Who are the Globalists !?

Islamization of Europe a good thing'
Rabbi Baruch Efrati believes Jews should 'rejoice at the fact that Europe is paying for what it did to us for hundreds of years by losing its identity.' He praises Islam for promoting modesty, respect for God
Kobi Nahshoni|Published: 11.11.12 , 13:52
As concerns grow over the increasing number of Muslims in Europe, it appears not everyone is bothered by the issue, including an Israeli rabbi who even welcomes the phenomenon.


Rabbi Baruch Efrati, a yeshiva head and community rabbi in the West Bank settlement of Efrat, believes that the Islamization of Europe is actually a good thing.



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"With the help of God, the gentiles there will adopt a healthier life with a lot of modesty and integrity, and not like the hypocritical Christianity which appears pure but is fundamentally corrupt," he explained.



Rabbi Efrati was asked to discuss the issue by an oriental studies student, who inquired on Judaism's stand toward the process Europe has been going through in recent years.

https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4299673,00.html

islam is noahide compliant.

christ is the idol.

they both agree christians should be xecuted for idolatry.
 
Ann Coulter accused of anti-Semitism after ‘globalist’ tweetstorm
Coulter's tweets referenced a term closely associated with alt-right conspiracies.
Ellen Ioanes Ellen Ioanes Tech Published Mar 9, 2018 Updated May 21, 2021, 10:15 pm CDT
Ann Coulter’s Twitter feed featured a string of Tweets using a far-right anti-Semitic slur on Thursday night.

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Coulter, a conservative author and pundit, posted seven tweets calling out so-called “globalists”—a coded slur for “Jewish.”


“Paul Newman is only half-Globalist,” reads one tweet (Newman’s father was Jewish); “Baseball hall of famer Sandy Kofax is also a Globalist,” reads another. She also links to a Huffington Post story about the use of the term “globalist” by the far right.

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It appears that Coulter is using the term to mock the news outlets for their interpretation of President Donald Trump’s statements about former economic advisor Gary Cohn. Cohn stepped down from his post last week after Trump announced new tariffs on steel and aluminum imports. Upon his departure, Trump said, “He may be a globalist, but I still like him. He is seriously a globalist. There’s no question.”

https://www.dailydot.com/debug/ann-coulters-anti-semitic-tweetstorm/
 
Ann Coulter accused of anti-Semitism after ‘globalist’ tweetstorm
Coulter's tweets referenced a term closely associated with alt-right conspiracies.
Ellen Ioanes Ellen Ioanes Tech Published Mar 9, 2018 Updated May 21, 2021, 10:15 pm CDT
Ann Coulter’s Twitter feed featured a string of Tweets using a far-right anti-Semitic slur on Thursday night.

Advertisement


Coulter, a conservative author and pundit, posted seven tweets calling out so-called “globalists”—a coded slur for “Jewish.”


“Paul Newman is only half-Globalist,” reads one tweet (Newman’s father was Jewish); “Baseball hall of famer Sandy Kofax is also a Globalist,” reads another. She also links to a Huffington Post story about the use of the term “globalist” by the far right.

Advertisement

It appears that Coulter is using the term to mock the news outlets for their interpretation of President Donald Trump’s statements about former economic advisor Gary Cohn. Cohn stepped down from his post last week after Trump announced new tariffs on steel and aluminum imports. Upon his departure, Trump said, “He may be a globalist, but I still like him. He is seriously a globalist. There’s no question.”

https://www.dailydot.com/debug/ann-coulters-anti-semitic-tweetstorm/

she's my dream girl.
 
I heard saddam was a christian, but, like I always say, not a good one.

Iraqi Christians report a decade of blood
Anjilo Fadheel, who was kidnapped and beaten for being Christian in Iraq, now wears the tattoo of praying hands holding a Rosary he had done after he came to the United States.
Anjilo Fadheel, who was kidnapped and beaten for being Christian in Iraq, now wears the tattoo of praying hands holding a Rosary he had done after he came to the United States. (Howard Lipin)
AUG. 30, 2014 11 AM PT
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The day the statue of Saddam Hussein was torn down in Baghdad’s Firdos Square in April 2003 — a day that was the basis for some of the most iconic and debated images of the war in Iraq — Sam, an Iraqi Christian who had a job at a barber shop just down the street from all of the action, skipped work.

“I saw everything with my eyes. I was there,” he said.

Like many Iraqis, he saw promise in the falling statue, and initially things were more or less OK. Even with the church bombings, the ransom kidnappings, the faith-based killings, the sectarian fighting between Shiite and Sunni militias, and the random atrocities that marked everyday life in occupied Iraq, Sam and his family were getting by.

That started to change in 2006, when militias made life unbearable even for those trying to keep a low profile. In late 2009, he fled to Jordan. That was after a group of women threatened his wife because she was Christian, and soon after a Shiite militia tried to recruit him. He eventually moved his family to San Diego.

In an interview this month at a coffee shop in El Cajon, home to one of the largest Iraqi populations in the U.S., Sam asked that his last name and workplace not be published. Even now, halfway around the world, he fears persecution because of his religion. He has a lingering regret: “We should have come before.”

But he knows he’s among the lucky. “Some people, they suffered more than us,” he said.

ISIS, the shorthand name for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, a militant group that wants to create a fundamentalist caliphate, recently claimed much of northern Iraq and has been persecuting Shiite Muslims, Kurds, Christians and other minorities. San Diego County’s Iraqi population — estimated at 70,000 people — has watched with dread and a sense of familiarity because they say this is just the latest chapter in a slow and painful extinguishing of their people in a land they occupied for almost 2,000 years.

photo
For Iraqi Christians, the past decade has been one disaster after another: first the emergence of violence that touched the lives of Iraqis, regardless of their religion, tribe or ethnicity, followed by violent and political persecution by radical insurgents and a noninclusive government.

Chaldeans in San Diego say they are haunted by their own tortured memories, as well as a stream of anguishing updates from their homeland. Now that ISIS has stormed their ancient homeland and killed or displaced Christians in the north, there’s a sense among Chaldeans in San Diego and in Iraq that help is urgently needed, coupled by a fear that any action would already be too late.

Mark Arabo, a Chaldean community leader who’s been pushing for safety measures and humanitarian aid, relayed a message to the international community he received from a man stuck in Iraq: “By the time you guys do everything you’re doing, there will be no Christians left (in Iraq). We’ll all be dead.”

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...n-chaldeans-genocide-2014aug30-htmlstory.html
 
Saul David Alinsky (January 30, 1909 – June 12, 1972) was an American community activist and political theorist. His work through the Chicago-based Industrial Areas Foundation helping poor communities organize to press demands upon landlords, politicians and business leaders won him national recognition and notoriety. Responding to the impatience of a New Left generation of activists in the 1960s, in his widely cited Rules for Radicals: A Pragmatic Primer (1971) Alinsky defended the arts both of confrontation and of compromise involved in community organizing as keys to the struggle for social justice.

Saul Alinsky
Saul Alinsky.jpg
Alinsky in 1963
Born
Saul David Alinsky
January 30, 1909
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died
June 12, 1972 (aged 63)
Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, U.S.
Nationality
American
Education
University of Chicago (PhB)
Occupation
Community organizer, writer, political activist
Notable work
Rules for Radicals (1971)
Spouse(s)
Helene Simon (m. 1932; d. 1947)
Jean Graham

​(m. 1952; div. 1970)​
Irene McInnis Alinsky

​(m. 1971)​
Children
2[citation needed]
Awards
Pacem in Terris Award, 1969
Signature
Saul Alinsky
Notes
Sources[1][2][3]
Contents
Early life Edit
Childhood Edit
Saul Alinsky was born in 1909 in Chicago, Illinois, to Russian Jewish immigrant parents

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saul_Alinsky
 
Ricardo Wolf (originally Richard Wolf; 1887–1981) was an Israeli inventor, diplomat, and philanthropist. He was the former Cuban ambassador to Israel. He was the founder of the Wolf Foundation.[1]

Ricardo Wolf
Cuban ambassador to Israel1960.jpg
Israel's foreign minister Golda Meir, President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, and Cuban Ambassador to Israel Ricardo Subirana Y Lobo (Ricardo Wolf), after presenting his credentials. Jerusalem, 1960.
Born
1887
Hanover, Germany
Died
February 1981
Herzliya, Israel
Nationality
Israeli
Occupation
Diplomat, inventor and philanthropist
Known for
Cuban ambassador to Israel
Founder of the Wolf Foundation
Contents
Early years Edit
Ricardo Wolf was born in Hanover, Germany, in 1887. He was one of 14 children born to Moritz Wolf, a pillar of that city’s Jewish community.

Before the First World War, Wolf emigrated from Germany to Cuba, which became his second home. In 1924, he married Francisca Subirana, a tennis champion of the 1920s.

Later years Edit
For many years, Ricardo Wolf and his brother Sigfried Wolf worked to develop a process for recovering iron from smelting process residue. Ultimately successful, his invention was utilized in steel factories all over the world, bringing him considerable wealth.[citation needed]

Wolf lent both moral and financial support to Fidel Castro from the onset of the Cuban revolution. Beholden to Ricardo Wolf for his unswerving support, and cognizant of his personality and natural gifts as a diplomat, the Cuban leader offered him the position of Minister of Finance and, after Wolf declined, responded to Wolf’s request and appointed him in 1961 Cuban Ambassador to Israel.

Wolf held this position until 1973, the year Cuba severed diplomatic ties with Israel. Upon relinquishing his diplomatic post, Wolf decided to remain in Israel, where he spent his final years.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricardo_Wolf
 

what about this?

Pederasty in ancient Greece was a socially acknowledged romantic relationship between an older male (the erastes) and a younger male (the eromenos) usually in his teens.[2] It was characteristic of the Archaic and Classical periods.[3] The influence of pederasty on Greek culture of these periods was so pervasive that it has been called "the principal cultural model for free relationships between citizens."[4]


Pederastic couples at a symposium, as depicted on a tomb fresco from the Greek colony of Paestum in Italy. The man on the right tries to kiss the youth with whom he is sharing a couch.[1]
Some scholars locate its origin in initiation ritual, particularly rites of passage on Crete, where it was associated with entrance into military life and the religion of Zeus.[5] It has no formal existence in the Homeric epics, and seems to have developed in the late 7th century BCE as an aspect of Greek homosocial culture,[6] which was characterized also by athletic and artistic nudity, delayed marriage for aristocrats, symposia, and the social seclusion of women.[7] Pederasty was both idealized and criticized in ancient literature and philosophy.[8] The argument has recently been made that idealization was universal in the Archaic period; criticism began in Athens as part of the general Classical Athenian reassessment of Archaic culture.[9]

Scholars have debated
 
what about this?

Pederasty in ancient Greece was a socially acknowledged romantic relationship between an older male (the erastes) and a younger male (the eromenos) usually in his teens.[2] It was characteristic of the Archaic and Classical periods.[3] The influence of pederasty on Greek culture of these periods was so pervasive that it has been called "the principal cultural model for free relationships between citizens."[4]


Pederastic couples at a symposium, as depicted on a tomb fresco from the Greek colony of Paestum in Italy. The man on the right tries to kiss the youth with whom he is sharing a couch.[1]
Some scholars locate its origin in initiation ritual, particularly rites of passage on Crete, where it was associated with entrance into military life and the religion of Zeus.[5] It has no formal existence in the Homeric epics, and seems to have developed in the late 7th century BCE as an aspect of Greek homosocial culture,[6] which was characterized also by athletic and artistic nudity, delayed marriage for aristocrats, symposia, and the social seclusion of women.[7] Pederasty was both idealized and criticized in ancient literature and philosophy.[8] The argument has recently been made that idealization was universal in the Archaic period; criticism began in Athens as part of the general Classical Athenian reassessment of Archaic culture.[9]

Scholars have debated

Greece isn't Catholic.
 
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