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In 325, the emperor Constantine made decisions about what information to include or exclude from the early Christian Bible. As a result, at least 45 books were either removed or heavily edited in our Western biblical tradition. These edits caused us to lose valuable information that emphasized the interconnectedness of everything and the language used in this field. However, we are now in the process of recovering this lost information.

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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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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.

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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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Early Roman Jews engaged in crafts, trade, and money lending, sometimes at high interest rates. Despite expulsions, their presence as usurers grew, contributing to the empire's decline. Julius Caesar combatted usury by implementing social and monetary reforms, including debt reduction, regulation of interest rates, and wealth redistribution. These actions angered aristocrats who then assassinated him. The adoption of the gold standard led to financial instability due to gold scarcity and outflow to the East. Counterfeiting was severely punished. The church's accumulation of wealth via tithes further strained the economy, concentrating wealth and hindering circulation. Social injustice, excessive taxation, and a weak industrial base also contributed. The empire's collapse led to the Dark Ages and a deflationary depression. Factors included wealth concentration, lack of mining resources, and a decline in genetic value due to non-white slaves. The primary economic cause was an inadequate money supply and the treatment of money as a commodity. The transcript concludes that a dishonest economic system leads to dissolution, and a functional society requires debt-free currency issued by the state.

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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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All European nations were once Christian, with most ancestors willingly converting and never returning to pagan religions. Europeans, seen as genetically Christ's sheep, collectively embraced Christianity. Europe was known as Christian doom, with every European nation proudly Christian. Europeans always established Christian colonies and nations. Today, antichrist forces have infiltrated Christian nations, undermining Christianity. Yahweh will not be mocked forever. Translation: All European nations were once Christian, with most ancestors willingly converting and never returning to pagan religions. Europeans, seen as genetically Christ's sheep, collectively embraced Christianity. Europe was known as Christian doom, with every European nation proudly Christian. Europeans always established Christian colonies and nations. Today, antichrist forces have infiltrated Christian nations, undermining Christianity. Yahweh will not be mocked forever.

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There was an advanced civilization called the Empire that used atmospheric energy to create free energy for all. They manipulated substance through frequencies to build grand architecture like the pyramids. The powerful oil industry saw this free energy as a threat and destroyed the Empire to maintain their profits. They erased all evidence of the Empire's existence to keep the knowledge of free energy hidden.

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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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The speaker discusses pre-Nicene Christianity, asserting that victors erase history and memory, a process called Dominatio Memoriae, which allegedly wiped out the first Christian Bible and key figures involved in its creation. Two main camps in pre-Nicene Christianity are described. The first is the Judeo Christians (also called Messianic Jews or Ebionites), who later evolve into the forms we recognize today in various denominations. They all share a common belief in Yahweh as God and in Jesus Christ as born of Jews, with a Bible that includes a Jewish Torah stapled to the front. This camp is said to have a tidy, though debated, narrative shaped by centuries of editing and whitewashing. The second camp, referred to as the Cairo Christians, is presented as largely erased by Demnatio Memoriae. The Cairo Christians used the symbol Chiro (the first two Greek letters of Christ) and held fundamentally different beliefs. They believed Jesus descended to earth in a human form, crucified, resurrected, and ascended, but that upon visiting the apostles after the resurrection, he descended again and took on a completely human form. They held that the first sentence of the first Christian Bible identified Jesus’ arrival precisely: “in the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judea, Jesus descended into Capernaum.” They tracked this as 29 AD, with Marcionites suggesting an exact solar eclipse on November 24 at 11 AM as supporting evidence. Their gospel was the Gospel of the Lord, a direct revelation to the apostle Paul on the road to Damascus, along with Paul’s original ten epistles (Galatians, Romans, 1-2 Corinthians, Colossians, Philippians, 1-2 Thessalonians, Laodiceans, and Philemon). This is described as the first Christian Bible, unchanged since January. In contrast, the Judeo Christians would not invent a Bible until hundreds of years later, producing four Gospels, Acts, 62 additional books, and a Torah-stapled front—an “old testament” reshaped in the third century. The Cairo Christians, at one point, outnumbered the Judeo Christians and were the largest denomination across the Roman Empire. The first visible traces of Cairo influence include Marcionite inscriptions, such as the oldest known inscription bearing Jesus’ name on a Marcionite church archway in Syria, dated March and written in Greek. The Marcionites were persecuted by Romans, Jews, and Judeo Christians, and Vatican Library material has surfaced suggesting Saint Jerome drew on Marcion’s work for his Latin translations of Paul’s epistles. Marcion’s church is said to have been defaced under Demnatio Memoriae, with Marcion’s head scratched from portraits. The narrative then centers on Eusebius, the “father of church history,” and Constantine the Emperor as pivotal figures who would reshape Christianity. Eusebius, not a historian but a PR figure who allegedly believed in weaving lies if beneficial, allegedly helped Constantine convert to Christianity and establish Judeo-Christianity as Rome’s state religion. Constantine, portrayed as a devout worshiper of Sol Invictus and Pontifex Maximus, is said to have orchestrated political and religious moves, including the suppression of Cairo denominations, seizure of property, burning of Bibles, and transfer of wealth to the Christian church. Eusebius allegedly was excommunicated for Arian beliefs before being reconciled by Constantine, who appointed him to lead the council. The Council of Nicaea is described as the moment when Judeo-Christian dogma was codified and the Demnatio Memoriae extended to Marcion and the first Bible. Subsequently, Constantine allegedly issued 50 copies of Eusebius’s revised Judeo-Christian Bible, with the Torah front, and removed the Gospel of the Lord and altered Paul’s epistles, making this version the official Bible of the Roman Catholic Church. The period is summarized as Islamically as “the twenty-nine days of the Council of Nicaea,” after which Christian beliefs, doctrine, and dogma are claimed to have been hijacked and inverted. The speaker ends by noting that the first Bible remains downloadable at theveryfirstbible.org and Marcionite continuity persists at marcionitechurch.org.

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We've lost over 90% of ancient writings and artifacts, many of which are in the Vatican library. The Vatican holds Maya, Aztec, Egyptian, and Sumerian tablets taken from conquered regions. The Vatican archives store unconventional items, accessible only to high-level individuals with specific knowledge. Access is restricted, and wandering is not allowed.

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The Fulani ethnic militia are allegedly trying to turn Nigeria into a Muslim caliphate. They reportedly enter Christian villages on motorcycles with AK-47s, killing everyone and razing the villages. This is not about climate change but a 500-year-old view of cattle farming. Nigeria was 70% Christian but is now 50% Muslim due to this "systematic jihad." Islam conquers civilizations through three methods of jihad: cultural, political, and violent. They move in, blend in, gain population, then engage in political jihad, and finally, violent jihad to take over territory, which is how they allegedly took over Northern Africa. The Fulani tribe exists throughout central, east, and west Africa, and every country they touch allegedly turns into war and genocide.

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The Bible's collection of books wasn't always the same. Early Christianity had many versions, with some books considered canonical (divinely inspired) and others apocryphal (rejected). The councils of Hippo and Carthage in the fourth century formalized the canon we know today, excluding books like the Book of Enoch and the Gospel of Thomas. These exclusions stemmed from various factors: later writing dates, radical ideas (like reincarnation), and the desire for a unified Christian doctrine to combat heresy. The Vatican didn't create the canon, but its library holds many ancient manuscripts and it's been central to preserving and interpreting the Bible throughout history, sometimes leading to conflict, as seen during the Protestant Reformation. The exclusion of these books significantly shaped the Bible we have today, highlighting ongoing debates about religious authority.

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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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For the first 1500 years, Christianity was only in Europe with white figures. Christianity is seen as exclusive to Europeans, a covenant between God and the Israelites. The Jesuits forcefully converted non-Europeans, leading to artificial Christianity needing Western aid. European acceptance of Christianity was voluntary, leading to great civilizations. Without Europeans, Christianity and civilization would not exist, only paganism.

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The star people landed in Africa, starting mines and enslaving the locals near the Toledo Hills. This spot is believed to be where humanity began, guided by a giant, leading to the spread of knowledge and beliefs to Sumer and Egypt.

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"The Ghana Empire, otherwise known as the Empire of Gold, was an ancient civilization that thrived in West Africa between the fourth and thirteenth centuries AD." "The Ghana Empire's roots are steeped in mystery and legend, with the bulk of historical knowledge stemming from oral and archaeological records and the writings of Arab travelers of the time." "The region abounded in gold, and controlling this precious resource, along with the opportunity to mediate between the northern salt producing areas and the southern gold producing regions, positioned the Empire of Ghana as a dominant trading force." "The main city and capital of the empire is believed to have been Kumbai Sala." "Islam also had a strong foothold, especially among the elite and merchants." "Eventually, Mali in particular overshadowed Ghana in power and influence in West Africa."

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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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History is a lie. Tartaria was a global empire, a threat to the system, with inexplicable architecture: starforts, domed buildings, and cities buried by mud floods. This civilization wasn't a collapse, but a reset. The Bible mentions fallen empires and great deceptions hidden by time. Were the Tartarians remnants of a pre-flood world, possessing Tesla's secrets of free energy? The elite couldn't allow this knowledge to persist, so they rewrote the narrative. Mud floods, great fires, and stolen history erased Tartaria. If you knew what came before, you'd question everything.

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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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Did you know Byzantine legal principles are still used in some parts of the world? Byzantine emperor Justinian set scholars to compiling his famous body of civil law Corpus Juris Civilis, which is the foundation of Roman law in Continental Europe today. These Byzantine legal principles were transmitted to Latin America, Quebec province and Louisiana through the Napoleonic code.

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In the early twelve hundreds, Pope Innocent the third launched the fourth crusade not to reclaim Jerusalem, but to strike at the heart of Christianity itself, Constantinople. The Venetians saw an opportunity and turned the Crusade to their own ends. Put me on the throne and I will reward you with gold. The Crusaders agreed. In 12:03, they reached Constantinople. The city fell and Alexios Angelos took the crown, but he could not deliver what he promised. The people revolted. The new emperor opposed the Crusaders and war became inevitable. Then in April '4 came the catastrophe. The Crusaders breached the walls. For three days, they looted the greatest city in Christendom. Churches were destroyed. Icons shattered. Crusaders rode horses through Hagia Sophia. Gold, relics, and sacred manuscripts were loaded onto Venetian ships.

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The Middle East was originally white, with white Adamites settling there. After Noah's flood, Nephilim and Kenites survived and mixed with Adamites, leading to a darkening of the population. The invasion of Islam in Arabia led to further mixing and darkening, spreading to North Africa, Southern and Eastern Europe. This resulted in a permanent change in demographics, with once-white populations becoming darker. Ancient Greeks, Italians, Spaniards, and other Adamic nations were white, but populations in those areas today have changed due to invasions and intermingling. This pattern is repeating in nations worldwide.

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Some Muslims claim that Islam was never spread by force, but this is not true. In the past, Islam was indeed spread through the use of the sword. Turkey, for example, was not originally a Muslim region. Muslims came with force, established Sharia law, and many people converted to Islam to avoid conflict.

Lex Fridman Podcast

Gregory Aldrete: The Roman Empire - Rise and Fall of Ancient Rome | Lex Fridman Podcast #443
Guests: Michael Levin
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Gregory Aldrete discusses the military strategies of Hannibal during the Second Punic War against Rome, emphasizing Hannibal's genius in cutting off Rome from its allies by invading Italy. Hannibal's crossing of the Alps with elephants was unexpected, and his victories at battles like Cannae showcased his military brilliance, where he utilized the double envelopment strategy to defeat a much larger Roman force. In a broader context, Aldrete contrasts the ancient world with the modern, highlighting differences in childhood mortality rates and the psychological impacts of high mortality in ancient societies. He argues that while human nature remains constant, the structural differences between ancient and modern societies are significant. He emphasizes the importance of understanding everyday life in ancient cultures through artifacts like tombstones and graffiti, which reveal shared human experiences across time. Aldrete also discusses the influence of ancient Rome on modern civilization, noting that many aspects of contemporary law, language, and culture derive from Roman practices. He explains how Rome's obsession with the past shaped its political and social structures, particularly the importance of ancestry in Roman identity. The conversation shifts to the role of emperors in Roman history, with Aldrete explaining the complexities of succession and the impact of individual rulers on the empire's trajectory. He highlights Augustus as a pivotal figure who established the imperial system while maintaining the facade of the republic, and he notes the challenges of governance over such a vast territory. Aldrete addresses the crisis of the third century, marked by civil wars and barbarian invasions, which threatened the stability of the empire. He explains how Diocletian's reforms temporarily stabilized the empire and led to the rise of Constantine, who embraced Christianity, fundamentally altering the religious landscape of the empire. The discussion concludes with reflections on the fall of the Western Roman Empire, emphasizing that it was a gradual process influenced by various factors, including economic decline, military pressures, and internal strife. Aldrete argues that the legacy of Rome continues to shape modern society, and he stresses the importance of learning from history to inform present and future decisions.
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