
The American taxpayer just gave this organization a $10 million grant so it could fund messaging and goals like
“defending Jerusalem as the moral capital of the West”
And
“…the answer to this challenge is to believe again that being Jewish is the most important thing in the world… and that defending Jewish civilization is the only way to advance the cause of human liberty and human dignity…”
__________
He is expressing clan and tribal values, much like the Somali clan & tribal values we are witnessing in the Minnesota scams.
USA and the West were built on a civilization that had ended clans, stopped them from perpetuating themselves through strict marriage laws against marrying near kin.
This fostered the high-trust (of strangers) that characterizes Western civilization.
This is also the reason Westerners have so much trouble understanding how and why clans and tribes work and why they almost always become parasitic in a high-trust society.
In a generous society such as USA and Europe, a parasitic clan will tend to hate the host and thus feel blissfully justified in scamming as much as they can while also destroying everything they touch.
A conspicuous exception to this rule are the Amish, who live by a moral and ethical code which prohibits parasitism and is highly respected by almost everyone who lives near them or knows anything about them.
Jews could easily earn immense respect from the entire world if they would kneel at the feet of the Amish and learn to behave more like them. ABN
The regulation of consanguineous marriages within the Catholic Church evolved over time, with early foundations rooted in classical Roman law, which already prohibited certain degrees of kinship for social and inheritance reasons. The Christianization of the West introduced theological dimensions to these laws, but the Church did not initially enforce strict prohibitions on cousin marriage. By the early 9th century, the Western Church had expanded the prohibited degrees of consanguinity from four to seven, adopting a new method of calculation that counted generations back to a common ancestor. This expansion marked a significant development in canon law, though it was not a single legislative act but a gradual process. The formal codification of these rules was further refined at the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215, which reduced the prohibited degrees from seven to four and established the method of calculating consanguinity still used today.




