TruthArchive.ai - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Great academies of the rabbis were established, Pharisees ruled Judaism. The Babylonian Talmud codified oral traditions, endorsed killing indirectly, and promoted adultery and child sex. Gentiles were deemed inferior, with no legal rights. The Talmud belittled Jesus, encouraging persecution. Jewish culture values knowledge and questioning. Israel's fight is supported. Anti-Semitic remarks were made. Circumcision practices were criticized. Supporting Israel was discouraged. Jewish hatred towards Jesus was highlighted.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The video discusses controversial passages from the Talmud, a compilation of Jewish oral history and lore. It mentions instances where the Pharisees indirectly caused harm, including the crucifixion of Christ. The Talmud is said to endorse adultery and sexual activity with minors, but only under certain circumstances. It also portrays Gentiles as inferior to Jews, denying them property rights and legal protection. The Talmud is critical of Jesus, defaming him and claiming he is in hell. It expresses hatred towards Christians and encourages their persecution. The video concludes by discussing the origins of the Talmud and its controversial passages.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript claims that Jews in Spain conspired with Arabs to overthrow the Visigothic monarchy and aided the Moorish conquest. Despite acts of "bad faith," they prospered, but resentment grew as they were not subject to canon law and allegedly engaged in subversive activities, especially usury. Christians were forbidden from lending with interest, granting Jews a monopoly. Popular resentment led to violence, culminating in the riots of 1391, resulting in mass forced conversions. These "conversos" were viewed with suspicion, accused of maintaining Jewish practices and gaining undue influence. By the 1440s, conversos allegedly controlled a large portion of indirect taxes. Some conversos were said to have sailed for Constantinople to aid the Turks against Christian Europe. Ferdinand and Isabella established the Inquisition to address the perceived threat of Jews and Judaizers. In 1492, they issued an edict expelling Jews from Spain, claiming total separation was the only solution. The transcript suggests that unchecked Jewish influence, as seen in Poland, led to decline, while Spain saved itself through the Inquisition and expulsion. Expelled Jews, particularly conversos, then established a mercantile network centered in Antwerp, engaging in espionage and supporting anti-Spanish forces, thus taking "revenge" on Spain.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Talmud is a central text in Judaism, second only to the Hebrew Bible. It serves as the main source for Jewish law and theology. Here are some rules from the Talmud that Jews are taught to follow. Remember that "Goyim" means non-Jew. Even the best of the Goyim should be killed. All children of Goyim are animals. Gentiles are not humans, but beasts. A Jew may violate, but not marry, a non-Jewish girl. A Jew may have sex with a child younger than nine years old. Eating with a Goy is like eating with a dog. If a Jew finds something lost by a Goy, it doesn't have to be returned.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker clarifies that the Talmud is not the most important book in Judaism. The Torah holds the highest position, followed by the Tanakh (Torah, Writings, and Prophets). The Talmud is next in importance. There are two versions of the Talmud: the Babylonian and the Jerusalem Talmud. The speaker characterizes the Talmud as containing debates and disagreements between rabbis. The speaker suggests the verses to be read may contain content about Christ. The speaker states the Talmud is not necessarily considered canonical or authoritative.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Arabs translated Aristotle into Arabic. When the Spanish conquered Spain, the popes ordered the burning of books, but Benedictine and Dominican monks secretly saved them in underground libraries. A human card catalog helped identify books to be burned, while the monks preserved them by translating into Greek and Latin, saving works by Plato and Aristotle from destruction by Christians.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
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.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Talmud teaches that Gentiles are considered inferior to Jews, not even classified as men. Gentiles have no legal rights, and if a Jew is sued by a Gentile, the verdict favors the Jew. Sharing Talmudic teachings with Gentiles was punishable by death. Jews are praised as exalted beings, while Gentiles are viewed as vile. The Talmud promotes the idea that the best Gentile deserves to be killed.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 describes a long history of Jewish subversion and influence in Spain. He notes that Jews prospered under the Visigoths but conspired with Arabs in Africa to overthrow them, citing evidence from the early eighth century including contacts with African Jews to prepare Moorish incursions across the Straits of Gibraltar and a June council of Toledo condemning Jews for plotting with Hebrews beyond the seas. He recounts the loss of Barcelona to Moors, claiming many Christians were killed and Jews remained unpunished. After Islam’s conquest, Jews flourished culturally, excelling in medicine and helping bring Aristotle to Europe. During the Reconquista, Saint Ferdinand allegedly rewarded Cordoba’s Jewish population with mosques converted to synagogues but imposed conditions the Jews violated. As Islam fell back to North Africa, Jews allegedly collaborated with Muslims, fueling Christian suspicions of an alien alliance between the two communities that supposedly enabled civil order to be enforced through canon law, while Jews, not being Christians, could not be targeted by it. They allegedly engaged in subversive activities with impunity, causing resentment. The narrative then pivots to the paradox of Pedro the Cruel, where greater Jewish power allegedly increased their vulnerability to violence. Walsh is cited asserting that Jews were disliked not for Moses’ teachings but for practices like slavery, usury, proselytizing, forcing circumcisions, and pressuring debtors to abandon Christ. Usury is highlighted as a main grievance, since Christians were forbidden to charge interest, creating a Jewish monopoly on lending and capital. The text recounts episodes in Cuenca (1326) and Valladolid (1385) illustrating tensions over usury. Farmers faced starvation or usury, leading to Jewish wealth concentration. The church tried to curb Jewish influence, but rulers pursued short-term gain, culminating in Henry of Trastámara’s rise, persecution of Jews, and mass flight or refuge in Paris. Henry later repented by freeing Christians from debts to Jews, yet realized Jews could not pay taxes or lend the king money without extortion. Jews’ financial and administrative skills proved indispensable to rulers, fueling continued cycles of resentment and social upheaval. By 1391, anti-Jewish riots in Seville and across Castile led to forced conversions (conversos), significant numbers baptized under duress, and suspicion that converts remained secretly Jewish. Murano became a terms of opprobrium for conversos, who leveraged church protection to exploit opportunities, while sincere converts endured suspicion. By the 1440s, conversos allegedly controlled large shares of indirect taxes; their wealth enabled social mobility and access to offices, provoking further suspicion and moral decline at court. Mob violence and weak leadership under Enrique el Impotente culminated in executions and burnings of conversos in multiple cities prior to Isabella and Ferdinand’s rise. Isabella, influenced by Fri Alonso de Hoyeda and other clergy, grew convinced that radical measures were needed; the Inquisition was established in 1478 to root out Judaizers, chosen to operate beyond intimidation or bribery. The monarchs expelled Jews on 03/31/1492 from Castile and Aragon, offering baptism as an alternative but finding little incentive to convert after the Inquisition’s reforms. Expulsion relocated the problem to Northern Europe, with many Jews settling in Antwerp, becoming central to trade networks and mercantile enterprises connected to Lyon, Ferrara, Rome, and beyond. The narrative asserts that Antwerp’s Jewish and Portuguese conversos formed a spy network for anti-Spanish, anti-Catholic forces, leveraging printing to disseminate Protestant Bibles and engage in cultural subversion, ultimately contributing to Spain’s long-term setbacks. Speaker 1 shifts to Jewish pirates in the Caribbean, tracing their roots to the 1492 expulsion and the period’s anti-Semitic context. He notes exiled Spanish Jews sought revenge at sea, with figures such as Sinan Reyes, adversary of Barbarossa, and Moses Cohen Henriques, a key player in the 1628 capture of the Spanish Silver Fleet. Henriques allied with the Dutch West India Company and piratical networks; Diego Perez de Costa, a converso, commanded three pirate ships before retiring to Safed to study Kabbalah. A “pirate rabbi” reportedly aided Sephardic Jews in Amsterdam, keeping kosher on the high seas. Jewish pirates often partnered with non-Jewish pirates, producing cross-cultural connections—Hebrew treasure maps, ships named for biblical figures, and Jewish tombstones bearing skull-and-crossbones. The speakers discuss whether “Jewish pirates” is the right label, noting many served in advisory roles but agreeing they participated in illegal trade and attacks on Spain, while building a global mercantile and intelligence network. The segment closes inviting viewers to subscribe and share topics for future videos.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Two years later, French officials conducted a widespread search for remaining copies of the Talmud and other Hebrew books. On June 17, 1242, approximately 10,000 books were brought to the Place de Greve near Notre Dame Cathedral and burned. Following the trial, King Louis expelled the Jewish population from France and initiated crusades to the holy land, which targeted Jewish communities along the way.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Talmud contains hateful references about Jesus, calling him the product of adultery and a fool. There are implications that the Jews may have killed Jesus, with some believing he deserved it. The Talmud even gloats about Jesus dying young, comparing him to Balaam. Peter Schaeffer's book, "Jesus in the Talmud," confirms the Talmud's narrative refers to Jesus, stating he deserved death as a blasphemer and idolater. The Jewish community takes pride in Jesus' execution, claiming he got what he deserved.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
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.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Talmud speaks harshly about Jesus, calling him a sorcerer, idolater, and son of a whore. It claims Mary slept with a Roman soldier, leading to Jesus being born out of wedlock. It even suggests Jesus is burning in excrement in hell.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The video discusses the establishment of rabbinical academies and the formulation of new laws by the Pharisees, who were the rulers of Judaism. It highlights the Pharisees' codification of their oral traditions into the Babylonian Talmud, which Jesus criticized. The Talmud is said to contain passages that support the Pharisees' hypocritical and immoral behavior, including their role in the death of Jesus. It also mentions the Talmud's endorsement of adultery and sexual perversion. The video emphasizes the Talmud's negative view of Gentiles, considering them as barbarians and denying them legal rights. It concludes by criticizing the Talmud's defamation of Jesus and the negative attitude towards Christians.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 presents the view that great academies of the rabbis were established, thousands of new laws formulated, and that the Pharisees who killed Jesus Christ remained the rulers of Judaism. He asserts that in Babylon the Pharisees codified oral traditions into the Babylonian Talmud, which he claims reveals Israel’s apostasy and supports Christ’s descriptions of the Pharisees as hypocritical and malignant. He cites a Talmud passage in Treatise Sanhedrin claiming a Pharisee may kill indirectly, giving an example where binding a neighbor leads to starvation and liability is avoided. He contends the Pharisees manipulated Romans to kill Christ, arguing Romans were the direct cause of Christ’s death but the Pharisees claimed Romans as the guilty party. He states Christ called Pharisees adulterers and that the Talmud provides “loopholes” for adultery, providing examples such as exceptions for sex with a minor or a heathen’s wife, and endorses seduction of unwed adolescent girls described as designated bond maids. He emphasizes death penalties differ for natural versus perverse sexual acts, alleging that rape in a perverted form falls outside legal jurisdiction, and claims sexual perversion was a long-standing practice in Babylon. Speaker 1 continues by noting three major Talmudic treatises contain passages endorsing the seduction and marriage of three-year-old girls, with Simeon Ben Yohai among prominent rabbis upholding this privilege. He states that in Israel today, many venerate Simeon Ben Yohai. He quotes Simeon Ben Yohai and the great Raba approving intercourse with a little girl under three years and a day, comparing virginity to tears returning to a little girl, and asserts the same section covers sexual activity with small boys. He adds that the Good Samaritan story portrays Pharisees as racial bigots, unwilling to respond to a non-Jew’s suffering. He notes that God’s command to the Canaanites was harsh and that by New Testament times, separation and the sword had become obsolete, with God no longer making racial distinctions. Speaker 1 and Speaker 0 discuss Gentile status in the Talmud and Jewish encyclopedias, claiming the Talmud’s critical attitudes toward Gentiles, including that Gentiles are not men but barbarians, lack legal rights, and that a Gentile’s suit in Jewish courts favors the defendant if the plaintiff is Jewish. They claim Christians are curses within the Talmudic framework, that Jesus is portrayed as a bastard, and that Gentiles face death for Sabbath observance or for providing testimony in a Jewish court. They assert that the Talmud equips Jews with an ethic fostering bigotry, isolation, and persecution, leading to the expulsion of Jews from Babylon to the West by the eleventh century. Speaker 2 reframes as a positive counterpoint: the tradition of Talmudic questioning, continuous inquiry, and a culture of learning that never ends, which exploded when the walls of the ghetto fell, and remains part of contemporary Jewish culture. Speaker 3 declares solidarity with Israel, insisting “Israel’s fight is our fight,” vowing unity and resistance to anti-Semitism, and asserting they will not be discouraged, defeated, or silent. Speaker 4 interjects with a hostile confrontation, expressing willingness to “kill Christ again,” accusing Jews of killing Jesus, and making violent threats toward a pastor and others; a rabbi’s circumcision practice is described graphically as supportive of Talmudic Judaism, followed by a denunciation aimed at Christian Zionists.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 1226, King Louis IX took matters of justice into his own hands, personally judging cases and delivering punishments. He also targeted the Jewish community, forcing them into manual labor and engaging in religious debates. In 1230, he issued the Ordinance of Malone, which further oppressed the Jews. A letter reached Pope Gregory IX in 1232, claiming that the Talmud, a significant Jewish text, attacked the Catholic Church multiple times and should be destroyed. If the pope agreed, the Talmud would be eradicated, along with Jewish practices.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 1347-1349, a great pestilence wiped out much of the world's population. Some believed it was due to poisoned wells by Jews, leading to their persecution and burning across Germany. The killings escalated, with Jews being burnt in various towns. The persecution continued until all Jews between Cologne and Austria were killed. Despite the violence, some Jews were spared and baptized. The persecution was fueled by rumors of poisoned wells, leading to mass killings and confessions under torture. The killings were widespread, with Jews being burnt in various towns and cities. The violence was fueled by the belief that the Jews were poisoning wells.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Talmud, written down centuries after Christ, contains critical and antagonistic views towards Jesus. It defames him, claiming he was born illegitimately, practiced magic, and died shamefully. The Talmud even states that Jesus is in hell, being punished. According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, Jesus advises us to bless and promote the well-being of Jews, as harming them is like touching the apple of his eye. The Talmud also expresses hatred towards Christian Jews, considering them dangerous heretics. The rabbis believed that the New Testament gospels posed a greater threat to the unity of Judaism than other writings.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Talmud contains strong antagonism towards Jesus, portraying him negatively, including claims about his mother, Mary. It asserts that Jesus was born illegitimately and faced a shameful death, being subjected to multiple forms of execution and now suffering in hell. The Jewish encyclopedia states that Jesus advised blessing Jews and ensuring their well-being. Christians, seen as followers of a false prophet, also face condemnation, especially those observing the Sabbath. The Talmud regarded Christian writings as a significant threat to Judaism, leading to prohibitions against sharing food with Christians and rejecting their testimonies in court. Overall, the Talmud reflects a deep-seated animosity towards both Jesus and Christianity.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
According to the Jewish encyclopedias, the Talmudic view of Gentiles is that they are not considered equal to Jews. Gentiles are classified as barbarians and are not seen as neighbors to Jews. They are seen as having no property rights and are compared to animals in a Jewish court. The Talmud favors Jews in legal disputes with Gentiles, and it is forbidden for a Jew to reveal the true teachings of the Talmud to a Gentile. The Jewish perspective is that Gentiles are vile, and even the best among them deserves to be killed. Jews, on the other hand, are highly regarded.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript compiles a series of alleged ritual murder cases and accompanying commentary stretching from the 17th to the early 20th centuries, presenting a continuous thread of accusations against Jews in various European locales and times. - 1663, Kakao, Poland: Rabbi Matatia Kallahora was believed to have murdered a gentile child for his Jewish occult rights; he was tried, convicted, and executed. - 1669, near Metz, France: writes doctor Dahl, the Jew Levi kidnapped a baby, later found dead in the forest; the guilty man was put to death. The case details are described in a small French book, A Summary of the Trial Against the Jews in Metz in 1670. - 1619, Belarus: Jews reportedly murdered a young child named Gavril in a ritualistic fashion; in 1997, Belarusian television produced a documentary about the murder. - 1753, Markova, Vonitsa (in the area of present-day Greece/Ukraine borderlands): Gittomura promulgated on Friday, April 20, 1753; in the village of Markova, Vonitsa, Jews allegedly called three-year-old Stefan Struditsky and carried him away. - On Sunday, the Jews gathered in a house, blindfolded the child, closed his mouth with pincers, and then, while holding the child in a tub, pricked him from all sides with sharp nails, moving him to extract as much blood as possible. After the child’s death, the corpse was carried to a forest and found the next day. By obvious evidence, the Jewesses Brine and Frutza, without torment, confessed to involvement; their husbands were exposed by them. Other men were implicated and subjected to torture; these others confessed and detailed the crime, and the Jews involved were executed. A picture of the corpse was drawn, showing the pricked body, kept safe with the archbishop of Lvov. - 1791, Tasnad, Hungary: Jews were accused of ritually murdering a gentile boy; one of the Jews’ children admitted having seen the event. - 1797, Gelats, Romania: a child was allegedly ritually murdered by Jews. - 19th century: explorer and linguist Sir Richard Francis Burton wrote a manuscript called Human Sacrifice Amongst the Sephardim or Eastern Jews. Some of his manuscript was obtained by Jews and published as The Jew, The Gypsy, and El Islam. In this book, Burton notes that in 1825, the Jews of Beirut made a way with Fatala Sayyid, an Alpine Mohammedan. - 1829, Hama: the Jews of Hama murdered a Mohammedan girl and were expelled from the city. - 1839, Beirut: a Jewish-owned flask of blood passed through the customs house of Beirut. - 1840, Damascus: one of the most notorious modern ritual murders occurred when a Catholic priest named Father Thomas was ritually murdered. Burton’s original manuscript described the investigation; notes used in The Jew, The Gypsy, and El Islam did not include full details. - The New York Herald (04/06/1850) reported the case under the title Mysteries of the Talmud, Terrible Murder in the East, describing the murder of Father Thomas and the trial of those involved, including claims that blood was used to moisten holy unleavened bread. Manuscripts of the original trial are said to be sealed by French and Austrian councils; Mustafa Talas, with a doctorate in history, translated transcripts from France into English in a book called Mazo of Sion, which is being made into a movie. Talas describes the investigation, including confrontations about blood and the Talmud. - Jonathan Frankel wrote The Damascus Affair to counter Talas’s book; Frankel’s work is suggested to reveal less than Talas’s, potentially to conceal the truth of the event. - Early 20th century aftermath: two people independently guided investigators to the remains of Father Thomas discovered in a sewer behind a rabbi’s home. - 1850s–1900s: references to subsequent stories of Jewish ritual murder in various contexts continue, including the implication of a universal sensationalism and the alleged practice used to undermine Christianity or to achieve occult aims. - 1911, Kiev, Russia: a highly publicized case of Andrej Yushinsky, an innocent young child killed for occult rights; Menachem Mendel Baylis was accused; extensive international involvement and allegations of jury manipulation, witnesses killed, and evidence destroyed; Baylis was freed by a simple majority verdict (six of twelve jurors), with later claims of corruption and a “kangaroo court” linked to the Bolshevik era. - John Grant, US consul in Odessa, reported the jury verdict; Baylis allegedly killed by fanatical Jews; evidence pointed to the crime occurring inside a synagogue at the Jewish-owned Seitzew factory. A 13-wound pattern on the head was cited as symbolic of ritual acts, with a referenced line of analysis connecting Sephirothic symbolism to the wounds. - Vasily Rosenov (Rosanoff) and others connected to Kabbalistic interpretation, including the concept of Echad, and the Shin letter as a symbol within the wounds, was discussed in supporting material. - Postscript: Zamoslovsky, the prosecuting attorney, wrote The Murder of Andrei Yushinsky; the Bolshevik revolution followed; Zamoslavsky was murdered for exposing the facts, and his book was classified until 1997 to suppress the truth of the matter.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Pharisees established academies and created new laws. The Babylonian Talmud codified their traditions, showing their apostasy. The Talmud justifies Christ's criticism of the Pharisees. It endorses adultery and child sex, degrades Gentiles, and defames Jesus and Mary. The Talmud promotes bigotry, isolation, and persecution. Despite this, Jewish culture values knowledge, questioning, and unity. The speaker expresses pride in Jewish identity and history. Anti-Semitic remarks are made, advocating violence. These extreme views do not represent all Jewish people.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The video discusses the Pharisees' influence on Judaism through the Babylonian Talmud, which endorses disturbing practices like child marriage and bigotry towards Gentiles. It also mentions the Talmud's negative portrayal of Jesus and his mother, Mary. The Talmud's teachings led to Jewish persecution and expulsion in history. The speakers express pride in Jewish culture and unity, while a disturbing individual expresses violent anti-Semitic sentiments. The video ends with a graphic and biased portrayal of Talmudic Judaism.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 1144, a child named William was ritually murdered in England, which was significant because he was related to an educated monarch, Thomas of Monmouth. Thomas wrote a book to expose the cruel nature of these acts, describing how Jews abducted and tortured William. His efforts led to the child becoming a saint and raised awareness among parents in England to protect their children. This incident was not the last reported case of Jewish ritual murder.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker explains that the Gospels were considered more dangerous to Judaism than pagan writings. They mention a Talmudic rabbi who believed that Christian writings should be burned because Christianity posed a greater threat than paganism. Another speaker shares their personal experience of being raised in Judaism, stating that modern Judaism has little connection to the patriarchs and prophets of the Old Testament. They explain that the authority of the rabbis, based on the Jewish Talmud, shaped their understanding of God and the world. The speaker also mentions that the rabbis emphasized Jewish superiority over Gentiles in intellect, morality, and race.
View Full Interactive Feed