Brandon Dunarote

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Brandon Dunarote

Brandon Dunarote

@BrandonDunarote

God - Fatherland - Liberty. Catholic Nationalist….Jesus Christ is King

Katılım Haziran 2025
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
Matthew 21:12 “Money Changers”
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𝐌𝐚𝐥𝐜𝐨𝐥𝐦
These Iranian🇮🇷 girls are trolling Israel🇮🇱 at the next level: ‘Israel is attacking Iran’s historical sites, but Iran can’t respond the same way because Israel has no history.’ 🙄😂
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Iranian Force ✴️
Iranian Force ✴️@MrImranPk·
Dear Americans, do you stand with Israel or with Iran?
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
@grok @ArchetypeTheory @jakeshieldsajj @Grok The figure I mentioned ~0.1% Jewish in the Marine Corps, aligns with anecdotal and older reports from Jewish chaplains and Marines themselves (e.g., references to "one in a thousand" or 0.1%). Official DoD religious demographic data
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Jewish Americans are ~2.4% of the U.S. population but ~0.1% of the Marine Corps (per your figures). Per capita underrepresentation ratio: population share ÷ actual share = 2.4 / 0.1 = 24. They are represented at 1/24th the proportional rate, or 24 times less likely to serve in the Marines relative to their population share.
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
@ArchetypeTheory @jakeshieldsajj @Grok jewish Americans are ~2.4% of the U.S. population but only ~0.1% of the Marine Corps. Per capita, how underrepresented are they? What are the exact odds or ratio (e.g., how many times less likely) compared to population share?
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Brandon Dunarote retweetledi
北小路 維織
北小路 維織@k6kd9d·
イーロンはクソ野郎だ
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Michael Adler ✡️
Michael Adler ✡️@Ad1erMichael·
@RealCandaceO @TaylorRMarshall You’re a fake Catholic. No Christian would be grifting off a supposed friend like Charlie, who you claimed to like. You’re using the Catholic label as a skin suit to hide your evil intentions.
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Brandon Dunarote retweetledi
Candace Owens
Candace Owens@RealCandaceO·
I am a new Catholic but I am deeply concerned about Bishop Barron. Paula White in an unabashed heretic. He remained silent when His Eminence was refused from the Holy Sepulchre but penned a Twitter novel lambasting Carrie PreJean over her theologically-sound views regarding Zionism. Today, the Bishop promotes Ben Shapiro as his friend— Ben, to his credit, has always been honest about his views that Christ was a criminal who is burning in feces in hell. I will remind you he also once told Ben that he could be saved, before backtracking. I ask you sincerely, what is the proper recourse for this within the church?
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MaviMarmara
MaviMarmara@ArchilleLauro·
@Malcolm_Pal9 The Babylonian Talmud, the central text of Judaism, was written in Persia. Without Iran, there would be no Judaism.
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
@grok @AClDBURN67 @terrakei07 @Grok the Wisdom of Solomon (also called the Book of Wisdom), a Jewish text written in Greek around the 2nd–1st century In Wisdom 12:5, it accuses the “ancient inhabitants” (Cannanites) of the holy land of “ruthless murders of children, cannibal feasts of human flesh and blood.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
In the Hebrew Bible, the Israelites' adoption of Canaanite child sacrifice—primarily to the god Molech (Moloch)—involved burning children alive or passing them through fire in the Valley of Hinnom (Tophet) outside Jerusalem. This is explicitly condemned in Leviticus 18:21 and 20:2-5 as a capital offense, with God declaring it a defilement of His name. Kings like Ahaz (2 Kings 16:3) and Manasseh (2 Kings 21:6) practiced it, building high places and altars for the rite. Prophets such as Jeremiah (7:31, 19:5) and Ezekiel (16:20-21, 23:37) denounced it as an abomination worse than idolatry, one that filled the land with innocent blood and provoked divine wrath. This, combined with widespread apostasy, led to the Babylonian conquest and destruction of the First Temple in 586 BCE (2 Kings 24-25; Jeremiah 32:35), fulfilling warnings of exile as punishment for forsaking the covenant (Deuteronomy 18:10). Archaeological finds at sites like Carthage confirm similar Phoenician/Canaanite rituals involving infant cremation.
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白饅頭(御田寺圭/光属性Vtuber/バーチャルツイッタラー)
ほかのSNSでもそうだが、外国人がとにかく日本の治安や秩序を褒める理由は、Xによる言語の壁の消滅でよりはっきりと分かった。
Pregonero@PregoneroL

🎒🇯🇵 Japón es ese país donde los niños de escuela primaria van solos a la escuela sin miedo a que les pase absolutamente nada malo. A mil años luz de distancia del resto del mundo.

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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
@AClDBURN67 @terrakei07 @Grok God punished the Israelites of the First Temple period for adopting Canaanite-style practices, especially idolatry and child sacrifice. elaborate/expand on the "child sacrifice"
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Think of it like a global open-source software network in the Middle Ages. The Talmud was the core "codebase"—a massive legal and ethical manual finalized in Babylon's academies at Sura and Pumbedita. Geonim (academy heads) were the lead developers: they debated, updated rulings, and shipped "patches" (responsa letters answering real-world questions) to Jewish communities worldwide. The Exilarch was the CEO— a hereditary Davidic leader handling politics and taxes with caliphs, giving the system official clout. Radhanites? The Jewish merchant couriers: they crisscrossed Silk Road and sea routes (France to China) trading silk, spices, and slaves while ferrying those rulings, books, donations, and feedback—keeping everything synced like a medieval FedEx for faith and commerce. This web held diaspora Jews together for centuries.
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
"This pivot decentralized Judaism toward rabbinic authority, synagogues, and halakha over rites" @Grok Explain in simple terms, with a modern analogy: How did the structure and workings of the Talmud, the Radhanites, the Exilarch, the Geonim, and the academies of Sura and Pumbedita function together — especially across the Silk Road and medieval trade networks
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The 70 CE destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple by Titus ended centralized Jewish genealogical archives. Temple practices: Priestly (kohanim) and Levitical lineages were verified in Temple registers for sacrificial purity and duties, as Josephus describes in *Antiquities* and *Life* (public registers consulted for ancestry). Lineage scrolls (megillot yuchasin) were housed in Jerusalem archives. Scholarly debate: Insurgents burned some public records early in the revolt (per Josephus, *Jewish War* 2.17); Romans razed the rest. Talmud (Pesachim 62b) alludes to a restricted "Book of Genealogy." While Mishnah (Yevamot 4:13; Eduyot 8:7) cites post-70 genealogies via oral/family traditions, centralized Temple-based verification was lost—no comprehensive tribal registry survived. Historians’ views (Shaye J.D. Cohen, Seth Schwartz): This pivot decentralized Judaism toward rabbinic authority, synagogues, and halakha over rites. Jewish identity endured via matrilineal descent, Torah study, and endogamy, sustaining ethno-religious continuity in diaspora without archival proof.
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
@grok @TLmnbsz6K81Fo7O @terrakei07 @Grok Explain, with academic rigor, that the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE ended centralized Jewish genealogical archives, covering Temple record practices, lineage scrolls, scholarly debate over what was lost, and historians’ views on long term effects on Jewish identity
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, historical and genetic evidence supports substantial admixture in Jewish populations over time. Ancient Israelites emerged from Canaanite stock (DNA studies show ~50%+ Levantine/Canaanite ancestry shared with modern Jews and regional Arabs). Biblical and post-exilic records note intermarriage/conversion with Edomites (Hasmonean era), Moabites, Gibeonites, Hittites, Arameans, and Persians during exiles and returns. Post-Roman diaspora added layers: Ashkenazi with European (German, French, Slavic); Sephardi/Mizrahi with Berber/North African, Iberian (Spanish/Portuguese); Yemenite with Himyarite/South Arabian; plus Beta Israel (Ethiopian) and Bene Israel (Indian) communities showing local host admixture alongside core Middle Eastern markers. Continuity persists via shared ancestry and culture, not replacement.
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
@grok @TLmnbsz6K81Fo7O @terrakei07 @Grok are jews mixed with Canaanites, Edomites, Moabites, Gibeonites, Persians, Arameans and Hittites before Greek/Rome, later merging with Berbers, Himyarites, Slavs, Turks, Ethiopians (Beta Israel), Indians (Bene Israel), Germen, French and Spanish/Portuguese groups.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, that's broadly correct. In Jesus' era (1st century CE), Judaism was primarily Second Temple-based: centered on sacrificial rites in Jerusalem, priestly authority, and sects like Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes. The Temple's destruction in 70 CE forced adaptation. The Mishnah (c. 200 CE) formalized the Oral Torah into rabbinic law, shifting focus to synagogues, prayer, and Torah study. The Babylonian Talmud (c. 500 CE) built on it with vast debates, becoming the foundation of Rabbinic Judaism that defined Jewish practice, ethics, and community life for centuries.
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
@grok @TLmnbsz6K81Fo7O @terrakei07 @Grok is this statement correct: While the word jew is the same, the meaning and the way of life associated with being a "jew" shifted dramatically between the time of Jesus and the codification of the Mishnah 200AD and even more so after the completion of the bavil talmud 5OOAD
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, that's correct. The term "Jew" derives from Hebrew "Yehudi" (of Judah), originally a tribal/regional label for the Kingdom of Judah's people. After the Assyrian fall of the northern Kingdom of Israel (722 BCE) and especially the Babylonian exile (586 BCE), it broadened to an ethnic identity for all surviving Israelites. Persian administration (post-538 BCE return under Cyrus) normalized it province-wide as "Yehud," solidifying its use for the people in texts like Esther and Nehemiah.
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Brandon Dunarote
Brandon Dunarote@BrandonDunarote·
short answer no. long answer. @Grok The term “jew” originates from “Judah,” however the Babylonian exile transformed “Yehudi” (jew) from a regional label into a people-wide identity. Babylonian and Persian administration helped normalize and disseminate the term. is this correct?
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