Diversity

Praise God By Not Destroying His Creations

God Created All

Genesis 1 In the beginning God created the heavens (so not one heaven but multiple) and the earth. God created the humans and animals on the earth. The bible is focused on the life on earth.

Colossians 1:16 For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him
Revelation 12:12 Therefore rejoice, you heavens and you who dwell in them!
Jeremiah 4:22 "For my people are fools; they do not know me. They are foolish children, without understanding. They are skilled in doing what is evil, but they do not know how to do what is good."

Human–Pig Chimeras: As It Was in the Days of Noah

In recent years, scientists have created human–pig chimeras by inserting human stem cells into pig embryos. Though these embryos were destroyed before birth, they contained both human and animal cells—fitting the biological definition of a chimera. 

Defenders of this research may downplay its significance, but the experiment represents a profound moral and theological crossing of boundaries.Scripture teaches that human beings are uniquely made in the image of God. 

Genesis 1:27 affirms that humanity stands apart from all other creatures, and God established clear limits between species, creating each "according to its kind." Deliberately mixing human biological material with animals challenges this divine order, treating what God has made sacred as mere biological matter. 

 The Bible provides a stark example of the consequences of violating creation. In Genesis 6:1–4, "the sons of God saw that the daughters of man were attractive. And they took as their wives any they chose… The Nephilim were on the earth in those days." 

God's judgment in Noah's time came not only because of human wickedness, but because His created order was being corrupted. Jesus warns that the last days will resemble those times: "As it was in the days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the Son of Man" (Matthew 24:37). 

Just as creation was defiled then, modern experiments that blur the line between human and animal reflect the same spirit of rebellion.This research is not merely a scientific curiosity—it is a blasphemous overreach that assumes a role belonging to God alone. By treating human life as material to be manipulated rather than as sacred image-bearers, such experiments directly challenge God's design and boundaries. Even if human cells make up only a small fraction of an embryo, the principle remains: humanity is not ours to redefine. 

Scripture affirms that humans belong to God, created in His image and accountable to Him, and any deliberate merging of human and animal life stands in stark opposition to His authority. 

This is more than a scientific question—it is a moral and spiritual warning, echoing the defilement of creation seen in the days of Noah, that humanity must heed. - by Jason Ashe

Just as there are in a military camp separate lines for each platoon and section,
men are placed on the earth so that each nation may be content with its own boundaries.
God, by his providence reduces to order that which is confused. After the Flood, humanity spoke one language. At Babel, God confused their language and scattered them across the earth. 

The LORD will bring a nation against you from far away… whose language you do not understand. (Deut. 28:49)

Our inheritance has been turned over to strangers, our homes to foreigners. (Lam. 5:2)

The sojourner who is among you shall rise higher and higher above you… he shall be the head, and you shall be the tail. (Deut. 28:43–44)

Why does the world pretend there is only One human race?

God did not create one new universal language. His gift was unity through diversity. Diversity is still needed to protect us from ourselves. That was the whole purpose of judgment at Babel, and that judgment is still in effect. 

When Satan fell from heaven to earth, he contaminated the earth. Everyone is confined to a specific location. We are quarantined, we all have our own kingdom. Just as there are in a military camp separate lines for each platoon and section, men are placed on the earth so that each nation may be content with its own boundaries. God, by his providence reduces to order that which is confused.

Acts 17:26 And hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation


No, we are not all the same. The liberal dream is devastating to reality. For example, during COVID 2020 we saw that no distinction was made between men and women (the reason why menopause, for example, can still hardly be treated properly). 

On the website of a hospital in the Netherlands, we read: "A fibroid occurs more often in women who do not (yet) have children and in women of African descent. A fibroid usually does not cause problems when becoming pregnant or during pregnancy." (source) In short, women of different racial backgrounds may also experience variations in how their bodies respond.

Deut 32:8 When the most High divided to the nations their inheritance, when he separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel.

A reminder for those who have been led to believe they have no culture, for those who feel hated or pushed aside: remember who you are.

We hear more and more claims like Jennifer Welch on Fox News, saying that "crusty old White people have no culture." But why would anyone want to destroy European culture—or the white population itself?

Cultures around the world hold beauty, and our differences should be cherished—so long as they are grounded in creativity, humanity, and integrity, not in practices like cannibalism or child brides.

It is precisely this legacy of creativity, courage, and intellect that we celebrate today. From the daring knights and visionary inventors to the philosophers, writers, and artists who shaped the world, their achievements remind us of the enduring pride and richness of European civilization.


An Ode to the Heroes of Western Civilization

Let it be known, across every screen and every fleeting word, that the white man—or rather, the inheritors of a rich tapestry of history—has shaped a world of ideas, invention, and beauty.

Raise your eyes to the stars, where Galileo peered with wonder, unraveling the heavens. Hear the quill of Shakespeare whispering the deepest truths of the human heart, and the pen of Charles Dickens illuminating the streets of London with compassion and insight.

Honor the philosophers: Socrates, whose questions pierced the veil of ignorance; Plato, whose visions built the foundations of thought; Descartes, Kant, and Hegel, whose minds charted reason itself. They showed the path from darkness to understanding, urging us to think, to question, to dream. 

Sing praise to the artists who made eternity visible: Rembrandt, whose light and shadow captured the soul; Michelangelo, whose hands liberated stone into divine form; Leonardo da Vinci, whose genius bridged art and science, imagination and observation.

Remember the warriors and the knights, bound by courage and code, defending lands and ideals, facing death to uphold honor. Their valor, chronicled in the histories and sagas, teaches that integrity and bravery are eternal virtues.

Celebrate the inventors, the dreamers who reshaped the human experience: Braille, who brought light to the blind; Gutenberg, who unleashed knowledge with movable type; Curie, Edison, and Newton, who turned curiosity into revelation. Every lever, every spark, every insight—a testament to human ingenuity.

Look also to the writers, the voices of conscience and imagination: Goethe, Byron, Shelley, and the enduring figures of English letters - Dickens, Shakespeare - whose words continue to teach, to console, and to ignite the mind.

To the architects of civilization, the thinkers, the creators, the builders of worlds both real and imagined: let this ode remind you of your heritage, your triumphs, your capacity to illuminate the dark corners of existence. Take pride in what was achieved, and may it inspire all generations yet to come.

For culture is not merely walls and dates, but the fire of thought, the courage to create, and the relentless pursuit of understanding. This is the legacy you inherit, the anthem of your civilization, and the proof that the human spirit—undaunted, inquisitive, and imaginative—cannot be denied.


We are all sinners

Across history, torture devices were engineered to extract confessions, punish crimes, or terrorize populations, often under the authority of states or religious courts. 

Medieval Europe produced some of the most infamous examples, including the rack, which stretched the body by pulling the limbs apart until joints dislocated, and the thumbscrew, which crushed fingers or toes between metal plates to inflict escalating pain. The pear of anguish, inserted into the mouth or other body openings and slowly expanded with a screw mechanism, was designed to mutilate while keeping the victim alive. 

The breaking wheel tied victims to a large wheel so their limbs could be shattered with heavy blows, leaving them to die publicly as a warning to others.Other civilizations developed devices that relied on prolonged suffering rather than immediate injury. 

In ancient Greece, the brazen bull was a hollow metal statue heated from below; victims were locked inside while fires roasted the metal, and the acoustics transformed their screams into sounds meant to resemble an animal's bellow. 

In parts of Asia, bamboo torture reportedly restrained a person over fast-growing shoots, which could pierce the body as they grew upward. Ancient Persia is associated with scaphism, where victims were trapped between two boats, force-fed honey and milk, and left to insects and the elements over days. These methods emphasized endurance and spectacle, using time itself as a weapon.What unites these devices is not only their cruelty but their symbolic function: they turned pain into a tool of power and fear. Torture chambers and execution squares were meant to be seen, reinforcing authority by demonstrating what happened to those who disobeyed. Over centuries, many societies formally outlawed such practices, replacing them with legal systems based on evidence rather than forced confession. Today, these devices survive mainly in museums and historical records as reminders of how technology and imagination were once used for domination rather than protection, and why modern human rights laws arose in direct response to that legacy. - source Question Antiquity

Love Your Race

God made us all wonderfully diverse. Long ago, humanity tried to unite everything into one, as with the Tower of Babel, only to learn that this was never meant to be. Every culture has its own beautiful languages, traditions, and clothing, and traveling reminds us how precious this variety truly is. True diversity means celebrating our differences, not forcing one way or one culture upon everyone.

A lion does not need to be a fish, and a bird does not have to learn it is an elephant. We are each blessed with unique gifts and talents. "If you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid." - Albert Einstein

Did you know that Africa is home to over 3,000 different ethnic groups, each with its own unique language and traditions?  

Be proud of who you are and where you come from.
Don't let greed blind you, lust betray you, or sick ideologies steal your identity.


"I am a red man. If the Great Spirit had desired me to be a white man he would have made me so in the first place. He put in your heart certain wishes and plans, in my heart he put other and different desires. Each man is good in his sight. It is not necessary for Eagles to be Crows." - Sitting Bull

To discriminate against one another is to pretend we are all the same. We are not. You cannot expect a snake to fly or a gorilla to swim. It is blasphemy, for God did not create the gorilla that way, nor the snake according to human desire. Do not project your own insecurities onto others; instead, praise one another for the talents you do have, and help each other nurture them. You cannot stick a peacock feather in your backside and pretend to be a peacock. We are all good in His sight. Be as you were blessed to be. Do not think yourself superior- your bloody history has proven that none of you are.

"Love for one's nation cannot turn a man into a wild animal that destroys everything and calls for revenge. It must ennoble him, so that his own nation gains the respect and love of others." - Alojzije Stepinac

Jesus the 'refugee'

No, Mary and Joseph were NOT refugees by modern standards. 

First, they weren't forced to flee until after Jesus' birth. Mary was not a "pregnant refugee" when she arrived in Bethlehem; the flight to Egypt occurred later. 

Second, this wasn't international flight. Both Judea and Egypt were provinces of the Roman Empire. Unlike modern refugees crossing national borders to escape different governments, they moved within the same political system, meaning they weren't refugees as most of us would define the term.
Third, even if termed "refugees" due to escaping violence (which I don't think most people today would), this doesn't mandate open borders. A nation's primary responsibility is the safety and prosperity of its own citizens through established laws, including laws that migrants need to abide by in order to become citizens.
Lastly, this narrative shifts the focus of Christmas away from the Messiah's birth and the hope of salvation, twisting the Nativity into a political tool. We won't let that happen. Mary and Joseph lived to exalt Jesus - and we will do the same this Christmas season. - Trevor Sheatz

The man who discovered DNA get cancelled for talking about DNA 

Nobel Prize-winning scientist James Watson, who helped discover the structure of DNA, was stripped of several honorary titles last week after his recent comments linking race and intelligence to genetics.