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Dispensationalism is not true, however. Even the Dispensationalist postulation of a uniquely Jewish claim to any part of the Levant or anything in the Bible is faulty. As the Christian Nationalist theologian David Carlton writes:

Ironically, most white Christians have as good a claim on ancient Israel as anyone. I’m not invoking far-fetched theories derived from specifically Christian Identity or British/Anglo-Israel claims, either. It seems that, during the time of the Maccabean revolt against the Seleucid overloads of the Israelites, the Israelites established a pact with the Spartans based upon the fact that both the Israelites and the Spartans were descended from Abraham (1 Macc. 12:21). The Spartans (sometimes referred to as the Lacedemonians) are portrayed in the movie 300 for their heroic stand against the Persians at Thermopylae, and are a major pillar of European civilization. If the Spartans are descendants of Abraham, as the ancient Israelites believed, then it would seem logical that all Europeans are likewise descended from Abraham. This could explain at least in part how Japeth (the general ancestor of Europeans) dwells in the tents of Shem, according to Noah’s prophecy in Gen. 9:27. It is a truly sad irony that European Christians expend much energy lobbying for a group of people with a less clear claim to descent from the ancient Israelites than they have themselves.[2] nahahahaha from counter-currents last week then ……. Then IRELAND JOINS THE PARTY WHY NOT The Old Irish word tuath (plural tuatha) means "tribe, folk, people"; dé is the genitive case of día and, depending on context, can mean "god, gods, goddess" or more broadly "supernatural being, object of worship".[12] In the earliest writings, the mythical race are referred to as the Tuath Dé, "tribe of gods", or Tuatha Dé, "tribes of gods".[1] In the Lebor Bretnach their name is translated into Latin as plebes deorum, "god-folk".[13][14] However, Irish monks also began using the term Tuath Dé to refer to the Israelites,[1] with the meaning "People of God".[15] Apparently to avoid confusion with the Israelites,[1] writers began to refer to the mythical race as the Tuath(a) Dé Danann or Tuath(a) Dé Donann (Old Irish pronunciation: [ˈt̪uaθa d̪ʲeː ˈd̪anan̪]). This is generally translated "folk of the goddess Danu".[2] It may also have been a way of humanizing them: instead of 'god-folk' they were now the folk of a particular goddess.[16] Early Christian writers also referred to them as the fir dé (god-men) and cenéla dé (god-kindreds), again possibly to avoid calling them simply 'gods'.[17] Some of the Tuath Dé are occasionally called the clann Eladan, "children of art".[1] HAHAHHAHAHA

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So the lefendary heroes of white history and the kshatriya caste are …….. Jews HAHHAHA fuck me im out enjoy ~ gone

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sounds like a lot of distortion to me.

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