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Ryan Albury's avatar

Thank you

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Justin C's avatar

Just a point of clarification. Are the bolded and bulleted points direct from Chat GPT? Or were they written by with help of Chat GPT.

Also, do you believe the term "Khazarian Mafia" holds any water? Do they actually exist? And if so do you know any good articles on the history of them?

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Justin C's avatar

Thank you

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Eivind Figenschau Skjellum's avatar

The bulleted points are directly from ChatGPT. I didn't edit them at all.

The Khazarian Mafia hypothesis is one origin story about the people who in Revelations are referenced as "people who claim to be Jews but are not".

Other origin stories are the Sabbatean and Frankist origin stories as mentioned here.

I am not quite sure how everything blends together, but there is almost certainly something to the Khazarian Mafia hypothesis. After all, they come from present day Ukraine, a nation with one version of its present day flag literally featuring the Khazarian emblem.

Another reason there is likely something to it is that references to it are so violently opposed as conspiracy theories.

One take on the theory is listed here: https://veteranstoday.com/2022/03/10/the-hidden-history-of-the-incredibly-evil-khazarian-mafia/

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Enric Carbó's avatar

"What would that mean for the world?

Effectively that a small group of old Jewish men become final authorities on anything related to God, and that anyone who violates their subjective opinion gets the same treatment as Stephen does in Acts (if we are heard at all)."

I understand that this is certainly not your intention. However, the way it is phrased may unintentionally evoke associations with classic conspiracy theories—such as The Protocols of the Elders of Zion—which have historically caused profound harm. Fortunately, we now have frameworks such as rationalism and human rights that, while not entirely preventing it, make it more difficult for narratives based on myths of control and domination to gain widespread acceptance

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Eivind Figenschau Skjellum's avatar

I understand your concern, Enric, though from the proposed framework of rationalism, I think the more rational position is as follows:

If the actions of the rabbis who wrote the letter to Trump remind you of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion document, then it is on them to act in ways which do not, not on me to keep quiet up about their actions.

Furthermore, human rights are generally not honored in this world, and rationalism isn't a framework that holds weight anymore. We are deep in the territory of spiritual warfare at this point.

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