White House Christmas decorations draw comparisons to 'The Shining', 'Handmaid's Tale'
The decorations drew immediate comparisons to the "blood hallway" sequence in the iconic horror film "The Shining," as well as at least one scene in "The Handmaid's Tale
One of the things that the Democrat Bigots are absolutely the best at is hating.
They won’t take a break from hating even for Christmas.
BTW everyone already gets it.
The Left hates Christians.
You can stop your constant reminders.
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Or the concept is inspired from the TV series 12 Monkeys.
I think it looks cool snd stylish and since the Romans (red) borrowed Dec 25th as the mask for Baal's birthday and devotion to the sun the color red is more appropriate since the tree decor celebration was from Baal worship.
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First off, Baal is the Moon god. Secondly, Baal is Babylonian, not Roman. Baal is the deity from the Mesopotamian Parthenon who lived in the Phallic or "black stone" of the Kaaba. Muhammad destroyed all idols in the Kaaba EXCEPT the Phallic stone, which all Muslims bow to 5 times daily.
Get your facts straight.
Canaanites had 2 main deities Baal and "Shalem" (*not the original transliteration).
Baal was the Harvest God often associated with the sun, thus the sun symbol behind the cross was a Baal cross predating Christianity borrowing it. Shalem= the deity symboled by
the Moon is why if you look up Shalem the deity is symboled as the Evening Star(Night) and
Baal's son (morning star) called Day.
Jesus is deemed Lucifer the morning star
(rev 22:16) the one overturned by the Night which is the legend in the holy city becoming the
city of peace(Shalom). THINK REAL HARD:
who is the Shiloh (one who's right it is) who overturns and removes the fallen prophet(morning star)? This is why Evening Star if you look it up is Michael.
NIGHT overturns the day. Baal is associated as the sun god sustenance of their HARVEST.
THe overturning is of thus archaic baal worship masked by a compiled image of a man made from many myths and figures, hence given a new borrowed birthday (Baal's birthday.)
About Muslim tradition & the black stone:
1) Koran also recants the Jewish legend on YeruShalem in the "Al Isra"-when the "the NIGHT"
ascends in JOURNEY to Jerusalem there will be peace.
2)the tradition in Meca is for Focus and highlighting something to be remembered for as they were told "the time the secret would be revealed"- thst message given to them by top messenger Michael (the Night), the centerpiece of the mystery (meteor)has Silica the focus of what powers the mystery box "too come" a secret revealed in it's time to come and the 7(Sheva)times rotation around the building reveals "the name", which is also in the original transliteration of the true name we call Shalem or Shelim.
So basically they were given the first and last name of the HaSheva (redeemer) as even found first and last name in DAN 10:20-21 and Dan 12:1-4
{
Baʿal Hammon was worshipped in the
Tyrian colony of
Carthage as their
supreme god. It is believed that this position developed in the 5th century bce following the severing of its ties to
Tyre following the 480 bce
Battle of Himera.
[40] Like Hadad, Baʿal Hammon was a
fertility god.
[41] Inscriptions about
Punic deities tend to be rather uninformative, though, and he has been variously identified as a
moon god[
citation needed] and as
Dagan, the
grain god.
[42] Rather than the bull, Baʿal Hammon was associated with the
ram and depicted with his horns. The archaeological record seems to bear out accusations in Roman sources that the Carthaginians
burned their children as human sacrifices to him. He was worshipped as Baʿal Karnaim ("Lord of the Two Horns"), particularly at an open-air sanctuary at Jebel Bu Kornein ("Two-Horn Hill") across the bay from Carthage. His consort was the goddess
Tanit.
[43]}
Baal - Wikipedia
{
Baal as a deity
When applied to a deity, the word Baal retained its connotation of ownership, and was, therefore, usually qualified. The documents speak, for instance, of the Baal of
Tyre, of Harran, of
Tarsus, of Herman, of Lebanon of Tamar (a river south of
Beirut), of
heaven. Moreover, several Baals enjoyed special attributions: there was a Baal of the Covenant (
Bá'ál Berîth (
Judges 8:33;
9:4); cf.
'El Berîth (ibid., ix, 46); one of the flies (
Bá'ál Zebub,
2 Kings 1:2, 3, 6, 16); there also probably was one of dance (
Bá'ál Márqôd); perhaps one of medicine (
Bá'ál Márphê), and so on. Among all the
Semites, the word, under one form or another (
Bá'ál in the West and South;
Bel in Assyria;
Bal,
Bol, or
Bel in Palmyra) constantly recurs to express the deity's lordship over the world or some part of it. Not were all the Baals — of different tribes, places, sanctuaries — necessarily conceived as identical; each one might have his own nature and his own name; the partly fish shaped Baal of Arvad was probably
Dagon; the Baal of Lebanon, possible Cid "the hunter"; the Baal of Harran, the moon-god; whereas in several Sabean Minaean cities, and in many
Chanaanite,
Phoenician, or Palmyrene shrines, the sun was the Baal worshipped, although Hadad seems to have been the chief Baal among the Syrians. The diversity of the
Old Testament intimates by speaking of
Baalim, in the plural, and specifying the singular
Baal either by the article or by the addition of another word.}
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Baal, Baalim