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In thirteen twenty four CE, Mansa Musa, the ruler of the Mali empire, embarked on a legendary pilgrimage to Mecca. His journey accompanied by a vast caravan of gold, slaves, and camels demonstrated the immense wealth of his empire. Mansa Musa's generosity during his travels, particularly his lavish distribution of gold in Cairo, disrupted local economies. His pilgrimage solidified Mali's status as a major power in the medieval world and established Mansa Musa as one of the wealthiest individuals in history. In thirteen twenty four CE, Mansa Musa, the ruler of the Mali empire, embarked on a legendary pilgrimage to Mecca.

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During the fall of Rome, daily circuses were held to divert people's attention. When the barbarians reached Rome's gates, they didn't even realize the empire had already crumbled. The distraction of the circus had kept them unaware. People were caught up in festivals, cheering for individuals as if they were divine, while the same songs could be easily accessed on YouTube for free. Meanwhile, I am living my life, while you, on the other hand, are foolish.

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The Crusades were fundamentally a defensive response to the expansion of Islamic armies, which had already conquered significant portions of the Christian world, including the Holy Land, Egypt, North Africa, and Spain. As these forces threatened the Byzantine Empire and Europe, Christian nations recognized the need to act. The First Crusade aimed to protect against ongoing Muslim attacks, which persisted into the 20th century. During this period, over a million Europeans were abducted and enslaved in North Africa and the Ottoman Empire.

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By the sixth century, the Roman Empire was a shadow of its former self, with only the eastern half surviving. But Emperor Justinian had a vision to restore Rome's lost territories. Under his brilliant general Belisarius, Justinian launched ambitious conquests, reclaiming North Africa from the Vandals, Italy from the Ostrogoths, and even a foothold in Spain. But war wasn't his only battle. When the Nika riots threatened his rule, he crushed the revolt securing his throne. He then rebuilt Constantinople's skyline, constructing the magnificent Hagia Sophia, a marvel that still stands today. Yet, Justinian's reign was also marked by disaster. The plague of Justinian ravaged the empire, crippling his ambitions. Despite his achievements, his empire began to decline after his death, and we can ask, was Justinian the last great Roman emperor or just delaying the inevitable?

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Louis the 9th, a king in 1226, personally judged cases and punished in Paris. He targeted Jews, leading to the Talmud trial in 1232. The pope ordered its destruction, resulting in confiscations and a trial overseen by Louis. Rabbis defended the Talmud against a convert to Catholicism, but it was condemned to burning. The remaining books were burned in 1242, and Louis expelled Jews from France, targeting Jewish communities in crusades. Despite his actions, a city was named after him.

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The city was in chaos with many starving in the streets while the wealthy enjoyed lavish meals. The poor ate turnip soup and bought crows, squirrels, and rats from butchers, while the rich indulged without a care.

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For the Pope kissing the Koran. The Catholic Catechism in our library out here, you can read it for yourself. Some of the things they believe are pretty interesting. They say in the Catholic Catechism, eight forty one, the church's relationship with the Muslims is the plan of salvation also includes those who acknowledge the creator. The first place among whom are the Muslims. These profess to hold the faith of Abraham, and together with us, they adore the one merciful God. There's an excellent little bitty comic book called The Prophet you can get from our ministry. It's like $2 or something like that by Jack Chick. He goes through the history of the Muslim church and how they started. Very few people realize it was the Catholics that started Islam. They started the whole religion purposely to try to get the holy land back for the Catholics. They built up the Islam. They they funded Mohammed. They trained him. They sent a Catholic nun out of the monastery. They said, we want you to come out of your convent. Go find a young promising Muslim, marry him, and train him to raise up an army of Arabs to go take back the holy land for the mother church. Quite an interesting story if you wanna read about that. It started to work, but then it failed because Islam got so big, they said, well, forget you, Catholics. We're doing what we want. And I don't think most Muslims, which is now, what, 10%, 20% of the world population, Islam, I don't think most of them know that they really started off as a front for the Catholic church.

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Lebanon used to be the only majority Christian country in the Middle East, known for its open-mindedness, multiculturalism, and high-quality universities. By the 1970s, the Christian majority shifted due to the growth of the Muslim population, who are allowed to marry up to four wives. As Muslims became the majority, violence against Christians increased. By 1974, it became unsafe for Christians to travel due to checkpoints where they were targeted. In 1975, civil war erupted after an attack on a church. Muslims, supported by oil money, aimed to use Lebanon as a base against Israel. Lebanon, once nearly 70% Christian, saw its demographics change within thirty years. Despite a fair division of government posts after independence, the new Muslim majority became intolerant and began massacring Christians, believing they now had the power to dictate the rules.

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Islam rapidly expands from the Arabian Peninsula, attacking the Middle East, crossing the Mediterranean, and targeting southern France and Spain. Despite the common association of Islam with Arabs and deserts, it projects power throughout the Mediterranean, attacking coastal towns, taking slaves, and engaging in over 200 battles in Spain alone. Meanwhile, Islam also attempts to break into Europe through Turkey. Over time, the Christians push back the Muslims in Spain, but Constantinople falls, leading to the jihad spreading to Eastern Europe. This relentless jihad is driven by the teachings of Mohammed and the desire to fight against non-believers. New sultans would often initiate wars to establish their reputation in Islamic history.

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In Christian nations, lending money for interest was illegal, so Jews became the lenders. They charged interest and eventually owned everything. Kings would then round them up and kick them out of the country. This cycle repeated for centuries, as Jews would go to the next country and start lending again. Compound interest was seen as a powerful force that could enslave people, which is why it was illegal. Today, credit card and student loan interest continue to enslave people. The start of modern banking in Italy saw 80% of the land owned by 20% of the families, with a significant Jewish population.

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The Catholic Church, specifically Pope Boniface VIII in 1302, created the first expressed trust in history. This trust concept originated from Crusaders leaving their homes and riches behind to fight in Jerusalem. They would entrust their property to a trusted friend, who became the trustee. However, some trustees decided to keep the treasures when the Crusaders returned, and the courts supported their right to do so. This marked the beginning of the trust system, which worked for most people but not for those who didn't get their property back.

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During the era of pre-Nicene Christianity, the victors not only wrote the history books but also deleted them, along with the memory of people, buildings, and statues associated with them. The two main camps of Christians during this time were the Judeo-Christians and the Cairo Christians. The Judeo-Christians believed in Yahweh and Jesus as the son of God, while the Cairo Christians believed that Jesus descended and ascended to heaven in human form. The Cairo Christians had their own Bible, which included the gospel of the Lord and Paul's original epistles. However, the Judeo-Christians, led by Eusebius and Constantine, gained power and created their own Bible, which included the Torah and excluded the gospel of the Lord. This marked the transformation of Christianity into Judeo-Christianity.

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On 05/29/1453, the world witnessed a seismic shift with the fall of Constantinople, marking the end of the Byzantine Empire and altering the course of history. This monumental event was the culmination of a siege led by Sultan Mehmed II of the Ottoman Empire, a campaign that lasted for fifty three days. The use of massive cannons, particularly the legendary basilica, played a crucial role in overcoming the city's defenses. The fall of Constantinople not only marked the end of the Byzantine Empire, but also symbolized the rise of Ottoman dominance in the region. This event paved the way for the spread of Islam into Eastern Europe and altered trade routes, prompting European explorers to seek new paths to the East, eventually leading to the Age of Exploration.

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In Christian nations, usury (charging interest) was illegal, so Jews became money lenders. Over time, they owned everything, leading to expulsion by kings. This cycle repeated for centuries, as kings feared Jews' financial power. Napoleon warned of compound interest's ability to consume property. Today, credit card and student loan interest enslave people, replacing physical slavery with debt slavery.

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It is commonly taught in school that Rome fell in April. This is wrong. The last legitimate Western Roman Emperor actually lived until April, and then the city of Rome itself continued unchanged from this event, and so did all Roman institutions. Only the Gothic Wars, some sixty years later, actually ended the glory of Rome and destroyed most Roman institutions and infrastructure of Italy. But even then, didn't end, because the Eastern Roman Empire continued for almost another thousand years, and this empire, better known as the Byzantine Empire, was actually the legitimate continuation of the Roman Empire. We can thus see that saying Rome ended in 04/1976 is a gross oversimplification, and in fact, the Roman way of life continued for sixty more years in the West, and for thousand more years in the East.

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To understand the differences between Western civilization and the Islamic world, one must look at the history of Islam. Prophet Muhammad initially struggled to gain followers in Mecca and later sought acceptance from the Jewish community in Medina. When they rejected him, he shifted from a spiritual leader to a military figure, declaring war on them and establishing a system where Jews and Christians became second-class citizens, known as dhimmi, required to pay a protection tax. As Islam expanded, it imposed restrictions on non-Muslims. The Crusades were launched to liberate Jerusalem from Islamic control, which lasted until 1967. The Islamic empire grew significantly but faced pushback from Europeans, culminating in the end of the caliphate in 1924. This period saw immense violence, with millions killed under Islamic rule.

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Text called the Kabbalah were transcribed by rabbi Isaac the blind in Provence in the South Of France during the twelfth century. For the first time in its six thousand year history, the ancient magical techniques of invoking fallen demonic angels and killing someone using the evil eye were put down on paper. The cabalistic writings of Isaac the Blind fell into the hands of a group of nine French noblemen. These noblemen became known as the Knights Templar. The word cabal, meaning a group who conspire together, comes from the word kabbalah. One such cabal who were to later inspire a whole armada of black magic cults and Freemasonry were the so called knights Templar. They laughingly called themselves the poor knights of Christ, but these men were far from poor. They deliberately styled themselves as monks so that they could go about their Luciferian cabalistic studies and conduct business without being taxed nor aroused suspicion from the Vatican. The cabalistic higher secrets of ritual sodomy, the evil eye, chanting incantations, necromancy, blood sacrifice, and invoking the fallen angels in service to Lucifer fascinated the French knights Templar. They realized that the Kabbalah originated in Palestine. And once they had realized that the Kabbalah was the key to untold spiritual magical power, they cunningly planned a bloody crusade to Palestine in order to search for more Kabbalistic and magical artifacts. They eventually discovered and looted the Temple Of Solomon. Solomon was a biblical magician king who is accredited with inspiring large parts of the corpus of works we now know as the Kabbalah. The Knights Templar arrived in Palestine with one main goal, to stop the Muslims from gaining any knowledge about the Kabbalah. Historical Islamic oral accounts from the twelfth century testify to a sickening crusade of plunder, torture, murder, and sexual depravity. The Knights Templar, once they had discovered the magical teachings of the Kabbalah, were dedicated utterly to destroying its origins so that they might hold its secrets exclusively. Archaeologists have found ample evidence of tunnels constructed by the Templars in Jerusalem. The Templar, including silver caskets containing desiccated heads and skulls. The Knights Templar referred to these heads as Baphomet's. They were placed at the center of a round table. Templars would then conduct a seance invoking the spirit of Lucifer to speak through the head. The most damning information exposed them as antichrists. Several Knights Templar confessed that the image of Jesus was spat upon and trampled during cabalistic rituals, a satanic tradition which is still practiced to this day at lodges of the Ordo Templi Orientis, which was once headed by Alastair Crowley's.

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The narrative centers on the idea that victors control not only history books but also memory, describing Dominatio Memoriae as the Roman practice of erasing people, buildings, and even entire histories, with the first Christian Bible of January and its key figures suffering this fate. The timeline runs from January to March, with the Council of Nicaea marking the end of the Pre Nicene Christian era. Two main camps emerge. The first camp, the Judeo Christians (also called Messianic Jews or Ebionites), later evolving into the various forms of what becomes the Roman Catholic Church and its many denominations (Baptists, evangelicals, Anglicans, Orthodox, Protestants, Mormons, etc.), all share a single denominator: belief in Yahweh as God and that Jesus Christ was born of Jews. Their Bible is Judeo-Christian, with the Jewish Torah stapled to the front, referred to as the old testament after a third‑century renaming. Rivalry within this camp is intense, with disputes over whether to be Jews or “kinda Jewish,” illustrated by the Council of Jerusalem in 48 AD. The second camp, the Cairo Christians, is less known due to the Demnatio Memoriae. The Cairo Christians use the symbol chi-rho (the first two Greek letters of Christ) as identification, a predecessor to the Latin cross after Nicea. Both camps acknowledge Jesus as the Son of God and place extreme importance on the Apostle Paul, but beyond that, their beliefs diverge widely. The Cairo Christians have a Bible in which Jesus’s arrival and life are clearly dated in the first sentence of the first Christian Bible of January: “In the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judea, Jesus descended into Capernaum, a city in Galilee.” Some groups like the Marcionites even pinpoint November 24 at around 11 AM as the exact moment, noting a solar eclipse in that time frame visible over Capernaum. The first Bible consists of the gospel of the Lord, plus Paul’s original ten epistles; this version is contrasted with the later Judeo-Christian canon assembled centuries later with four Gospels, Acts, 62 other books, and Torah front matter. Marcionites are described as the largest Cairo Christian denomination, persecuted by Romans, Jews, and Judeo Christians. Fragments of their influence persist, including the oldest inscription bearing Jesus’s name on a Marcionite church arch in Syria. The Vatican Library allegedly hosts manuscripts showing Saint Jerome’s source material for his Latin translations attributed to Marcion of Sino. Marcion is depicted as a target of Demnatio Memoriae, with defaced paintings of him and his head scratched off. A standalone page for Pre-Nicene History is mentioned at prenicene.org, with cross-links to firstbiblenetwork.com, and the Marcionite Church (marcionitechurch.org) is cited as existing today. The turning point arrives with Eusebius and Constantine. Eusebius, known as the father of church history, is portrayed as a PR operator who would omit inconvenient facts and even advocate deceit for the “greater good,” excommunicated for Arian beliefs but later rehabilitated by Constantine, who becomes Pontifex Maximus and uses Eusebius to advance a Judeo Christian narrative. The Council of Nicaea (May 20–June 19, in March of the same year) supposedly unites the empire under Judeo Christianity, with Constantine ordering confiscation and destruction of Cairo Christian property, torching Bibles, and transferring wealth to the new church. Demnatio Memoriae targets Marcion and his first Bible, and within six years Constantine issues 50 copies of Eusebius’s revised Judeo‑Christian Bible, which staples the Torah and alters Paul’s epistles, becoming the official Bible of the Roman Catholic Church, signaling a wholesale hijacking of doctrine in a span of twenty-nine days. The narrative closes with “And now you know.”

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The Great Schism was the formal split of the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church in October. The division was the result of longstanding theological, political, and cultural differences between the Latin speaking West and the Greek speaking East. Some of the key issues that led to the split were the authority of the pope, the use of leavened versus unleavened bread in communion, as well as the filoque controversy that stemmed from the Nicene Creed. The schism became official when Pope Leo the ninth excommunicated patriarch Michael Cerellarius, who in response then communicated pope Leo. Attempts at reconciliation were made but ultimately unsuccessful, and the Catholic and Orthodox churches remain separate to this day.

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During the collapse of the Roman Empire, Constantine restructured it by controlling history and religion. The empire shifted from nonmonotheistic to monotheistic, persecuting non-Christians and destroying ancient groups like the gnostics. The library at Alexandria was burned, and ancient civilizations were eradicated to erase echoes of the past. This led to the Dogon people settling in Mali due to religious persecution. The Roman Empire's actions, including the crusades, aimed to eliminate pre-Christian influences.

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The speaker continues a deep-dive into a claimed global power structure, asserting that those who rule the world are the Illuminati or Cabal, a hidden group that pulls strings behind presidents, kings, and governments. The Cabal is described as real, with evidence spanning thousands of years, and is presented as the key behind modern darkness and the “best kept and most shocking secret in the history of mankind.” The narrative promises to take the audience “down the rabbit hole” and to reveal the true agenda of this unseen force. Historical roots begin with ancient Sumer seven millennia ago. Sumerian civilization is described as highly developed, with grand cities, temples, pyramids, and advanced infrastructure like indoor plumbing. The Temple of Inanna at Uruk is highlighted for its splendor and depictions of various deities. Ishtar (Ishtar/Asherah) is linked to Isis, Diana, and Venus, and associated with Baal, a deity demanding child sacrifice. A second historical thread follows the Khazars in the region of the Northwest Silk Road, in the area known as Khazaria. The Khazars are described as a people who migrated north to the region between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, calling their homeland Khazaria. They are depicted as deceitful and cruel, worshipping Baal/Moloch, and engaging in child sacrifice. When the Russian ruler Vyacheslav warned their king Bulan to end Luciferian practices and convert to Judaism, Bulan adopted elements of Judaism but did not fully convert. Later, Vyacheslav’s forces targeted the Khazars; the king fled with much of the nobility via Hungary to Poland, and eventually to France and Spain. The exodus led the Khazars to call themselves Ashkenazi Judeans, though outsiders rejected their practices. The Ashkenazim, descendants of Japheth, adopted the name Askenaz while tracing lineage to Togarmah and Jafeth. The Rothschilds are introduced as Khazarian descendants who settled in Frankfurt, becoming powerful bankers in Europe. They issued notes and deposits through their bank, amassing wealth that funded influence across Europe, with Maya Amschel Rothschild’s five sons operating in Frankfurt, London, Paris, Vienna, and Naples. The narrative then shifts to the Age of the Crusades. In Jerusalem, the Order of Malta is founded with two arms: a hospital for pilgrims and a military protection mission under Rome. The First Crusade leads to rulers of Jerusalem. In 1099, the Knights Templar (Poor Knights of the Temple of King Solomon) are established, with headquarters on the Temple Mount. Their goal is described as protecting pilgrims and rebuilding Solomon’s Temple. They accumulate vast wealth through land, ships, banking, and exemptions from local laws, aided by papal support through the bull Omnidatum Optimum issued by Pope Innocent II. The Templars’ wealth and influence culminate in their dissolution in the early 14th century, after King Philip IV of France’s debts to them. Jacques de Molay is executed; the pope dies under dramatic circumstances, and the Templars’ legacy supposedly continues through successor orders and symbols, including the Rosicrucians, the Jesuits, and Freemasons. The Jesuits, though portrayed as a powerful, elite group, are accused of infiltrating Freemasonry and driving a centuries-long power play. The Jesuits’ initiation oath is quoted in full, illustrating an image of a militant, unquestioning order. The Jesuit order is said to have been dissolved by Pope Clement XIV in 1773, allegedly replaced by the Freemasons, though the speaker notes that not all Jesuits are harmful, distinguishing between individual priests and the top pyramid, the Jesuit Council. The narrative ties together the Knights Templar, Jesuits, and Freemasons as a continuous thread of secret influence. The speaker teases a convergence of these two storylines at a pivotal historical event, promising to reveal how they intersect in part two.

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The Red Army invaded Germany in 1944, committing horrific atrocities like rape, torture, and murder. Women, children, and the elderly were brutally assaulted, with no one spared. The Jewish commissars orchestrated the violence, defiling churches and public spaces. German civilians suffered unimaginable horrors at the hands of both Soviet and Western invaders. Millions were killed, raped, and enslaved, marking the beginning of Germany's nightmare.

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Islam rapidly expanded from the Arabian Peninsula, launching attacks across the Middle East and into southern France and Spain. This expansion involved naval assaults on Mediterranean coastal towns, resulting in significant violence and the capture of over a million slaves from Europe. In Spain, over 200 battles occurred over 400 years, with Christians eventually pushing back against Muslim forces. Meanwhile, in the east, the fall of Constantinople marked the beginning of Jihad in Eastern Europe. Northern Africa and the Middle East became entirely Islamic. This relentless Jihad was driven by the teachings of Mohammed, with new sultans often initiating wars to establish their legacy in Islamic history.

Philion

The TRUTH About The Crusades..
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The episode argues that popular depictions of the Crusades misrepresent both sides, using the 2005 film Kingdom of Heaven as a touchstone for a biased Western view that casts Christian crusaders as barbarians while portraying Muslims as peaceful, a portrayal the host attributes to Ridley Scott’s atheism and selective storytelling. The hosts trace the Crusades back to long-term pressures in the Mediterranean world: Islamic expansion, piracy that disrupted trade, and the vulnerability of a fragmented Christendom. They explain how the Christian East and West had to overcome schism to respond, and they recount the sequence from late antiquity through the 11th century, including the Arab conquests, the Reconquista, the Seljuk advance, the Battle of Manzikert, and the appeal of Pope Urban II. The speaker then reframes the Crusades as a sustained defensive and diplomatic effort that united diverse Europeans under a common cause, created Crusader states, and preserved Western Christianity for centuries, while acknowledging that some campaigns failed. The episode emphasizes context, complexity, and the danger of modern secular narratives that demonize the Crusades, insisting that understanding history requires nuance beyond simplified moral judgments.

Uncommon Knowledge

“The End of Everything,” with Victor Davis Hanson
Guests: Victor Davis Hanson
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Historian Victor Davis Hanson discusses his book, *The End of Everything: How Wars Descend into Annihilation*, which examines the annihilation of civilizations through four historical case studies: Thebes, Carthage, Constantinople, and the Aztecs. He explores why these civilizations faced complete destruction rather than mere defeat, noting patterns in the mindset of both attackers and defenders. Hanson argues that contemporary leaders often underestimate threats, believing that such annihilations are relics of the past. He highlights modern examples, such as Greece, Israel, and the Kurds, as nations facing existential threats today, emphasizing that threats of destruction should be taken seriously. He details the destruction of Thebes by Alexander the Great, who, after a revolt, annihilated the city to eliminate Greek opposition. Carthage's downfall came during the Third Punic War, where Rome, driven by fear of Carthage's resurgence, ultimately destroyed the city despite its previous compliance. The fall of Constantinople in 1453 marked the end of the Byzantine Empire, as the Ottomans, led by Mehmet II, overwhelmed the city after a prolonged siege. Lastly, Cortés's conquest of the Aztecs involved not just military might but also the exploitation of local resentments against the Aztec empire, leading to the obliteration of their culture. Hanson warns that the same patterns of underestimation and miscalculation could lead to modern conflicts resulting in catastrophic outcomes, urging vigilance against the potential for annihilation in today's geopolitical landscape.
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