Reading the notes from the last bread, I noticed something about Denver. It reminded me about a drop about some underground "facilities," in Denver airport. Just saying.
6 Strange Conspiracy Theories Surrounding the Denver Airport
By Kate Erbland |Jun 8, 2023
On February 28, 1995, the Denver International Airport (DIA) opened its doors and its runways to the public after falling over a year behind schedule and spending a reported $2 billion more than its original budget had dictated.
The massive new airport didn’t just take up lots of time and money—it also took up a lot of space: More than two decades later, it’s still the largest airport in the United States by area (53 square miles) with the longest commercial use runway available in the country (runway 16R/34L is 16,000 feet long—approximately three miles). DIA replaced Denver’s old Stapleton International Airport, which was plagued by problems (runways too close together, a general lack of space for necessary expansion), and its creation helped meet some basic needs that Stapleton simply couldn’t. Denver needed more room to serve the various airlines that had made—and wanted to make—the Mile High City a hub of operations, and DIA did just that.
That all sounds normal enough, right? A city needed a new airport, and it got one, even though it took a lot more money and time than originally planned, as so often happens with large-scale public works (although there is some debate as to who actually funded the airport, but we’ll get to that). But people have wondered if DIA—giant, expensive, strange DIA—is home to something far more sinister … like a conspiracy. Or a lot of conspiracies.
https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/61740/5-weird-conspiracy-theories-surrounding-denver-international-airport
Yeah, what the other poster said, 5280 in a mile. What you been smokin'?
Jesus Himself called them hypocrites.
Matthew 23:23
23 “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You give a tenth of your spices—mint, dill and cumin. But you have neglected the more important matters of the law—justice, mercy and faithfulness. You should have practiced the latter, without neglecting the former.
I noticed that too. Guess engrish isn't his strong point.
Apparently they don't even really read the Torah these days, mainly the Talmud, which was just written mostly by dudes in exile for NOT obeying God. They didn't want to hear the actual prophets like Isaiah, Jeremiah etc.
Isaiah 30:10
“Which say to the seers, See not; and to the prophets, Prophesy not unto us right things, speak unto us smooth things, prophesy deceits:”
Torah is pretty much only the first five books of Moses. The Tanakh is the whole old testament.
The Tanakh.
Or Isaias. Lots of ways to spell it depending on what language you are using.
יְשַׁעְיָהוּ
You realize this is a research chan right? Go research and find out for yourself.
Of course, the old testament was written in Hebrew and translated into Greek by the best Hebrew scholars of the day in Ptolemaic Egypt. Greek empire days. Most of the Jews at the time spoke Greek and not Hebrew. Think of it like Catholics and Latin. Mass in Latin but nobody really spoke Latin anymore. Same thing.
That is why the old testament is called the Septuagint. It means 70. Apparently there were about 70 Hebrew scholars who did the translation.
That's because at first they were separate writing over time that were collected into one codex.
Moses wrote the first five books. Then over the centuries others added to it. David, Isaiah, and many others. You sound like you are more interested in trying to discredit the bible than anything else.
Not always, God wrote it in such a way that it had to be understandable to all ages of time. So He uses metaphor often, but NOT always, sometimes it has multiple layers of truth.