Comments by "Phoenix O\x27Brien" (@phoenixobrien163) on "Occult Literature 342: Hebrew Idolatry and Superstition" video.

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  10. I've long been down that road trying to sort out the craziness from the facts. All I can offer you is to track down every lead for yourself, rather than believe what anyone says. Look at contrary sources when tracking a lead. I have heard about the Mecca black cube, when someone pointed out the similarity with the Jewish tefillin -- Tefillin (sometimes called phylacteries) are cubic black leather boxes with leather straps that Orthodox Jewish men wear on their head and their arm during weekday morning prayer. Observant Jews consider wearing tefillin to be a very great mitzvah (command) The boxes contain four hand-written texts from the Bible, in which believers are commanded to wear certain words on the hand and between the eyes. The texts are Exodus 13:1-10, 13:11-16; Deuteronomy 6:4-9, 11:12-21. The hand tefillin has all four texts written on a single parchment strip but the head tefillin has four separate compartments, with a single text in each. Jewish men start wearing tefillin just before their Bar Mitzvah. Making tefillin -- Tefillin can only be made by specialists and often come with a certificate from a rabbi to prove that they've been made properly. The rules do not exist for their own sake, but to ensure that an article of such enormous religious significance is perfect in every way. Bear in mind that Judaism, especially with the rabbis, Orthodox, and Hasidics is A SYSTEM OF MAGIC that comes down through its priests in the Temple of Solomon. Their MAGICAL SYSTEM does not allow for any non-Jew to touch a RABBI. This was shown in a movie I saw the other day called The Seventh Sign . This  is a 1988 American apocalyptic drama horror film. There's a scene where a gentile, pregnant girl is seeking answers and she's directed to see a rabbi. She does, but inadvertently touches his hand. He goes apocalyptic and slams the door in her face. This is rather long, but as you see, there are no easy answers. Your mind must remain open, and you must go where the leads take you. Burn After Reading 🔥 Not for the Profane. 🔥 As you see from all of the above, so far there appears to be no connection to the black cube of Mecca.
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  11.  @GabrielEddy  -- I don't know what you are talking about. I don't make "claims". I don't know what you are trying to say. The Shasu (from Egyptian š3sw, probably pronounced Shaswe [1]) were Semitic-speaking cattle nomads in the Southern Levant from the late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age or the Third Intermediate Period of Egypt. They were organized in clans under a tribal chieftain, and were described as brigands, active from the Jezreel Valley to Ashkelon and the Sinai .[2] -- wiki Etymology The name's etymon may be Egyptian š3sw, which originally meant "those who move on foot". Levy, Adams, and Muniz report similar possibilities: an Egyptian word that means "to wander", and an alternative Semitic one with the meaning "to plunder" .[3] There's no mention of, or insinuation of, Egyptian foot soldiers here. Let's not get obscure and not dabble in mystification, but try to keep things straight. So...apparently the Egyptians knew about the Shasu tribes. Amenhotop III and Ramesses II. OK so big deal. The question is; Why did the Shasu merit two mentions in Egyptian texts? And they believed in the cult diety Yahweh. Now I recall reading they had some deep thoughts on this Yahweh , which i suspect later triggered and was broadened into Jewish Kabbalistc notions about "God" in general, which sounded so "profound" that the three Abrahamic religions did eat it up, and the world did marvel (but shrugged it off -- good for them.) So, the very Kabbalah itself is man-made rabbinic humbug, it being mere Jewish NOTIONS, derived and broadened on whatever it was that the Shasu taught them. The wiki page on "Shasu" is interesting, but dense. I'm not altogether sure what the author is saying.
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