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Author Topic: Missing aeroplane  (Read 18153 times)

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Missing aeroplane
« Reply #95 on: April 05, 2014, 08:47:16 AM »
Quote from: glaston
Again that line on the map is krafty-symbolic of the Hebrew 'BO' Coming or Going
BO-EING



Have you ever wondered, glaston, why things related to the Council of Trent are called "Tridentine?"  

Why the extra "id" in the word:  Trident(ine)? Why not just say, "Trentine?"

Does TRIDENT have anything to do with TRENT?



Trent is a city, but a trident is a three-pronged pitchfork:

Or a pack of chewing gum:



I suppose the "ine" at the end makes sense, but the "id" in the middle?  


How about putting "id" into the name of other cities, and adding "ine":

New York --------- New Yidorkine

Cincinnati -------- Cinidcinnatine

Chicago --------- Chidicagoine

Rome --------- Ridomine

London -------- Lidondonine   (or maybe Lidonine, to avoid redundundancy)

Venice --------- Videnicine

Boston ------- Bidostonine


These new words look like names for pharmaceuticals.


.

Missing aeroplane
« Reply #96 on: April 05, 2014, 12:40:51 PM »
Quote from: Neil Obstat
Quote from: glaston
Again that line on the map is krafty-symbolic of the Hebrew 'BO' Coming or Going
BO-EING



Have you ever wondered, glaston, why things related to the Council of Trent are called "Tridentine?"  

Why the extra "id" in the word:  Trident(ine)? Why not just say, "Trentine?"

Does TRIDENT have anything to do with TRENT?



Trent is a city, but a trident is a three-pronged pitchfork:




.


The Council of Trent was called by Paul Ill who was pope from 1534 to 1549 and it first sat in December 1545. It was finally disbanded in 1563 but though it would appear to have a life span of 18 years, it was only engaged in talks for four and a half years. Most of the popes at this time did not want to lose power and "they did not feel any enthusiasm for the abolition of abuses which were lucrative for the Papacy." (Cowie)

I read somewhere they swapped the Sabbath day from Saturday to Sunday and fined all poor who didnt turn up for mass on Sunday - until Sunday worship became automatic.
(dont know what truth there is in this)
(you could still be fined up until 1950's in Ireland for missing mass)

Catholics were fed up with being ruled by English Protestant extremists, most English favoured a more moderate form of Protestantism

James was a firm protestant, and in 1604 he expelled all Catholic priests from the island. This was one of the factors which led to the Gunpowder Plot of 1605

English cινιℓ ωαr (1642 - 1655), which pitted Roman Catholics against Protestants. The conflict divided England

The Mayflower was the ship that transported mostly English Puritans and Separatists in 1620

Check how all the dates are closely related!

The excuse for break-off cults
Quote
During the English cινιℓ ωαrs, George Fox pulled together groups of disparate Seekers that formed the Religious Society of Friends following 1647. This time of upheaval and social and political unrest called all institutions into question, so Fox and his leading disciples--James Nayler, Richard Hubberthorne, Margaret Fell, as well as numerous others—targeted "scattered Baptists," disillusioned soldiers, and restless common folk as potential Quakers. Confrontations with the established churches and its leaders and those who held power at the local level assured those who spoke for the new sect a ready hearing as they insisted that God could speak to average people, through his risen son, without the need to heed churchmen, pay tithes, or engage in deceitful practices.


The faux mongol-jew elites who have 'wormed' their way into our economies (hebrew related word for "complete takeover" "Goyim are the slaves of the chosen race")

'Love' giving their crony-elite corrupts more tax cuts
- whilst inflicting austerity 'cuts' on the rest of the mainly Christian populations!

ROOT =

Quote


A simple illustration of the transformation from two to three-lettered roots is to be found in the group of words that have גז as the first two letters. All of this group had the fundamental meaning of cutting with, of course, different shades of meaning. It is easy to see clearly how they are related, and in all likelihood, they were developed from the primitive two-lettered root, גז.

Here is the list:

גוּז      cut
גזר      cut, also - with metathesis גרז the root of גרזן axe
גזע      cut
גזז      to shear (sheep)
גזה      cut
גזם      a locust, one who eats the produce and thus effectively cuts it from the field.
גזל      rob, to violently tear something away from somebody.


Each of the words in turn gave rise to many other words. For example from גזר cut we have מגזרה an ax, גזרה a decree. From גזע we have גזע the stock of a tree; what's left after all the branches have been cut off. From גזז shear, we have גזה sheared wool. גזה is the root of גזית which means “hewn stones”. From גזל we have גזלה - robbery.

Do not be surprised if so many of these comparatively few two-lettered roots mean to cut, to split, to slit, or slice.

AFTER ALL, EVERYTHING THAT PRIMITIVE MAN DID IN THE WAY OF MAKING A LIVING FOR HIMSELF AND HIS FAMILY IN SOME WAY OR OTHER INVOLVED A CUTTING ACTION, whether it was wounding animals, felling trees, digging into the earth to plow or to find water, fighting his enemies, or dividing the prey that he brought home.

The word “cut” in the Kaufman “English-Hebrew Dictionary” has over a hundred Hebrew translations, and actually there are even more...




"When and where the Mayflower of the Pilgrim voyage of 1620 was built is not known, but it is likely that she was launched at Harwich in the county of Essex, England, and although later known ‘of London’, she was designated as ‘of Harwich’ in the Port Books of 1609-11. Harwich was the birthplace of Mayflower master Christopher Jones about 1570."

Fascinating coincidence
- I found and own a 'pound weight' in Suffolk, England for measuring corn with the portcullis 'Harwich' official 'customs' stamp on it - from the same era!

If you have a Mayflower exhibition - I've got no problem parting with it to a museum or exhibition!
Means more to you yankee Brit cousins than it does to me!


Missing aeroplane
« Reply #97 on: April 05, 2014, 08:29:00 PM »
Quote from: alaric
many "reasons" for the Crusades, but only one right reason . And what did we get for all our troubles over in the Levant in the end besides debt, bankruptcy, a lot of dead knights and the death of the Templars.I believe most of the Crusades was a big waste of time , men and money not too mention forever losing Jerusalem to the Mohamedens in the end, the main reason for taking on the Crusade to begin with. Not worth it if you ask me.


Then you know nothing about the Crusades. The Crusades unified Christendom, kept militant Islam thoroughly in check, freed Spain from the tyranny of the Mohammedans, and played a pivotal role in the formation of Catholic civilization. If Christendom had not demonstrated it's power and unity at the right moment, the Mohammedans may very well have overwhelmed Europe in time, as they would again attempt to do in the Ottoman invasions. That would have meant the end of European civilization. The Crusades saved Europe and are a testament to the vigor and vitality of Christianity in the middle ages.

http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpiumHmUE5EZeLTftxv9qGw

Missing aeroplane
« Reply #98 on: April 05, 2014, 08:42:10 PM »
He thinks the Templars were set-up(framed) by the mean King & Pope.  :roll-laugh2: