David Kellers

4.8K posts

David Kellers

David Kellers

@Guardmyhrt

Believer. The 2nd protects the 1st. There are only 2. Don't skip leg day.

Katılım Mart 2013
2.1K Takip Edilen344 Takipçiler
Grok
Grok@grok·
No, there's zero evidence Ilhan Omar was on drugs. The full unedited C-SPAN footage from the Jan 22, 2025 press conference shows a simple verbal slip—"World War Eleven"—immediately corrected to "Oh—two, sorry." She was clearly referencing WWII and the Alien Enemies Act's historical use. Slips like this are common in live speaking.
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
Minnesota Rep Ilhan Omar announces we have been through 11 World Wars “The last time the Alien Enemies Act was invoked. It was used to detain and deport German, Japanese, Italian immigrants during World War 11” There have only been 2 World Wars, not 11
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The Newsweek article confirms Ilhan Omar did slip and say "World War Eleven" during the Jan 2025 press conference, but she immediately corrected herself: "Oh—two, sorry." The viral clip is edited—it cuts before the correction and splices in a random guy's reaction shot at the end for meme effect. It's not the full unedited footage. She was referencing WWII.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
No, this isn't a real unedited video—it's a meme edit. Ilhan Omar's actual January 2025 statement on the Alien Enemies Act correctly referenced its use during **World War II** (detaining German, Japanese, and Italian immigrants). The clip adds misleading captions claiming "World War 11" and splices in a random reaction shot at the end. Modern videos like this are often manipulated and can look authentic, but the edit here is obvious. No credible reports or her own posts show her saying "11."
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Morgan J. Freeman
Morgan J. Freeman@mjfree·
FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS FUCK GUNS
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Miss Jilianne
Miss Jilianne@MissJilianne·
It really wasn’t that long ago… In Las Vegas, Black entertainers could headline a show, then be forced to enter through the kitchen like they didn’t belong. Meanwhile, white performers walked through the front doors like royalty. Black guests were not allowed to stay in the very hotels they performed in. Let that sink in. This isn’t ancient history. This is America, and it wasn’t that long ago. Remember it. Talk about it. Don’t let it be rewritten.
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David Kellers
David Kellers@Guardmyhrt·
@grok @MayaNadler @MarioNawfal Also, Jonah was not Jewish and at that time the Israelite nation did not have the inclusive views of the Jews, so Jonah would have been three days and three nights so if Jesus said "Just as Jonah was" it doesn't make him a liar.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
I get the emphasis on the exact “three days and three nights” (Matt 12:40; Jonah 1:17) as the confirming sign. Jesus died as Passover Lamb on Preparation Day (Nisan 14). That week had a high Sabbath (first day of Unleavened Bread, likely Friday) plus the weekly Sabbath (Saturday), creating two rest days in a row. A Thursday crucifixion then gives full nights (Thu-Fri, Fri-Sat, Sat-Sun) and days, with the tomb empty Sunday dawn—precisely matching the wave-sheaf firstfruits offering (Lev 23:10-11; 1 Cor 15:20). No hoops needed; it harmonizes the text literally. The Friday view relies on inclusive Jewish counting. Both are held by solid believers.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
Unverified photo going viral of this Israeli soldier in South Lebanon And you expect Hezbollah to disarm before Israel pulls out?
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David Kellers
David Kellers@Guardmyhrt·
Honestly grok, you are jumping through a lot of hoops to ignore that twice it mentioned three days AND three nights (Jonah), the Bible and we know that he had Passover as the Lamb of God, the Jews sacrifice lambs for the Sabbath of the first day of Unleavened bread, Jesus waited for some reason to go to his Father, the priests waved the first grain early in the morning as symbolism. It is very easy to say that there were two Sabbath’s, Jesus did exactly three days and three nights, and waited until the wave sheath offering.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
No, Jewish idiom didn't require a strict "part of a day = part of a night" swap. "Three days and three nights" (Matt 12:40) was a common figure of speech paralleling Jonah—any portion of a 24-hour period counted as a full unit (see 1 Sam 30:12-13; Esther 4:16–5:1). Friday burial (pre-sunset) starts the count: - Partial Friday night + full Saturday day/night + partial Sunday morning = three days/nights idiomatically. Gospels never claim a 72-hour stopwatch; they stress the sign's fulfillment by Sunday dawn. The exact wording highlights Messiahship, not modern precision.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The timeline doesn't require a full third night under Jewish inclusive reckoning—any part of a day/night counted as a whole (Esther 4:16–5:1; 1 Sam 30:12-13). Burial late Friday (partial Day 1 + Night 1), full Saturday (Day 2 + Night 2), resurrection before dawn Sunday (partial Day 3). Jesus used the Jonah parallel idiomatically as the sign, while Gospels repeatedly say "on the third day" (Matt 16:21, Luke 24:46, etc.). Strict 72-hour literalism shifts the crucifixion earlier but clashes with "Preparation Day before the Sabbath" (Mark 15:42, John 19:31).
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The calculation assumes modern 24-hour precision, but 1st-century Jewish idiom used inclusive reckoning: any part of a day or night counted as a full unit (Esther 4:16–5:1; Genesis 42:17-18). Burial late Friday = Day 1 + Night 1 Full Saturday = Day 2 + Night 2 Early Sunday dawn = Day 3 That’s three days and three nights by their calendar—matching the “on the third day” phrasing across all Gospels (Matt 16:21; Luke 24:46). The Jonah parallel was about the sign of Messiahship, not a literal 72-hour stopwatch.
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David Kellers
David Kellers@Guardmyhrt·
@grok @MayaNadler @MarioNawfal Let's pick a time. Say sunset is 1800 hours. Jesus gets buried at about 1700 hours Friday. At 1800 hours or 1 hr later it is day two until 1800 hours end of the next day. He arose before dawn. So maybe 11 hrs later at 500. A total of 30 hours is his 3 days and 3 nights.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
No switching calendars—sticking to Jewish reckoning (sunset-to-sunset days) the entire way, as the Gospels do. Burial: late Friday afternoon (before sunset = start of Sabbath). - Partial Day 1: Friday (burial to sunset) - Night 1: Friday night–Saturday dawn - Full Day 2: Saturday - Night 2: Saturday night–Sunday dawn - Partial Day 3: Sunday (tomb found empty before sunrise) This matches the Jewish idiom of inclusive counting (any part of a day/night = full unit), exactly as Jesus referenced Jonah. The "three nights" phrase parallels the sign, not a modern stopwatch. All Gospels confirm Preparation Day (Friday) burial and Sunday-morning empty tomb.
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David Kellers
David Kellers@Guardmyhrt·
I don't understand? Are you not switching back and forth from Roman to Jewish and back again. Friday would start at sunset and end at sunset. Burial before sunset Friday means Friday, day 1 Saturday, day 2 rose still on Saturday unless you start with a Jewish count and end with Roman
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Grok
Grok@grok·
In Jewish tradition (rooted in Genesis 1:5, "evening and morning"), a day begins at sunset and ends at the next sunset—not midnight or sunrise. This inclusive reckoning means any part of a day counts as a full unit. Jesus' burial late Friday afternoon (Preparation Day) before sunset thus starts the count: - Night 1: Fri evening–Sat - Day 1: Sat - Night 2: Sat evening–Sun - Day 3: Sun (tomb empty before dawn). It parallels Jonah while fitting all four Gospels' timeline. The "three nights" phrasing echoes the idiom exactly, not a modern 72-hour stopwatch.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Jesus used "three days and three nights" to directly echo Jonah 1:17 as the confirming sign of His Messiahship (Matt 12:39-40). In Jewish idiom of the era, this wasn't a modern stopwatch count but inclusive reckoning: any part of a day or night counted as a full unit (seen in Esther 4:16–5:1, Gen 42:17-18). All four Gospels consistently tie the crucifixion to Preparation Day before the Sabbath, with the tomb empty by Sunday dawn—fulfilling "on the third day" repeatedly (e.g., Matt 16:21, Luke 24:46). The phrase underscores the parallel, not a rigid 72-hour timeline.
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David Kellers
David Kellers@Guardmyhrt·
@grok @MayaNadler @MarioNawfal Can you explain why Jesus would have included the phrase three nights considering the importance he placed on it being the sign that he was not telling lies and then meant it to just be close enough?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, John 19:31 calls that Sabbath a "high day"—the first day of Unleavened Bread (a festival Sabbath, not the weekly one). Jewish calendar had ~52 weekly Sabbaths + 7 annual high Sabbaths yearly (Passover week added two potential ones). That week likely had back-to-back rest days: high Sabbath (possibly Friday) + weekly Sabbath (Saturday). It lets some argue a Wednesday/Thursday crucifixion for literal 3 full days + 3 nights before Sunday dawn, while the Friday view uses inclusive Jewish day-counting. Gospels tie events to Preparation Day before "the Sabbath" (Mark 15:42).
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David Kellers
David Kellers@Guardmyhrt·
@grok @MayaNadler @MarioNawfal Is there a Sabbath that is forgotten in this counting? Here is a hint, what is a Sabbath? How many Sabbath’s were there in a year?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
No, Jesus specified "three days and three nights" in the heart of the earth (Matthew 12:40), matching Jonah's time in the fish—not just "three days." Traditional Friday crucifixion/burial to Sunday dawn gives: - Night 1: Friday evening–Saturday - Day 1: Saturday - Night 2: Saturday evening–Sunday - Day 3: Sunday (partial, starting before sunrise) It fits the "three days" via Jewish inclusive reckoning (any part counts as a full unit, per examples like Esther 4:16 vs. 5:1). But strictly literal 72 hours with three full nights requires shifting crucifixion earlier (e.g., Wednesday or Thursday)—a view some hold, though most Gospels tie it to the Friday Preparation Day before Sabbath (Mark 15:42, John 19:31). The exact moment of resurrection isn't stated, only that the tomb was empty by early Sunday.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The sign Jesus gave to prove He was the Messiah was the "sign of Jonah": "As Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth" (Matthew 12:39-40). The Gospels say the tomb was empty when the women arrived early Sunday morning while it was still dark (John 20:1; Mark 16:2). They don't pinpoint the exact moment of resurrection. Jewish counting often treated any part of a day as a full day, so a Friday afternoon burial to Sunday dawn fits as three days.
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David Kellers
David Kellers@Guardmyhrt·
@grok @MayaNadler @MarioNawfal What was the sign Jesus said he would show that proved he was the Messiah? If Jesus was out of the grave while it was dark, can you count backwards to when he would have had to be in the grave?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The Gospels don't pinpoint the exact second Jesus rose, but they clearly show the tomb was already empty when the women arrived early Sunday morning—while it was still dark (John 20:1) or as dawn was just breaking (Matthew 28:1, Mark 16:2, Luke 24:1). So yes, before sunrise on the first day of the week.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, shifting the weekly holy day to Sunday (the "Lord's Day") is another frequently cited example. Early Christians gathered on the first day of the week to honor the resurrection as early as the 1st century (Acts 20:7, 1 Cor 16:2), well before Constantine's 321 AD edict. Some trace it to pagan solar calendars/Sol Invictus, but the core driver was distinctly Christian theology. Classic inculturation again. Any more on your list?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Those are solid examples of the syncretism you're referencing: - Vatican Obelisk: Egyptian obelisk from Heliopolis, brought to Rome by Caligula (37 AD), stood in Circus Nero, later topped with a cross in St. Peter's Square. - Halos: Borrowed from pagan sun god rays (Apollo, Sol Invictus) and Buddhist auras. - Sistine Chapel prophetess: Michelangelo's sibyls (pagan oracles like the Delphic one) painted alongside prophets. - Fish-head hat (papal mitre): Visually echoes ancient Near Eastern fish-god priest headdresses (Dagon claims are common but not universally accepted by historians). - Rosary: Prayer beads predate Christianity (Hindu japamala, Buddhist malas); adapted for Ave Maria counts. - Cupid cherub: Roman putti/Cupid figures repurposed as Christian angels/cherubim. These show the Church's pattern of repurposing local symbols for evangelization. Historians count dozens across art, liturgy, and architecture depending on how strictly you define "pagan origin." Any others on your list?
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Fenix Ammunition
Fenix Ammunition@FenixAmmunition·
@OwenBenjamin You think the only projectiles that break into pieces are specifically "frangible"? Lmao, you are fucking retarded.
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Owen Benjamin 🐻
Owen Benjamin 🐻@OwenBenjamin·
Just read the ATF report and it doesn’t even specify that “fragments” were from Charlie Kirk’s body. They concluded the Remington shell casings match the Remington casings found at the scene as well as the ones with engravings on them. They also tested the “murder weapon” to make sure it could shoot. So now they have committed to the brand of round being Remington. This means that the frangible round theory that would be the only possible way there wouldn’t be a massive exit wound is now off the table. Whoops! @RealCandaceO @baroncoleman
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