The Book of the Esther is about Jews subverting non-Jewish countries, taking power, and murdering their enemies.
Mordecai, the Jew, refused to obey the King. Haman recognized the deceit and disloyalty of the Jews toward the Kingdom and sought to address it.
The Jew, Esther, hid her identity so she could infiltrate the center of power and then revealed her Jewishness when she could play the victim.
As “victim,” the Jews slaughtered 75,000 people. Not one Jew was killed in the book of Est...
The Book of the Esther is about Jews subverting non-Jewish countries, taking power, and murdering their enemies.
- Mordecai, the Jew, refused to obey the King. Haman recognized the deceit and disloyalty of the Jews toward the Kingdom and sought to address it.
- The Jew, Esther, hid her identity so she could infiltrate the center of power and then revealed her Jewishness when she could play the victim.
- As “victim,” the Jews slaughtered 75,000 people. Not one Jew was killed in the book of Esther.
- There is no reference whatsoever to the Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob.
- There is no prayer to the God of Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob.
- These Jews do not consider themselves sons of Israel, just Jews.
- There is no reference to Moses or to his Law.
- Mordecai offers his cousin in marriage to a pagan in order to get close to the centers of power (a follower of the God of Israel would never have done this).
- The people in this empire greatly feared the Jews.
- Many non-Jews converted to become “Jews” because of their great power.
- The festival of Purim celebrates the slaughter of non-Jews and has nothing to do with the feasts of Moses or the Law.
- The Jews did best in a multi-ethnic, multi-cultural empire where they could seize power by getting close to the king, claiming victim-hood, and murdering their enemies.
The Book of Esther is the Jewish “how to” manual.
For everyone else, it is a warning about the Jews and what they will do to your nation.
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