First, I would make the scholarly argument that "Amalek" originally referred to adherents to Satan It's an interesting and illuminating (haha) case, but quite long.
Of course, since Satan rules this world, the original meaning has been inverted, so that "Amalek" eventually gets used when pointing to someone or something that stands in the way of Satan's goals. See how neatly that holds together?
The Khazarians, generally being both intelligent and violent supremacists, gladly fill in all the connecting "logic" and "facts" of the inversion, and congratulate themselves on their moral superiority for thus saving the world.
Much like if someone tries to investigate a pedo sex ring and he gets swatted with child porn injected on his pc. OK i don't have a reference for this - but it is the modus operandi.
Do psycho shit
Opponent shows up to stop you
Find way to say opponent is doing psycho shit and thus is projecting
fabricate evidence, buy courts, seal his future
Go to media and cry how much his lies tormented you, but finally justice is done, hope we never see that monster again
Have party and go back to psycho shit
So a guy trying to do good will not simply risk his life... At the very minimum he will be painted black in all ways possible by medias, a loony, a clown, a deranged, be judged evil by the people he wanted to help, then forgotten in a cell or "died resisting" or "cut his tongue in cell".
Inversion is the main principle in all of their modus.
It also works very well to demotivate "wannabe heroes" (as they would call fair people) and make them feel lonely. It's all the same game... like "our democracy" to make the cattle feel close on the same level while making sure the cattle hates his potential saviours. The potential saviour also see this in play and frankly says "really? And i'd risk all to save those that would readily scorn me for a voice? well wait a sec"
For the last couple of years I had the hypothetical question on my mind: how many people would do what they knew was right even if everyone else thought (because they were told) that they were the worst person in the world?
I never thought it would actually play out, but here we are with Putin and Ukraine.
First, I would make the scholarly argument that "Amalek" originally referred to adherents to Satan It's an interesting and illuminating (haha) case, but quite long.
Of course, since Satan rules this world, the original meaning has been inverted, so that "Amalek" eventually gets used when pointing to someone or something that stands in the way of Satan's goals. See how neatly that holds together?
The Khazarians, generally being both intelligent and violent supremacists, gladly fill in all the connecting "logic" and "facts" of the inversion, and congratulate themselves on their moral superiority for thus saving the world.
It's part of the ritual, too.
Much like if someone tries to investigate a pedo sex ring and he gets swatted with child porn injected on his pc. OK i don't have a reference for this - but it is the modus operandi.
Do psycho shit
Opponent shows up to stop you
Find way to say opponent is doing psycho shit and thus is projecting
fabricate evidence, buy courts, seal his future
Go to media and cry how much his lies tormented you, but finally justice is done, hope we never see that monster again
Have party and go back to psycho shit
So a guy trying to do good will not simply risk his life... At the very minimum he will be painted black in all ways possible by medias, a loony, a clown, a deranged, be judged evil by the people he wanted to help, then forgotten in a cell or "died resisting" or "cut his tongue in cell".
Inversion is the main principle in all of their modus.
It also works very well to demotivate "wannabe heroes" (as they would call fair people) and make them feel lonely. It's all the same game... like "our democracy" to make the cattle feel close on the same level while making sure the cattle hates his potential saviours. The potential saviour also see this in play and frankly says "really? And i'd risk all to save those that would readily scorn me for a voice? well wait a sec"
For the last couple of years I had the hypothetical question on my mind: how many people would do what they knew was right even if everyone else thought (because they were told) that they were the worst person in the world?
I never thought it would actually play out, but here we are with Putin and Ukraine.