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Sunday, February 8, 2026

Wolves In Sheep's Clothing




Trey Knowles’ “Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing” is a short comedy that calls out the so-called stumbling blockers—the people who trip others on purpose, then charge them for falling.

They don’t teach truth. Truth doesn’t pay enough. Instead, they lead people down the wrong road, set up a toll booth halfway through, and collect money every time someone stumbles. To them, power and profit beat morals every time. These wolves dress like helpers, smile like teachers, and talk like they care—while quietly stacking wealth and passing laws so confusing that if you don’t have money, you’ll need their money just to survive. The more you fail, the more you pay. It’s a subscription plan for misery. They flood books, screens, and airwaves with darkness, then call it “freedom.” When people act out that darkness, the wolves don’t correct it—they applaud it. “Be yourself,” they say, because your mistakes keep the justice and correction systems in business. Your downfall is their revenue stream. Trey Knowles exposes how these people ride on other people’s darkness. They vote for darkness, promote darkness, and profit from darkness—but never live in it themselves. The wolf knows the truth. He just doesn’t want you knowing it. Because if you stay lost, confused, and cursed, the wolves stay rich—and that’s the whole joke.