This episode exposes who can actually respond to Yahowah, what Nacham reveals about humanity’s failure through religion, politics, conscience, and deception, when this collapse began from Adam to now and why it has reached a breaking point, where it is unfolding globally with Yisra’el at the center, and how most people are already failing without realizing it. It shows who has lost the ability to think and discern, what the divide between neshamah and nepesh proves about conscience collapse, why religion and political systems replaced Towrah understanding, where Babel-style confusion is distorting reality, and how this deception is accelerating beyond most people’s awareness. It concludes by identifying who will respond correctly, what recognizing regret actually requires to change direction, when the final opportunity to respond still exists, where alignment restores clarity and purpose, and how ignoring this moment guarantees separation as everything intensifies in real time.
Nacham regret meaning, neshamah vs nepesh explained, Yahowah truth vs religion, Towrah vs religion deception, Babel confusion explained today, why people can’t think anymore, conscience collapse end times, Yisra’el prophecy happening now, religion and politics exposed truth, spiritual deception right now, end times warning 2026, return to Yahowah truth
#NachamRegret #NeshamahVsNepesh #YahowahTruth #TowrahNotReligion #BabelConfusion #YisraelProphecy #EndTimesNow #ConscienceCollapse #TruthVsDeception #ReturnToYahowah #SpiritualWakeUp #FinalWarning
Nacham regret meaning, neshamah vs nepesh explained, Yahowah truth vs religion, Towrah vs religion deception, Babel confusion explained today, why people can’t think anymore, conscience collapse end times, Yisra’el prophecy happening now, religion and politics exposed truth, spiritual deception right now, end times warning 2026, return to Yahowah truth
#NachamRegret #NeshamahVsNepesh #YahowahTruth #TowrahNotReligion #BabelConfusion #YisraelProphecy #EndTimesNow #ConscienceCollapse #TruthVsDeception #ReturnToYahowah #SpiritualWakeUp #FinalWarning
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NewsTranscript
00:00Come a little closer and lend me your ears.
00:03Don't worry, you keep yours while I keep mine.
00:07In each episode, we'll dig into the major stories, uncover the truth and retrieve gems from Yarda's blog.
00:15We'll discuss what's right, bark about what's wrong, wag our tails at the thrill of discovery and take you on
00:21adventures through the exciting world we live in today.
00:24So, fasten your curiosity leash and get ready.
00:31Right then, coming to you with another episode of the Yarda's blog on a blog, tomorrow's news disseminated today.
00:38Let's dive in.
00:41Yeah, what do you think, Kevin, about tomorrow's news disseminated today?
00:45Isn't it going to be the opposite today and that we're going to disseminate news from 5,000 years ago
00:53today?
00:55Yeah.
00:55Because I don't think anybody has dared to go where we're going to go today.
01:00No, it is definitely a blast from the past.
01:03Let's put it that way.
01:05Not only a blast from the past, we're going to discuss something today that I don't think anyone would even
01:11dare say.
01:12This is, you had better be really comfortable with your relationship with Yahweh to dare go where we're going to
01:21go today.
01:22And yet, he has made it blatantly obvious that this is the case.
01:30So, let's deal with reality.
01:32Let's, you know, we've always said that we're willing to go with the words lead no matter where they go.
01:37And when they're Yahweh's words, we're going to follow them to their natural conclusion.
01:43Well, in this particular case, my friend, they point right back at Yahweh.
01:48Yes, they do.
01:49And so, we're going to talk about something I just think is fascinating.
01:52So, welcome to the blog on the blog, our daily edition.
01:57Good to have you here, Kevin.
01:59That handsome fellow behind you, that is Chanuk.
02:03Chanuk, and he is a very important player in this story because, as we will prove over the next two
02:10days, we'll do half of this today and half tomorrow, is that Chanuk is also Nowak.
02:18They're one and the same.
02:20And we're going to find out why that is the case.
02:23And that's also pretty controversial, isn't it?
02:26Easily.
02:27That statement alone is just a mind blower, right?
02:29I mean, if you haven't been with us, you're going, huh?
02:32What?
02:33Most people don't even know who Chanuk is.
02:35They're familiar with Enoch, but they think Enoch is the guy that authored the really whacked out book by that
02:43name that is considered part of the Old Testament and the church canon, but, of course, just utterly absurd.
02:53Chanuk actually is the person that is called Enoch.
02:56And who knows how they got from Enoch to Chanuk, but nonetheless, that is the individual.
03:04And he is the first individual that, first of all, we find that he comes and goes twice very early
03:10on in the testimony.
03:11We will examine why there is a first Chanuk and a second Chanuk.
03:16But the second one, of course, is the one that God said he distinguished himself by being completely distant from
03:25man's ways.
03:26And that is how he earned favor with God.
03:28And as a result, God took him.
03:31And we're going to find out why God took him and then when Chanuk would return and why.
03:37But that isn't actually the subject of our program today.
03:40It is based upon this statement.
03:43It reads,
03:44So Yahweh, God's one and only name, as properly distinguished by his Torah instructions on his higher existence, said,
03:57I will wash away, removing the impurities with regard to the man whom?
04:05To reveal the benefits of the relationship I created from upon the surface of the ground and the presence of
04:15the edema,
04:16the bloody red man of the earth.
04:18Because mankind has become prey and is praying continuously as far as being a creature who is always moving around
04:32while praying upon birds flying about in the sky.
04:35Indeed, this is the part that is so extraordinary of this.
04:41I am grieved, regretting what has gone so terribly wrong.
04:49I've changed my mind.
04:53Because I'm genuinely sorry.
04:56I'm even remorseful.
05:00I've come to an accurate understanding regarding what I have done.
05:04While I'm looking to find some solace, some comfort, some consolidation and support to recuse myself.
05:16That I engaged with them and acted at this time to make them.
05:26Genesis 6-7.
05:28Well, the fate of the animals in that preceding text is troubling no matter how we render it.
05:36There is no getting around the fact that Nakam, regret for what has gone tragically wrong,
05:43especially this time, at this time, is of concern because it was spoken and recorded in the first person.
05:51God is saying, I made a mistake and I regret it.
05:54I'm looking to be consoled for having made this mistake.
05:58And by the way, we're the mistake.
06:02Yeah, that's a double gut punch, isn't it?
06:05Oh, man, it's a double gut punch.
06:06It's got God saying, I screwed up.
06:08I made a mistake and I regret having done so.
06:11I'm remorseful for having made this terrible mistake.
06:14And oh, by the way, you humans, you are that mistake.
06:18Right.
06:20Whoa.
06:22But that's what the words say.
06:24So are we to ignore them and pretend that it's not true?
06:27Of course not.
06:29So we have successfully and recently come to realize that Yahweh has no interest in us being perfect
06:37because it's not only impossible, it's unproductive.
06:43Perfection leaves nothing to be learned, nothing to be accomplished, nothing to be proven and no way to grow.
06:50Even the word Tamim, which is religiously rendered as perfect, will be applied later in this text to Nowak, at
07:01least momentarily.
07:03And it is an errant extrapolation of the verbal root, which is Tamim.
07:09And that actionable root actually speaks of being prepared to complete the mission while assuring a successful finish.
07:21So, Kevin, that automatically changes how we're going to look at this whole thing.
07:27If God is saying that he's imperfect and made a mistake, then we need to understand that nobody is perfect
07:37and that perfection is a mistake.
07:40And learning from his example.
07:43Yeah.
07:43And learning from his example.
07:45Right.
07:45And his assessment.
07:47So, Tamim is the verbal root of Tamim, which is religiously rendered as perfect.
07:56And yet it doesn't mean any such thing.
08:00Tamim means to finish the job.
08:02So there's no perfect lamb out there, huh?
08:06There's no perfect cow with those spots.
08:09So no bullishes.
08:10But there is a lamb that completed the mission.
08:13And that's what matters.
08:15It's the ultimate test that we are asked to achieve with God.
08:22Can we complete the mission?
08:25Can we finish what is required of us?
08:28That is what God is asking of us.
08:32It's what he asked of Adam in the garden.
08:34And Adam didn't live up to that condition.
08:37And it's what God is evidently imposing on himself being fair.
08:44So, it's true that we can strive to be correct while we complete what we set out to accomplish for
08:52God.
08:53This is how we learn.
08:54It's how we grow.
08:55And it's the means to being productive.
08:58Tamim is how we prove that we can be trusted.
09:03This is the primary lesson of Eden.
09:06And it is why the remnant is returning to the garden.
09:11We're going to have another opportunity as humans to Tamim, to finish the job this time, which is to earn
09:19God's trust.
09:20Now, since Neshamah man, and that's the only thing that was different about Adam that made him God's firstborn, he
09:27was given a Neshamah conscience in addition to a Nefesh consciousness.
09:33He was conceived, we're told, multiple times in God's image, correct?
09:39Yeah.
09:40Like he made it just like us.
09:42Yep.
09:42Yep.
09:43That suggests that God would be like us in this way.
09:48And that God would also want to improve, to learn, to grow, while constantly proving that he can be relied
09:55upon.
09:56That's the nature of infinite, isn't it?
09:58That's the nature of infinite, isn't it?
10:00Constantly growing.
10:01In fact, God can't be infinite unless he grows.
10:06And for life to be interesting, he must be able to learn and experience new things.
10:12This is all logically deduced and reasonable, as is the realization that God gets angry at the malcontents and religious
10:22among us.
10:23And nevertheless, you are likely struggling to accept the realization that God makes mistakes.
10:31And this becomes surreal for many when you acknowledge that we humans, we're the biggest of them.
10:42Now that everyone listening to us is on their heels and teetering from the blows, I'm going to go one
10:51step further.
10:53This is a dangerous turf, and I would never go here if it were not for the fact that we're
11:00following God's words.
11:03We discover that Neshamah man, when conceived in Yahweh's image, was not good on his own.
11:11Correct?
11:13Yeah.
11:14He didn't do well on his own.
11:14And Adam, prove it, yeah.
11:17Did not do well on their own.
11:20So, wouldn't this also be true with God?
11:24Yeah.
11:25He's less productive, less beneficial, less accommodating, less capable without us.
11:33Now that puts us in a very, so we've just now gone from the bottom of the barrel, the biggest
11:38mistake in the history of the universe,
11:40to, wait a minute, we can have tremendous value because God is less successful, less beneficial, less productive without us.
11:52Absolutely.
11:52Now I'm going to hear to tell you that that would be something God would say, hey, somebody finally gets
11:57it.
11:58That's exactly what I've been telling you all along.
12:02That's the reason why I choose to work through people.
12:06That's why we exist, by the way, is for God to be more than he is, not for him to
12:11be less than he is.
12:13And if it were not for this fact, God would be less than he is because we were a colossal
12:17mistake.
12:19Right.
12:21So, I mean, what we're talking about now is rationally irrefutable, even if it is exceedingly controversial.
12:27So, Yahweh obviously conceived his firstborn for a reason.
12:32And that reason is to enjoy a tobe, positive, productive, and beneficial relationship.
12:40No argument there.
12:42But it did not work out.
12:44However, when God tried to solve the problem by giving his firstborn son a helper,
12:51she made things worse, didn't she?
12:53Not better.
12:55What Adam needed was Chanuk.
12:58He needed a grandson who would teach him how to be a father and a man,
13:05capable of pleasing God, capable of working with God, capable of earning God's trust.
13:11Chanuk was conceived to protect and save Yah's firstborn son
13:16and to restore the fractured relationship.
13:20That was Chanuk's purpose.
13:24But when, then I should say, when many men became universally corrupt,
13:33one man has the potential of being good or bad, many men are universally bad.
13:40God returned once again to his fixer.
13:45The guy that he uses to resolve the biggest problems.
13:51And this time, he didn't bear the name Chanuk, but instead the name Noak.
13:58And this is to say, just as we must trust Yahweh to become his sons and daughters,
14:05God must also rely on men to make that possible.
14:11In other words, by design, we have become mutually dependent.
14:16Now, isn't that an interesting thought?
14:20It's a synergy.
14:22Yeah, there is a synergy.
14:23We have a mutual dependence.
14:24We depend on God and he's depending on us.
14:28Now, he has been far better in this equation than we have,
14:32but he hasn't given up on us.
14:35Adam and Chanuk, Noak and Shem aren't random names tossed about in a sea of such monikers,
14:45but instead the central cast of God's story is vital to him as he is essential to us.
14:54So, even when we come to terms with a fallible designer who needs us just as we are reliant on
15:02him,
15:02we still must think our way through the other implications of this pronouncement.
15:08It means that man is almost universally bad.
15:13Considered an intelligent life form, our potential is typically squandered.
15:18Rather than being an asset, mankind has become a liability.
15:24And the more of us there are, the longer we exist, the worse we humans become.
15:33Therefore, mankind isn't the answer.
15:36Certain men are.
15:38And there are very few of them who actually matter in this story,
15:42which is why we hear of Adam and Chanuk and Noak and after him, Shem.
15:52It is also telling that God wasn't interested in resolving the problem with mankind's propensity to be evil.
16:00There was no attempt here to say, hey, let's fix the problem, a little good preaching, you know,
16:07we'll invite him for a nice dinner, we'll have a big party, we'll get this all sorted out.
16:14No, he just says, I'm going to wipe him out.
16:16I'm going to cleanse this debris away.
16:20He wasn't offering humankind an antidote for religious error or a cure for political cruelty.
16:29His sole focus was in cleaning up the mess that he was acknowledging that he had made.
16:37In so doing, God is acknowledging that the vast preponderance of people cannot be salvaged.
16:43They cannot be saved.
16:44There is no potential for redemption.
16:49Now, that's something by itself, isn't it?
16:53Now, well, all of these are extraordinary insights.
16:59Thoughts no one has pondered previously.
17:02I'll assure you that.
17:05There is a profound moral to this story.
17:08With the population within the cradle of civilization, which ranged from the Black Sea to the mouth of the Great
17:14River,
17:14reaching 8 million people at this time, which was 5,000 years ago,
17:21only eight Nassama humans would survive.
17:25That, of course, is one in a million.
17:28They alone demonstrated that men and women, properly guided,
17:32could engage with Yahweh in a productive manner.
17:36They could earn his respect, and they could prove that man with a conscience
17:41hadn't been a colossal or universal mistake.
17:45And this way, Yahweh not only set our expectations for how many souls would ultimately survive,
17:52but through this story, he also explained exactly how this will occur.
17:59In this regard, it occurred to me that I should share something that I don't think anyone has considered
18:08since God presented this connection to us 5,000 years ago.
18:14Now, the verb that beget the deployment of nook is nakam.
18:21It's min.
18:25And nakam is nun, chen, mem.
18:30Now, the lone distinction between this verb and the name nook is the addition of water.
18:42You see, nook is nun followed by chen, or chet, as they typically say.
18:52Okay, so he is the son who separates and protects.
19:00The chet is a fence drawn in Paleo-Hebrew.
19:04So he is the son who, in fact, we might even have that in the document that you have behind
19:10you.
19:11It might show, so people can actually see that.
19:15You might want to bring it up again, Kevin.
19:18It doesn't display the Paleo, but we can bring it up?
19:20Oh, if it doesn't display the Paleo, then don't bring it up.
19:23Okay, it's a shame that it doesn't transfer it effectively.
19:26It should have.
19:28But you look at the nen in Hebrew.
19:33It was drawn as a sperm.
19:36It means son, and it is to add to the family.
19:41So the nook's name is son, and then the chet is a wall who separates and protects the covenant family.
19:51And the only difference in nook's name and the verb that begat this whole story
19:58is that Nakem reverses the order and adds a mim, which is water at the end of it.
20:13And so rather than the son who separates, it's protecting the son.
20:21Well, I should say, in this case, nook and Nakem, I'm getting ahead of my story here.
20:27Nook and Nakem are exactly the same, with the exception of water.
20:31So God is saying that the solution via nook is to add water to the equation.
20:38And water is the source of life.
20:40Water is the universal solvent.
20:43And nook is going to return as the Adamah Parah.
20:48And when the Adamah Parah is sacrificed on Mount Moriah in the end, on Teruah,
20:55Gawah is going to release copious amounts of water from beneath the Temple Mount
21:01that's going to purge, cleanse their remaining remnant, and extend their lives.
21:07So that is the solution to Nakem.
21:10So nook plus water, the mim, which is waves on the water.
21:15Nook is the solution to God's Nakem regret.
21:21That's how he's named.
21:23He is literally, Nakem, the verb is nook plus mim water.
21:28So then we go to Chinook.
21:32Chinook is fascinating in this regard because it tells us that you take the nun and the chet
21:45and you reverse the order.
21:47So that rather than the sun doing separation and protection by way of the cleansing and
21:55life-giving nature of water, now what you have with Chinook in the first two letters is you
22:02have Chinook protecting the sun because the protection is goes before sun.
22:10So it's reversed order.
22:12So it's protecting the sun.
22:15And then other two letters are a tent peg, which means to secure the home
22:24by offering to help with an open hand.
22:29The cough.
22:31So these names are really fascinating in terms of what they convey pursuant to this situation.
22:38Now, this being the case, rather than focusing on the scope of the flood,
22:43all eyes should have been on Nakem and his family.
22:45But not one in a billion has known who he was, why he was deployed,
22:52or what he would accomplish to change the fate of mankind or protect the planet.
22:59But because here's the bottom line to all of this, Gavin, if not for Noach,
23:06we would not exist today.
23:09There would be no Nassamaman.
23:11We would all be animals, and God was fed up with the whole thing.
23:16Everything would have been wiped out.
23:21So who was this man, and how did he elicit such a positive response from Yahweh?
23:28Well, that's going to be the subject of tomorrow's vlog on the daily.
23:34We're going to consider a little more about who Noach was and what made him special
23:41and why it was this man who God used to solve this mess.
23:48I get it now.
23:49Man, it is tough just to stop.
23:52You have all this written.
23:53I have all these thoughts that I want to pop in with it, and it's like, nope, we only said
23:5730 minutes.
23:58It is tough not to just keep going.
24:00But we're going to make an exception here.
24:02You had a thought on what we've already talked about, which was that God makes mistakes,
24:07and we're the biggest of them.
24:08And that God came up with a man who was specifically designed to resolve that problem,
24:17making us interdependent.
24:19Did you have a thought on those things, or do you want to talk about Noach,
24:22which we'll put off to tomorrow?
24:25No.
24:26We can go back just to the original part of it.
24:29That, like you said, the controversial idea that, first of all, that God's not perfect, okay?
24:37And then to add upon that, that how important we are to the relationship as we become more completed,
24:47as we get better, as we become saddak.
24:50There's a lot of folks in the covenant family that question themselves, that wonder, why me?
24:55Why am I here?
24:56Or, you know, I'm not good enough.
24:59I said, you know, Yahweh describes himself as Shaddai, so we are sufficient as well.
25:04He would look at us as the ones of my covenant family that are saddak, that are shazak,
25:12that are doing the things that need to be done the way they need to.
25:15They are helping me grow.
25:17They are sufficient as well.
25:18You know, they're doing exactly what they need to be doing.
25:21And so the pressure kind of comes off of you a little bit that, oh, I get why it can
25:26be me now,
25:27this failed person experiment or whatever.
25:30It's because I'm improving.
25:31I'm moving in the right direction.
25:33Okay.
25:34Let's not blame it on the senior host, the older of the two, for going long today.
25:42But I think this is an interesting topic for us to pursue.
25:47So the first is that when we declare that God is not perfect, rather than a condemning statement,
25:54that's an accolade.
25:59That is an exceedingly good thing that God is not perfect, because the moment God becomes perfect,
26:05A, we can't relate to him.
26:07He becomes too far off there, and we can contribute nothing to him.
26:11There's no purpose for us to do anything or learn anything or grow or become anything more than we are.
26:19In fact, we are a net liability, an irritant to him, and have no value whatsoever to him if he
26:27is perfect.
26:29You're right, that there is no possibility of a relationship ever with a perfect being.
26:34That is correct.
26:35Absolutely.
26:37And the very fact God says that I'm not perfect, and I have made mistakes, and I grieve over my
26:43mistakes, and I regret them,
26:44tells us that, A, he's approachable, that he is moral, that he is like the best of what we can
26:54become,
26:55and that he is trying to establish a model for us to follow.
26:59So, that if we respond to our mistakes, and God came up with a solution to this mistake through Noach,
27:08Noach was specifically designed to resolve this mistake and others.
27:12And the fact that God said, I made a mistake, but rather than saying, I'm going to destroy everybody,
27:19he came up with a solution and found somebody that he could work with to resolve that mistake.
27:25And that is the lesson he's trying to teach us.
27:27You don't need to be perfect, but what you do need, if you start something, finish it.
27:33Clean up your mess.
27:35He started it with an Asama man, with his firstborn, Adam, and he is now continuing that process.
27:44He's continuing to complete what he started.
27:49And in my view, that is a magnificent insight, and it makes God so much more approachable,
27:56so much more interesting, and it makes our lives meaningful and our relationship useful.
28:04So, rather than being troubled by this, we should be celebrating it.
28:09Mm-hmm.
28:11Absolutely.
28:11The possibilities for what it means.
28:13Absolutely.
28:15Oh, I'm actually thrilled with it.
28:17You know, it's interesting that if you look at the gods that Satan inspired man to create
28:23originally, they were all flawed.
28:26Now, they were flawed in immoral ways, but they were all flawed.
28:29It wasn't until man had more time to polish his fake gods and decided to make quasi-pagan gods.
28:41I mean, Christianity with its trinity and Allah with all of the various names for gods.
28:46I mean, they're variations of paganism.
28:49And even in Hinduism today, all of the billions of gods are considered to be attributes of the main three
28:55gods.
28:55So, what happened is that over time, pagan religions were refined to create pseudo-monotheistic religions.
29:08And when that happened, the gods became less interesting, and they became omniscient, omnipresent, and became perfect.
29:23And yet, God can't be any of those things.
29:26If he's perfect, he can't be infinite, because then there'd be no place to grow, and you have to be
29:32growing to be infinite.
29:33If he's omniscient, then there'd be nothing to learn, nothing to gain from any relationship, no reason to have somebody
29:41do anything pursuant to him.
29:44And if he's omnipresent, he is no different than the fur on Wookiee here.
29:53He's in everything, he is everything, which means he cannot be set apart.
29:57He is the opposite of that.
29:58He is exceedingly common.
30:02Yeah, it does. Profanes.
30:04Yeah, the religious god profanes the nature of what God actually says about himself.
30:14All right, so we're ready to go to some news, or do you want to have another comment on this?
30:18No, go ahead. Let's go to some news, because we could—
30:21And we're going to return to this tomorrow, and we'll probably go long again tomorrow,
30:25because these are very profound concepts, particularly in the acknowledgement of who Noach really is,
30:29and the fact that Noach was Chinook.
30:31But the Chinook, the double Chinook to Noach is just the first two of what will be eight deployments of
30:40this same soul.
30:42All right, so here we are on some news, and we're using the feed on a Facebook page that I
30:49have.
30:49And somebody posted, Romans 11 proves replacement theology.
30:58Replacement theology basically says our God lies.
31:02That if our God makes a promise to Israel, he won't keep it.
31:05If our God says that David is the Messiah and the Son of God, that's meaningless.
31:11We can replace him.
31:13Our God is replaceable.
31:14His people are replaceable.
31:16His promises are meaningless.
31:18That's what replacement theology is.
31:20And so now they're claiming that the irrational writings of a man who admitted he was demon-possessed,
31:28writing here on behalf of the beast of Rome can prove that it's okay for God to be a liar.
31:40Yeah, so my replacement theology proves replacement theology, right?
31:47I think, therefore I am.
31:49Is that the statement they're making?
31:50I don't think, therefore I am religious.
31:54Right.
31:58There you go.
31:59All right.
32:00What else do you have there, Kevin?
32:02Yes?
32:02I wrote some writings that prove my writings.
32:05Yes.
32:06You can prove your writings through your writings, but not that way.
32:11This is really funny.
32:13And it says,
32:14Those daggone Trumpian officials, can you believe it?
32:17They're misquoting the Bible.
32:19Oh, you're misquoting the Bible.
32:21Oh, no.
32:22Oh, Rich, Asher just walked.
32:27Gosh, that's your fat dog.
32:28She just knocked the teleprompter way out of position.
32:32Oh, goodness gracious, Asher.
32:37Okay.
32:39So, tough having dogs sometime.
32:42You have them.
32:43Just amazing here that they can be so irresponsible.
32:48There we go.
32:49I'm sure that's better.
32:53You see me rolling off the screen.
32:55I'm the doorman.
32:56I got to open the door, let them out, let them in.
32:58That's what I'm doing.
32:59Okay.
33:00Well, that's yours.
33:01Oh, you can see there's Wookiee, and he wants to be on the desk.
33:05So, here's what these numbskulls don't know,
33:08is that every single citation in the New Testament made by Paul, Peter, Luke,
33:17or Mark, every single citation of the Torah and Prophets is a misquote.
33:24They didn't get one single quote right.
33:28So, they're saying, it's okay for our religious buffoons,
33:32those that we believe were saints,
33:34to misquote God,
33:36but you can't misquote the religious buffoons.
33:41Yes.
33:42This buffoon, don't misquote our religious buffoons.
33:46Yes.
33:46Uh-huh.
33:47That's exactly.
33:48It's stunning that they are that utterly moronic.
33:56I don't ever hear them quoting it in the Greek.
34:00You know what I mean?
34:00No one ever comes out and reads the Greek.
34:03They always go to some poor translation of their misquoting.
34:10Yes.
34:11And nor do they know that there are 300,000 known variances
34:15between the oldest Greek manuscripts of their demonic drivel
34:19and what they claim is the inerrant word of God.
34:22There's only 184,000 words in the text,
34:24and there's 300,000 discrepancies.
34:28None of it would ever hold up in a court of law.
34:30It would never be admissible.
34:31No, it wouldn't.
34:31I would have.
34:32I'm looking forward to convicting all of them.
34:37Mm-hmm.
34:42Oh, so this idiot's preaching here is that it is inappropriate
34:49for you to broadcast the sin of a Christian.
34:54Bad, bad, bad for you to broadcast the sin of a Christian.
34:59That's not biblical.
35:00That's not godly.
35:02Has he ever read the Torah or the prophets?
35:04What's God's single most repeated theme throughout the Torah
35:08and the prophets?
35:10Ah, their sin.
35:12Yes, they have their what they're doing that's being religious.
35:16The religious and political malfeasance of his people, right?
35:20That's the single most repeated theme of the Torah and prophets.
35:24So he's saying that God is clueless,
35:26that God is really bad for exposing and condemning
35:30the religious guilt of his people,
35:33and the way to deal with that is you don't mention it.
35:38Right.
35:38Let's don't talk about it.
35:40Let he without sin cast the first stone, right?
35:44Is religion a brain virus?
35:47Yes.
35:48That is exactly what it is.
35:49Yeah.
35:50That's what Yahweh calls it, you know, the plague.
35:56That is just fascinating.
35:59These, being a Marxist is the same as being a Christian.
36:03You absolutely give up on having a brain.
36:08You might as well not have one.
36:09I dissent.
36:11But what does she say there?
36:12I dissent on what grounds?
36:14That a glorious bill that was approved by Congress
36:19is being torn asunder.
36:21Oh, my God, I dissent.
36:23What is the Supreme Court's mandate?
36:28To approve or disprove whether or not Congress laws
36:35are applied to the Constitution,
36:37whether they are constitutional or not.
36:40If anything that comes up in the court
36:42or anything that is passed by the government,
36:44so justice system or government,
36:46whether or not the decision or the result
36:49is constitutional or not.
36:51And if it is not constitutional,
36:53they must vote against it.
36:55And if it is constitutional,
36:56they must vote for it,
36:58no matter of their politics.
36:59All she wanted to say here is a democratic bill,
37:02voting rights, which, by the way,
37:04they're always named for things that they don't do.
37:06They mean the Voting Rights Bill Act
37:09was that anybody, living or dead,
37:12real or imagined,
37:14can vote without any actual proof
37:17that they should be voting.
37:19And, of course, it's not constitutional.
37:22In fact, the Constitution actually doesn't say
37:24much about voting,
37:26and it doesn't mention democracy at all.
37:28In fact, the Founding Fathers
37:29would have been opposed to democracy.
37:30But her dissent is solely based
37:32on her political views of a congressional bill,
37:35which has nothing to do with the authority
37:39she has been given, period, end of conversation.
37:41So I dissent that she's an idiot.
37:44Right.
37:45How did she get the job?
37:47We need to rethink this appointment stuff process, huh?
37:51Yeah, with the previous administration.
37:53Mm-hmm.
37:55All right.
37:56So Trump has a new slogan.
37:59It's Project Freedom.
38:02Project Freedom, baby!
38:04And what is Project Freedom?
38:06We can reset our timer.
38:07We'll do...
38:08We went a little long on the other,
38:10so we'll give the news its due.
38:13But Project Freedom is...
38:16Well, let's see.
38:16Trump started a war
38:18that has the direct result
38:21of the Strait of Hormuz being closed
38:24and being exceedingly destructive
38:26to the world's food supplies and economies.
38:30Correct?
38:31Mm-hmm.
38:31Yeah.
38:32He started the war that caused the...
38:33Strait was not closed when he started the war.
38:35It was closed immediately after the war began.
38:38So Trump's response
38:39to the Strait of Hormuz being closed
38:43as a result of his unprovoked attack
38:45was to establish a blockade.
38:49Mm-hmm.
38:49So closing the Strait is bad,
38:51so I'm going to have a blockade
38:54that makes sure it stays closed.
38:57Right.
38:57Now, and then the following day,
38:59I'm not going to pull my blockade away,
39:02but I'm going to call my blockade
39:03Project Freedom.
39:08This is the second time
39:11in as many as two weeks, I think,
39:14two more weeks,
39:15that CENTCOM has come out
39:17and completely torn asunder
39:22what his post,
39:24his executive order by posting has done.
39:27We're going to call it Project Freedom,
39:29and what we're going to do
39:29is we're going to free all the boats
39:31that are trapped in the Strait of Hormuz.
39:34We're going to escort them out.
39:35That's what he says in his post.
39:38CENTCOM comes out an hour later
39:40and says,
39:41eh, this is not exactly what we're doing.
39:43What we're going to do
39:45is we're going to stop blockading
39:47and try to clear them, you know,
39:49and it's like Project Freedom.
39:51And it is just like this bill nonsense
39:55we talked about on the last post.
39:58We are calling it the exact opposite of what it is.
40:02What it is.
40:02The fact is the U.S. Navy can't get within 500 miles,
40:07and the carriers have to stay over 1,000 miles away from shore
40:10because the missiles that permeate the Iranian coast
40:15would otherwise sink the U.S. ships.
40:18So they have to be way offshore,
40:21which means any ship that cruises
40:23through the Iranian territorial waters,
40:25which is 12 miles off the Iranian coast,
40:27cannot be blockaded by the U.S. blockade,
40:31which is 99% of the traffic,
40:34and the U.S. cannot board a Russian or a Chinese vessel,
40:39and the Russians and the Chinese are 95% of Iranian trade
40:43without starting a much bigger war.
40:46So the blockade was an absolute waste of time.
40:50I'm sure it's an irritant for the Iranians,
40:54but it is one of the great blunders of all blunders.
40:58And then saying that you're going to escort ships out of the,
41:02well, I think in my next post I speak to that,
41:06you're going to escort the ships out.
41:08It is true that as you look at our next one here,
41:12there we go,
41:12oh, there's our escort team right there.
41:15This is a new version of Russian roulette.
41:18You see, the Iranians can't sink every vessel
41:21that goes through the Strait of Hormuz.
41:24So you're playing Russian roulette,
41:25but instead of bullets against Russians,
41:28it's against Iranians,
41:29and it's against missiles and fast boats.
41:32You want to play?
41:34Yeah.
41:35He's not going to,
41:35they're not going to sink every vessel.
41:37So you would have a chance.
41:39Ride them, cowboy.
41:41So you're saying there's a chance.
41:44Yeah, you'd have a chance of surviving this.
41:47Twelve miles off the coast of Iran is a sneeze to a hypersonic missile.
41:52Right?
41:53Oh, of course.
41:56My understanding, too,
41:58is that Russia and China have decided to give Iran hypersonic missiles,
42:04and their best hypersonic missiles have now been given to Iran,
42:08and that both countries have told Trump privately
42:11that if you escalate this,
42:14you're at war with us.
42:16Wow, yeah.
42:20That brings up a completely side thought I just have, though,
42:24about how years ago we always thought that the million-man army
42:28was going to come from China.
42:29There's a good chance China won't be there either.
42:31The U.S. won't be there.
42:32Russia won't be there.
42:33China won't be there.
42:34It'll be the Persians coming out of Iran
42:36that is the million-man army coming through Israel.
42:39Yeah, I'm not certain that the Chinese won't be there.
42:44I do not think that the U.S. will fight a nuclear war with China.
42:50The U.S. cannot fight a conventional war with China.
42:53It'd be annihilated.
42:55But the U.S. is stupid enough
42:57that they will ignite a nuclear war with Russia,
43:00and they may wipe each other out.
43:03But the fact is that the million-man army is not a million-man.
43:07It's probably two to four million men,
43:10and its primary source is going to be Iran.
43:15So the profits are reasonably clear in that regard.
43:19The Chinese have a major issue with Israel at this point.
43:24You know, Israel's continued attacks on Iran,
43:28which is an essential trading partner.
43:29You know, the Chinese actually have,
43:32and we'll get to Mr. Giuliani here in just a second,
43:34the Chinese actually signed a $400 billion trade deal
43:40with Iran just a few years ago.
43:43And that deal said that the Iranians agree to sell China
43:51huge quantities of oil and gas at way below market prices.
43:58And for that, China agrees to invest some $400 billion
44:04in Iranian infrastructure,
44:06and particularly would be the Belt and Road Initiative
44:10to have an inland means of transporting goods
44:14between China and the rest of the world,
44:18bypassing the U.S. Navy.
44:19And, of course, that is being used right now
44:23to arm and replenish the Iranians,
44:25as is the route to Russia through the Caspian Sea.
44:29The Iranians don't actually need the Strait of Hormuz
44:32to do business because of the Belt and Road Initiative
44:36with China and the Caspian Sea connection to Russia.
44:41So the U.S. just hasn't thought this through.
44:44And China and Russia,
44:47neither one are going to allow Iran to fall.
44:50And it was, Israel has become both of their enemies,
44:52which was really foolish on behalf of Israel
44:55to put themselves in this position.
44:57Now, speaking of foolish,
44:59if you go back and you probably listened to me
45:01all the way back in this time,
45:03but right after 9-11,
45:06when I started this,
45:08speaking for you,
45:10that man was a public enemy number one to me.
45:14He was the one that came out
45:16and said that the hijackers
45:19had hijacked their religion,
45:21that Islam was not responsible for 9-11,
45:25that the terrorists had hijacked their religion.
45:30And at that time,
45:31I had written Tea with Terrorists.
45:33I was writing Prophet of Doom,
45:34and my message on some 10,000 radio interviews
45:38was exactly the opposite,
45:39that the jihadists were the perfect exemplars of Islam.
45:45They were doing exactly as Allah commanded them to do,
45:49and they were the best of Muslims.
45:51It is the likes of this man
45:54who have hijacked the religion
45:55and are misciting it.
45:57And the suicide bombers of 9-11 were good Muslims.
46:02And so now the world knows that he was an immoral liar.
46:06He's in critical condition,
46:08and he's genuinely a creep.
46:10And I'm glad to see it happen to him
46:13for all of the harm that was done by his lies.
46:19It blows my mind
46:21that we can talk about Giuliani, 9-11,
46:25what happened, Islam,
46:26and New York has a Muslim mayor.
46:30Less than 20 years later.
46:3220 years later.
46:33I mean, is that unfathomable?
46:37Unfathomable, you know?
46:39Yeah.
46:39But the reason they have a Marxist-Muslim mayor
46:42is twofold.
46:43Marxists have joined with Muslims.
46:47They only have one thing in common,
46:49which is a hatred of Jews.
46:52But they have joined together.
46:54They'd actually joined together with Hitler
46:58during the Second World War.
47:00That was when the Muslim-Marxist alliance was forged,
47:04and it has become extremely effective.
47:07It is the most evil influence in our world today.
47:11And this idiot that has a very nice smile,
47:14but that's all he's got going for him,
47:17has managed to convince dunderheads in New York
47:22that don't understand the nature of Marxism
47:25and do not understand the nature of Islam
47:28and who voted for him because, well,
47:31they hate Donald Trump.
47:33Now, they hate Donald Trump?
47:35Fine.
47:35Got no problem with that.
47:36Right.
47:38That's the whole reason why Democrats lost to Trump
47:41is that nationwide people aren't as stupid
47:45as they are in New York City.
47:47And, you know, Marxists are not going to prevail.
47:50If that is your answer, you're going to lose.
47:53And when the head of your party is a Muslim
47:56and the rank and file of your party are Marxists,
48:00you don't have an answer.
48:02You're as big a problem as the MAGA nutcases.
48:13We'll end with this one.
48:15Billionaire tax now.
48:16You know what this is a function of?
48:19Greed.
48:20This is a function of selfishness,
48:23of covetousness.
48:26The young Marxists of today
48:29are completely clueless
48:32and insanely parasitic.
48:35They want their education paid for.
48:38They want their housing paid for.
48:39They want their health care paid for.
48:40And they don't ever bother to think of
48:43who made those things possible,
48:45who built the hospitals,
48:48who built the universities,
48:50who pays those salaries.
48:53And they're unthinking in this regard.
48:56They're just covetous.
48:57You have something and I want it,
48:59so I'm going to take it.
49:01Marxism.
49:02But the bottom line is here, it's real simple.
49:05If you punish success
49:07and you reward failure, which is Marxism,
49:10all you're going to get
49:12is less success and more failure,
49:15which is what's happened
49:16in every communist and Marxist culture.
49:21So, people are just insanely stupid.
49:26And there's just no fixing them.
49:29It's not even the who built those things,
49:33okay, the hospitals, the universities.
49:35It's why they built them.
49:38They built them because to make a profit.
49:41And if you take out this idea of
49:44for a person to be able to reap the rewards
49:46of their own work and their own success,
49:49okay, then those things don't get done.
49:52Nobody's going to do anything
49:53because what's in it for, you know,
49:55what's in it for me?
49:55Well, I would be,
49:57I agree with you up to a point.
49:59They built their businesses
50:02because they were trying to create a product
50:05that they could offer at a value
50:08such that people would want to buy it
50:10and that they could make it efficiently
50:13so that they would profit
50:14by supplying that product.
50:16It's a noble institution.
50:18It has caused mankind success
50:21from the beginning.
50:23What Marxism does is redistribute that
50:26so that you take all the incentive away
50:28from the person who's taking the risk
50:30and enduring the blows of starting a business
50:35and running a business.
50:36And you're giving the benefits
50:37to those who did nothing.
50:39Now, the fact is that they built their businesses
50:42on a profit motive,
50:44which is a very good thing.
50:46Profiting is good.
50:48It's being productive.
50:49But the hospitals and the schools
50:53were typically built out of their good nature.
50:56Here, I've been successful.
50:58I want to give something back to society.
51:00I'm offering it of my own free will.
51:03But now what you want to do it
51:04with the billionaire tax
51:05is you just want to steal it from me.
51:07You want to steal it.
51:13And the things that probably shouldn't have,
51:18I'm okay with hospitals making money.
51:19Don't get me wrong.
51:20But when hospitals
51:23and especially universities
51:25have a profit motive
51:27that skews the equation
51:29because now we have,
51:30the most important thing on the table
51:32is that education,
51:33it's our Division I football team
51:35because that brings in the most money.
51:37You know?
51:39The most important thing
51:40isn't healing people, okay?
51:43The most important thing
51:44is treating people
51:46because we need more customers.
51:48We need more heads and beds.
51:49Now, I know that that is not
51:51their philosophy,
51:52their thinking.
51:53I understand that.
51:55And I would argue with you
51:57that Division I football
51:59is a profit center
52:01for the universities
52:02and therefore a benefit for them.
52:05And so is men's basketball,
52:07but all other sports
52:08are a charity.
52:10And so they should not be funded
52:11by the university,
52:12but men's football
52:14and men's basketball,
52:15they are actually profit centers
52:17for the university
52:18and therefore very valuable
52:19to them,
52:21other net contributors.
52:23On healthcare,
52:24our biggest problem
52:26on healthcare
52:26is the fact that
52:28with nationalized healthcare,
52:30it's impossible
52:32for the person
52:32that actually wants
52:33to pay for their own healthcare
52:34to be able to buy
52:37decent healthcare
52:38at a fair price.
52:39I've gone from being insured
52:41and insuring myself
52:43and all of those
52:44who worked for me
52:44all of my life
52:45to the last 20 years
52:47of my life
52:47being uninsured
52:48because the nationalized
52:51healthcare system
52:53is horrible.
52:55I'm not only penalized
52:56in terms of what I have to pay,
52:58but I get a product
52:59that I cannot use.
53:01The biggest issues,
53:03of course,
53:03is that it provides coverage
53:08for things
53:09it shouldn't provide coverage for.
53:10If you don't have the money
53:11to pay for your own healthcare,
53:13then if you break a leg
53:16or you get a disease,
53:17you should be able
53:18to receive antibiotics
53:19and a cast
53:20for your wound.
53:23But if you need
53:25a triple heart bypass surgery,
53:28you're not entitled to that.
53:30You're not entitled
53:32to the government
53:32spending millions of dollars
53:35to prolong your life
53:36another year
53:37if you're 80 years old.
53:39I'm sorry.
53:40You're just not.
53:40If you want to pay for it
53:42and that's something
53:43you want to do
53:44out of your own pocket
53:44because you made the money
53:45and now you want to pay
53:47to extend an unhappy
53:49and unfulfilling life
53:50another year,
53:51go at it.
53:52But it isn't
53:53the society's responsibility
53:55to do that for you.
53:57And so there's serious problems
54:00in healthcare
54:01and how it is distributed
54:04that would have to be changed
54:06radically going forward
54:07and it's not fixable now.
54:10You can't even have
54:11an intelligent discussion
54:12about the broken nature
54:14of healthcare
54:14and why socialized medicine
54:17does not work
54:18and why we're moving more
54:20in the direction
54:21of a broken system.
54:24Luckily, we won't need it.
54:26Won't be much longer
54:26we won't need it.
54:28A year from now
54:28we will have our
54:29we'll have life assurance
54:31instead of life insurance
54:33and we will have
54:35perfect health.
54:36Well, we'll have
54:38good health.
54:39I can't say you'll have
54:40perfect health
54:40because perfect's
54:42a bad idea.
54:43Right.
54:44Absolutely.
54:45We're going to have to
54:46view perfect
54:47as perfecting
54:48as opposed to
54:50perfect as a result.
54:52It's a
54:52we're
54:53we're completing
54:54and we're perfecting
54:56as opposed to
54:57have reached
54:59that end.
55:00It's just like
55:00throughout
55:01the next thousand years
55:02we're going to continue
55:03to learn and contribute.
55:04Mm-hmm.
55:05And grow.
55:06Absolutely.
55:07Yes.
55:08All right.
55:08So I think we did
55:1045 minutes today
55:11but the subject
55:12was interesting.
55:12We may do as much
55:14tomorrow.
55:14We have a whole bunch
55:15of material
55:16set up to examine
55:18who was
55:19Chinook
55:20who was
55:20Nowak
55:21and what did
55:22they achieve
55:23and why did God
55:24tell us this story
55:25and what can we
55:26learn from it.
55:27So with that said
55:28our next program
55:29maybe in about
55:3030 minutes from now
55:31if all goes well
55:31is going to be
55:33another episode
55:34of Luminaries
55:35which by the way
55:36this story of
55:37Nowak
55:38has been derived
55:39but we're going to
55:40return to
55:41coming home
55:42for Luminaries
55:44and we'll present
55:45it right here
55:45in the Ocean Studio.
55:47So thank you
55:48all for listening.
55:49Thank you Kevin
55:50for participating.
55:51Thank you Rich
55:53for producing this.
55:54Look forward
55:55to being with you
55:55all again
55:56in about
55:5630 minutes time.
55:59Shalom everyone.
56:00Hey there.
56:01Thanks for tuning in.
56:03That was Fetch.
56:04Gotta Run Now.
56:05Catch y'all
56:05on our next podcast.
56:06I Loot Now.
56:08See you next time.
56:10Bye.
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