involved. But the bigger issue is this: things like the plane, Mar-a-Lago, and other properties are listed as “assets.” In reality, they are liabilities. An asset puts money into your pocket; a liability takes money out—at least according to @theRealKiyosaki, author of Rich Dad, Poor Dad.
In other words, the “value” of anything the banker asks you to list as an asset is abstract. It’s just someone’s opinion, based on unstable factors. A house, a plane, even expensive watches—they look like assets, but in reality they’re liabilities. They constantly drain money instead of producing it.
And here’s the irony: loans themselves are based on this so-called “value,” which is subjective and, in many ways, meaningless. But because most people lack financial literacy, they’re tricked into believing liabilities are assets—simply because the banker tells them so.
https://x.com/simonateba/status/1957773201179832490
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