16th April 2004, 6:31 AM
Dude, that was awesome. Thank you.
One thing though, Jews didn't kill Christians on some massive scale or anything. Rome did though. Many many years after Jesus a reform happened among Jews and they separated in to two sects one of which evolved in to Christianity. Jews were afraid of this of course, just as any religion would be afraid of having itself branched off in to another direction and there were many debates and fights but never an attempt at genocide. Some Christians even believe that Christianity is the true Judaism, that we follow the King of the Jews.
Above all things presented in the bible, it teaches us to hate Rome. All white people have blood ties to Rome and for 15 thousand years it was the Anglo Saxon Mecca of the world and was very powerful and corrupt, more powerful than any country that has ever existed since. The people who tried to separate themselves from this entity of what they considered to be evil were the Jews.
They were Romans who left Rome in the hope of creating a society with more freedom and good will, that society was created out in the deserts away from Rome's eyes. (Keep in mind that the Jews wrote both the old and new testament); When they saw people following a living man (Jesus), who promised that he was the son of God, many of the officials were frightened and were reminded of their Roman roots, a place where people would follow a living man, a self-proclaimed God and much of that idea led to Rome's corruption. But many Jews wrote that Jesus was a savior, saving the Jews from their own corruption because they had turned the temples in to banks and no longer loved God.
Many many many many many years later we would re-tell that story in the re-written New Testament. That Jesus is our savior and that he will bring us closer to God with tons of embellishments and what not but that doesn't matter, the embellishments are only there to help people realize what an important figure he is to everyone's life since if he would not of existed, everything as we know it would be very different. The high priests would have collapsed Judaism under a veil of seemingly innocent corruption, Rome would have become even stronger as the white Mecca and would probably be a super power today that wouldn't have let any other countries form without its approval (and ownership) and we would all be speaking a form of Latin... well, we already do that, but you get my point.
One thing though, Jews didn't kill Christians on some massive scale or anything. Rome did though. Many many years after Jesus a reform happened among Jews and they separated in to two sects one of which evolved in to Christianity. Jews were afraid of this of course, just as any religion would be afraid of having itself branched off in to another direction and there were many debates and fights but never an attempt at genocide. Some Christians even believe that Christianity is the true Judaism, that we follow the King of the Jews.
Above all things presented in the bible, it teaches us to hate Rome. All white people have blood ties to Rome and for 15 thousand years it was the Anglo Saxon Mecca of the world and was very powerful and corrupt, more powerful than any country that has ever existed since. The people who tried to separate themselves from this entity of what they considered to be evil were the Jews.
They were Romans who left Rome in the hope of creating a society with more freedom and good will, that society was created out in the deserts away from Rome's eyes. (Keep in mind that the Jews wrote both the old and new testament); When they saw people following a living man (Jesus), who promised that he was the son of God, many of the officials were frightened and were reminded of their Roman roots, a place where people would follow a living man, a self-proclaimed God and much of that idea led to Rome's corruption. But many Jews wrote that Jesus was a savior, saving the Jews from their own corruption because they had turned the temples in to banks and no longer loved God.
Many many many many many years later we would re-tell that story in the re-written New Testament. That Jesus is our savior and that he will bring us closer to God with tons of embellishments and what not but that doesn't matter, the embellishments are only there to help people realize what an important figure he is to everyone's life since if he would not of existed, everything as we know it would be very different. The high priests would have collapsed Judaism under a veil of seemingly innocent corruption, Rome would have become even stronger as the white Mecca and would probably be a super power today that wouldn't have let any other countries form without its approval (and ownership) and we would all be speaking a form of Latin... well, we already do that, but you get my point.