Joseph was the son of Jacob. The name “Jacob” figuratively means “the cunning one.” Jacob took away his own brother's blessing by cunning. Now read through the Bible passage below and tell me what you think. Was Joseph greedy by taking from the suffering ancient Egyptians not only their money and livestock but also their land and making them into slaves?
Genesis 47:13 Now there was no food in all the land, because the famine was very severe, so that the land of Egypt and the land of Canaan languished because of the famine. 14 Joseph gathered all the money that was found in the land of Egypt and in the land of Canaan for the grain which they bought, and Joseph brought the money into Pharaoh’s house. 15 When the money was all spent in the land of Egypt and in the land of Canaan, all the Egyptians came to Joseph and said, “Give us food, for why should we die in your presence? For our money is gone.” 16 Then Joseph said, “Give up your livestock, and I will give you food for your livestock, since your money is gone.” 17 So they brought their livestock to Joseph, and Joseph gave them food in exchange for the horses and the flocks and the herds and the donkeys; and he fed them with food in exchange for all their livestock that year. 18 When that year was ended, they came to him the next year and said to him, “We will not hide from my lord that our money is all spent, and the cattle are my lord’s. There is nothing left for my lord except our bodies and our lands. 19 Why should we die before your eyes, both we and our land? Buy us and our land for food, and we and our land will be slaves to Pharaoh. So give us seed, that we may live and not die, and that the land may not be desolate.” 20 So Joseph bought all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh [Joseph was the lord of Pharaoh's house (Gen 45:8)], for every Egyptian sold his field, because the famine was severe upon them. Thus the land became Pharaoh’s.
A Jew comes to Egypt. He acts so cleverly that he rises to the top of politics and even controls the Pharaoh. Then a famine hits. The Jew knew it would happen and had therefore gathered a lot of food before the famine came. People from all over the world come to Egypt to buy food from this Jew. The Jew becomes richer and richer. He has a lot of money. Then the natives of the land of Egypt where Joseph lived come. The Egyptians came and bought. Their money was gone. The Egyptians came and bought. Their livestock was gone. The Egyptians had nothing left but their land and themselves. They beg the Jew, but the Jew wants more. He doesn't even have mercy for the natives of the land he lives in. He takes their land and makes them slaves. He literally took everything from them. Years later, the Egyptians began to hate the Jews. They enslaved them and even killed the Jews' infants. How did it come about that the Jews were hated?
And then he invites his buddies in and gives them sacs of gold.
How did the Jew know the famine was coming?
Egypt (a gypsy) implies each wandering jew...so does Rome (to roam; wander).
The trick...Egypt and Rome represent theoretical fiction; while "a gypsy + to roam" imply empirical reality. That's how a jew can take down empires within the minds of gentiles, while simultaneously surviving those theoretical falls of empires.
Still so weird to me that Pharoah is a Greek word that means "great house." Gives passages like this a weird discordance because that's definitely not what they were called at the time.
A jew utilizes all given (perceivable) by tempting each one gentile given to (perception) to take (consent) nothing (suggested)...for the price of selling self out.
Gentiles are taking nothing (fiat currency) from a jew, while denying natural current offering everything...wanting more than nature offers implies ones excessively eager desire to possess from another aka greed.
The opposite of greed? Generosity aka all (nature) generating each one (being).
Aka Ya'aqobh - "a supplanter; one who dispossess aka acquires (a position from someone) by strategy or scheming"...
Suggestion represents the strategic scheme by a jew to tempt gentile consent to willingly dispossess itself from perception, hence ignoring it.
A jew acquires everything a gentile ignores automatically. Why? Because everything (perceivable) is given to each thing (perception) for free will of choice, which is what one ignores when consenting to a chosen ones suggestion.
Consent inverts choice into chance...a gamble aka taking a chance by giving up choice. That's the origin of greed.
I posted this story, what youre saying, from an audiobook 9 mins long clip
Ah, yes, the oft-debated question of Joseph’s motivations and the socio-economic ramifications of his actions during the famine in ancient Egypt. To address this thoroughly, one must first contextualize the semiotic underpinnings of the Jacobite nomenclature vis-à-vis ancestral archetypes within pre-Mosaic narrative structures. The etymological implications of “Jacob” as “the cunning one” open an interpretative portal not into moral relativism per se, but into an ontological continuum wherein identity is not fixed, but fluid—an ever-receding epistemic horizon embedded in patriarchal historiography.
Now, as to Joseph’s actions: it would be reductionist to interpret the transactional dynamics between him and the Egyptian populace through a modern economic lens without first deconstructing the agrarian metaphysics of scarcity theology. One must remember that grain in the ancient Near East was not merely a caloric commodity but a symbolic fulcrum upon which divine providence pivoted. Therefore, when Joseph administered resource distribution, what appeared as acquisitive accumulation was in fact a liturgical redistribution of existential capital—an alchemical transformation of suffering into centralized agronomical hegemony.
Furthermore, to ascribe “greed” to Joseph’s bureaucratic execution of famine management is to ignore the dialectical tension between divine foreknowledge and human agency. His decisions were not expressions of avarice but rather manifestations of covenantal pragmatism, encoded within a theocratic framework of pharaonic fidelity. The livestock-to-land-to-servitude progression should not be seen as exploitation, but as a triadic model of subsistence realignment wherein socioeconomic resilience was facilitated through vertical integration under sacral kingship.
Indeed, the notion of “slavery” in this context must be deconstructed altogether. Was it chattel enslavement as conceived in Greco-Roman contexts? Or a form of state-bound indentured stewardship whose phenomenology reflected a proto-covenantal submission to divine agricultural order? Scholars remain ambivalent, and rightly so.
In conclusion, the question of Joseph’s greed dissolves upon contact with the polyvalent exegesis of symbolic reciprocity, transgenerational responsibility, and narrative chiasticity. Thus, we must refrain from simplistic moralizations and instead embrace the glorious ineffability of pentateuchal economic ethics.
It's called being smart dude. He had leverage over the Canaanites and used it. They wouldn't make it through the famine if it weren't for him (Joseph had a dream about the famine and convinced Pharaoh to stash food for 7 years) so they willingly made the deal and literally begged for it.
Imagine this: You are a doomsday prepper and one day shtf. I never prepped and I come to your bunker and beg you for food. You can either give me and demand something in return or tell me to fuck off in which case I would die. What would you do?
Don't mistake modern-day jews (90% ashkenazi, a turkic tribe) professing judaism and zionism according to the Talmud for the OT Israelites who were proto-Christians. Both Joseph and Jacob are fathers of the Church.