Poor Mark and the Weaponized Meme Machine
July 21, 2025
He Doesn’t Let Go. He Rebrands.
July 23, 2025
Poor Mark and the Weaponized Meme Machine
July 21, 2025
He Doesn’t Let Go. He Rebrands.
July 23, 2025

Preaching Repentance, Practicing Deflection: Mark’s Gospel of Everyone Else

"Mark preaching repentance... but somehow the pulpit always faces outward."

Mark Anthony Stephens loves to post about repentance. His latest offering—“If the gospel you preach doesn’t include repentance, you preach a false gospel!”—is classic Mark: a moralizing statement aimed squarely at everyone but himself.

For anyone unfamiliar, this blog is intentionally documentary in nature. If it feels repetitive at times, that’s because Mark himself is repetitive. His social media cycle is predictable: post lofty, sanctimonious statements calling others to repentance, all while evading any meaningful reflection on his own behaviors. The posts write the blog—and Mark’s content guarantees we keep circling the same themes.

So, here we are again.
Mark preaches repentance loudly, yet his life and documented actions show no evidence of it:

  • Repentance would look like accountability for his child’s medical crisis.
    Instead, Mark undermined Liam’s doctors at Kartini Clinic, claiming they invented ARFID to boost profits—a disorder clearly recognized by psychiatric medicine since 2013. When confronted with his son’s severe malnutrition and growth arrest, Mark doubled down on pseudoscience and control rather than accept that his choices were harming his child.
  • Repentance would look like honesty and integrity.
    Instead, Mark was caught wearing a team baseball cap he never earned or paid for—a hat that belonged to a crying child—and spun multiple stories when asked how he got it
  • Repentance would look like creating peace at public events for his son.
    Instead, Mark brought a friend to a kids’ basketball tournament who shouted profanities and political slurs at families and coaches. Rather than intervene, Mark laughed and filmed the disruption on his phone

And then there’s this inconvenient fact:
Mark currently has four Restraining/No Contact Orders against him—though, to be precise, one has aged out of enforcement now that his oldest son turned 18.

It’s as if Mark has been lurking like a vampire, waiting in the darkness until enough time passes and his victim is no longer protected by the light of the court’s order.

But don’t expect Mark to acknowledge any wrongdoing that led to these orders either.
In classic Mark fashion, it’s all brushed aside: “It’s ALL LIES, I tell you!”—delivered with that condescending certainty he reserves for anything that challenges his carefully curated narrative.

Mark’s pattern is as consistent as it is tired:
👉 Demand repentance from others.
👉 Project a posture of righteousness online.
👉 Refuse to take personal responsibility in his actual life.

If this blog feels like it’s returning to familiar ground, it’s because Mark himself is caught in this loop. He writes his own indictment every time he posts. We’re just documenting it.