EatMyShortsPlz 📉 retweetet
EatMyShortsPlz 📉
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EatMyShortsPlz 📉
@LucciCrypto
Wake me up in 2020 - Trade up to 100x leverage with me on Bybit. https://t.co/u9VLNB4jP3
Denver, CO Beigetreten Mayıs 2018
192 Folgt56 Follower
EatMyShortsPlz 📉 retweetet

@DevorahChaya @Average_NY_Guy You literally have Neanderthal genetics 😂
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@LucciCrypto @Average_NY_Guy Keep coping! And keep enjoying us living rent-free in your pea sized brain!
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If you’ve never experienced Passover in an Orthodox Jewish home, it’s almost impossible to understand how far it actually goes. People throw around the phrase “spring cleaning” and think that’s what it is. It’s not. It’s a full teardown and rebuild of how you live inside your own house, all for just one week.
It doesn’t start a few days before the holiday. It starts weeks, sometimes even months earlier. Every cabinet gets emptied, every shelf is wiped down, and every corner is checked. We’re not just cleaning dirt, we’re on the hunt for chametz, any leavened grain product. Bread, cookies, crumbs, even something that fell behind a couch months ago. You move appliances, you vacuum inside drawers, you scrub surfaces you normally wouldn’t even think about, like high walls. Some people take apart their ovens, some pour boiling water over countertops, others line entire kitchens with foil or special coverings so nothing that touched chametz during the year comes into contact with Pesach food.
And that’s just the beginning.
In many homes, especially more careful or Hasidic ones, cleaning alone isn’t enough. The entire system gets replaced. Separate dishes, separate pots, separate utensils that were never used with chametz all year. Some families have full Pesach kitchens packed away in boxes eleven months of the year. And it goes further. In certain homes, you won’t eat there unless you know exactly how that kitchen was prepared, down to the smallest detail, and many won’t eat anything that wasn’t prepared in their own home, even if it’s from close friends.
Then comes the halachic process.
You don’t just clean and call it a day. There’s bedikat chametz, the formal search the night before Pesach, done with a candle and a blessing, where pieces of bread are traditionally placed around the house and then found. The next morning is biur chametz, burning whatever remains. Anything you can’t realistically get rid of gets sold through a rabbi in a formal transaction called mechirat chametz, because owning chametz on Pesach is forbidden, not just eating it.
Then the eating itself changes completely.
For seven or eight days depending on where you are, there is no bread, no pasta, no flour products unless they are specifically made as matzah, which is unleavened bread made quickly so it doesn’t rise. And matzah itself is a whole world. It has to be made in under 18 minutes from the moment water touches flour, because otherwise it could start fermenting and become chametz. Some only eat shmurah matzah, which means matzah that has been supervised from the time the wheat was harvested to make sure it never came into contact with moisture. Others insist on handmade matzah, not machine. There are also families who won’t eat anything that has even a question of moisture that could have caused fermentation.
Then you have kitniyot, which is legumes and similar foods like rice, corn, beans, and peanuts, which adds another layer. Ashkenazi Jews, Jews of European descent, traditionally don’t eat these on Pesach. Sephardic Jews, from Middle Eastern and North African backgrounds, generally do. So even within Orthodox Judaism, what your Pesach looks like depends on your background. One family is eating rice, and another wouldn’t let it into the house. One family is comfortable with certain processed Pesach foods, another will only eat simple, basic items they prepared themselves.
And it keeps going.
Some peel every vegetable because maybe something touched it in a factory. Others won’t use any product unless it has a very specific Pesach certification, meaning rabbinic approval that it meets all Passover standards. Many won’t eat out at all, not even in kosher restaurants, because they don’t trust anyone else’s standards. In certain homes, even food prepared before Pesach won’t be touched once the holiday starts. Everything is fresh, controlled, and intentional.
Then comes the Seder. It’s not just a meal. It’s a structured reliving of Yetziat Mitzrayim, the Exodus from Egypt, guided step by step through the Haggadah, with four cups of wine, matzah on the table, maror eaten to feel the bitterness, korech put together like a reminder you can actually taste, children asking questions, and everyone leaning like free people. It’s built to make it feel like you yourself left Egypt.
And that’s the point behind all of this.
We’re not just avoiding bread because of some random restriction. Chametz represents inflation, ego, something that rises. Matzah is simple, flat, controlled. The Torah commands us to remember the Exodus as if you yourself left Egypt. All the cleaning, all the restrictions, all the effort, it forces you to step out of your normal life and enter a completely different mode. You feel it physically. Your house looks different, your kitchen functions differently, your diet changes, your schedule changes. You can’t ignore it even if you wanted to.
And if you step back, it’s actually insane in the most literal sense.
Thousands of years later, Jews are still removing every crumb of bread from their homes because of something that happened in Egypt. Entire industries exist around this. Families plan their lives around it. Kids grow up expecting it as normal.
There is no other nation on earth that has maintained something this detailed, this demanding, and this consistent for this long. Empires came and went, languages disappeared, cultures vanished, and Jews are still arguing over how to kasher a countertop and whether a product is acceptable for Pesach.
You can call it stubbornness, but it’s more than that. It’s continuity, it’s identity, it’s a direct line from the Torah to a kitchen in Brooklyn in 2026.
And for those of us who live it, it’s real. It’s exhausting, it’s expensive, it’s sometimes overwhelming. But it’s also something we take seriously in a way that barely exists anywhere else. Because this is what it means to be part of Am Yisrael, not just believing something but living it in a way that shapes your entire life, down to the crumbs you can’t keep in your house for one week a year.
And after all of that, after the cleaning, the stress, the shopping, the kashering, all the details that never seem to end, you sit down at the Seder with your family and it all comes together. You look around the table, your kids are asking the same questions kids have asked for generations, and you realize it worked. This whole system actually worked. It kept us the same people.
So wherever you are, whatever your level, whether your kitchen looks like a full Pesach operation or you’re just doing what you can, there’s something powerful about being part of this.
Wishing you a happy and kosher Pesach, wherever you are, physically and spiritually.
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@LucciCrypto @ArchDeltaHound @Average_NY_Guy 🤡🤥🤦♀️ has nothing to do with the shape idi@t! Has to do with if it’s hand made vs machine made. Some Orthodox Jews only use hand made which is always round (for practicality) because it’s made with human intentions, unlike machine.
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EatMyShortsPlz 📉 retweetet

@NachumZvi And if you don’t want the entire world to hate you, don’t rape and kill kids. It’s quite simple.
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@henry73094 @NachumZvi 1. The entire world is standing with the Palestinians, terrible read on the room.
2. Thank you for calling them by the true name of the citizens of the country you creatures are currently killing and stealing land from.
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@mzpincali @politicalelle I said what I said on purpose, so by your own definition/confession I’m telling the truth 🤣🤡
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@LucciCrypto @politicalelle You're delusional. You have no idea what you're talking about. Liar is someone who says something wrong on purpose.
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Hamas raped the corpses of Jewish women. Remember that next time Podcastistan starts simping for Hamas again.
Anshul Saxena@AskAnshul
United Nations (UN) report states that Hamas committed sexual violence, including rape, gang rape, and sexualized torture of women during the terror attacks on 7th October 2023 in Israel. Hamas terrorists also raped corpses (dead bodies).
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@mzpincali @politicalelle Call me a liar so I can post the FULL VIDEO IN 4K plus the HUNDREDS of articles including Israeli news networks, along with videos of the full protests and trial?? Please do it
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@HashemAllMighty Wanna know what Israel has brought to society?
Read the Epstein files
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@AmyMek And it didn’t even include the nice chunk of land ya just took in Lebanon and that sweet, SUPER LUCKY deal you guys got for burnt land in Argentina.. RIGHT before it all burned down, you guys are definitely the “chosen ones”, the luck is undeniable 🤣
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Iran has taken over or occupied zero new sovereign territory in the last 50 years. The 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War ended in stalemate with borders restored to pre-war lines—no net gains.
Israel annexed East Jerusalem (1980, ~70 km²) and the Golan Heights (1981, ~1,200 km²). It has maintained military control over the West Bank (~5,700 km²) with ongoing settlement expansion, while fully withdrawing ground forces from Gaza in 2005 (though retaining external controls).
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@LucciCrypto @YungGlobaLeader @Mondoweiss Yeah I wonder why I don’t love is Israel. Probably because Arabs invaded and forced my ancestors out. But don’t worry once the Arab is eradicated we will return
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CHRIST IS KING
You creatures preach he is currently in hell boiling in human feces. You were told you are not of his father and are a pit of vipers. He rejected you. Then you killed him.
The end of you creatures and the SoS is nearing, watching you worms squirm puts the greatest smile on my face.
“Why? What crime has he committed?” asked Pilate. But they shouted all the louder, “Crucify him!” When Pilate saw that he was getting nowhere, but that instead an uproar was starting, he took water and washed his hands in front of the crowd. “I am innocent of this man’s blood,” he said. “It is your responsibility!” All the people answered, “His blood is on us and on our children!”
Matthew 27:23-25
FUCK THE SOS
CHRIST IS KING
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You hate Jews. And Jesus was a Jew. You hate Jesus and he rightly vomits you out. Your sins will NEVER be forgiven
James Fishback@j_fishback
You hate Christians. Your excuses are irrelevant. You are not welcome in Florida when I’m governor. Happy Palm Sunday. Christ is King.
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