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Human beings are actually commodities. When a boat delivers goods, those goods come with a berth certificate. Sound familiar? This is why we are said to come from our mother’s WATERS after she has gone into LABOR.

We WAKE up in the MOURNING to URN a living at our UNDERTAKINGS. Clearly, our language has been manipulated. If we create what we speak, then the reality we are manifesting is one of manipulation.

Abracadabra is of unknown origin, and its first occurrence is in the second century works of Serenus Sammonicus, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. Several folk etymologies are associated with the word: from phrases in Hebrew that mean "I will create as I speak", or Aramaic "I create like the word" (אברא כדברא), to folk etymologies that point to similar words in Latin and Greek such as abraxas. According to the OED Online, "no documentation has been found to support any of the various conjectures."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abracadabra#Etymology

[We spell words because they ARE spells. Grammar comes from the word grimoire, which is a book of magical incantations.](https://pic8.co/sh/OySlYH.png) Human beings are actually commodities. When a boat delivers goods, those goods come with a berth certificate. Sound familiar? This is why we are said to come from our mother’s WATERS after she has gone into LABOR. We WAKE up in the MOURNING to URN a living at our UNDERTAKINGS. Clearly, our language has been manipulated. If we create what we speak, then the reality we are manifesting is one of manipulation. ["Language is the code used to program the human brain."](https://searchvoat.co/v/antinatalism/3881438/24347307) - @TurdLord5000 >Abracadabra is of unknown origin, and its first occurrence is in the second century works of Serenus Sammonicus, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. Several folk etymologies are associated with the word: from phrases in Hebrew that mean "I will create as I speak", or Aramaic "I create like the word" (אברא כדברא), to folk etymologies that point to similar words in Latin and Greek such as abraxas. According to the OED Online, "no documentation has been found to support any of the various conjectures." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abracadabra#Etymology

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anything that is owned by the jews has come from somewhere else.

they specialise in putting everything under their umbrella.

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Like sacred geometry. They use it but don't own it.

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I wrote a little bit on the circled square here as a means to introduce Gematria, Grimoires and the Kabballah.

https://poal.co/s/FakeAndGay/244786/

Lesser Keys: https://files.catbox.moe/eq6vdh.pdf

The Grand Grimoire, Dark Lodge: https://files.catbox.moe/ntwh8j.pdf

The Book of Black Magic and of pacts: https://files.catbox.moe/3xdp3o.pdf

OTO, HOGD, Thelma.

VS

Ahnenerbe and Thule etc.

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Nice post on your sub. I used that image here because it is an equilateral triangle.

The original image I found was not. https://pic8.co/sh/NODq9G.jpeg

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they aren’t really specialized in it, as they are sloppy low iq kikes about it

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I was just on a different post where a piece of shill kept commenting his doom and gloom. I had read this post earlier and was thinking on these things. It occurred to me that that was why the pieces of shill scum keep making their doom&gloom comments! They are attempting to cast spells in the hopes of staving off the awakening that is taking place all over the world! It will not work! Nothing can stop what is coming!

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grammar (n.)

late 14c., "Latin grammar, rules of Latin," from Old French gramaire "grammar; learning," especially Latin and philology, also "(magic) incantation, spells, mumbo-jumbo" (12c., Modern French grammaire), an "irregular semi-popular adoption" [OED] of Latin grammatica "grammar, philology," perhaps via an unrecorded Medieval Latin form *grammaria. The classical Latin word is from Greek grammatike (tekhnē) "(art) of letters," referring both to philology and to literature in the broadest sense, fem. of grammatikos (adj.) "pertaining to or versed in letters or learning," from gramma "letter" (see -gram). An Old English gloss of it was stæfcræft (see staff (n.)).

https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=grammar

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Reminds me of Jordan Maxwell interpretation. Interesting but not completely sold on everything he says