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vridar.org | ||
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dissidentvoice.org
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| | | | | Faramarz Farbod: You have taught at Princeton University for four decades; you were the UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories in Israel (2008-2014); and you are the author of numerous books about global issues and international law. In preparation for this conversation, I have been reading your autobiography, Public Intellectual: | |
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bibleinterp.arizona.edu
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| | | | | [AI summary] The text explores the diverse beliefs about death and the afterlife in ancient Near Eastern cultures, particularly focusing on Jewish and early Christian traditions during the Second Temple Period. It highlights how various communities addressed theodicy, the problem of evil, by proposing that the righteous would be rewarded and the wicked punished in the afterlife. The discussion includes different views on resurrection, immortality, and eternal life, with references to key texts like the Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, and the New Testament. The text also notes the influence of Greek philosophy on Jewish thought, as seen in figures like Philo of Alexandria, and how these ideas shaped early Christian doctrines, particularly the belief in Jesus' resu... | |
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brewminate.com
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| | | | | The guild existed to serve a singular purpose: to train Apprentices. By Kristine Wilson-SlackWriter I became fascinated with | |
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www.standingforfreedom.com
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| | | President Trump's effort to end automatic U.S. citizenship for children born to illegal immigrants sets up a showdown between progressive globalism and common-sense constitutionalism. What does it mean to be an American? Who gets to be an American citizen? These are fundamental questions that America - and every serious nation - must be able to answer coherently if it wishes to endure the test of time and withstand the pressures of deracinated globalism presently bearing down on Western civilization. While they are crucially important questions for our moment, they definitely don't have simple or agreed-upon answers in America - for | ||