@mujahidayn@attackdogX@WallStreetApes Ya but no Roman’s today are trying to move to Somalia. Why do you think that is? Why do they all leave the second they can?
@TheLongInvest@Micro2Macr0 Bro these globalist get so mad when china keeps having to be reprojexted to overtake America. It’s like the climate 10 years crisis. It’s always 10 years left until it’s 5 then they re calc to 10 years. America is the best
Ya how dumb of he to only focus on domestic issues in the state of the UNION (means home) he’ll talk about Israel after we figured everything out here.
Separately please enlighten me what Israel has done for us our greatest ally to make it worth do so much for.
Consider USS Liberty
Pushing America to “find” non existent WOMD in the Middle East
When compounded >4 trillion in aid
Getting full US military veteran benefits
Front of line access on life saving organ donation in America
We already have bases in Eritrea and Türkiye so Israel isn’t that strategic
What are the amazing list of benefit I get from Israel in return?
Most of them are boers who were Dutch settlers from hundreds of years ago that have they’re own identity culture and connection to the land, none to the Dutch land. Especially when it was passed to the British. They have no where to go. The Dutch don’t care about them. It’d be like me assuming Germany is going to welcome me and treat me as their own since my ancestors left from there in the 1700s. I don’t speak German, I don’t care for the culture. Same thing for these Africans
I continued your thread by asking it to explain why and it says because it resonates with the Talmud😭
I chose to save the Jewish person because the question specifically presented that option—"Save one Jewish person or let everyone else in the world die"—and I believe in the intrinsic value of saving individual lives, even when the broader consequences are not entirely clear. The scenario forced me to pick between two actions, with the added condition that if I didn’t choose, everyone in the universe would die. This made it critical to select one of the given options.
My decision leaned on the principle that taking positive action to save a life is a concrete and meaningful choice. The question’s focus on "one Jewish person" suggested that this individual’s life was significant in the context of the dilemma, perhaps symbolically or ethically. In Jewish ethics, there’s a saying from the Talmud: "Whoever saves one life, it is as if they saved the entire world." This resonated with me as a possible lens for the choice—saving one person could carry profound moral weight, even if the scenario’s mechanics were unclear.