$700,000 for a House… But Broke in Court?
September 10, 2025
Hidden in Plain Sight: Mark’s Conscious Manipulation
September 12, 2025
$700,000 for a House… But Broke in Court?
September 10, 2025
Hidden in Plain Sight: Mark’s Conscious Manipulation
September 12, 2025

Grammar, God, and $700,000 Worth of Weird

Mark dropped another word salad on Facebook yesterday, and it deserves a closer look. Here it is in its raw, unedited form:

“Mines not even finished lol been 19 months now and thinks she is remarried lol this is why she snapped up someone just as weird as her very sad because she does not work and never has had to pay for anything and wants me to walk away from my home I put over 700 thousand dollars into and we are legally still married lol . #receipts #notfinished #goodluck #TruthWins #jezebelspirit #Pretendingtobechristian The law @everyone”

Where do we even begin?


The Grammar Graveyard

  • “Mines” → Are we talking about gold mines? Coal mines? The Navy? No, Mark. You meant “Mine’s” (short for mine is). God may know your heart, but He’s also probably cringing at your apostrophe abuse.
  • Run-ons → The entire thing is one giant sentence, with “lol” sprinkled in as punctuation. “lol” does not replace a period, no matter how many times you repeat it.
  • Math Fail → “700 thousand dollars.” Sir, if you really put $700,000 into a house you don’t even own, maybe spell it correctly? Remember—this was the same time you claimed you were destitute in child support hearings, refused to share banking information, were held in contempt for failure to pay, and refused to help with your kids’ medical and dental costs.

Mark always says, “God doesn’t care about my spelling or grammar. He knows my heart.” Sure. But the rest of us aren’t blessed with divine telepathy. We only see your Facebook posts—and they read like a ransom note without punctuation.


The Hashtag Hustle

Mark ends his ramble with a flurry of hashtags: #receipts #notfinished #goodluck #TruthWins #jezebelspirit #Pretendingtobechristian.

Let’s unpack that:

  • #receipts → The only receipts we’ve ever seen are court orders showing you in contempt.
  • #notfinished → True. Because you stalled it.
  • #goodluck → What every doctor has said after dealing with your “alternative truths.”
  • #TruthWins → Not when the record shows lies, evasion, and contempt rulings.
  • #jezebelspirit #Pretendingtobechristian → Religious slurs used to smear your ex and distract from your failures.

Mark doesn’t bring receipts. He brings hashtags—cheap substitutes for accountability.


The “Weird” Argument

Mark calls his ex-wife and her partner “weird.” That’s the best he’s got.

This from the man who:

  • Wore a stolen baseball cap at a kids’ game.
  • Laughed while his “guest” screamed profanities at Nathan’s basketball tournament.
  • Forced his own son to sign a fake medical “contract”.

If that’s not weird, what is?


And then there’s this gem. Mark staring into the camera like he’s trying to read a teleprompter written in hieroglyphics. His eyes look downright wonky, darting in different directions as if they’re struggling to keep up with all the lies, contradictions, and hashtags he’s juggling at once.

It’s like his pupils are playing pickleball against each other—one chasing the “$700,000 house” narrative, the other chasing the “destitute in court” defense. No wonder he looks exhausted. Even his own eyeballs can’t follow his storylines anymore.


The Satirical FAQ

Q: Why didn’t Mark finish the divorce and recoup his $700,000 investment?
A: Because once the papers are signed, the fantasy collapses. Court requires receipts, not hashtags. If he really had $700k in the house, he could prove it with documentation. If he doesn’t, then he’s just spinning another tale. Stalling lets him keep playing the victim without ever producing evidence.

Q: But isn’t he legally still married?
A: Only because he drags it out. Being “legally married” isn’t a flex, Mark—it’s proof you haven’t closed the chapter you rant about daily.

Q: Why does he call his ex and her new partner weird?
A: Projection. It’s easier to throw the word “weird” around than to face his own bizarre track record.


Closing Thought

Mark wants us to believe he’s a man of truth, accountability, and seven-hundred-thousand-dollar investments. What we actually see is a man who hides behind hashtags, holy buzzwords, and broken grammar, calling everyone else “weird” while his own contradictions pile higher than his pickleball paddle collection.

God may know his heart. The rest of us just know his posts.