The Jewish Question (JQ)


The analysis revealed two distinct subgroups within the remains: one with greater Middle Eastern ancestry, which may represent Jews with origins in Western Germany, and another with greater Eastern and Central European ancestry. The modern Ashkenazi population formed as a mix of these groups and absorbed little to no outside genetic influences over the 600 years that followed, the authors said.

Some disease-causing mutations that are widespread in modern Ashkenazi Jews are suspected to have been introduced by members of the founding group long ago. The team found some of these mutations in Erfurt as well, indicating that the medieval Ashkenazi population indeed originated from an extremely small set of founders.
 

For clarification on why Jesus was born in the tribe of Judah not Joseph.

How to put it, the short version is... Remember the parable of the thrift spending son that asked his father to make him a servant?

It's like that.

"It is as if my son was dead, and has come back to life."

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Interesting in-depth @BasedSamParker's thread on (((Mossad Honeytrap))).

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The jews and their transhumanists think they can out-design God. That in itself is anti-God. If all jews "evolve" into a computer and we turn it off and go outside, is it still considered a holocaust?
The image reminded me of Marvel & DC comic "super heroes", Iron Man, X-Men, etc., which I was enthralled by as a boy. And of course both Marvel and DC were both Jewish companies. Thinking back and comparing those comics with English comics reveals the warped psyches of the Jewish creators.

The English comic characters I remember were mostly men or boys who were virtuous in some way or quirky eccentrics, but who led lives that were ordinary and therefore more relatable and even achievable. Jewish comic characters and storylines were marked by super powerful beings (some of alien origin) concerned with fixing the world in some way (tikkun olam). It's all there really. They always overshoot.
 
The image reminded me of Marvel & DC comic "super heroes", Iron Man, X-Men, etc., which I was enthralled by as a boy. And of course both Marvel and DC were both Jewish companies. Thinking back and comparing those comics with English comics reveals the warped psyches of the Jewish creators.

The English comic characters I remember were mostly men or boys who were virtuous in some way or quirky eccentrics, but who led lives that were ordinary and therefore more relatable and even achievable. Jewish comic characters and storylines were marked by super powerful beings (some of alien origin) concerned with fixing the world in some way (tikkun olam). It's all there really. They always overshoot.
Everything produced from the talmudic weltanschauung has themes of apotheosis and messianism in it. They can't help but channel their satanic energy that is hiding in their genes all the way from Cain until the present in everything they "create".

In comics specifically, you can literally see their imbuing of superpowers onto a false idol as an extension of their denial of Christ and the mortality of common man as God commanded.

-Superman (1938, Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster)
-Batman (1939, Bob Kane & Bill Finger)
-Captain America (1941, Joe Simon & Jack Kirby)
-The Thing (Ben Grimm, 1961, Lee & Kirby, Fantastic Four)
-Spider-Man (1962, Stan Lee & Steve Ditko)
-The Incredible Hulk (1962, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Thor (1962, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Iron Man (1963, Stan Lee, Larry Lieber & Don Heck)
-The X-Men (1963, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Daredevil (1964, Stan Lee & Bill Everett)
-Doctor Strange (1963, Stan Lee & Steve Ditko)
-The Silver Surfer (1966, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Black Panther (1966, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Moon Knight (1975, Doug Moench & Don Perlin)


All created by jews, notice the same thing about all of them, then contrast them with those created by gentiles or Christians:

-Tarzan (1912, Edgar Rice Burroughs) – The noble savage raised by apes.
-Zorro (1919, Johnston McCulley) – A masked swashbuckler fighting corrupt officials.
-Dick Tracy (1931, Chester Gould) – A tough detective waging war on crime.
-Conan the Barbarian (1932, Robert E. Howard) – A fierce warrior in a brutal violent world. Howard also created the characters of Kull The Conqueror and Solomon Kane, a Puritan.
-Doc Savage (1933, Lester Dent & Henry Ralston) – The "Man of Bronze" an early super-scientist adventurer.
-The Shadow (1930, Walter B. Gibson) – The detective that jews stole the idea of to make Batman.
-Turok: Son of Stone (1954, Matthew H. Murphy & Rex Maxon) – Native American survivalist in an alien and dinosaur-filled world.
-Judge Dredd (1977, John Wagner & Carlos Ezquerra) – dystopian lawman who enforces totalitarian justice.
-Spawn (1992, Todd McFarlane) – dark antihero with supernatural Christian-based mythology fighting demons.
 
Everything produced from the talmudic weltanschauung has themes of apotheosis and messianism in it. They can't help but channel their satanic energy that is hiding in their genes all the way from Cain until the present in everything they "create".

In comics specifically, you can literally see their imbuing of superpowers onto a false idol as an extension of their denial of Christ and the mortality of common man as God commanded.

-Superman (1938, Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster)
-Batman (1939, Bob Kane & Bill Finger)
-Captain America (1941, Joe Simon & Jack Kirby)
-The Thing (Ben Grimm, 1961, Lee & Kirby, Fantastic Four)
-Spider-Man (1962, Stan Lee & Steve Ditko)
-The Incredible Hulk (1962, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Thor (1962, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Iron Man (1963, Stan Lee, Larry Lieber & Don Heck)
-The X-Men (1963, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Daredevil (1964, Stan Lee & Bill Everett)
-Doctor Strange (1963, Stan Lee & Steve Ditko)
-The Silver Surfer (1966, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Black Panther (1966, Stan Lee & Jack Kirby)
-Moon Knight (1975, Doug Moench & Don Perlin)


All created by jews, notice the same thing about all of them, then contrast them with those created by gentiles or Christians:

-Tarzan (1912, Edgar Rice Burroughs) – The noble savage raised by apes.
-Zorro (1919, Johnston McCulley) – A masked swashbuckler fighting corrupt officials.
-Dick Tracy (1931, Chester Gould) – A tough detective waging war on crime.
-Conan the Barbarian (1932, Robert E. Howard) – A fierce warrior in a brutal violent world. Howard also created the characters of Kull The Conqueror and Solomon Kane, a Puritan.
-Doc Savage (1933, Lester Dent & Henry Ralston) – The "Man of Bronze" an early super-scientist adventurer.
-The Shadow (1930, Walter B. Gibson) – The detective that jews stole the idea of to make Batman.
-Turok: Son of Stone (1954, Matthew H. Murphy & Rex Maxon) – Native American survivalist in an alien and dinosaur-filled world.
-Judge Dredd (1977, John Wagner & Carlos Ezquerra) – dystopian lawman who enforces totalitarian justice.
-Spawn (1992, Todd McFarlane) – dark antihero with supernatural Christian-based mythology fighting demons.
Yeah, and the West always had biblical, Greco-Roman, and other folkloric heroes to draw from. The average joe these days would probably be better-versed in comic book superheroes though, and maybe that's by design.

Speaking of the English, as a child I grew up thinking Robin Hood was a fox, and was confused upon seeing "real life" people playing him and his merry men in Robin Hood: Men in Tights (now why would Mel Brooks want to ridicule English Crusaders)?
 
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