hard to say. It could be but we truly have no way of knowing if they are the same thing. The star of david didn't even really appear until the 18th century i think, but i guess they could have been using it for 2000 years.
@Xenophon@mushroom_soup@BowsacNoodle there were some ✡️-s as Jewish community symbols in the middle ages already (the quarter in Prague had a red-yellow flag with it) but all contemporary sources put it on the level of "cool symbol, let's use it lmaoy"
i'm not discounting it. It's very possible the same symbol has been around for a long time. I'm just saying there is no direct link between the verse about the star of remphan and the 6 pointed double triangle star of jews.
Some attribute it's appearance on the Israelite scene with Solomon and his delving into strange arts. I'm sure the symbol itself existed long before then.
@Omega_Variant@mushroom_soup@Xenophon I've read that "moloch" might have been a reference to burnt offerings (often humans / children) rather than a specific pagan god. As in it was an act, often associated with idol worship, but became a "god" over time. IDK if that's modern revisionism or what. A lot of the "discoveries" of the 90s and 00s were ass pull speculation.
i've briefly looked into it in relation to David/Solomon and there is no evidence that THIS star is the one. Solomon I believe had a star on his signet, but there is no record of what it looked like.
Yea it's just rabbinical tradition it was on his signet ring. No evidence though. I consider it possible since he seemed to stray off into weird stuff later in life, unfortunately.
the last 2 are secular versions of the first. Like how communism is best understood (imo) when you view it as a secular governmental form of talmudism.
@Xenophon@mushroom_soup@Omega_Variant I agree. I think it was more speculation on the origin of the term. Regardless, I don't need to know about it other than that it's bad.
>Its association as a distinctive symbol for the jewish people and their religion dates to 17th-century Prague. In the 19th century, the symbol began to be widely used by the jewish communities of Eastern Europe, ultimately coming to represent jewish identity or religious beliefs.[2][3] It became representative of Zionism after it was chosen as the central symbol for a jewish national flag at the First Zionist Congress in 1897.[4]
Honestly a lot of the gods throughout history are just copy paste revisions of Nimrod, simiramas and tamuz. They are likely copy pastes as well but it seems a lot of the lines seem to coalesce there.
Like baal is either nimrod or Tamuz, so is chemosh, moloch, Marduk and so on. I'm sure moloch was an actually "god" it was just heavily associated with sacrifice.
It still exists. It's name is just changed from moloch to "my body my choice"
it's just so clear that they were guided towards this "we wuz" campaign imo. No way did a nigger read the bible 200 years ago and come to the conclusion it was AKSUALY written by them.
I'm sure a jew planted the seed as the british were realizing that White people were actually Israelites.
>They are so stupid, they even use the star of david. While reading The Bible. As long as it upsets the neurotic tribe, I'm pleased to see this level of cultural appropriation.
@TeaTootler@BowsacNoodle@DutchBoomerMan@mushroom_soup@Xenophon Imagine putting solar panels on it to power quadcopter motors that's able to fly a predetermined path. Almost no energy needed to keep it in the air, it could stick around for days, maybe even weeks.