Anonymous ID: 4f5cba Jan. 30, 2020, 12:20 p.m. No.7968141   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8162

Anons often dig up the Khazar empire as the source of Ashkenazi Jews

But they never dig into who the Khazars were

And where they came from

hazars were a Turkic tribe who ruled over a collection of other tribes

Many of whom were also Turkic

But some were Aryan and some were other miscellaneous Finno-Ugrian people

Like the Magyar

Only the royal tribe, the ruling class, officially converted

And many of the Jews in Khazaria were diaspora Judeans

Who wandered east into Persia and then north.

 

But it is the Turks who are more interesting

Monotheistic worshippers of Tengri like their neighbors to the East

The Mongols

And further east, the peoples of North America

So why do the history books say that monotheism was invented in Israel?

 

We think of Turks as Turkey

But the Osmanlar who created Turkey

Were Oghuz Turks from Turkmenistan

One of 24 clans descended from a hero named Oghuz

The Kayi clan, in fact.

Here is their Tamga, or clan symbol, which they marked on anything of value

To the Turkic peoples, tamga is important, because it is a record of kinship and genealogy

Here is the genealogy of Oghuz from various sources

And a closeup so you can see the Kayi clan at the top

 

In the Magyar language, House of Kayi would be Kayiev'

In other words Kiev

In Russian Kum means godfather (or close relative)

Cuman turks used to rule almost all of the territory of Ukraine and the Caucasus

 

Are you interested in Jason Bourne, Treadstone and MKUltra supersoldiers?

The Turks invented this with the Yanichari (Janissaries)

 

Could it be that the Khazar roots of the Cabal are NOT THE JEWS?

Anonymous ID: 4f5cba Jan. 30, 2020, 12:23 p.m. No.7968177   🗄️.is 🔗kun

You all noticed the…

Rocket's Red Glare

I hope. It was in the statement by Sen. Lindsey Graham

He said scintilla several times.

 

Did You Know?

Scintilla comes directly from Latin, where it carries the meaning of "spark" - that is, a bright flash such as you might see from a burning ember. In English, however, our use of "scintilla" is restricted to the figurative sense of "spark" - a hint or trace of something that barely suggests its presence. The Latin scintilla is related to the verb "scintillare," which means "to sparkle" and is responsible for our verb "scintillate" ("to sparkle or gleam," literally or figuratively). In an odd twist, "scintilla" underwent a transposition of the "c" and the "t" (a linguistic phenomenon known as metathesis) to create the Vulgar Latin form stincilla, which is believed to be an ancestor of our word stencil.