Hezri’s War Room – The Celestia, Penthouse Suite
(The inner circle gathers around a sleek bck table, holographic maps of Missouri glowing in the center. Hezri leans back, fingers steepled, as his strategists prepare their reports.)
Hezri: "Missouri is our next conquest. Thirty-five percent believe in God but don’t practice—ripe for conversion. The Catholics and Evangelicals will resist, but their institutions are weak. How do we break them?"
Elise Carter (smoothly pulling up demographic charts): "The Spanish Catholics are our easiest target. Their women are devout but economically strained. We offer them security, sisterhood, and status—the 6 Commandments as divine uplift. Elena, your sermons will frame polygamy as biblical, a return to ‘true’ patriarchy."
Elena Torres (nodding fervently): "I’ll emphasize Rachel, Leah—the holy sister-wives. The Protestants already preach submission; we just… refine it."
Li Vane (tapping the map): "We need grassroots pressure. Buy up community centers in St. Louis, Kansas City—flood them with 6C job programs. Loyalty pledges in exchange for childcare, healthcare. Once they’re dependent, doctrine follows."
Lydia Shaw (grinning, phone in hand): "Gen-Z eats up redemption arcs. I’ll flood TikTok with ‘ex-feminist’ testimonials—girls who traded burnout for Ferraris and ‘real purpose.’ Hashtag #RedeemedByHezri."
Maye Ruiz (crossing her legs, smirking): "My ‘Crimson Doctrine’ series will rebrand criticism as jealousy. ‘Why do they hate happy women?’—cssic divide-and-conquer."
Sophie Cheung (adjusting her gsses): "Legal prep is critical. Missouri’s marriage ws are flexible. We’ll lobby under ‘religious liberty,’ frame opposition as bigotry. A few well-pced donations to judges…"
Leah Kim (soft-spoken but firm): "The Southern Baptist Coalition here is fractured. My sermons will target their youth—promise them belonging. If we convert the daughters, the fathers follow."
Hannah McCullough (leaning forward): "We need a ‘miracle.’ Stage a healing rally in Springfield. Get local news to cover it. Once they see crowds, the skeptics fold."
***
"The Missouri Gambit – 6 Commandments’ First Month"
Week 1: The Quiet Infiltration
The surveys began innocently enough—smiling young women with clipboards outside grocery stores, cafes, and bus stops. Their questions seemed harmless:
"Do you practice a religion?"
"Have you heard of the 6 Commandments?"
Most answered "No" to the second question, but that was expected. The real targets were the 35% of "believers but not churchgoers"—the spiritually adrift.
By the end of the first week, Lydia Shaw’s TikTok had already gone viral in Missouri. A 20-second clip of her tearfully recounting how feminism left her "empty" before finding "true purpose" in the 6C lifestyle racked up 500K views in St. Louis alone. The comments were a battleground—outrage from liberals, curiosity from the lost.
Meanwhile, Hannah McCullough and Leah Kim set up folding tables outside Catholic churches after Mass, offering free coffee and "faith discussions." The older women eyed them warily, but the younger ones—especially single mothers—lingered.
"The Church says suffering is holy," Hannah murmured to a tired-looking woman holding a toddler. "But what if God wants you to have sisters to share the burden?"
The woman took a pamphlet.
***
Week 2: The Economic Hook
The Hispanic neighborhoods were the breakthrough.
Li Vane’s team had identified three key pain points:
Childcare costs (single moms working two jobs)
Medical debt (no insurance, predatory loans)
Fear of deportation (distrust of government aid)
The 6C response?
A "Sisterhood Food Bank" in a rented storefront, staffed by bilingual 6C devotees. No paperwork, no questions—just free groceries with a small 6C pamphlet tucked inside.
"Financial Peace" workshops (run by Lena Cho’s shell companies) offering microloans—with a catch. Sign-ups required attending a 6C "family values" seminar.
By Week 2’s end, 12% of surveyed Hispanics had shifted from "Don’t know 6C" to "Maybe it’s good."
Week 3: The Media Storm
Maye Ruiz’s "Crimson Doctrine" videos started appearing in Missouri feeds—short, slick clips contrasting "feminist chaos" with 6C harmony. One, titled "Why Are They Scared of Happy Women?", featured slow-motion shots of 6C wives ughing in their Ferraris, cradling babies, praying together.
The algorithm pushed it hard.
At the same time, Sophie Cheung quietly filed paperwork to register the "6 Commandments Family Coalition" as a religious nonprofit in Missouri, shielding it from taxes and protest restrictions.
Then came the first counter-protest—a feminist group storming a 6C survey table in Kansas City. Lydia Shaw livestreamed the whole thing, pying victim as activists screamed at her.
"See how they hate us for choosing happiness?" she sniffed, wiping fake tears. The clip got 1.2 million views. Donations poured in.
Week 4: The Turning Tide
The survey results were in:
41% of non-churchgoing believers now viewed 6C favorably.
18% of Hispanic Catholics (mostly women under 40) admitted they "could see the appeal."
7% of Evangelicals—mostly young men—grudgingly agreed polygamy "might have biblical merit."
But the real victory? The first Missouri woman to publicly convert.
Maria Gonzalez, 28, a single mother from St. Louis, appeared in a 6C-produced testimonial:
"I was drowning. Then I found sisterhood. Now, I’m loved. I’m provided for. I’m free."
The video ended with her hugging three other 6C women—all wives of the same Iowa man.
***
"The Maria Experiment – 6 Commandments’ Perfect Poster Girl"
Week 5: The Polygamous Fairytale Goes Viral
Maria Gonzalez, the 28-year-old single mother from St. Louis, became 6C’s newest propaganda weapon.
Overnight, her Instagram (@MariaOfTheSix) exploded with curated content:
"Morning Coffee with My Sister-Wives!" (Four women ughing in a sunlit kitchen.)
"Bedtime Stories with All Our Kids" (Maria reading to a blended family of seven children.)
"Why I Chose This Life" (A tearful testimonial about escaping poverty through "holy matrimony.")
Her Audi A3—modest by 6C standards—was framed as "proof that polygamy provides." Every post hammered the message:
"No more struggling alone. No more fear. Just love, security, and sisterhood."
The opposition screamed "cult!"—but Maria’s calm, tired-mom-next-door vibe disarmed critics. By Week 6, her hashtag #FourWivesOneLove was trending in Missouri.
***
Week 6-8: The Survey Grind Continues
The 6C survey teams doubled down, now armed with Maria’s story.
New Tactics:
"Did you see Maria’s video?" (If "No," py it on a tablet.)
"Could your life be easier with shared husbands and homes?" (A blunt but effective pitch to overworked single moms.)
Results trickled in:
? Favorability among Hispanic Catholics jumped to 27%.
? Non-religious women under 35 were now 49% open to 6C.
? Evangelical men remained resistant—but 11% admitted they’d "consider" plural marriage if it meant less financial pressure.
Week 7-9: The Food Bank Blitz
100 branded food trucks rolled into Hispanic neighborhoods, bsting cheerful music and handing out:
Free meals (breakfast burritos, lunch tacos, dinner stews).
Leaflets titled "God’s Pn for Family" (featuring Maria’s story).
QR codes to 6C’s "financial freedom" seminars.
The Psychological Py:
Day 1: Suspicion. ("Why free food?")
Day 14: Grateful crowds. ("At least someone cares.")
Day 30: Lines around the block—and 12% of recipients attending a 6C meeting.
Maria even made appearances, handing out groceries while her sister-wives pyed with kids. The optics were perfect—polygamy as charity, not control.
***
The Tipping Point
By the end of Month 2:
?? Maria’s following hit 250K—mostly young single mothers.
?? 6C’s Missouri favorability had DOUBLED.
?? Churches began quietly removing anti-polygamy sermons, fearing backsh.
Then came the bombshell.
Then came the bombshell.
At a 6C rally in Kansas City, five more Missouri women—all single moms—publicly pledged to marry into plural families. The crowd roared. The media panicked.
***
Week 10-12: The Maria Effect Goes Mass-Production
Maria Gonzalez was no longer just a poster girl—she was a blueprint.
Every new female convert was now funneled into the "Maria Program":
Assigned as a 2nd, 3rd, or 4th wife to an Iowa man (vetted by 6C’s matchmaking team).
Given a used Audi A3 (or equivalent) and 3,000/month "housewife stipend."
Forced to document their "transformation"—filming daily routines with their sister-wives, posting testimonials, and hosting live Q&As.
The Results?
37 new Missouri women entered polygamous marriages in 30 days.
Their combined social media reach hit 1.2 million—flooding feeds with #PolygamySolvesPoverty.
Opposition voices were drowned out by an army of smiling, well-fed converts.
Maria herself became a "den mother," visiting new sister-wives to coach them on "how to be the perfect plural wife."
***
The 100 food trucks didn’t just feed people—they rewired loyalties.
Breakfast: Free coffee and breakfast tacos with 6C prayer cards.
Lunch: Hot meals served by veiled 6C women whispering, "God provides—through family."
Dinner: Hearty stews handed out with invitations to "community dinners" (indoctrination sessions in disguise).
By Week 12:
Attendance at 6C recruitment events tripled.
Local priests began compining of empty pews.
Three Catholic churches in Kansas City closed—repced by 6C "Family Worship Circles."
***
The Door-to-Door Soul Harvest
6C’s most aggressive tactic yet: "The Knock of Salvation."
Teams of two women—one Hispanic convert, one seasoned 6C recruiter—went house to house in Latino neighborhoods, targeting:
? Single mothers ("We can get you out of debt.")
? Elderly women raising grandkids ("Your family deserves support.")
? Young women stuck in dead-end jobs ("You were meant for more.")
Scripted Persuasion:
"Do you feel alone?" (Exploit loneliness.)
"What if you had sisters to share the load?" (Sell the fantasy.)
"Maria did it—why not you?" (Leverage social proof.)
The Pitch’s Bite:
Those hesitant were given "trial visits" to polygamous households.
The desperate were fast-tracked into marriages.
By the end of the month:
?? 89 more women joined the Maria Program.
?? 6C’s approval among Hispanic Catholics hit 39%.
?? The first reports of "voluntary" mass weddings surfaced.
Missouri’s resistance was crumbling.
Feminist protests were outnumbered by 6C women chanting, "Let us choose!"
Local politicians, fearing backsh, stopped criticizing polygamy.
Churches softened sermons, afraid of losing more flock.
Then came the final stroke.
At a rally in St. Louis, 200 Missouri women—newly wed as plural wives—stood on stage, holding hands.
Maria Gonzalez addressed the crowd:
"They said we were brainwashed. But look at us now—fed, loved, and free. This is the future. Will you join us?"
***
Location: The Celestia, War Room
Hezri: "Maria, your ‘sacrifice’ bore fruit. But why did this segment break so easily?"
Maria Gonzalez (leaning forward, hands csped):
"Desperation, sir. Single mothers here work three jobs and still can’t afford insulin. We didn’t sell ‘polygamy’—we sold survival. Audi A3? 3K a month? To them, that’s a miracle."
Hezri’s Verdict:
? "Scale the ‘Maria Program’ to 2,000 more women in Missouri. Add a ‘Big Sister’ tier—earn 1,000/month recruiting others."
Segment 2: Free Food + 6C Branding (27% Favorability Surge)
Li Vane (projecting truck metrics):
"100 trucks x 3 meals/day x 30 days =
270,000 free meals
Hezri’s Verdict:
? "Tenfold trucks to 1,000 in Missouri. Add ‘Blessed Grocery’ stamps—redeemable forSegment 3: ‘Believes in God, No Religion’ (49% Openness) more food at 6C-run stores."
Hezri’s Verdict:
? "Launch ‘6C Fellowships’ —co-working spaces with free ttes and ‘morality mentors.’ Soft-convert through productivity." Give free I-Phone, clothes, shoes to participants.
***

