It's a jewish attitude as well. In israel, being an honorable and trusting person is called a 'friar', and it's the gravest insult you can levy at someone.
We have that word in Poland too (guess where it comes from), but is spelled "frajer". It lost a lot of meaning over last two decades and people who call others frajer are seen as lowlife idiots
Entire buildings have their elevators switched to sabbath mode where they run the entire day, occupied or empty, automatically moving to and opening doors on every floor.
The fact that they think their God is a retard bound up in his own rules betrays how highly they think of themselves and how little they actually under the concept of "principles and morality."
Its such a foundational difference built into their very religion that makes them incompatible with almost any society or country, short of a nation of savages for them to exploit.
It's a jewish attitude as well. In israel, being an honorable and trusting person is called a 'friar', and it's the gravest insult you can levy at someone.
We have that word in Poland too (guess where it comes from), but is spelled "frajer". It lost a lot of meaning over last two decades and people who call others frajer are seen as lowlife idiots
jews try to play their own God too, can't use electricity today but can you come turn on the light for me?
Even better, look up the Shabbos Light Switch.
Entire buildings have their elevators switched to sabbath mode where they run the entire day, occupied or empty, automatically moving to and opening doors on every floor.
If this is how they do with their own religion in customs, imagine just how much they value other's.
The fact that they think their God is a retard bound up in his own rules betrays how highly they think of themselves and how little they actually under the concept of "principles and morality."
Its such a foundational difference built into their very religion that makes them incompatible with almost any society or country, short of a nation of savages for them to exploit.
A piece of wire hung across several buildings is enough to be considered "private domain" and thus kosher to be out in public during the Shabbat.