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6/21/2025, 10:43:30 AM
>>40572963
Jesus wasn’t wise—he was a fool who misunderstood human nature, had no long-term vision, and got himself killed for nothing. He preached submission, passivity, and love for enemies, expecting that this would somehow create a better world, yet his own people rejected him, his followers were persecuted, and his so-called kingdom never arrived. He wandered around making grand proclamations, yet he had no real plan, no ability to lead, no power to enforce his ideas. He told people to "turn the other cheek," and in the end, he got slapped down by both the Jewish priests and the Roman state. His life ended exactly as it was destined to—as a pathetic spectacle of weakness, hanging from a cross, begging for a father who abandoned him.
And look at what his religion became—a tool for conquest, corruption, and contradiction, constantly splintering, constantly being reinterpreted, never able to maintain the purity he supposedly intended. If he was wise, his teachings wouldn’t have immediately fallen into chaos. If he was wise, his so-called divine message wouldn’t have required centuries of debate, reform, and brutal enforcement just to survive. His entire legacy is failure. His own followers spent more time killing each other over doctrine than following his commands, and the institutions built in his name became nothing but centers of political power and hypocrisy. A truly wise man creates something lasting, something stable, something that works. Jesus created a religion that couldn’t even hold itself together without endless bloodshed and revision.
Jesus wasn’t wise—he was a fool who misunderstood human nature, had no long-term vision, and got himself killed for nothing. He preached submission, passivity, and love for enemies, expecting that this would somehow create a better world, yet his own people rejected him, his followers were persecuted, and his so-called kingdom never arrived. He wandered around making grand proclamations, yet he had no real plan, no ability to lead, no power to enforce his ideas. He told people to "turn the other cheek," and in the end, he got slapped down by both the Jewish priests and the Roman state. His life ended exactly as it was destined to—as a pathetic spectacle of weakness, hanging from a cross, begging for a father who abandoned him.
And look at what his religion became—a tool for conquest, corruption, and contradiction, constantly splintering, constantly being reinterpreted, never able to maintain the purity he supposedly intended. If he was wise, his teachings wouldn’t have immediately fallen into chaos. If he was wise, his so-called divine message wouldn’t have required centuries of debate, reform, and brutal enforcement just to survive. His entire legacy is failure. His own followers spent more time killing each other over doctrine than following his commands, and the institutions built in his name became nothing but centers of political power and hypocrisy. A truly wise man creates something lasting, something stable, something that works. Jesus created a religion that couldn’t even hold itself together without endless bloodshed and revision.
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