Tucker Carlson interviews & ideologies

He just aired a new episode related to the purge of Christians in Israel, this show interviewing a Palestinian Christian minister who lived his childhood there and tells stories of when the Israeli settlements began forming around his majority Christian town, was recorded prior his visit to Israel.


Reeally good episode and heartbreaking too!

Here is the summary of the episode:
In this video, Tucker Carlson and Christian minister Farres Abraham discuss the treatment of Christians in the Holy Land, focusing on the town of Bet Sahour, Abraham's hometown, near Bethlehem (10:21). Abraham highlights the existential threat to the Christian community in Bet Sahour, stating that Christians are leaving due to Jewish settlers moving into the town (11:03). He explains that these settlements are often funded by the Israeli government and supported by some Christians in the United States (11:16).

Abraham recounts a personal experience where his mother was shot by an Israeli soldier when he was ten years old (26:54). Despite this, he emphasizes the Christian teaching of loving enemies and not harboring bitterness (28:30). He notes that Palestinian Christians take the Sermon on the Mount very seriously, believing it calls for forgiveness and love even in the face of persecution (27:42).

The conversation also touches on "home mapping," a policy where Israeli soldiers enter Palestinian homes for intelligence gathering, often locking families in a room for extended periods (41:16). Abraham shares another incident where a Christian young man was killed by a stone dropped by an Israeli soldier during such an operation (41:46).

The discussion extends to the role of Christian Zionism, which Abraham defines as a theopolitical movement that believes God has two distinct peoples with separate plans and covenants (1:03:37). He argues that Christian Zionism has replaced Jesus with the current state of Israel (1:08:06). Abraham stresses that Jesus expanded the scope of God's promise to everyone, not just a geographical location or a specific bloodline (1:08:32). He criticizes the notion that current-day Jews have a stronger ancestral claim to the land than Palestinian Christians, suggesting DNA tests would reveal Palestinian Christians are more closely related to first-century inhabitants (1:17:10).

A significant point of concern for Abraham is a Christian summit in Jerusalem where participants were reportedly instructed not to mention the name of Jesus or preach (1:23:40). He sees this as a troubling parallel to biblical accounts where disciples were told not to speak of Jesus (1:24:16). He concludes by stating that the gospel message includes advocating for the marginalized and bringing God's love to those suffering (1:42:22). He expresses deep concern that the vacuum created by violence and despair in places like Gaza will be filled by radicalism and extremism (1:47:27).
 
It seems that Israel actually cares a great deal about how they are perceived in the country where they get all their money and support from, but not at all about how they are perceived in the country they control. I guess it's a question of "priorities".
 
Tucker Carlson goes head-to-head with Mike Huckabee in an interview recorded 2 days ago in Israel that, as of this posting, is still live.


About to watch that next. Tucker also interviewed Dr Fares Abraham - a Christian Palestinian who was born in Bethlehem, founder of Levant Ministeries, can trace family roots there back 2000 years. He details examples of how Christians are getting the exact same treatment by the Israelis as Islamists and notes that diasporic Jews are not allowed to complete Aliyah if they believe in Jesus. Tucker is astounded at some of the tales that Abraham relates with the typical Tucker, 'Wait, what?!' Both Tucker and Abraham seem to have similar beliefs about what the bible is actually saying and how the Israelis are getting the ideas totally wrong. In any case, this totally wipes any notion that the Israelis have any benevolent notion of Judeo-Christianity and puts the ideals of Christian Zionists further under the spotlight for questioning about the true nature of their faith.

In his introductory monologue Tucker addresses how he perceives the truth hitting his senses that I found myself nodding along to as he spoke. I was good to hear it spoken of in the way he addresses it.

 
About to watch that next.

It's...stunning...to hear Huckabee's mind. It's so narrow! I found the revealing interview difficult to watch at times. Tucker's monologue at the beginning were he relates how this interview came about and how he and his crew were treated (before (US embassy) and after ("thugs")) made me think Tucker should not go back to Israel. They might have been lucky to get out of there this time.
 
Fantastic interview with Fares Abraham, and I'm about halfway through Huckabee's interview. It's remarkable how different a take two people can have on the same text. Abraham's ideas and areas of focus is really about the transformation in the hearts of people that takes place with the New Testament, that it's never been about a physical piece of land, but that the 'Kingdom' resides within our hearts and souls. Very Pauline, and so he sees the injustices going on and feels the need to speak up. It's incredible that he doesn't have, or is able to release any hatred towards the Israeli's for the way they treat Palestinian Christians. The examples he brings up about how the settlers and soldiers treat the Palestinians would boil anyone's blood.

In contrast, Mike Huckabee, who is a Christian Zionist, is incredibly narrow-minded. When Tucker brought up all the sex offenders that flee to Israel to escape prosecution in the US, he essentially shrugs it off as no big deal, and the Justice Department's problem. He's fixated on the physical ownership of land as promised in the Bible, and changes his definitions based on what suits his agenda, which is the Israeli agenda. Watching both interviews back to back is akin to witnessing the schism in belief systems that occurred 2000 years ago between Pauline Christianity and Jerusalem Christianity.
 
In the following episode Joe Rogan talks with Filippo Biondi, one of the engineers who discovered the structures beneath the Giza pyramids. I've founded the whole episode pretty Interesting since the said discovery kinda supports the C's thesis that the pyramids were build as machines to collect, storage and use the energy from the atmosphere/Sun/outer space.

Yes, fascinating, right? What I found most striking was his hypothesis that the Sarcophagus is a place in which people used the stored power/energy for 'something'. He's not quite willing to speculate on what, precisely, but the C's provide us with some clues in this session:


And here is the transcript of the relevant section of the JRE:

Starting point is 00:55:29 the so-called sarcophagus, That's not a sarcophagus there. And so what do you think that's what they call a sarcophagus, this immense granite box? Let's call it, yes, the granite box, yes. And inside the granite box was done to contain a man, a body. And that vibration, look, collapses at the center of the granite box where the man was lying down. So do you think there was actually a man inside that? So a person would lay in that box.
Starting point is 00:56:06 Yes. And what happened to them? I don't know. Whoa. So. I don't know. That's a simulation that I did, but it's precise. So you don't think it's for a dead body.
Starting point is 00:56:18 You think it's for a live body. Yes. And so a person would lay there and have some probably incredibly profound experience with whatever. Probably, yes. What do you think it was? if you just wanted to get crazy and put on the tinfoil hat and speculate what do you think it was..

Might turn out to be a hit for the Cs if anyone is allowed to objectively research the whole site, AND we back engineer Atlantean tech haha. Highly unlikely, but stranger things have happened
 
What I found most striking was his hypothesis that the Sarcophagus is a place in which people used the stored power/energy for 'something

The speculation is that perhaps the Ark of the Covenant was there. (battery):

Yes, another Forum member (on the Alton Towers thread) suggested that theory about the dimensions of the Ark being the same as the coffer in the King's Chamber, erroneously called a sarcophagus. If true, this can't be mere coincidence.

Well, this book is a little treasure. From here I get the dimensions of the king's sarcophagus.View attachment 61154View attachment 61155View attachment 61156View attachment 61157


Inside dimensions: (Keops)

Length: 1,985 Mts. = 6ft 6in
Width: 0,675 Mts. = 2ft 3in
Height: 0,837 Mts. = 2ft 9in


External measurements of the ark:

According to the writings, it is a chest of acacia wood, covered with gold plates inside and out. On the outside it had four rings, one in each corner, used to put rods to help transport the Ark. It was 2.5 cubits long, 1.5 cubits wide and high (1,143 mts x 0,685 mts x 0,685 mts).

1,143 mts = 3ft 9in
0,687 mts = 2ft 3in
0,687 mts = 2ft 3in

Not that it fits to the nearest tenth of a millimeter, but the measurements give enough room for it to fit. Perhaps the ark needed some empty space inside the "sarcophagus" and that it would be suspended inside by some rods.
 
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