Counter-Currents
2,243 words
Part 2 of 2 (Part 1 here)
The Gospel of Christ
The Roman Army, led by Pompey, conquered Syria and the Levant in 63 BC. Less than three decades later, Julius Caesar conquered Egypt. The Romans indirectly ruled Judea through a client king, Herod the Great, an Idumean. As in Idumean, he was not racially Jewish and only nominally practiced the Jewish pseudo-religion.
To read this, get behind our Paywall
Enjoyed this article?
Be the first to leave a tip in the jar!
* * *
Counter-Currents has extended special privileges to those who donate at least $10/month or $120/year.
- Donors will have immediate access to all Counter-Currents posts. Everyone else will find that one post a day, five posts a week will be behind a “paywall” and will be available to the general public after 30 days. Naturally, we do not grant permission to other websites to repost paywall content before 30 days have passed.
- Paywall member comments will appear immediately instead of waiting in a moderation queue. (People who abuse this privilege will lose it.)
- Paywall members have the option of editing their comments.
- Paywall members get an Badge badge on their comments.
- Paywall members can “like” comments.
- Paywall members can “commission” a yearly article from Counter-Currents. Just send a question that you’d like to have discussed to [email protected]. (Obviously, the topics must be suitable to Counter-Currents and its broader project, as well as the interests and expertise of our writers.)
To get full access to all content behind the paywall, please visit our redesigned Paywall page.
Related
-
Charles Murray’s Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010
-
Notes on Plato’s Gorgias, Part 3: Philosophy’s Evil Twin
-
Notes on Plato’s Gorgias, Part 2: War and Battle
-
Notes on Plato’s Gorgias, Part 1: Setting the Scene
-
Queen Amanirenas: The Black Lady Who (Allegedly) Opened a Can of Whup-Ass on the Roman Empire, Part 2
-
Queen Amanirenas: The Black Lady Who (Allegedly) Opened a Can of Whup-Ass on the Roman Empire, Part 1
-
The Cultured Thug: Tito Perdue’s Reuben
-
Jamie Allman and Talk Radio — or, the Missouri Listener, Part 2
4 comments
Thank you for your detailed review and for bringing this book and the long history of Jewish perfidy it chronicles to our attention. Where can I order it? It does not seem to be in the Clemens & Blair catalog.
Also, did Dara Halley-James ever publish the book you linked to in the article?
One can buy the book on Amazon.com.
Did Dara Halley-James ever publish the book linked to in the article?
I don’t know.
No, we lost touch. She was a very security conscious writer. If she is out there still, I would love to hear from her.
All told, this is a good balance of reverence and the scholarly approach, which I don’t see together very often. The things they don’t discuss in Sunday school!
Other than that, there’s a lot they don’t talk about in history classes either. Even in more advanced presentations, I don’t often see the straight dope discussed plainly and concisely. For instance, I’d heard about a big dust-up in Alexandria back then, but it wasn’t clear what it was all about. I had no idea that this was part of a coordinated series of massacres to protect their foreign business interests while the Romans were at war in Mesopotamia. (I suppose that’s much in the same way that one hears about late 19th century pogroms in Russia, but it’s seldom explained that things got that way because the usual sort of berserk radicalinskis whacked Czar Alexander II.) Given how the Romans handled the Spartacus revolt, the Carthaginians, and the Gallic wars, I’m surprised that they didn’t expel all the empire’s Jews eastward, or worse. Treasonable shenanigans don’t win hearts and minds – maybe they should just stop doing that.
If you have Paywall access,
simply login first to see your comment auto-approved.
Note on comments privacy & moderation
Your email is never published nor shared.
Comments are moderated. If you don't see your comment, please be patient. If approved, it will appear here soon. Do not post your comment a second time.