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Nayto wrote:Especially when they have plastic surgery to make themselves look more White. Jews just love doing it.
Fenwick wrote:I wonder if the jews might have been at their most hideous in the middle ages, being cut off from diluting themselves with whites, and with cosmetics still several hundred years away. They'd have been limited to inbreeding amongst themselves, giving many of them a monstrous degenerated appearance. The old caricature of the jew can't have been very far from reality back then.
Catherine wrote:I've seen blacks try to say that the Song of Solomon proves that the ancient Hebrews were black because of the following verses:
Son 1:5 I am black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of Kedar, as the curtains of Solomon.
Son 1:6 Look not upon me, because I am black, because the sun hath looked upon me: my mother's children were angry with me; they made me the keeper of the vineyards; but mine own vineyard have I not kept.
If one looks up the words in a concordance the words (the sun hath "looked" upon me) means she was TANNED. It has nothing to do with being a negro. Farther on in that same book she says her lover is WHITE. But, blacks over look that, naturally.
Here there is a Simon, called Niger, the Latin word for black,who is accompanied by Loukios, a Cyrenian. Apparently it is safe to conclude that this Simon Niger is indeed one and the same as Simon the Cyrenian, and that is why and how he is mentioned here along with another Cyrenian. There are many fools who think that the appellation Niger means that Simon was a negro. However there were no negros in Cyrene at this time. This use of the Latin word for black, niger, pronounced as we pronounce the word nigger today, does not mean that Simon had black skin. White men have for ages used terms like gold, black and red to describe hair color, and terms like black, blue or even yellow or green to describe one's demeanor or other characteristics. Eric the Red was not an Indian, but a White Norseman. Hugh the Black was not a negro, but a White Frank, a Duke of Burgundy in the 10th century. As for White men having black hair, both Prince Hector of Troy (in the Iliad) and King Solomon himself (in the Song of Solomon) are described as having had raven hair, and both of them were certainly White men.
William Finck : Acts chapter 13, part 1
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