Anonymous ID: aa19c5 July 19, 2018, 2:59 a.m. No.2209126   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2208893

 

>You have to remember, the ones posting the hate are actually the Libs.

>If Q was here, he'd tell them to get lost.

 

I don't think it's Q responsibility to call them all out on here.

It's your too, Anon.

Cleaning house is all of our duty.

Q is here to drop Intel.

Not wipe asses :)

So pucker up autists, and grab a hefty handful of TP.

You'll need it…

>WWG1WGA

Anonymous ID: aa19c5 July 19, 2018, 3:08 a.m. No.2209166   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2209146

 

>I'm English. Speak English to me cunt or fuck off.

Speaks English into your cunt

Sorry… all I'm hearing are echoes!

(Apologies… I had to, kek)

Anonymous ID: aa19c5 July 19, 2018, 4:47 a.m. No.2209477   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2209452

 

From my understanding I don't believe that's entirely accurate.

The Eye of Ra is different from the Eye of Horus.

They are very different.

Horus is the inverse of Osiris, Horus in life and Osiris in death.

Set was his rival, and sought to kill Horus.

Thoth sought to balance the equation as a mediator.

The Eye of Horus is attempted to be corrupted or killed by the Cabal.

It is something they parade in plain sight if they control, kill or corrupt.

 

Some copy / pasta;

 

The Pyramid Texts (c. 2400–2300 BC) describe the nature of the pharaoh in different characters as both Horus and Osiris. The pharaoh as Horus in life became the pharaoh as Osiris in death, where he was united with the other gods. New incarnations of Horus succeeded the deceased pharaoh on earth in the form of new pharaohs.[5]

 

The lineage of Horus, the eventual product of unions between the children of Atum, may have been a means to explain and justify pharaonic power. The gods produced by Atum were all representative of cosmic and terrestrial forces in Egyptian life. By identifying Horus as the offspring of these forces, then identifying him with Atum himself, and finally identifying the Pharaoh with Horus, the Pharaoh theologically had dominion over all the world.

 

The notion of Horus as the pharaoh seems to have been superseded by the concept of the pharaoh as the son of Ra during the Fifth Dynasty.[6]

 

Horus was born to the goddess Isis after she retrieved all the dismembered body parts of her murdered husband Osiris, except his penis, which was thrown into the Nile and eaten by a catfish,[7][8] or sometimes depicted as instead by a crab, and according to Plutarch's account used her magic powers to resurrect Osiris and fashion a golden phallus[9] to conceive her son (older Egyptian accounts have the penis of Osiris surviving).

 

Once Isis knew she was pregnant with Horus, she fled to the Nile Delta marshlands to hide from her brother Set, who jealously killed Osiris and who she knew would want to kill their son.[10] There Isis bore a divine son, Horus.

 

Since Horus was said to be the sky, he was considered to also contain the sun and moon.[citation needed] It became said[by whom?] that the sun was his right eye and the moon his left, and that they traversed the sky when he, a falcon, flew across it. Later, the reason that the moon was not as bright as the sun was explained by a tale, known as The Contendings of Horus and Seth. In this tale, it was said that Set, the patron of Upper Egypt, and Horus, the patron of Lower Egypt, had battled for Egypt brutally, with neither side victorious, until eventually the gods sided with Horus.