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7/17/2025, 8:32:06 PM
>>510648794
>Why wouldn’t it be the descendants of the people who have spent thousands of years being Christian and spread Christianity to the world? Why wouldn’t it be us?
The most hated people of the world.
The only people the world is ENCOURAGED to hate, Whitey.
The Edomites forgot that they look like us and none of the brown people can tell the difference, so it is going to bite them squarely in the ass.
>Why wouldn’t it be the descendants of the people who have spent thousands of years being Christian and spread Christianity to the world? Why wouldn’t it be us?
The most hated people of the world.
The only people the world is ENCOURAGED to hate, Whitey.
The Edomites forgot that they look like us and none of the brown people can tell the difference, so it is going to bite them squarely in the ass.
6/23/2025, 9:10:25 PM
>>508490049
The Welsh, Irish and Scottish are more racially pure than the English.
The Welsh, Irish and Scottish are more racially pure than the English.
6/21/2025, 6:44:42 PM
>>508207627
indeed
>Capt’s work was later confirmed by Welsh archeologists, Alan Wilson and Baram Blackett whose work connects the Welsh people — Cymry/Cymru — with the ancient Khumry of the Assyrian captivity. Wilson and Blackett maintain that the Welsh language is virtually the same as that of the ancient Khumry.
>In the British Isles there was a direct Hebrew element which is especially apparent in Welsh.
sauce:
"Comparing Welsh-Hebrew" by Karel Jongeling (Netherlands, 2000).
The Rev. Eliezer Williams (b.1754) wrote several works on the Celts and made several remarks (quoted by Roberts p.23):
>In the Hebrew...which the ancient British language greatly resembles...the roots of most of the ancient British, or real Welsh, words may be regularly traced in the Hebrew.
>Scarcely a Hebrew root can be discovered that has not its corresponding derivative in the ancient British language...But not only..the words...their variations and inflections afford a much stronger proof of affinity...
> The Celtic Welsh Language and Hebrew: Note only the Great Orme and County Conwy but much of the rest (perhaps all) of Wales was also settled by Hebrews. This is reflected in the language. The Welsh national bard Taliesin (ca. 600 CE?) is elsewhere quoted as saying that the language he spoke in was Hebrew.
indeed
>Capt’s work was later confirmed by Welsh archeologists, Alan Wilson and Baram Blackett whose work connects the Welsh people — Cymry/Cymru — with the ancient Khumry of the Assyrian captivity. Wilson and Blackett maintain that the Welsh language is virtually the same as that of the ancient Khumry.
>In the British Isles there was a direct Hebrew element which is especially apparent in Welsh.
sauce:
"Comparing Welsh-Hebrew" by Karel Jongeling (Netherlands, 2000).
The Rev. Eliezer Williams (b.1754) wrote several works on the Celts and made several remarks (quoted by Roberts p.23):
>In the Hebrew...which the ancient British language greatly resembles...the roots of most of the ancient British, or real Welsh, words may be regularly traced in the Hebrew.
>Scarcely a Hebrew root can be discovered that has not its corresponding derivative in the ancient British language...But not only..the words...their variations and inflections afford a much stronger proof of affinity...
> The Celtic Welsh Language and Hebrew: Note only the Great Orme and County Conwy but much of the rest (perhaps all) of Wales was also settled by Hebrews. This is reflected in the language. The Welsh national bard Taliesin (ca. 600 CE?) is elsewhere quoted as saying that the language he spoke in was Hebrew.
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