im just waiting for mass protests in dc i will walk there if have to
well i think were about to find out. all we need is a few elite families to go poof. murderers and rapists blush at what these people do
sounds like the nephillim.
thats a impossible question. i hope nobody had to do that
makes more sense than people watching reality tv. still wouldnt be in the hospital
oh hey jacob rothschild still trying the black pill? god isnt gonna be happy with you when he meets you lul
my aunt was gonna be in the towers that day works at red hat. wonder if its an act of god or if she knew ..
dont discount aliens so fast. altho they might not be aliens in the way you think they are
if youre refering to what i think you are refering to
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serpent_seed
Serpent seed, dual seed or two-seedline is a controversial religious belief which explains the biblical account of the fall of man by saying that the serpent in the Garden of Eden mated with Eve, and that the offspring of their union was Cain. This appears in early Gnostic writings such as the Gospel of Philip (c. 350). This teaching was explicitly rejected as heresy by Irenaeus[1] (c. 180), one of the early church fathers, and later by mainstream Christian theologians. According to The Celtic Church In Britain, by Leslie Hardinge, the early Celtic church taught the belief in the seduction of Eve by the serpent.
Notable proponents of the serpent-seed doctrine have included Daniel Parker (1781–1844),[2] William M. Branham (1909–1965),[3]:98 and Arnold Murray (1929–2014). This belief is also held by some adherents of the white supremacist theology known as Christian Identity, who claim that the Jews are descended from the serpent.[4][5] It is considered heresy by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches and by most Protestants.[6] The Unification Church, for example, teaches that Eve committed adultery with the devil, but does not teach the serpent-seed doctrine. A section of the Mormon Fundamentalist group Church of the Firstborn (LeBaron order) led by author and publisher Fred Collier out of Hanna, Utah adhere to a form of "two Seedline" doctrine.[7]
the second 2 sound great. the first 2 not so much
nephillim dna ?