Christianity Rules

Jesus.  Jesus Jesus Jesus.  Jesus Jesus Jesus Jesus.  

Jesus.  If you take the square root of that number, you get Jesus  (if you focus on the right answer, sometimes you get Jesus Jesus Jesus which is the same right answer as Jesus).  Of course, you could factor in the equation for Jesus, and then you would just get Jesus.  Also, the equation has to take Jesus into account.  Basically Jesus.  Je—errr.  I should let the Ists speak some.  Here goes: 


There have been human remains found in China, which remains date from before the official story says humans left Africa.  Many galactic clusters have been found, which date from billions of years before the official story says the Big Bang created everything.  There was never a Passion, anymore than there was a Christ, and yet many people have founded their entire moral system upon the idea of the Passion; of how good they are for recognizing that the Passion happened.  


Take those things together, and what do you get?  


Jesus!  Jesus.  Sorry, returning to Ists now: 


Think about those things in more detail.  The story goes that everything was created in a big explosion, that all human beings came from Africa (the Middle East; maaaaybe some Asia), and that there was a very specifically focused great mistreatment and badness even though there is no evidence whatsoever that such a thing ever happened.  Does the combination of those things sound like anything?  Let’s review those things: 


1) A single big explosion created everything.

2) After that common origin that was that explosion, all people came from about Africa.  

3) There was a Passion where extreme badness happened without leaving behind any evidence.


What do those things sound like?  They sound exactly like Christianity.  


People commonly think that Christianity is old-fashioned and no longer relevant.  Such a perspective, though, is wrong.  Christianity has controlled “the West”—and thus much of the world—ever since it became the dominant intellectual force in Europe and much of Asia (Russia).  It is still the dominant intellectual force over the world.  Many people think that Christianity is no longer even relevant, because they have figured out themselves, and because they believe correctly that many others have figured out, that there is no omnipotent, invisible rabbi who created the world (some people still haven’t figured that out, but currently dominant now is the belief that there was/is no such rabbi).  Even so, it took a majority of people descended from European lines over 1600 years to figure that out.  


(Again, some people still haven’t figured that out!  Correctly seeing the insanity of now, they have been deceived into believing that sanity [the recognition of more components to the world than now officially allowed; spirituality] is to be found in Jesus-based Christianity.  However, getting past Jesus-based Christianity is a simpler problem than 2+2.  “Is there an all powerful, invisible man living in the sky who wants you to behave a certain way?”  Such a question has a very easy answer: no.  Of course not.  That kind of question is like the question, “Are there a billion billion pounds/dollars in my hat?”  And yet, there are still people who can’t get the right answer to that question!  


Yes, very many good people and very many attempts at social resistance used pro-Jesus expressions, but that only happened after the wooden horse was already in the gate.  


The weird passion of Europeoids for universalism--very like an addict's passion for a new dose of the very drugs that are killing her/him--is not a dramatic story which we are telling, but a very real thing.  If you encounter any Jesusians, you can see that the desire for something better than the material world is very real.  They do still exist.  Even after there was never a second coming, even after people invented airplanes and space shuttles and proved in a very detailed way with lots of cheap photographs that no one was watching from above, Jesusians exist.  It seems amazing, but many people actually say they believe those things.  Confronted by the various idiocies of modern society, they think that they can find life-affirming spirituality by believing that they will get to be with a special man after they die, and that claiming everyone should be subject to a first century rabbi from the Middle East who is going to make things better for their genetic grouping that is not from there, was not at all like that, and did not have leadership by rabbis nor even rabbis at all.  The malevolent feelings echo of someone who has tricked the enemy into thinking members of her or his group are inherently good.  


Progressive taxation, mad universalist delusions, fiat currency, and a foreign policy that is self-harmful and crazily over-focused on the Middle East all originate from Jesusianism.  All of the things about which Jesusian Christians are mad are, ironically, sourced in Jesus.  Even so, saying you believe that an omnipotent, invisible, first century rabbi lives somewhere unseen and cares about what people do is still very popular.  Having positioned this hypothetical rabbi as against various things which people are correct to identify now as extremely bad--such as giving up territory so that you can pay for people to come rape women with your genes--has been so successful that there are still Jesusians.  As the Devil's greatest trick was convincing man that he didn't exist, Christianity has very effectively used a false dichotomy to make people believe that the problems of Jesus' universalism are solved by more Jesus.  


Ex oriente lux can be seen in the eerie way that a large number of remaining White people live in governments that repeatedly vote for and even make them pay a lot for their own destruction.  Why do they keep doing this?  For the same reason that everyday fools still think that worship of a rabbi will be good for their genetic offspring.)  


To better understand why Christianity is still dominating the planet Earth even though most people even in the West don’t believe in Jesus, ask yourself what “christ” means.  Savior.  Jesus Christ is like Jesus Savior.  The necessary soteriological question is from what is Jesus saving people who do what he wants them to do?  The material world.  Christianity is what is called a world-rejecting religion, in that it presents an image of a better place that doesn’t actually exist—kind of like a super duper magical boarding school—and expresses the philosophy of this world—the real world—being inadequate by comparison.  From this world, the schtick goes that lucky people can be saved, because being in this world is said to be bad.  Christianity is the perfect idealogical weapon to deploy against people from whom you want to take things, such as land, possessions, and vaginas.  After all, if you can make those people—aided by the idiots among them who hope for a rabbi exemplifying human equality—pursue a policy of the real world and things in it being bad, it is much easier to acquire that land, those possessions, and those vaginas, because those are real.  


An all powerful, invisible man-like entity who either hates, loves, or both the world that he made to be a shithole/planned test does not exist.  However, the idea that people should try to save themselves from inadequate reality remains.  It is still—and has been since the dominance of Christianity began—broadly considered good to perform actions in the service of imaginary fantasies about a better future rather than real results.  Like “I’ll pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today,” Christianity offers an imaginary award that will never come.  It celebrates ignoring what is real in favor of subscribing to a popular consensus, which is like believing that a mirage in the desert is real.  The term “faith” is this: an explicit rejection of reality in favor of fantasy.  Because the invisible all powerful rabbi who lives in the sky (sic!) is not real, one has to have faith that he is, because one will never find even a tiny bit of evidence that he is real.  


The ongoing contradiction between evidence that something really happened and the currently mainstream-preferred story that something else happened is thus exemplified.  The existence of galactic clusters disproves the popular new Genesis, just as the existence of human remains in China before humans supposedly left Africa disproves Out of Africa.  Although we just can’t figure out what the modern version of the story of fictional, completely made-up badness in the style of the Passion could be, we are sure that the Big Bang and Out of Africa “theories” are wrong, and demonstrate how powerfully some people like fake stories.  Because these stories are so similar to the fake stories told in the Bible, we know that Christianity rules.  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Goodness of Jesus

The Gift of Christianity

Mass-Murder of Children