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Oct. 17, 2025 - Know More News - Adam Green
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Science Before Jesus | Know More News - Adam Green
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Welcome, ladies and gentlemen to no more news.
I am your host, Adam Green.
Thank you all for joining me today.
Friday show, October seventeenth, twenty twenty five.
Gonna change it up a bit today.
No uh no news, no uh Judaism and Zionism, and uh I guess it's a little bit Christianity, but gonna be discussing science before Jesus, talking about some of the amazing feats of engineering and technology and building and architecture of the ancient world before Christianity.
We often hear Christians or even rabbis say that like our civilization is built on Judeo Christianity.
You'll hear Christians argue that we wouldn't have these beautiful cathedrals and architecture and science or morality or families or civilization or a functioning society without the Bible, we have to have Jesus, the Jewish Messiah, and the Hebrew Torah and the Bible in order to survive as a people.
So I figured we'd dig into this the ancient world back before when we had rationality and reason and science before the supernatural superstitions of these religious dogmas took hold and and sent us into the dark ages and set back progress about a thousand years.
Before we get into some of the videos and clips and interviews of about uh we're gonna do some we have a carrier clip here.
He was just on with myth vision talking about this topic, and we've got a highlight clip from with Neil from Gnostic Informant from three years ago, Ancient Technology before the common era.
We're gonna play that one too.
I'm learning, we're learning, because we encounter this a lot, like from Christians like Alex Jones, who say stuff that we're just we're just idiots and beasts and heathen, like E. Michael Jones says too, chasing pigs through the fields.
Well, the Roman Empire and the Southern European world was so far advanced and would have continued advancing if not for Christianity and the shackles of the mind that it put on people,
and it and it distracted everybody from instead of focusing on like sciences and reality, it's got people running circles and mental gymnastics to do Christian apologetics or literally an obstacle to advancement in science because you think it's demonic or satanic or is gonna disprove the Bible, contradicting the Bible, contradicting the authority and the power of the church.
So, how many times have you guys heard something like this in the comments or from Christians degrading Western civilization, uh trying to give all the credit for the accomplishments of Europe and Western civilization and other empires and civilizations that we were all stupid idiots and damned for hell because we didn't have Jesus.
How many times have you guys heard this one?
And then we are here promoting a Americana Renaissance Christian revolution to be Christ-like.
The most successful settlements in Africa are where blacks would up to Christianity.
Incredibly simple.
You go to Africa, you get black people to become Christian, actually follow it.
They're just as successful as European.
Europeans were living in caves and huts and killing each other till they got Christianity, just like Africans.
We acted just living in caves and huts.
We were the Europeans were just like sub-Saharan Africa until we had Jesus, and they'll be just like us if they have Jesus.
Completely preposterous.
It's this is degrading.
This is very degrading.
It's anti-European, anti-white to say these things.
And it is true.
I'll I'll grant, like uh Northern Europe.
We're living in harsh climates with crazy winters, just basically trying to survive.
It was a different, it was a different type of civilization than the South.
Southern Europe.
But nonetheless, Rome, which became the Roman, uh well, the Holy Roman Empire and adopted Christianity, were doing just fine.
Actually, doing better in a lot of ways.
They're aqueducts, they're uh we'll get into it.
The bathing.
Europeans were living in caves and huts and killing each other till they got Christianity, just like Africans.
We acted just like Africans today.
You can go, look at those savages.
Well, we were Jesus.
Savages till we had Jesus.
Yeah, the smearing of pagans.
Online, you'll see, oh, you you pagans dancing around trees and sacrificing children and all this stuff.
Uh, you know, you'd be heathen savage barbarians if it weren't for the Jews to bring Jesus to you.
Right.
How many times have we heard that?
We're gonna see about that.
We're gonna see about that.
Number one, before Christianity, marvels of engineering, like the Pantheon, which I saw.
The Romans built the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome in history.
The Pantheon is one of the best preserved monuments of ancient Rome, highlighting Roman engineering prowess.
First, the engineers had to build a solid base, a six-meter thick double wall in the shape of a rotunda.
To prevent sinking and enhance solidity, a series of relieving arches and eight massive pillars are built inside.
Before pouring the forty-three meter diameter concrete ceiling, craftsmen meticulously assembled a wooden framework.
After completing the lower support.
Look at this church that was built.
That that's always after the Dark Ages, too.
And uh the Colossus of Crete, yeah, check that out.
Um nothing in the Bible, by the way, no science in the Bible, no mathematics, no divine understanding of technology or the world, no advice on how to build things like this, and then to try to credit the Christianity and Jesus for all the accomplishments that man made that that we made.
The builders turned to a clever technique, using increasingly lighter concrete as they rose, lightening the load at the dome's summit.
To lighten the upper structure, the Romans mixed the concrete with volcanic tuff, pumice, and even hollow amphorae.
As the dome rises, its shell becomes progressively thinner, reducing the overall weight.
At the base, seven concentric rings arranged in a stepped pattern, help redirect lateral thrusts, stabilizing the entire structure.
The interior of the dome is composed of one hundred forty coffers, not only for decoration, but to reduce weight and help the concrete cure faster.
At the very center.
I went there twenty eighteen.
What is that?
Two seven years ago.
It was amazing.
I want to go back one day.
I probably spent like an hour and a half just in awe walking around inside of this thing.
I could probably look up and my Oculus acted as a key structural feature.
It relieved pressure at the dome's weakest point, while flooding the space below with natural light, creating a dramatic play of shadows and brilliance.
The End Okay.
Now look at look at this.
Alex Jones, Europeans were just living in huts and caves, and were just like Africans in their mud huts.
Look at this ingenuity of this tool, this crane, this ancient crane.
Yeah, I'm sure I'm sure they had ancient cranes like this.
Everywhere without Jesus.
The Romans used cranes like this to raise massive stones high into the air.
A tall wooden mast, sometimes over ten meters, was firmly anchored into the ground.
The central mast was held steady by four anchor points.
By pulling on the ropes attached to them, workers could tilt the crane to the exact angle they needed.
Workers hold the stone using a rope that passed through a pulley at the base, then another at the top of the mast before dropping down to the block.
Each pulley multiplies no no pulley science.
In the Bible, no, none of this stuff.
The Bible wasn't aware of bacteria or diseases.
It thought diseases and mental illness were being possessed by demons.
So a single worker could lift a two hundred kilo stone.
Didn't know didn't know the earth was a globe either.
They figured out before Christianity cut into each block to fit a set of metal wedges.
A locking pin secured the wedges, and a metal ring was attached, allowing the crane to lift the stone cleanly from the center.
Its own weight actually helped lock it more firmly into the lifting system as it rose.
These cranes were revolutionary and changed how Rome was built.
Yeah, uh Africans couldn't invent the wheel and didn't have swords.
And the point the whole point is not just to like try to say we're better than Africans, that's not like the main issue here.
The point is what we were able to have before Christianity.
Before Christian trying to credit Christianity like the Christians do, the Christian apologists do, they go, Science came from Christian from Christian churches.
The aqueducts and their understanding of siphon, siphoning and using gravity, the aqueducts and their plumbing systems were Romans used inverted siphons to transport water across valleys that no bridge could span.
Water from the aqueduct first entered a header tank, then flowed into cut stone, clay, or lead pipes laid on a masonry ramp, buried and covered with concrete to withstand the enormous pressure.
From there, it plunged into the valley and crossed the bottom on a Vantra bridge.
This limits the pressure of the water in the pipes and allows it to pass over any obstacle.
Then the water was pushed up by the pressure and climbed up the other side, reaching the receiving tank slightly lower than the previous one.
The difference in height created enough head loss to maintain a functional hydraulic grade line.
Christian Dark Ages couldn't maintain the aqueduct system, and and it the plumbing advanced plumbing technology that they had, and then that's why there was there was plagues and disease and live living in filth.
Once past the receiving tank, the aqueduct continued on its way to its destination.
The monks, the early Christian monks'aesthetics, they wouldn't bathe.
They stank.
I remember, I think it's in the Darkening Age.
It talked about these first Christians, they were like poor homeless stinky Antifa like criminals.
Who the first Christians were that went around destroying the ro the pagan temples and burning the pagan literature, being whipped up into a low IQ mob by their Christian priests.
If needed, several siphons could be linked in a row.
With a bold mix of pressure, gravity and engineering, the Romans made water flow anywhere.
The Hellepolis was the largest siege tower of the ancient world.
Okay, we'll do that one later.
Here we go.
Here's more of the Romans' water distribution.
The Romans used a basin called the Castellum Divisorium to distribute water in their cities.
Built on the city's highest ground, it received water straight from the aqueduct.
At its entrance, a movable grid kept out intruders while filtering large debris.
Inside, the water passed through a strainer in a first basin, before being split into several tanks at different heights.
The central tank is the lowest, and thus served first, because it was the one that fed the public fountains.
The second lowest was for the thermal baths, and finally, the highest for the private houses.
Then the water was redistributed throughout the city via a network of lead, wood, or terracotta pipes.
Some castella even flushed excess water into the sewers through vertical shafts.
A clever way to clean the drains and prevent foul smells and disease.
Finally, a system of sluice gates made the Costellum a true regulator, controlling the flow of water.
Look at this.
Here's a picture I took.
Of the Coliseum.
The underground of the Coliseum.
Lasting 2,000 years later.
Incredible.
all.
Okay.
One more engineering.
We're gonna get to the carrier clip here in a second.
But how did Roman aqueducts work?
Roman aqueducts were an engineering masterpiece used to transport fresh water to the cities.
First, a water source had to be found higher than the destination, thanks particularly to the army.
Trump's going to build an arch like this.
Most of the aqueduct ran underground, through channels lined with hydraulic mortar, and punctuated by vertical drops to relieve pressure.
Along the way, the water passed through settling tanks that removed sediment and impurities.
To get through the hills and mountains, the Romans used a mining technique consisting of digging a vertical shaft every thirty meters.
This in mud huts, mud huts before Jesus, Alex Jones, and Christians.
Enabled them to work faster with a team in each shaft and to check alignment using plumb lines.
To cross valleys, a bridge was built on which the aqueduct rests.
But arches higher than 20 meters became unstable, so engineers limited the height of each level and gained elevation by stacking additional tiers.
In deeper valleys, they used a brilliant solution, the inverted siphon, a sealed pipe system that carried water down and back up using gravity and pressure alone.
To control and maintain the flow, they used sluice gates, special valves that could divert water, regulate pressure, isolate sections for repair, or distribute flow to different branches.
To further purify the water, the Romans used large settling basins, usually located near the source and or just before the aqueduct entered.
Aerosene, $10.
Europeans weren't savages before Jesus.
We were pragmatic.
We did what we could with what we had.
Right.
The Nordics were building advanced boats and traveled across the oceans to America without Jesus.
Thunderstorm, nine cent, five dollars on Rumble.
Etruscans before the Romans had opened theaters that amplified the singer slash speakers as if they were sitting next to you.
Fiesole and Volterra, the Romans copied this.
Oh, yeah, the amplitheaters.
Yep.
the city where they they had their plays and their speeches and their philosophers all before christianity Once in the city, the water entered a distribution tank called the Castellum Divisorium, then was distributed via a network of pipes.
The aqueducts were so well engineered that some are still in use today.
Public toilet system.
Thank you.
Here we go.
...public toilets.
Beneath Roman public toilets, a steady stream of water carried waste into the sewers, ensuring continuous drainage.
The benches were pierced with openings, extended by a notch at the front for easier use for men.
And to allow passage of the sponge stick used for wiping.
Everybody shared a sponge stick?
That is nasty.
Imagine having some poopy ass stick that's been used by hundreds of people before you the sponge was rinsed in a shallow channel of running water at the users' feet.
Often decorated, they were more than simple sanitary facilities.
They served as social spaces, seating many people side by side with no dividers of any kind.
Tunics and togas offered only limited modesty.
Called foricai, public latrines were open to all, and some were equipped with a central water basin for washing hands.
But wealthy Romans, who sometimes paid for their construction, rarely set foot in them, preferring the privacy of toilets in their own homes.
Their sophisticated sewage system made Roman latrines some of the most advanced sanitary facilities of the ancient world.
Surveying tool that gave Rome its perfect line.
P. Rules 247 cent $10 on Rumble.
Thank you P. Rules.
Mixing things up today, I see.
Love it.
Happy weekend.
It's relevant.
when I'm arguing because you you hear the Christians say all the time, Oh, we wouldn't have this.
We wouldn't be nothing without the Bible.
You know, uh we saw Alex Jones, you know, E. Michael Jones, they do this.
We're we were barbarian heathens, savages chasing pigs in the forest.
Oh, these use these degenerate pagans.
They say pagans like the Romans were pagans.
They were pe they were peak pagans.
And the Christians go, uh you pagans, you just savages, you'd be nothing without Jesus.
Simple tool.
Roman surveyors used this simple tool to trace perfectly straight lines and right angles for their constructions.
The Groma was a wooden cross mounted on a vertical pole with plumb lines hanging from each arm.
Once set in position, the surveyor ensured the cross was level by adjusting until the plumb lines hung straight down.
Then looking along the alignment, one plumb line had to line up perfectly with the opposite one, providing a precise reference for sighting.
Holding the instrument steady, the surveyor guided an assistant, positioned at a distance with a staff to move until the staff matched the plumb line's alignment.
Step by step, the Romans extended these lines for kilometers, even across uneven terrain through successive sightings.
From Rome they weren't they weren't distracted by the Christian Goislop.
They weren't obsessed with Hebrews the what Hebrew scriptures meant.
They what what they were able to accomplish.
We'd probably be at Mars colonize if it weren't for Christians, I know.
Something something equivalent.
No joke.
Uh-oh.
How were Roman roads built?
All Eads Ro all roads lead to Rome.
They had the best the best roads.
How were Roman roads built?
First, the land was cleared of vegetation and the soil was drained.
Once the route was chosen, a trench several meters wide was dug, with stone curbs placed along the edges to define the road.
Construction continued in layers to ensure both strength and drainage.
At the bottom, large stones arranged to let water pass through.
Above that, smaller rocks to fill gaps and compact the base.
Finally, a layer of gravel or sand was spread on top, then compacted using water, hand tampers, and heavy stone rollers.
This basic surface was cheaper to maintain and better suited for carts and animals.
The roads were slightly curved, so rainwater could run off to the sides, where deep ditches were dug.
These ditches helped drain water and also acted as barriers against unauthorized vehicles.
Despite the popular image, most Roman roads weren't paved with stone slabs.
Those were mainly used in cities, high traffic areas, or where erosion was a problem.
Roman roads were typically straight.
These direct lines allowed troops to move fast across the empire.
In fact, road construction was often carried out by Roman soldiers themselves.
And you know, like the average person, average Christian, couldn't name any of these ancient Europeans that scientists and engineers that built all these amazing things or did these sculptures and stuff.
Some people know them, obviously.
But no, they know all the Bible stories.
They know all the fake fictional Jewish fairy tales.
Lotta Scent says every nation that was Christianized was driven into the muck, filth, poverty, and disease because of it.
And just the mental illness, like mind disease of believing in Jewish prophecies and Jewish fairy tales.
Incredibly, over two thousand years later, many of these ancient highways are still standing.
North or North England, I saw a bunch of uh Roman stuff.
I Did a little tour out of an old uh English city, and the walls were the Roman walls.
Okay.
Breakwater.
This one was uh this was the first clip.
This learn history simple account started sh showing me shorts and sent me a bunch of them.
This was the first one that I saw, and I was truly impressed.
Man, case the Romans used large wooden caissons to build breakwaters for their ports.
First, the caissons were floated to the site, anchored in place, and weighted down with bags of clay.
Additional clay sealed the structure, enclosing the area.
Once watertight, the caisson was pumped dry, creating a dry workspace inside.
Then the rocky seabed was leveled and covered with a slab of Roman concrete.
Stone walls were Yeah, right, right.
Most people know nothing about all these ancient technologies and great historical figures that came up with these things, but they sure know their Jewish fairy tales.
They su they sure worship all their Jewish fairy tales.
Erected on this foundation with concrete filling the interior.
When finished, the water was let back in and the cofferdams removed.
The Romans simply had to repeat this process in order to extend the breakwater.
Thanks to this method, they built true vertical walls that rose above sea level and was strong enough to withstand the force of the waves.
It enabled them to construct harbors that endured for centuries and sustained the maritime expansion of the empire.
The boatman said that once we pass what we need to go back to.
Okay, so now here's the clip.
Need more amaleks clip that kind of triggered this whole show.
Uh that and just seeing.
Hold on, what is this?
In South Africa, our legal system is based on Roman law.
Shout out South Africa, Lizaluzu, Lisa Lazuli.
In South Africa, our legal system is based on Roman law, contract, and law of succession.
They had courts in Rome.
Who needed mosaic law?
No, no laws and morals and societies.
With that all of West uh it bothers me too.
We hear the rabbis and the Christians and the Ben Shapiro's all the time, oh, Western civilization is all Judeo-Christian.
We'd have you'd have no West if it weren't for the Jews and their Judeo-Christian traditions, right?
How many times have they said that?
I think these people really believe it too.
But here's the clip from the latest from uh Myth Vision and Dr. Richard Carrier about scientific knowledge in the Roman Empire.
Welcome back.
Haven't watched it yet.
But Need More Amalek was uh praising.
Welcome back.
We're dealing with the Dark Ages.
Dr. Richard Carrier, you've written on this.
You have a book about ancient science.
You're a historian, you know a bit about the ancient Greek and Roman world, and have actually written on this material.
There is just a sweep into the issue.
Uh Nil, Gnostic Informant has engaged online, uh, argued with others, Temo-Nil, you name it.
Those who deny using language of dark ages, or even might even deny there ever was a dark age.
Right, yeah.
There's a growing trend even amongst academics that like want to soften the language.
And there are many who go, no, no, no.
Christians literally played a role in devaluing the the ancient sciences, the all sorts of stuff, causing us to go down a spiral that led into a dark age.
So the first question I have, and then take us into still.
Uh-oh.
What is the debate?
What are they trying to do, and why are they?
What are the dark ages?
And then take us into Yeah.
So the phrase was originally coined by Patriarch, and his reaction, like because he was uh basically a student of a scholar of literature, and so he he was looking at like all the ancient literature that's available to him and all the medieval literature that's available to him.
And he's writing like fourteenth century, I think, something like that.
And he's noticing that the medieval literature is shitty, like it's sparser, it's really more primitive, it's not as sophisticated and brilliant as the stuff.
So he sees it as a decline in literature, like literary quality.
He's looking at it aesthetically, it's like uh also like the the histories are worse and fewer, uh, like the quality of history is worse and fewer.
So he's saying, like, what what what happened?
Like you had this great glorious age of production of great literature with really accurate, detailed histories, a lot of sophisticated stuff, and then you have all this kind of like cop you know, sort of poor copies of it, right?
For hundreds of years until his own day, then stuff starts picking up again.
It's like what happened in that period.
So him is like that's the dark ages.
He did not mean uh anything more than that.
Now, later people picked up the phrase and sort of piling on, noticing more things fit this model.
So for during the same period, we're talking roughly um roughly like five hundred to a thousand AD, right?
So there's different datings like four hundred, nine hundred, five hundred, one thousand, whatever, but it's in there.
Also, we're talking about the West.
We're talking about Europe, we're not talking about Byzantium, which is the Eastern Roman Empire, different story what happened there.
But in the uh Western half and in the European half, uh, the scholars who use the phrase Dark Ages talk about the fact that we have less access to what was going on there.
Like the the documentation is more fabulous, less accurate, less quantified.
We start to get good quantification and good literature after a thousand, right?
So the the dark ages does not mean the whole Middle Ages, right?
Uh it's just this one phase after the total collapse of the Roman Empire in the West, and what you would call like the what's called the High Middle Ages, and the High Middle Ages start roughly around a thousand AD, give or take.
After that things start to get better.
Um but you can look at so many metrics, uh, not just literature, science, technology, industry, economy, uh, urbanization, population size, like you can just go over and over.
Uh productivity, like everything.
The Dark Ages were a tremendous dip, like a catastrophic drop in all of these metrics, all at the same time, which is not a can't be a coincidence, right?
So this something happened, it was pretty dark.
And so what will happen is uh then that's so we know it happened.
There's no doubt that this happened.
Look at this verse, okay.
Literally by design, look at this.
First Corinthians 1 19, Paul says, For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, the intelligence of the intelligent I will frustrate, which is just another midrashic citation of Isaiah 29.
Where is the wise person?
Where is the teacher of the law?
Where is the philosopher of this age?
Has not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?
They're anti-worldly wisdom and understanding, they're for religious dogma and ignorance.
And and the supernatural and the superstition elevating up Jewish mythologies over the real world, reality, rationality, reason.
Look at this.
For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not know him, God was pleased through the foolishness.
God loves fools, God loves a fool.
Fools make good sheep and good slaves of Zion.
God was pleased through the foolishness of what was preached to save those who believe.
It calls Christianity foolishness.
God is pleased with the foolish goyum that want to be cattle slaves and Noahides Bruh.
Bruh.
Fools for Christ, let's go.
And like the evidence, archaeological archaeology, the literature is 100% solid.
There's no way to doubt this.
So the argument gets over semantics.
It's like, well, what should we call it, right?
And Dark Ages seems completely suitable to me, like in the sense, like, yeah, we've lost a bunch of a bunch of stuff.
There's a huge decline, uh, and that includes informational decline.
So our informational access is gone.
A good example is like the number of inscriptions.
So like the amount of inscriptions that we have to reconstruct Roman history is massive.
Like it's hard to even explain how massive the epigraphic uh trend was in the Roman Empire.
Tons and tons of epigraphy that we can work for in.
In the dark ages, we have like the we're talking drops to maybe a hundredth as much, right?
Like it's a huge drop in our access to information.
That alone should raise and their destruction of information.
Their suppression of the sciences.
And the philosophies.
It was authoritarian.
Uh you know, dictatorial Jew worship.
That's all that was allowed.
Jew worship.
His eyebrow.
Yeah, yeah.
All the art became pictures of Jesus, your crucified Jewish Messiah.
Oh, well, wait till it wait for it.
Uh, it gets worse when you start looking at population.
So, like as one historian, and I cite several historians who agree with me on this, I'm not alone, about that.
We really should not be downplaying this.
And so, like the I the movement to get the semantics to use softer language or whatever, is actually not only disingenuous, but it's insulting to the horrors that happened as a result of this.
So we owe it to the people, the millions and millions and millions of people who died because of this.
Uh and so you can see this in the archaeology.
Because of Jesus now, is that you see urbanization, like the population sizes of these cities.
And we can do this through uh, you know, what uh hydrological research, we can see how much water these cities were consuming.
Uh we can see like habitation, like how many buildings were habited and things like this.
Lots of different ways we can triangulate how large this, how many cities there were and how populated they were.
And when you get into the dark ages, there's a massive drop, like like I can't remember the amount, but it's a huge drop.
And then this one scholarly points out that that means that we had a society that was sustaining about a hundred million people, and we went within like a hundred years to a society that could sustain a fifty million people.
That means millions and millions of people starved to death because they couldn't like they had just no food for them, there's no water supply for them.
Or maybe they died in other ways, but the thing is like this is a mess.
You know, and and think of this too.
I just had a thought.
Even though the Romans in Southern Europe ha had uh seemingly so much better architecture and you know technological advances, they still weren't able to conquer the northern tribes and the Germanics and the Gauls, right?
Ten baby mamas.
Adam Green is a beast.
Flexed bicep emoji.
Thank you, 10 baby mamas.
You know, it really means a lot to get some love from you.
You've got ten baby mamas, you got a lot of kids to take care of.
I'm sure a lot of uh a lot of child support, but you still manage to support the channel.
That says a lot.
I wish everybody else could follow in those footsteps there.
Past death era, because the civilization that was supplying people with food and water and all the things to keep them going collapsed, And so there's mass death, right?
We know this, this is a fact.
Um, and you can look at like science, like all the science, uh that Christianity leads to ma mass death.
Not to mention all the wars and death and and burning witches and sorcerers and and wars over these Jewish scriptures, right?
I just uh there's a bunch more verses too, by the way.
First Corinthians 3 18.
Do not deceive yourselves.
If any of you think you are wise by the standards of this age, you should become fools so that you may become wise.
Come on.
Hey, goi, be retarded.
Hey, hey, ignore all those evil, savage pagan technologies of Rome.
You need to be a fool.
The fools are actually the smart ones.
It's like all these Christians going, You're not a serious person.
You don't believe in my Bible, you're not a serious person.
You're an idiot.
Adam's dumb.
He doesn't believe in Jesus, he's dumb.
For the wisdom of this world is foolishness in God's sight.
Oh, all that math and engineering and philosophy, that's all foolishness.
Real intelligence is my Bible.
Hey, goi be retarded.
As it is written, uh more midrash, too.
Distrail sent twenty dollars.
Sorry, I'm late, brother.
I wish I knew this stuff sooner.
Me too, me too.
Uh as it is written, again, all Paul does is cite scripture for shit, too.
He catches the wise in their craftiness.
Dude, it doesn't he say like he caught you.
Paul says he caught the Gentile Christians through trickery.
He catches the wise in their craftiness.
Job five thirteen.
So these crafty Jews use Christianity to catch all the wise pagans, basically.
And again, the Lord knows that the thoughts of the wise are futile.
Psalm 49.
Jesus knows best.
Colossians 2 8.
I'm saving the best one for last.
It's from James.
See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy.
Man, talk about an inversion of reality there.
Oh, don't be held captive by the human tradition and the elemental spiritual forces of this world rather than on Christ.
Science and understanding and philosophies for fools.
You just have to believe that the king of the Jews died for your sins, otherwise you're going to hell.
Lane's been waiting two or three days for this episode.
I know we're finally, it's getting its whole episode.
Friday special.
I've been waiting for it too.
I've been I was teasing it all week.
Okay, here's the best one now.
James 3, 13 to 17.
Who is wise and understanding among you?
Let them show it by their good life, by deeds done in the humility humility that comes from wisdom.
But if you harbor bitter envy and selfish ambition in your hearts, oh, ambition is bad.
Glory is bad.
Thank you, crazy pills.
Do not boast about it or deny the truth.
Such quote unquote wisdom does not come down from heaven, but is earthly.
Unspiritual and demonic.
See, it's literally demonic.
Anything that's not Jewish fairy tale, fan fiction, anything that isn't Jewish prophecy delusions and Jewish Messiah scriptures is demonic and for fools.
That's demonic.
Yeah, self-oh, selfish ambition.
Okay, fair enough.
Shouldn't be selfish ambition, I guess.
Although selfishness does make people accomplish great things.
But uh call calling.
Hold on.
For when you have envy and self selfish ambition, there you find disorder and envy evil practice.
But the wisdom that comes from heaven is first of all pure.
The wisdom that comes from Jews is pure.
Says Yaakov James, the just, the observant Jew.
From heaven, that's the things from God and heaven and from the Jews, that is all good and pure and true wisdom.
But that pagan scientific understanding and philosophy is evil and demonic.
Peace loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere.
Do I have one more?
No, we already did that one.
That's the best one.
I will destroy the wisdom of the wise.
Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world.
Collapsed, right?
So there's mass death, right?
We know this, this is a fact.
Um, and then you can look at like science, like all the science uh that uh the Romans and Greeks and Romans achieved, almost all of that was forgotten.
It had to be reinvented after the dark ages or rediscover.
What are Christians say now?
They say space is satanic, a satanic Jewish lie.
Evolution is its fake Jewish science.
Right?
That's what they'll say.
Demonic.
It's all demonic and satanic.
I have a clip literally of I'll find it of Zirka saying that.
What do I gotta search to find it?
Flat Earth, maybe.
I'll search flat earth and find it.
Gravity is the devil.
And then you look at like science, like all the science.
Oh, sorry, hold on.
Anonymous thing.
Etruscans are the Roman predecessors.
Etruscans were Thracians according to plethora of evidence.
The highest Etruscan god was a carbon copy of a Thracian deity.
The Roman Colosseum was a Thracian invention.
Arena is as Thracian as it can get.
Interesting.
Thank you.
Just no food for them.
There's no water supply for them.
Or maybe they died in other ways, but the thing is, is like this is a mass death era because the civilization that was supplying people with food and water and all the things to keep them going collapsed, right?
And so there's mass death, right?
We know this as a fact.
Um and then you look at like science, like all the science uh that uh the Romans and Greeks and Romans achieved, almost all of that was forgotten.
It had to be reinvented after the Dark Ages or rediscovered because some of the stuff survived in the Eastern Roman Empire.
It's some uh the Arabic uh Muslims capitalized in their golden age.
Yes, they they survived stuff as well.
They're they're they had a renaissance that got quashed.
Yeah.
Christianity is spiritual Marxism slash slave morality, trying to destroy and bring down the aristocratic glory and strength of pagan Europe.
True.
True.
Hey, genetics matter just got banned.
Otherwise, I'd go.
I know in that uh huge thread of memes he did.
There was the good pagan memes that showed the difference between the pagan and the Christian values.
I just saw it and covered it on the show the other day.
I think he got banned because of that.
That thread possibly.
Maybe it was the happy merchant memes.
I know you're at you're asking for censorship when you use those those uh offensive and uh uh insulting caricatures, of course, that we always disavow.
But uh Virlzer also got banned too.
Liam got banned again.
These these Christians are always mass flagging our shit.
Shutting it down, like they tried to shut down all the wisdom and science and philosophy and cast us into the dark ages for Jewish fairy tales.
Dude, yeah, the Johann said ten dollars, Johan.
I'm donating ten shekels for your dear old mom who doesn't know her baby boy is an internet heretic.
Smiley face emoji.
Mommy issues, yeah.
No, we're uh we're uh almost everybody in the chat probably was raised Christian, I would guess.
Most 90, 80 percent raised Christian.
I would guess that.
It's something uh the Arabic uh Muslims capitalized in their golden age.
Yes, they they survived stuff as well.
They had a renaissance that got quashed.
Yeah.
Due to the the Renaissance in Europe, the Catholic Church also tried to quash that, but the Catholic Church lost its grip on power because of the Reformation.
So the Catholic Church basically declined in its ability to suppress this stuff, whereas there was more ability to suppress it in uh the Islamic world.
They didn't have the kind of uh like the fracture of sex that would back science against the other sect.
Like we didn't have that.
So it succeeded in killing it there.
But even the Renaissance there was just like the beginning of a recovery of lost knowledge.
There's not a lot of new stuff in the Islamic thing.
This is a thing I think a lot of the historians do.
The Islamic scholars get this wrong.
Medieval scholars get this wrong because they don't look at the evidence for the ancient world.
And so they look at all these like kind of brilliant clever things coming up in the Renaissance and in uh both Renaissances, right?
And they think, wow, there's there's new stuff, there's new genius and new things being discovered.
It's like actually, no, all that stuff was already known, and there's they're really just using lost manuscripts to recover lost knowledge.
They're not doing a lot that's new.
And in fact, you don't even get to anything, any level like if you talk about the scientific knowledge that we had in the Roman Empire, we don't get back to that, like equal to that until about the 15th century.
Uh and so that's so you're talking like you've got the dark ages, and then think where it was a massive decline, and then in the year thousand, we start digging our way out of the hole, but it still took 500 years to get back to where we started, right?
So the Dark Ages is kind of like the hole that we fell into, and then the high middle ages was called crawling out of that hole, and then you know, the high renaissance and early modern era is we say the high renaissance is when we finally like get back, and then the modern era is that's finally we're getting ahead.
We're building what were major causes based on your research.
Yeah, I'll get into that.
Let me let me get a few other data points.
So I talked about cities.
Another one is um the two things.
So shipwrecks.
Okay, so sh then the number the counting shipwrecks, that tells you how much trade there was.
So this corroborates this story I'm telling, right?
So if you look at shipwrecks from the Roman Empire versus the Dark Ages, massive decline, which means the amount of trade was massive decline.
So you have massively fewer ships sailing with products of economic decline.
Yeah, yeah.
So like that's that's another example.
You could look at other things you compare, for instance, the unsequel encyclopedists like um Kelsus from the first century, Pliny, and then you look at like Isidore and these medieval these Dark Ages uh encyclopedists, and they look like morons by comparison.
Like they're they're full of like fanciful ridiculous things, they barely understand the stuff that they're repeating.
So like the decline and even the understanding of the transmitted knowledge is profound.
Like it's a huge, it's really just a collapse, intellectual collapse, and collapse of the education system, collapse of the civilization, collapse of the trade system, like everything, right?
And another point of this is this is my favorite one is ice cores.
So you can show they they could dig these ice cores, because uh like in the Antarctic and Arctic, these cores, the snow builds over thousands of years, and so you can and it traps the atmosphere, so you can get a clip of what the atmosphere was like every year for foundal surgery.
That's right.
And one of the big ones is lead, right?
So um lead is uh is a big because lead gets everywhere, and it is a byproduct of a lot of other industrial activities.
So it's mainly silver mining, but also as all kinds of mining and production and manufacturing.
Lead was one of the main products and it gets everywhere, so it's easy to see.
So if you look at like lead levels, right, in in the ice cores, and you see like it peaks like tremendously under the Roman Empire, which shows a massive level of industrial production.
And then you have this massive decline to almost nothing, right?
The dark ages, very little is going on.
And then you don't get that peak to the same level of production again until again the 15th century, right?
So it's the same story, right?
You can see this.
So the data is beyond dispute.
There's no way to argue this.
But it's often diskewed by this refusal.
I never heard the ice core argument.
Great interview with Carrier.
Yeah, I hadn't watched the whole thing yet.
I plan on it.
Shout out Need More Amalek for posting it.
Man, what is this cool piece of art you got here, Derek?
Broken Vase or something.
Right.
So it's usually there's a try an attempt to sort of downplay that.
Like, oh, they weren't really as advanced.
Oh, they weren't really their industry wasn't really that great.
Oh, they didn't really have that many scientific inventions, which is all false because it's easily refuted.
And that's in my book, The Scientist and the Early Roman Empire.
I give all the data and scholarship you need to show that that's just not the case.
Yes, you do.
So much talked about it.
Yeah, and I've got that book on Audible.
I kind of went through it quick one time, probably missed a bunch of it.
All right.
Now here's top eight ancient Roman technologies, one more video, and then we're gonna get into ancient technology before the common era, a highlight from three years ago when he was on with Neil.
Let's check that we'll check that.
Rome wasn't built in a day, but the Romans created a few things that have lasted up to this day.
it's eight incredible roman innovations If you lived in ancient Rome and wanted to look up the box score from the big gladiator man.
Hold on, I wanted to play this, the satanic, satanic flat earthers.
What do you think the point of it being round is then?
Well, it it's clearly an attack on the first page of Genesis.
If the Genesis is saying there's a firmament dome.
See, and they're saying, nah, bro, it's a sphere.
They're really saying that holy book is bullshit.
There's dinosaurs before you, bro.
That holy book is bullshit.
So think it has to do it all has to do with religion.
That's why they're saying not religion, just the cross.
Think about what we deal with just in the internet.
Just like in having an opinion that you don't think you're on a spinning ball.
One of the most non-offensive opinions you can have in the world.
So simple, so non-offensive, so beautiful, so trusting in the Bible, literal.
But yet you're everybody mocks you.
See, denying reality, denying science, denying the shape of the earth, denying evolution, all because it contradicts the Bible.
They call it satanic.
They claim people's understanding of the world is uh attack on Christianity, so they suppress it.
That's why they hide uh the flat earth.
They want you just to think you're a globe floating around in space, nothing special about you.
You were an accident.
When God intentionally uh put us here, he intentionally created us, and he loves us, and he made us just like them.
So that is what I have to say about that.
That is why I lean towards more flat earth than I do round earth.
Also, I haven't seen it.
I don't trust anything I don't see anymore.
If I haven't seen it myself, I don't believe it.
It's a lie because everything that they've told me is a lie.
That's why you see this is this is what the Bible does to people.
Okay, hold on, let's find out.
I know uh oh, Thunderstorm, thank you.
One of God Apollo Montras's everything in moderation, goddess hell table in Hellheim was plenty for those who died in sickness.
According to Christianity, this is evil.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
But you really believe Earth's flat.
Yes.
Why the earth is because Bradley, you've never in your life seen a picture.
Okay, I know there's one where it says evolution.
Maybe if I search evolution is demonic, I'll find it.
Or we're looking for a review of Virgil's latest poem.
You weren't quite in luck.
However, the Romans did generate and distribute a daily document called the Acta that very closely resembles our modern newspaper.
The term acta diurna translates to daily acts or gazette.
Carved on stone or metal, the acta was originally a private account of what took place in the Senate meetings.
In 59 BC, Julius Caesar made the acta available to the public.
They were posted in common areas and began to feature content that was more relevant to the average citizen, like social, political, and criminal events.
The acta were able to be distributed across the whole empire.
Found it.
And just like in modern journalism, Cicero once critiqued that the acta had too much tittle tattle and not enough hard facts.
Watonomist says, Adam, you should go into medieval torture and imprisonment techniques.
That's a good idea.
I'll I'll I will search that.
Yeah, what they would do, how they would torture.
They were very creative in ingenuity to create torture devices to torture all the scientists.
Here I found the clip where they say evolution is demonic and satanic.
Zirka again.
Zirka uh cocaine crusader Zirka bringing us all the hits.
But this does illustrate the type of Christ brain religious mindset towards science and technology.
You know, the ape is named Lucy, right?
The last common ancestor that we should satanic in anthropology.
Absolutely.
Evolution is satanic.
Absolutely.
I hear the Christians go, Darwin was a Jewish conspiracy to cover up Genesis.
Uh the Jews want you to believe in Genesis.
And these type of videos on TikTok and on YouTube and Instagram, they go crazy viral.
The Christians lap this goy slop up.
Absolutely satanic.
I'm not even sure if Zirka really believes this or not.
I think he might be just doing a bit, acting like a stupid uh Christ's brain.
Common ancestors to the week.
So evolution is satanic in anthropology.
Absolutely.
Charles Darwin's a Satanist, right?
Absolutely.
I was a little bit late on that.
I I studied anthropology in uh college, and evolution, I loved it.
It was actually the hardest thing I had to let go of when I came to Christ.
But then I really did my research, and it's so stupid.
Yeah, you have to let it go when you be when you believe in the magical Jewish superhero that's born of a virgin and walked on water.
You gotta you gotta give up the real world.
Even if it's hard, Zirka is grifting 100%.
If he is, he's a genius, and I envy him.
If he got rich off playing a uh cocaine crusader, uh flat earther, duping all these idiots.
My hat's off to him.
Anonymous sent five dollars.
One of the most famous prophecies is about the city on the seven hills being destroyed.
Rome, yeah.
Everyone assume it's Rome in Italy.
It's not.
It will be Constantinople, current day Instant Bull and past day capital of Eastern Roman Empire.
I don't agree.
I think it's the seven hills of uh of Rome.
It's either he's really smart or really stupid.
I think he's smart in playing 40 chess, honestly.
Absolutely.
Hill Zerka.
I was a little bit late on that.
I Zirka, you're drowning.
College and emotion, I loved that.
It was actually the hardest thing I had to let go of when I came to Christ, but then I really did my research, and it's so stupid for the intermediary species and stuff.
He's like, I watched a lot of podcasts.
I watched some Christian creationists, uh apologists.
It's so stupid.
Bible, though, so smart.
Worldly wisdom, foolish.
He's just a good like a good Christian.
Worldly wisdom, foolish.
Jewish wisdom, genius.
Stupid for the intermediary species and stuff, like adaptation exists sent five dollars on Rumble.
Yet these types of Christians also believe that there are significant differences amongst the races.
How is that possible without evolution?
Yeah, I've heard people say, why did God invent these people?
It was the Sassanians of the fifth century, not the Muslims or Byzantines who preserved ancient knowledge.
Byzantines banned libraries while the Sassanians built the libraries of Gunshaper and Naservis.
Thank you.
Adam's biblical knowledge could make him a great Christian grifter.
Maybe one day, we'll see, one day.
Hail Zerka is the account that posted this.
Yeah, and an epic troll from Zerka, I think so.
For the intermediary species and stuff, like adaptation exists, animals changing, but going from whale to land mammal has there's millions of intermediate intermediary species missing there, never been found.
Just like a wolf and a dog.
Like when people are like, you can breed dogs with other dogs.
Fucking retard.
But now look at this.
Last common ancestor named Lucy.
Vatican telescope that looks at the stars, the planetarium telescope that no one's allowed to go in.
It's called Lucifer.
They're literally named it Lucifer.
So last common ancestors, Lucifer.
Everything ties back to the Bible.
It's actually crazy.
Boom!
Hail Zerka.
I found a video on Christian torture devices, too.
They're concrete, everybody's heard a lot.
There's been a lot of talk about how they're the ancient Roman concrete had a special ingredients where it could heal itself if it was damaged, and it still lasts till today, many places.
Although there is evidence that other ancient civilizations used it, the Romans are cemented in history as the kings of concrete.
Or should we say emperors?
One of the Roman Empire's lasting legacies is the many structures that stand today.
The Colosseum, the Pantheon, the Forum, the Aqueducts, and many more.
They are all made of and remain intact thanks to concrete.
A special feature of Roman concrete that scientists are studying to this day is its resistance to erosion by seawater.
While modern concrete begins to erode after about 50 years when underwater, the Roman concrete has survived for centuries.
This is due to the combination of slaked lime and volcanic ash that creates a chemical reaction, causing the concrete to dry quickly and actually thrive under seawater.
It was quite literally the foundation of the empire.
Civilizations had been building them since the Bronze Age.
But Babe Ruth didn't invent baseball either.
Yet they both just mastered a craft in a way that had never been done before.
The Romans revolutionized the engineering and maximized the potential of what a system of roads and highways could do.
The Romans telescope being Lucifer.
Lucifer means lightbringer.
Telescopes bring in the light from the stars.
That would be my guess.
Roads through any land that they conquered, beginning in the early 300s BCE.
The network stretched up to 50,000 stone paved miles at its peak.
Engineers figured out a method to build every road to be as straight as possible from origin to destination.
And yes, almost all of them led back to Rome.
Mud huts, Jones.
But the benefits of these roads are huge reasons.
That's the statue.
I took a picture with Mark Collette in front of this.
This was in York, England.
It's where he became, he was like anointed the emperor.
The Roman Empire was a world power for more than 800 years.
He ruined it all in cobblestone roads had drops.
It allowed messages and orders to be sent quickly, made for efficient trade across thousands of miles, and most importantly, gave campaigning armies a reliably steady stream of troops and supplies.
For the Romans, a picture I took was very much highway.
The Romans were jacks of all trades, warriors, engineers, artists, and intellectuals.
We even have them to thank for the invention of books.
Who knew?
For the first few millennia that people were writing things down, it was done on heavy stone or clay tablets, and then long scrolls that could stretch over 30 feet long.
The Romans were the first people to create the very first bound books of stacked pages called a codex.
Julius Caesar was known to make notebooks for himself, but they became really popular around 1 CE.
The pages were first made of wax-covered wood tablets.
Yeah, I went to Italy in 2018.
paper which was invented by the most amazing place I've ever been originally used as a log of laws and decrees made by emperors but the Christians were early adopters of the process to produce copies of the Bible to spread Christianity with great success The invention of binding is considered the greatest advancement in books until the printing press, a huge win for the bookworms.
Roman Pilled Friday.
Plumbing as far back as the 9th century BCE, it was the Romans a few centuries later who elevated, and in this case buried it, to another level.
The Romans developed the first modern plumbing system, building aqueducts to bring fresh water into the city, and laying a series of lead pipes and large sewers underground to flush away waste.
The Latin term plumbus actually means plumbus.
Special punishment for nuns disobeying or trying to escape was placing them in a well in monastery basements and covered it with a large stone.
Oh, just like Jesus covered in a in a tomb covered with a big stone.
Yeah, I I found a clip, an old uh five-minute clip of uh Christian torture devices.
We'll get to that too.
And we're gonna play the other carrier clip also.
I see Neamore Amalek had another clip too.
I miss many of which stand today, supplied public wells, baths, and many homes throughout the city.
After the fall of Rome, many of the countries that emerged were disinterested in maintaining the Roman standard for sanitation and cleanliness.
Christians allowed the plumbing to fall into disrepair, making the population more vulnerable to outbreaks of disease.
Great.
Good job, Christians.
Hey, couldn't have a society without Jesus, though, am I right?
Those pagans couldn't build anything.
...of improving upon existing ideas.
However, the concept of welfare stems entirely from the brains of forward-thinking Roman leaders.
In 122 BCE, Tribune Gaius Gracchus instituted Lex Frumentaria, a law ordering the government to provide citizens with cheaply priced grain.
However, it was two centuries later in 98 CE, under Emperor Trajan, that the first true welfare system took form.
It was called Alamenta, and it distributed funds to the poor and provided food for poor children throughout Italy.
Proponents of Trajan's system point out that this period was a prosperous time.
I've seen Christians argue that they invented welfare.
Christians were treated with fairness, and the empire reached its greatest expanse.
However, detractors feel that these programs were a drain on the economy, and were the reason that the empire began its decline shortly thereafter.
Maybe during the first century CE, the Roman version of Leonardo da Vinci was living in Alexandria, modern day Egypt.
Hero was one of the greatest mathematicians of his time and called the father of physics.
He was interested in the practical uses of mathematics, which led him to inventing several items that were so advanced, people viewed them as miracles.
One such invention was the first known vending machine in history, which dispensed holy water inside temples.
Priests were apparently having trouble with their poorer patrons using up all of the holy water, and they were tired of chasing down these wet patrons for payment.
I paid $69420 and $5 on rumble.
Thanks for the green pill, former Catholic and Pope John Paul II meter.
My family was well into it when I was growing up.
I Happy to have you with us.
I'm glad you're saved from the Jewish mine virus.
That's good to hear.
A whole lot of former Christians raise Christian people here.
Special kind of vase.
Someone would drop a five drachma coin into a slot at the top.
The coin landed on a tray, its weights slowly opening another slot that released the holy water.
When the coin slipped off the tray, the water slot would close.
The device not only gave temples an automated way to collect money, it became an attraction for the temple.
Everyone wanted to see this miracle with their own eyes.
To put this accomplishment in perspective, the first vending machine in the U.S. wasn't built until 1888.
The practice of surgery existed long before the rise of the Roman Empire.
There is evidence of a procedure called trefining, drilling a hole in the skull to relieve pain, being performed as early as 3000 BCE.
However, as you guys ever had a headache so bad you you felt like a pressure headache, you wanted to have a hold drilled in your skull.
I've been there before.
We've seen time and time again.
Hold on, it's hard to yell.
Again, just about anything people did, Romans did better.
Archaeologists have discovered many surgical tools that the Romans developed as early as 79 CE that closely resemble their modern contemporaries, including scalpels, bone forceps, vaginal speculums, bone hooks, saws and levers, catheters, and more.
Most of these tools and procedures were born on the battlefield, and being able to successfully treat previously deadly injuries gave the Romans another huge advantage over their adversaries.
These tools helped the Romans master other surgical advancements like C-sections and even plastic surgery.
It seems great until you remember that general anesthesia wasn't available for another 1800 years.
So we've essentially learned that the minds of the Romans were like the bacon of the ancient world.
Add them to anything and they enhanced it.
And they're also amazing on their own.
At this point, we wouldn't be surprised if the Romans invented brunch.
Yeah, well, Jesus healed with magic, right?
Sin's chicken's revenge.
Who needs surgery and medicine when Jesus can just say some magic words?
Faith heal people.
Just like just like your Christians today, they go boom, healed, healed all the fake healers today.
Or all the faith healers that won't take modern medicine or go to a hospital because they'd rather pray to pray to Jesus.
That was it.
That was it.
Okay, before we get to this, let's do the clip I missed from Need More Hamalek, a little more from Carrier here.
Not really making any progress where we had a massive loss and then a recovery, but it took that thousand years, a little more than a thousand years to get back to where we had lost, right?
So that was a huge pause button.
Can you imagine like had that not happened, we'd be right now.
Anonymous sent five dollars.
History doesn't repeat, but it does rhyme.
The Western Roman Empire fell first while the East stood another thousand years.
Today Western Europe is on the brink, but this will only unite a deastern Europe.
The region will become a new empire.
Well, I'm not betting on the West to fall so the East can be the new empire.
The West falling sounds like anti-Edom stuff.
Oof.
Awkward, awkward pause.
Can you imagine like had that not happened, we'd be right now, you and I would be a thousand years more advanced scientifically, technologically, economically, and so on.
So can you imagine what that would be like?
Like it's so we lost that because of this.
So it was really apocalyptic in that sense.
Even if it like took a hundred years for the whole collapse to occur, so that people aren't directly seeing how cat it's not like a nuclear war or a virus or something that you know, like all the post-apocalyptic movies that we have.
The decline would took about a hundred years.
It wasn't like one generation, right?
But it's still the decline happened, it was massive.
In the East, the decline also happened, it just didn't have it wasn't as catastrophic, so it wasn't a cliff.
And so in the East, it just uh it survived the collapse of Western civilization, but then slowly declined for over.
And so until it finally collapsed the Byzantine Empire in the 15th century.
And then when that happened, all of this literature that was sitting in their libraries eventually got west, and this supercharged the the high renaissance uh in the West, because now we're they're getting back all these documents they lost, which is another thing about the Dark Ages, so much was lost, and we know this because it was still sitting in libraries in the East, but it was completely unknown in the West for a thousand years, right?
And so the stuff finally filters back, and people are looking at it, they're reading like Lucretius and and lost works of Galen and Ptolemy and stuff like this.
Is amazing stuff.
How did we not know about this?
And so you can see how the reaction is like, shit, that really was a dark age, like we really lost all of this stuff.
And we lost more because the East also was in steady decline and and and was increasing disinterest in science too.
So it's important to note that the catastrophic economic collapse that resulted in what we call the dark ages, even though that didn't happen in the East, the same result is that there were there was no scientific progress in the East at all.
So basically science stopped at about 300 AD, maybe 250 AD.
Nothing new happened at all, like nothing significant, right?
So and that that reflects not economic loss, because they had money, they had resources, they had libraries, etc.
They were tasking monks with what is Derek doing with this glass bowl here.
Is this like their hand ancient hand washing station?
Like gladiator washes his hands in the bowl.
Preserving things.
But they weren't using it, they weren't building on it.
They lost interest in science.
And why why that is is a whole other story that I do tell in my book, The Scientist and the Early Roman Empire.
So you know, I'm thinking of Julian the Apostate in the fourth early fourth century, roughly, early to mid-fourth century.
And his cries from these ancient texts that are like just begging, you know, like look at what's going on.
These guys are these Christians are coming in and they're they're really ruining our culture and and and how much we were up here.
Damn Bigfoot spent five dollars on Rumble.
Why didn't Jesus or any other prophet tell their followers to sail west to the Americas?
All knowing God didn't know about a massive land mass.
Nope, no clue.
No clue about anything that they didn't know at the time.
Yeah, um, it's uh and yeah, and of course you start to see that with the more like violent hostility too.
Like Hypatia gets literally mass murdered, you know, murdered by a mass of Christians.
Like, how dare a woman teach philosophy?
Well, we'll need philosophy for, you know, it's like the Bible's the only thing that matters, that kind of attitude.
So you see this, this this stuff.
Never forget, never forget what they did to Hypatia.
Never forget what those Christian the mob of satanic demonic evil Jewish Christians did to our hypatia.
Thank you, Alabama.
This sort of rage we got a dance recital, the Halloween dance recital this weekend at some Halloween carnival.
Okay, I've been looking forward to it.
Ghostbusters.
My my little ones gonna be dancing the ghostbusters for Halloween.
And the hostility against the old world and science and things like this.
But it's not just like those were the extremists, right?
There were there were exceptions.
There were intellectuals who at least respected knowledge uh and the old knowledge and stuff, but they lost the values that are necessary for moving the ball down the field.
So I talk about this, I give examples and cite scholarship on this in my book on the scientist in the early Roman Empire, which is that Uh they lost empiricism.
So empiricism is the view that evidence trumps authority.
So what Christian the Christian culture flipped that it's the Bible and religious authorities trump evidence.
So the idea that evidence could refute the Pope, like that was not a popular thing anymore.
So this I this interest in empiricism declined.
And so you can see the actual like dumb things that show up in Isidore and these other like medieval scholars, like they're they're just gullibly believing lore and legends and stuff, and they're not really doing experiments, they're not fact-checking, like they're the interest in empiricism has declined.
Curiosity is also being attacked.
And so this is what there have been a lot of studies of the value of curiosity over time that show that curiosity was a denigrated value, it was dangerous to be curious in during the Christian era.
So like curiosity.
Christians are taught that like asking questions or having skepticism or or having doubts in your faith is a sin, and it's Satan whispering in your ear.
Such trash.
Inverted our European values, true, Need Moore Amalek.
And so, like, start asking questions about like, well, how what if we cut into the human body to see how it works?
We already see Certullian saying that's against the will of God.
If God wanted you to know it, he wouldn't have hidden it inside, right?
Your your devilish curiosity to know things is really your you're turning your mind away from God, and so it's bad.
Right.
So curiosity is bad, right?
So that's and but you need curiosity for science, right?
Uh, and then a belief in progress.
So the ancient Romans believe that you could increase.
History is repeating itself, right?
Empiricism is declining again.
Yeah, this Charlie Kirk revival is doing this to our brains again.
They want everybody back on the Judeo and the Judeo plantation.
Progress in science and other fields.
The Christians didn't believe that.
They believed that no, if if it's this progress for them was uh greater faith in God, right?
Like there was the idea that you could you could through your own decisions make society better, that you could increase the you know, decrease income disparity through economic mechanisms through technology, things like that.
They didn't believe in that.
They didn't think that it was possible for fallible humans to be able to do that.
Yeah, Christians still reject science, of course they do.
It's this idea that we that humans can't do anything.
So a form of fatalism in a way.
Yeah, it's this idea that there is no progress.
Why why so why work for it?
And in fact, it's vain.
It's vain.
Right, yeah, exactly.
That also has a thing, the idea that only put your your faith in Jesus.
Don't put your faith in man, only Jesus can save us.
Only the Messiah can come and save us.
Like, why bother trying to make progress?
It's all gonna be gone in a moment, right?
So um and also it's like the emphasis on godly things.
This is what the hero was the guy who went all cynic and like abandoned all technologies and all things and got went and lived on a pillar, right?
Like, this is the you know, the guy who ate bread the rest of his life and just prayed to God, like that's the ideal, not the intellectual who is like solving a hydrological problem, right?
Like that that wasn't your hero at the time.
Yeah, yeah.
Your average Christian says NASA is satanic.
An evolution in Darwinism is a satanic demonic Jewish lie.
That's the type of things they say.
Shout out, Need More Amlek for clipping those.
Shout out Derek and Carrier for doing that cool video.
Here, uh oh shoot.
Sita would also this fits the theme today.
He said go to 150, this fits the theme.
Let's hear what Rabbi has to say.
Of course, remains.
Why did God do this?
Why did God remove wisdom or a from the world for hundreds and hundreds of years?
So fundamentally what I really feel is true, because without doing that, Christianity would never have survived.
If if God didn't remove wisdom and intelligence and discernment from the world, Christianity would have never survived.
True, very true, Rabbi.
No lies detected there.
I can't wait to see where this is going.
Because Christianity, when it's confronted with philosophy and with logic and with science, begins to disappear.
Oh, but Judaism doesn't.
Christianity is just Judaism, is a version of Judaism.
Belief that a man is a god is absolutely ridiculous.
And that's why Christianity and his formation and later began to fight anything that had to do with any knowledge.
You know, Christianity fought flaffy and logic and any of these caught.
It fought science.
It completely opposed any inference to wisdom and so on, and it maintained that you in order to be Christian, you have to defy and reject all forms of knowledge.
Wow.
And the reason is fundamentally pretty simple.
That if God did not provide the dark ages with people no longer Rabbi is BTFO in the Christians right now.
I'm sorry.
But he's he he obviously he's throwing stones In his glass house because the Torah and Judaism is all just, in my view, just as fake and stupid as Christianity.
Christianity is just an extension of that.
Christianity would not have survived.
Because later on, when these was when this future of wisdom comes to the world in the period of the Enlightenment and the scientific revolution, which I will speak about later, Christianity began to fold up.
It began to desolve anonymous sent five dollars, the elite suffer from one problem, and that's the idea that they gain and retain control of anything.
The irony of everything is they're pushing the world to an event, and that would be the end of Judeo Matrix forever.
They gotta keep everybody dumb, ignorant, illiterate, distracted by mythologies and and kosher conspiracies and delusions.
Right, a real right bio-digital goblin, religion of the poor and the ignorant.
Yeah, Elaine.
Videos like this should go viral instead of the fake rabbi videos saying their God is illusory.
Christianity began to fold up.
It began to dissolve, began to disappear.
No, Harrison, this is stupid.
This is what Chris Cope's Christians say.
Science today thinks men can be women.
No, it doesn't.
No, it doesn't.
That's that's liberals trying to push their agenda.
That's not science.
Science says there's biologically two genders.
All of the liberals are attacking the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, the most famous atheist in the world, Richard Dawkins, Because he says that there's two genders.
Science says there's two genders, actually, not that a man can be a woman.
Wrong.
Because Christianity, in its fundamental beliefs, defies logic.
It defies any aspect of truth.
It doesn't make sense.
But Christianity was able to hold sway over the entire world because nobody knew anything.
Right.
It's only when mankind is completely ignorant of basic wisdom that Christianity has the possibility of surviving.
And God wanted Christianity to survive, to convert Christianity to the belief of God.
So even though it included the belief in Jesus, but that's what God wanted, because that's what was replaced uh Judaism, uh, and that that was the exile of the god of the Moshiach.
So therefore the perfect Jesus is the Moshiach in exile, like it says in Lamentations for the Jews in exile under the shadow of the anointed one.
So the dark ages was to allow Christianity to survive and to become the dominant religion in the West.
And in that way they completely um they included the the the uh the sovereignty of all of mankind.
And when Charlemagne and future I got you, Harrison.
I know I didn't expect Harrison would be a Christian koveching in the comments.
He says he agrees what I said, but they do try to push fake science.
Absolutely.
Something isn't like scientifically sound just because somebody calls it science.
Or they or if somebody puts on a lab coat, it doesn't mean what they're saying is you know, something that's true.
Gender social sciences included the the uh the uh the sovereignty of all of mankind.
And when Charlemagne and future kings became Holy Roman Empires, they not only had the theocra the theocratic or the theological power over the world, they also had the political, so all the kings of Europe became Christian.
Christianity, in order to become powerful, and also truly succeed, can only succeed under an environment of absolute ignorance, which gives total sovereignty to the power of the Christian church to dominate the people of Europe.
And that's what that became the fundamental basis of anti-Semitism and the real sovereignty of Aesov over the Jewish people.
So we see gradually for the last seven hundred years, how Christianity started to weaken, become weak, and began to in certain ways disappear.
And what is the purpose of all this?
The purpose of all this is because the Yours of Mashiach is going out of Gulus.
That's right.
What you are actually observing by the slow death of Christianity, you are out of exile.
So now you see even further that not only is Christianity weakened tremendously, but now Christianity begins to love Jews.
That's right.
The evangelists believe that God wants the Jews to be in Israel, and they consider their Jews the younger brother.
They are still the dominant religion, and they're waiting for the return of Jesus in the world.
But they believe that the Jews are critical to that function.
So therefore the Jews have turned some haters into lovers.
But they love us as a younger brother, that we are wrong, but it's not successful.
Right.
When the knowledge of the world, the world become Beninoya.
The world will become Noahides.
The one totally absolutely oneness of God.
I forgot about this meme.
Say Jesus is fake, nobody bats an eye.
Say he was invented by Jews, and everybody loses their minds.
Good meme.
That was mine.
That was mine.
Classic meme template.
I was proud of that one.
469 likes, too.
Not bad.
Let's give a retweet on that.
I've been in retweet happy today.
Okay.
Uh, should we do torture devices?
Let's do torture devices.
We've already seen quite a bit from Carrier.
The period of European history between the fifth and 14th centuries is known as the Dark Ages for a reason.
It's an era rife with political rivalries, religious intrigues, and cruel devices used to extract information and cause pain.
Now I'll grant lots of different cultures had throughout history, and not it's not only Christians that had torture devices.
But the point is that why they were torturing people, they would torture somebody if you for blaspheming the Moshiach.
They would torture somebody for saying that uh the earth is not the center of the universe, for saying that Genesis isn't real.
Anything like that, the torture is for that's that's what's ridiculous about it.
To hail from the dark ages.
None captures the imagination more than the infamous Iron Maiden.
A metal casket towering nearly seven feet tall.
Its exterior features a woman's face, one allegedly inspired by the Virgin Mary.
And when it's opened, there's an unholy surprise.
Jesus would have totally created stuff like this to torture, to torture the non-believers.
I mean, there is the verse about a millstone.
If you if you turn the little ones away from Jesus, tie a millstone around their neck, it'd be better.
Iron Maiden, great ban.
Satanic, actually satanic, man.
Impale the body, but in such a way that it wouldn't kill them.
Yeah, yeah.
They just say, Oh, you're satanic, or oh, that's a witch.
Hey, that girl, that that woman in the woods is making some herbal remedies.
That's witchcraft.
Burn her.
Put her in the Iron Maiden.
So the Christians would do.
It would go into places that were very painful, but not particularly deadly.
These spikes, because they're stabbed in, they're actually causing some sort of blockage of the blood coming out.
You're going to bleed, you're going to ooze around it, but it's actually going to take a lot longer to, say, bleed out.
Stick them in a box, make them really, really uncomfortable, so that they cannot sleep, they cannot move, they cannot breathe until they give in and give you what you want.
You would be so surprised how resilient the human body is.
The amount of damage that an individual can take and still be awake, alive, and suffering is immense.
You can have a ton of broken bones, you can have elacerations, cuts, all of these different things, and still suffer and feel the pain.
You would think at some point you're gonna stop feeling pain because you're in shock and you don't feel it anymore.
That is a misnomer.
But as sadistic as this device is, there's another that's even more feared.
One intended to inflict both terror and pain, known as the wreck.
The mere sight of it often elicits a confession.
We have bones popping, joints ripping, tendons coming undone.
Individuals who, even after they're released from torture, they never walk the same way again.
They're never able to stand upright again for the rest of their lives.
This is a means of torture that is permanently damaging to the people that it is inflicted on the wreck is an elevated wooden frame with spokes.
A victim's ankles and wrists are attached with ropes.
Poles are inserted into sockets, and when pulled, turn the axles, slowly tearing the victim apart.
When somebody's attached to a rat, what you hear is the popping sound of their joints and the cartilage as they are slowly dislocated.
Or you're gonna start having some bleeding into the muscle, and the muscles might rip.
And your muscles are attached by tendons, so tendons.
This is all Christian love.
The blessings of Christianity.
And when ligaments like that pop, what happens is then you're gonna be able to do that.
I know, huh?
That sounds like it'd be good for my lower back.
I think uh uh uh I've done inversion tables.
This is this is like a a more extreme version of an inversion table.
If you pull hard enough, there is enough force, probably that you can actually rip limbs off.
You're literally you use it on on low, you put it on the low setting, and you gain an inch in height.
Wow, someone is in your face, asking you questions, demanding that you confess, telling you at any moment this can stop.
Just do what we want you to do.
They wouldn't even just do this to pagans, Christians would do this to other Christians.
Christians would torture other Christians because they weren't interpreting or being subservient to the right authority or interpreting the scriptures correctly.
It's not about guilt, it's not about innocence, it's about stop ripping my body apart.
I will do whatever you want me to do.
The machine is so powerful, the force it uses to break a spine is equal to a 500 pound wrecking ball crashing through a wall at 30 miles per hour.
Nothing in the New Testament.
Where did Jesus talk about torturing the blasphemers or the heretics?
How did how did the Christian authorities get away with this?
Their congregations weren't saying, hey, this that's not what Jesus would do.
Very often.
It's amazing what they're capable of.
These holy ones of death in order to then apply other tortures.
Many of these devices are complex in their cruelty.
Christian love is wickedly simple.
The thumb screws are pretty aptly named.
The goal is to mangle the hand by putting it in a vice and using what are essentially screws to apply pressure to the thumb joints, both smashing them and pulling them away from the rest of the hand at the same time.
You're causing significant amount of soft tissue pain.
That's right.
They would if anybody complained, they'd be tortured too.
Traditionally, thumb screws contain two metal bars.
A screw on the center post, when turned, brings the bars together with great force, crushing whatever is placed between them.
If your hands are mangled from the thumb screws, people know that you've been tortured.
And people know that that perhaps means you deserved it.
Also, the mangling of the hands makes it very difficult for you to produce in a largely agricultural society.
Most people work with their hands.
So to make the hands unusable is a theme that we see across the panoply of forms of torture in the Middle Ages.
Thumbscrews actually was used to elicit a lot of information because it hurts so much.
Excruciating and portable thumbscrews are popular far and wide, from witch trials to slave ship uprisings.
But in the long history of torture devices, perhaps none is more diabolical than one designed not to crush, tear, or pierce, but to roast.
One of the most sadistic torture devices to come out of the...
So this this is the history of the church, burning heretics and blasphemers and torturing non-believers and torching heresy, right?
And then they want to turn around and say, You hey goi, you'd have no morals without us.
We won't have morality or ethics or a functioning society without the church, the institution of the church.
Ancient world was from the 6th century BCE in Sicily, known as the Brazen Bull, also known as the Bull of Phalaris, named after the tyrant of Sicily.
Philaris, the tyrant was known as being excessively evil.
There are even stories that he engaged in cannibalism.
The bull itself was actually invented by someone named Parales.
And Herolus wanted to invent a device that would be meant to torture and also kill people, but in a very symbolic way, placing them into a large hollow bronze bowl where a fire would be lit under it.
The brazen bull is essentially just a pressure cooker.
original Holocaust machine.
There is an enclosed cavity of air that as that air heats, the people inside will be cooked alive.
It's estimated that a person could survive inside the bull for up to 20 excruciating This is what the E Crusaders wish they could do to me in the so-called online pagan sphere.
This is what they fantasize about doing to us.
Doing crusades and killing their own because and torturing their own because we don't believe in Jewish fairy tales.
...
The bull is also almost entirely soundproof.
Except for two holes drilled into the nose.
This is where the device becomes even more diabolical.
The brazen bull was specifically designed so that the screams of the person would actually almost sound musical to people's ears.
So rather than hearing the torture, horrific pained screams of a victim.
They're listening to kind of the musical sounds coming from a large animal.
Making this musical conversion possible is a system of pipes and reeds that transforms the anguished screams into sounds made by brass or wind instruments.
And in a sick twist of fate, its first victim is the man who invented it.
Something inside the tyrant Philaris snapped.
Perhaps it was being confronted by another sociopath.
Perhaps he was angry that Carlos was more creative than he had thought.
But he invited Paralaus to climb inside the bull himself and show the tyrant Falaris.
How exactly did these pipes work?
Yeah, the Christians were sacrificing the Goyim to Moloch and their burnt offering, holocausts, that the sweet smell was pleasing to God.
He's happy to test out his device.
He's very proud of what he's created.
What he does not know is that Falaris is going to slam the door shut, trapping paralyzed.
Dice Trail.
That's a new name.
Right.
Yep.
Even believers.
They just didn't believe the right way.
Slaughtered.
Tortured.
In the brazen full, and then having a fire lit underneath.
Parallels cannot escape, and he is forced to stay inside the bull, literally becoming the actual test subject of this torture device.
The death of Parallels is kind of a standard trope in Greek tragedy and Greek storytelling.
You have the sociopath, the sicko, who creates the horrible, awful thing, and then of course becomes destroyed by the horrible awful thing that he created.
Okay.
What else do we have here?
how christian monks invented the most brutal torture devices in history the stone corridors of clunny abbey as brother thomas dragged another heretic into the purification chambers but that's not even the word Purification chambers.
What I'm about to reveal will shatter everything you thought you knew about medieval Christianity.
These weren't just isolated incidents of religious fanaticism.
This was systematic theological torture that made the Spanish Inquisition look like child's play.
By the end of this video, you'll understand why the Catholic Church tried to bury these records for over 700 years, and why modern historians still read monks were the gripers of their day, yeah.
Behind monastery walls.
Here's what's coming.
First, I'll expose how Christian monks didn't just participate in torture.
They literally invented three methods so brutal that even hardened executioners refused to use them.
Second, you'll discover the twisted biblical justifications these holy men used to convince themselves.
And finally, I'll reveal the single monastery that systematically murdered over 40,000 people in the name of divine purification.
If you're ready to dive into history's darkest religious secrets, hit the what made their brutality unique wasn't just its scale, it was its purpose.
These bald headed, smelly, stinky.
Seems like Talmudist Israelis may turn on Trump while secular Israelis now love him.
Left Israelis should just embrace Trump as Messiah but do so opposite to the Talmud Messiah.
Make him a pagan messiah for secular Jews.
Yeah, I've seen I've seen that clip of Pollard.
He was saying he was an anti-Semite, right?
That's what they do.
They c they give he benefits them from both ways.
being the villain and being the hero.
They chanted Christ is king while they tortured these people.
They're like, every knee will bow.
Pagan.
Get in the torture chamber For your for your Rabbi Jesus purification.
Dude, imagine just like being like, Hey, I don't know, guys.
I don't really believe in these Jewish books.
Hey, I'm not really interested in bowing down to a Jewish king and the Jewish god, and they're like, these freaks get you, and they're like, let's torture him.
Inquisitors tortured for confessions, medieval kings tortured for information, but these monks, they tortured for purification.
They genuinely believed that by breaking your body, they were saving your eternal soul.
And the most chilling part, they kept meticulous records, every method, every victim, every theological justification was carefully documented because they were proud of their work.
They thought they were serving God.
What you're about to hear comes directly from those records, documents the church has spent centuries trying to suppress, starting with the disciplined masters and their chambers of mortification.
Witchy woman!
We love our witches.
Thanks for your dedication and insight.
Thank you, witchy woman.
That's a new name.
Appreciate you.
You guys are awesome today.
I'm enjoying my Friday show.
My daughter's gonna be a witch.
My oldest daughter's gonna be a witch for Halloween.
Cutest witch ever.
She says she wants to be an evil witch, too.
Christians can see about that.
...walking into what looks like a medieval workshop, but instead of tools for building, you see instruments designed specifically for breaking the human spirit.
Welcome to the mortification chambers of St. Denny's Abbey, where monks turned self-torture into an art form.
In 1205, an art form.
Thank you, witchy woman.
You have a good weekend too.
Appreciate you guys.
Abbott Suga of St. Denis created what he called chambers of divine correction, underground rooms where monks would practice mortification of the flesh.
But here's where it gets twisted.
These weren't just for self-punishment anymore.
The monks had discovered something horrifying, they were getting addicted to the pain.
Brother Benedict's journal discovered in the Abbey Walls were self-flagellation.
They torture themselves too.
Most clearly when brother Mark applied the discipline to my back, the pain cleansed my soul of earthly desires.
I can see why our Lord suffered so beautifully.
The discipline Benedict mentions wasn't just flagellation.
The St. Denny's monks had invented three techniques that would make your stomach turn.
First was the crown of contrition, an iron band tightened around the skull until it cracked.
Second was soul binding, victims were suspended by their wrists for days while monks read scripture.
And third, the most sadistic of all, divine.
I can't even describe this one in detail.
Crusaders will watch something like this and be like, based, yeah, based, based Crusaders, we need to bring this back.
For the heretics, for the Satanists.
Moving pieces of flesh, while the victim was forced to recite prayers.
But here's what nobody tells you about the discipline masters.
They weren't just torturing themselves anymore.
By 1220, these chambers were being used on stubborn penitents, local villagers who couldn't pay their tithes, women accused of witchcraft, anyone who questioned church authority.
The abbey records show that between 1220 and 1240, over 800 people entered those chambers.
Only 94 came out alive.
You might think this was just one corrupted abbey, but archaeological evidence suggests similar chambers existed in at least 37 monasteries across France and Germany.
The monks were sharing techniques, improving methods, treating human suffering like a sacred science.
Brother Mark's later writings revealed the true horror.
We have perfected the art of purification.
No soul can resist divine correction when properly applied.
Even the most hardened heretic weeps for God's mercy by the third day.
The evil atrocities people commit based on these Jewish myths is just unbelievable.
Self-torture was just practice for what came next, because these monks were about to create a theological justification that would unleash two centuries of religious terror.
In 1247, a brilliant but twisted mind was about to change religious torture forever.
Abbot Malachy of Melifon Abbey didn't just want to hurt heretics, he wanted to save their souls through suffering, and he had the biblical scholarship to prove it was God's will.
Malachi's manual of sacred correction became the most dangerous religious text ever written.
This wasn't just a torture manual, it was a 200-page theological masterpiece that used scripture to justify every conceivable act of brutality.
And here's the terrifying part.
God of love argument was diabolically clever.
Malachy pointed to Christ's suffering on the cross and asked.
Stigma in the black community, Gilead.
Uh, they did a good job portraying those crazy monks in Game of Thrones.
Yeah, they did.
All those memes about conquistadors purifying the Americas.
All those memes about conquistadors purifying the Americas, yet humans were being slaughtered in Europe for Christendom.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
His own son to endure agony for humanity's salvation wouldn't inflicting similar suffering on heretics help save their souls.
Pain, he argued was the fastest path.
Just as gold is purified in fire, Malachi wrote, so must the heretic's flesh be purified through divine correction.
Their screams are prayers, they cannot yet speak with words.
We are merely God's instruments, helping them find their voices.
But here's what nobody tells you about the people thinking that they're good.
Suddenly, every act of sadism became an act of mercy, breaking someone's fingers, you were helping them understand Christ's nail wounds, waterboarding.
You were baptizing their corrupted souls.
The manual provided specific biblical justifications for each torture method.
Burning with hot irons was supported by Deuteronomy 32, 22, bone breaking reference, Psalm 51, 8.
Even sexual torture found justification in passages about mortifying the flesh.
Within a decade, copies of Malachi's manual had spread to over 50 monasteries.
Each abbey began developing its own specialized corrections based on local heresies.
The Cistercians perfected techniques for purifying women accused of adultery.
The Benedictines created specific tortures for money changers who charged interest.
Brother Patrick's letter to Abbot Maliki in 1253 reveals the doctrine's true impact.
Your theological insights have revolutionized our work.
Yesterday, a merchant confessed his usury after only six hours of purification.
His gratitude was beautiful to witness.
He thanked us through his tears, saying he finally understood God's love.
The most chilling aspect: the monks genuinely believed they were performing acts of divine mercy.
They saw themselves as spiritual surgeons, cutting away sin to save souls.
Pain wasn't punishment, it was medicine.
Don't click away yet.
And look at where they get these Bible verses, too.
Exodus 22, thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.
Leviticus, a man or woman who is a medium or spiritist among you must be put to death.
You are to stone them, their blood will be on their own heads.
Deuteronomy 18.
Let no one be found among you who sacrifices their son or daughter in the fire.
Well, I agree with that.
Who uh practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft.
Anyone who does these things is detestable to the Lord.
How many European women were killed by Christian Jew worshippers because they were called accuse them of being witches?
Guess what?
Witchcraft isn't real.
So they killed those women for no reason.
Because of this stupid Torah law.
Yet, because what I'm about to reveal about Clunny Abbey will make everything you've just heard seem merciful by comparison.
If the discipline masters were artists and the purification doctrine was their theology, then Clunny Abbey was their masterpiece, a factory of suffering that operated with industrial efficiency for over 60 years.
Built in 1088, Clunny was the largest monastery in the Christian world.
But what tourists don't see today are the underground.
This video is too slow.
Let's uh let's do a little bit more Christian torture devices.
This is an old history channel.
Causes significant pain.
A few torture devices seem to go beyond ordinary tools of pain and suffering.
Perhaps the most dreadful instrument of such debauchery was the pair.
Thirty from Globwob, thank you.
Cheers.
Let's see it.
Esoteric Guardian.
Let me see if I can turn this up.
What if the god worshipped by billions?
Today was originally just one among many desert deities.
Later transformed through political and theological shifts into the supreme being we know.
The true identity of Yahweh.
Okay, hold on.
I'm gonna have to skip this and see if I can play it again.
I try to turn the volume up.
Let's let's replay this and see if it goes.
Oh my god, that was loud.
Glabwab sent $30.
This video feels very fitting for this stream.
Cheers.
louder The truth is not always the god worshipped by billions today was originally just one among many desert deities, later transformed through political and theological shifts into the supreme being we know?
The true identity of Yahweh, the God of the Bible, is far more complex than most realize.
From ancient inscriptions to hidden connections with Mesopotamian gods, like Enlil and Enki, his origins might not be as unique as we've been led to believe.
Could Yahweh be an evolution of older gods?
Or is there something even more mysterious behind his rise to supremacy?
Stick around until the end to uncover how Yahweh's transformation reshaped entire civilizations, and why his true identity might challenge everything you thought you knew about religion.
Sorry if I burst your guys'ears on that.
But what if I told you that this god might have had a much more humble past?
Archaeological research and ancient texts reveal that Yahweh was not always the supreme figure we recognize today.
One of the earliest historical records of Yahweh can be found in the famous Mesha Stele, a stone inscription dating back to around 840 BCE.
In it, King Mesha of Moab claims to have defeated Israel and captured sacred objects belonging to Yahweh, regarding him as just another god among many.
This discovery suggests that at the time, Yahweh was not the universal and singular deity, but rather a local god, worshipped by a specific group of people.
Another intriguing discovery comes from Egypt, where an inscription found in the ancient temple of Soleb mentions the Shahu of Yahweh, a nomadic Semitic group that worship this god while roaming the deserts of Canaan.
The Egyptians described the Shahu as wandering desert tribes, leading some scholars to theorize that Yahweh was originally a desert god, worshipped by nomadic tribes before being adopted by the Israelites.
Could it be that Yahweh was in his earliest days simply the god of a nomadic and warrior people?
Scholars AI video is like a little repetitive.
I've only got another 15 minutes, so I'm gonna have to skip this.
If anybody wants to hold on.
In this context, Yahweh may have started as a minor nature god associated with storms and volcanoes.
Okay, thank you for that.
Who sent that in?
That video is the true identity of Yahweh.
Oh my gosh.
Send twenty dollars that poop sponge bar.
The Great Pyramid still can't be replicated.
That Jason from Archie, you had on earlier this year.
Oh, yeah, Archaix talks about ancient archaeology.
I bet he does.
I bet he knows a lot about that.
Really interesting guy.
Uh that video is the true identity of Yahweh.
Who do Christians really worship?
Eight months ago from Esoteric Guardian.
Thanks for sharing that.
Uh Glubwlub, thanks for the big dono there.
Um, we gotta finish this other video before I gotta wrap it here in another ten minutes.
But uh, that was a good one.
And yes, uh Yahweh is a fake god, not even original, obviously.
The Hebrew tribal war god of the Canaanites that the Hebrew that the uh Jews co-opted.
What's amazing about this piece in particular is the amount of work that went into it.
It's made of bronze, it's cast, and it took a bit of ingenuity and technology, especially for the time period, like many torture instruments, they're multi-functional.
Um in oral capacity, it would be placed into the mouth and slowly opened for those who had uttered uh heretical comments.
Now, uh, for those who had committed homosexuality, it would be placed in the rector.
And again, slowly opened, increasing the pain.
Uh in the case of women, it'd be placed in the vagina, and again, slowly opened into the provision.
Gal 316, Paul argues that since God's covenant is with Abraham and his seed, not seeds, it means Christ, not descendants.
But Gen 17 to 7 clarifies for all their generations, obviously plural.
Yeah, yeah, I know a lot of people disagree that Paul.
I mean, Paul did say that.
It's true that Paul wrote that, but does that make sense?
How about we'll take it a step further?
I don't give a fuck about what some prophecy about David's seeds is gonna be.
To begin with.
Thank you.
These points would puncture the uterus.
Abraham seeds.
They say David.
All right.
Okay, and last one.
This is the last one, right?
Oh, I meant to mention too.
Trump is gonna build scientists.
Okay, that's the full video.
That's the clips.
Oh, that was from four years ago.
No, no, this is the old one that they did.
Scientists in the early Roman Empire.
But here's the highlight ancient technology before the common era from Neil and Neil and Derek three years ago.
Donald Trump is gonna build an arch just like the Arch of Titus in Rome for the 250 year anniversary of America.
Trump's gonna build a big arch.
Like the Roman Emperor of Edom, Trump's gonna build his own arch.
Yeah, Gary, I know you don't care either.
You're just like debunking it.
Yeah, the original context clearly is talking about many descendants.
Got it.
The most advanced technology was the computer.
They had uh micro-geared powered computers at the time.
Yes, so uh so we found one of these actually.
We there's a lot of literature, like they the Greeks and Romans talk about these machines, and no one believed them, right?
They thought, uh Yeah, if Trump wasn't such a giant Zionist, the Arc the Arch would be based.
Wow, or it must be much simpler than it sounds.
No, we recovered one.
Uh there was an in a shipwreck at the bottom of the ocean off of the island of Antikythera, which is in the Greek islands.
Uh and it was recovered in the early 20th century, and it's been studied since um and it was all broken up, but we've used computers and reconstructed.
Right.
It's called the Antikythera mechanism, named after where it was found.
Uh and uh this was made about 120 BC.
It sank below to the sea in the 80s BC.
What's this?
It has all gears, right?
Yes, yes.
One knob, you turn one knob, and this is this massive system of gears.
Wow, controls a whole number of dials.
And then there's there's an instruction manual on it, and it has all these dial readouts.
And the dial readouts do all these things.
They reconcile four calendars.
So you take four different types of calendars, and it tells you what date is is the same on all the calendars, right?
So you can pick a date, and it would it ran up 250 years ahead of its creation, so it could actually calculate a date up to 250 years in the future.
Uh and you see you could pick a date, and it would show that date in four different calendars.
And then it would, there are dials that would tell you um what zodiac sign the planets each planet would rise in.
Uh for them, it was five planets.
Um it would tell you whether what phase the moon would be in.
It would tell you in what zodiac sign the sun would rise in.
It would tell you uh and it would tell you if the day was uh possible for a lunar or solar eclipse.
So it didn't predict lunar and solar eclipses, but it would tell you that it is possible on this day.
Uh so uh so it did all of those things.
Um, right?
Uh and and just turn of a dial, all the gears and all this requires micro-precise engineering and craftsmanship, requires really advanced astronomical knowledge and mathematical knowledge.
So it shows not only that they could do this, but they they did, right?
Like someone paid for this, someone actually made one of these things.
And we have so many references in the literature.
We know that there were tons of these things.
There were lots of them.
There wasn't just like one miraculous device.
No, they these things were all over Italy and Greece and other places.
Uh we just lost them all.
They were all just like melted down and turned into pots and pans or something.
Oh my god.
Yeah, so I mean, I've I've seen demonstrations from this girl, Kaylee History with Cayley.
I think she's a scholar.
I'm not sure.
She's a YouTuber.
She was showing a ancient building structure that had an air conditioning, but the way the way it was designed was there was a giant like vent on the top that would carry it would take in wind because it's higher up.
There's a lot of wind up there.
I might have to submit carry it through a tunnel and brought to the bottom of the building.
It was like an our air conditioning system.
This is one I don't know.
Do you know what culture that was?
I'm pretty sure it was like Babylonian.
Okay.
I'm pretty sure that makes sense.
No, I'm I'm that one I've not heard of.
I don't know that one.
Uh but there's uh there was a heating revolution to go on the other side.
Sure.
Which is uh blown glass.
You'd think so.
The blown glass was invented by Syrian Roman Jews.
Uh possibly Jews, we think, but certainly Syrian Romans.
Not a fan of history with Cayley.
I've never heard of her.
It became an exploding technology, super popular within a hundred or two hundred years.
Oh, yeah.
There's already a massive glass factory up in Germany.
Uh like so and so they had glass, right?
They had the slab glass where you just pour glass into things and you get big giant glass chunks.
Yeah.
Uh so glass existed, but but blown glass allows you to make very delicate panes of glass.
My name is Kayleigh, I wanted to actually flatten it out, and you can have uh see, it's like the rolling pin or whatever, and you get a really thin pane of glass.
So you get window panes, right?
You think, okay, well, what's the big deal about window panes?
Well, think about this.
This is and this is what happened.
Uh at Roman and Greek baths, bathing house painting houses and stuff, they could have massive walls of these panes of glass.
So you get tons of solar heating.
The sunlight gets in, but it's closed, so the sun the heat stays in there.
So you basically have a huge revolution in cheap heat, basically of solar heating as well, right?
Uhonomous says we went from this to ass destroying devices.
This is actually a really big deal economically.
Uh, and all just from learning how to blow glass, right?
That they were doing back then.
And the last thing I want to ask you about, because you mentioned they mentioned with that with that ancient computer talking about the planets.
Oh the five planets plus the moon and the sun.
What did they think they were?
Did they know they were planets and they think they were worlds?
Did they think there was a deity?
What what can you take away?
I mean, they speak metaphorically of them as deities all the time, but uh but no, the real scientists.
If you read Ptolemy, if you read uh uh other scientists like him, um no, they did believe that they were orbs.
So they didn't think the moon was a ball, a giant ball.
Uh they had a rough idea of how large they were, like they were had realistic notions of the sizes of these things, not necessarily spot on sizes, but pretty close.
Uh Ptolemy got the size of the moon almost directly, right?
Uh but um and the sun, he was a little off on, but uh, but still they they were able to do parallax observations and do the geometry and figure this out.
Um so they had rough idea of their sizes.
Um and they can only see the the up to Saturn, right?
So that they didn't see the planets beyond yet.
You need um I can't remember if they saw Neptune or not.
I don't think so.
I think Saturn was the most distant planet.
Yeah, Saturn was the most one.
Uh and they did so and Ptolemy has a treatise where he he writes it's called the planetary hypotheses, where it's a treatise where he's talking about well, what are these things?
Uh and he has hypothesizes, and he discusses different theories.
Um and one view is that they are these planets, these other worlds, um, may or may not have life on them.
Uh they were they were open to either possibility.
And they his view, there are two views.
One is that they're just floating around.
The other is that they're embedded in giants crystal spheres or crystal bands that you can't see because they're crystal that move, right?
So he he he proposes both theories.
He he agrees both are plausible.
Uh he kind of himself leans towards the crystal sphere view.
Uh now in the middle ages and that just uh right that they invented the idea of running an industry on water wheels.
Um that's not true.
That actually is a recovery of a lost technology.
Um in fact a lost concept.
Uh they went hundreds and hundreds of years with like they almost completely lost water tech.
The Roman Empire is the peak of this.
Uh they had more industrialized water power exploitation than we would see again until like the 15th or 16th century.
Right.
So if you think like that's it took a while, right?
Uh to get it back.
Uh but this means that they had water wheels not only grinding or grain, but also um uh sawing wood, uh sawing marble, um, doing and even had forges, they had automated water-powered forges.
Uh so they had they were exploiting water power very extensively, even including like there's the barbigol facility is one of the most famous examples.
It's a second century capitalist project in the Roman Empire in France, uh, where they set up 32 water wheels, they built it on a slope and they built an aqueduct to bring water to it.
So this you have this massive flower factory.
They basically what they created, this automated flower factory.
Wow.
Um that's the kind of technology that was lost.
It wouldn't be recovered until like 1100 or uh or about a thousand AD ish.
Uh and uh but it was lost for for the longest time.
Uh the Romans advanced that considerably.
And had all they had the science of it too.
They understood the physics of why this worked.
They had that they had um water wheels and water screw mathematics, so they knew how to do this.
Uh, they had kits.
So you could actually buy these things and like a geo project and get them in a box and they come out all the parts and they don't have letters on them.
Like that's that's the kind of stuff they were doing.
Uh before it is.
I know I don't know if it was Vespasian or maybe before him, like one of the Caesars had built giant aqueducts that were basically going all the way across the Roman Empire different city to city from like large lengths.
I'm not sure how long exactly, but well, actually, all that was a Roman thing all together.
Right.
So the Romans were building aqueducts already from the first century BC.
Uh, and and every emperor substance built tons of these and canals too.
They they they dug canals.
Um canals with locks, so you can have like this.
Okay, we heard about the canals already.
I gotta get going.
Uh, love you guys, thank you so much.
Fun Friday show learning about science before Jesus.
Don't listen to any of these delusional Christians that say we would be nothing without the Bible and without Jesus.
Thanks everybody for the donors today.
You're amazing.
Hope you all have a nice weekend.
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