>What exactly is this board fighting?
Human Nature.
"Thy Kingdom, cum."
The Song of Solomon is pornophilia.
FBI Director: "We need a FF. Ideas?"
Agent: "Best we can do is put a dress on a guy and let him win a women's foot race. That'll piss everyone off."
FBI Director: "Sounds effective. Need a volunteer?"
CCP = 33P
What's up with that?
When does a 'Temple' become a Prison?
"King" David was the father of "King" Solomon (King Solomon's mines) who had 700 wives and 300 concubines and whose Book of Pron is in the Bible as the Song of Solomon.
Religious freedom was the ruination of his "Kingdom".
Kinda like how the 1st Amendment neutered the Anglican Church's mind-control machine in early America.
Fuck NASHVILLE
Kobalt Blue
Add Cobalt, Chromium, and Tungsten to Steel to make Stainless Steel (SS)โฆor Blue Steel?
Kobalt Blue is for Immunity for Police Brutality?
Chromium, is for Police backdoors into your PC?
Tungsten, because "Watch yer tongue, boy?"
>What exactly is this board fighting?
Many fights over the meaning of "Thou Shalt not Kill" and other associated riddles.
Who Were the LEGENDS of 2023? (First Amendment Retrospective)
Celebrating the outstanding First Amendment Auditors of 2023, and all that they achieved. Activism, education, entertainmentโฆ what a great year!
This video showcases 17 individual Auditors in these categories:
โข LEGENDS in the Making (new auditors)
โข Modern-Day LEGENDS (established auditors)
โข Auditor of the YEAR (there can only be one!)
Featured Auditors (in alphabetical order):
@AuditingErieCounty716 Auditing Erie County
@AuditThem Audit Them
@bayareatransparency1722 Bay Area Transparency
@DeleteLawz1984 Delete Lawz
@elytpg Ely the People's Guy
@InlandAuditingMedia Inland Auditing Media (I.AM.FREE)
@leroytruth Leroy Truth Investigations
@Liberty_Troll Liberty Troll
@LongIslandAudit Long Island Audit
@NORCALCOPWATCH Norcal Copwatch
@Ontarioaudit Ontario Audit
@Iloveauditors Press NH Now
@RageGirlRadio Rage Girl Radio
@Surreal_Cam Surreal Cam
@TheJTownPress The J-Town Press
@TooApree Too Apree
@TTA42800 Tyrant Terminator Audits
CHAPTERS:
00:00 Introduction
02:08 Legends in the Making
16:54 Honor Roll
20:58 Modern-Day Legends
44:30 Honor Roll
48:41 Auditor of the Year
Showcase Audits
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ji_MasHWC-c
>Heter Iska
The subject of loans and interest in Judaism has a long and complex history. In the Hebrew Bible, the Book of Ezekiel classifies the charging of interest among the worst sins, denouncing it as an abomination and metaphorically portraying usurers as people who have shed the borrower's blood. (See Ezekiel 18:13[1] and 18:17.[2]) The Talmud dwells on Ezekiel's condemnation of charging interest.[3][4]
The Torah and Talmud encourage lending money without interest. But the halakha (Jewish law) that prescribes interest-free loans applies to loans made to other Jews, however not exclusively. Rabbi Isaac Abarbanel, however, declared that the acceptance of interest from non-Jews does not apply to Christians or Muslims, as their faith systems are also Abrahamic and therefore share a common ethical basis.[5]
The Biblical Hebrew terms for interest are neshekh (Hebrew: ื ืฉื), literally meaning a bite, and marbit or tarbit (ืืจืืืชโ/ืชืจืืืช), which refers to the lender's profit.[6] Neshekh refers to interest deducted in advance from the loaned money given to the borrower; the words marbit and tarbit refer to interest added to the amount that the borrower must repay.[7] The words marbit and tarbit, for the form of interest most familiar in modern times, became ribit (ืจืืืืช) in modern Hebrew.[citation needed] The latter word is cognate to the Arabic word riba used in the Quran.
Heter Iska and other evasions
Heter Iska
The Mishnah forbids arrangements where a supplier gives a product to a shopkeeper to sell in return for a portion of the profit, since it views the supplier as effectively loaning the product to the shopkeeper, while ignoring the fact that the shopkeeper takes on the risk of theft, depreciation, and accidents.[6] However, the Mishnah argues that it would not be counted as usury if the supplier employed the shopkeeper to sell the product, even if the wage was merely nominal, such as a single dry fig;[17] this mechanism to permit profit being gained by a lender, in a business transaction between lender and debtor, was formalised as the Heter Iska, literally meaning exemption contract, which worked in exactly the same way as the earlier Sumerian business partnership contract between lender and debtor. Like all contracts, there are sometimes disputes, and the parties may resort to secular courts, running the risk of the court imposing interest, or other conditions which are contrary to Halakhic principles.
Other evasions
There were also a number of methods of evading the anti-usury laws completely, identified in the Mishnah. One of the simplest methods was for a person to lend something to another and buy it back from them at a reduced price[6] (the purchase, of course, is independent of the loan); the Mishnaic regulations do not prevent the lender from requiring the full value of the loaned thing to be returned and so allows the lender to make a profit from the difference between the reduced price and the actual worth of the loaned thing.[6]
Another significant loophole in the law was the biblical permission to charge interest on loans to non-Israelites, since this made it possible for an Israelite to charge interest on a loan to another Israelite, by making the loan through a third party who was not an Israelite; interest could be charged on the loan to the non-Israelite, who could then loan the money to the other Israelite at a similar rate of interest.[18][19]
See also
Money changer
Shmita (seventh/last year of the Jewish agricultural cycle after which debts were forgiven)
Yovel ("Jubilee" year at end of seven agricultural cycles)
Prozbul (a Jewish writ making loans ineligible for cancellation)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loans_and_interest_in_Judaism
Look, Mary A posted a selfie too.