Anonymous ID: 3dbfaa July 22, 2023, 4:39 p.m. No.19224451   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4458

https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/nevada-woman-hired-hitman-bitcoin-kill-husband-gets-101568187

 

Women get away with murder through abortion, murder-by-hire, etc. because being the "fairer sex" means they tend towards hiding behind a 3rd party to commit certain crimes…thus bypassing the consequences of being the direct perpetrator. This needs to change. All this femicide shit about punishing men for 1st degree murder even in domestic crimes of passion is just another way this pendulum has gone way to far, especially when those feminist driven laws aren't required to be applied to women who kill their husbands…because "muh femicide is and epidemic"

Anonymous ID: 3dbfaa July 22, 2023, 6:18 p.m. No.19224910   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19224458

>Maybe you have a point, but a woman who would approve the killing of her unborn child is seriously messed up or under pressure from someone else.

agreed. millstone.

Anonymous ID: 3dbfaa July 22, 2023, 6:20 p.m. No.19224919   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4931

>>19224766

>Who killed Jesus?

>Cite your sources.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar%27s_Messiah

 

Caesar's Messiah is a 2005 book by Joseph Atwill that argues that the New Testament Gospels were written by a group of individuals connected to the Flavian family of Roman emperors: Vespasian, Titus and Domitian. The authors were mainly Flavius Josephus, Berenice, and Tiberius Julius Alexander,[1] with contributions from Pliny the Elder.[2] Although Vespasian and Titus had defeated Jewish nationalist Zealots in the First Jewish–Roman War of 70 AD, the emperors wanted to control the spread of Judaism and moderate its political virulence and continuing militancy against Rome. Christianity, a pacifist and pro-Roman authority religion, was their solution.

 

Atwill's Jesus mythicist theory contradicts the mainstream historical view[3] that while the Gospels include many mythical or legendary elements, these are religious elaborations added to the biography of a historical Jesus who did live in 1st-century Roman province of Judea,[4][5][6][7][8][9][10] was baptized by John the Baptist and was crucified by the order of the Roman Prefect Pontius Pilate.[11][12][13]