HAPPY RUNNING ALL THE SNAKES( BLACK AFRIKAN MOORS) OUT OF IRELAND DAY

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Think I'll drink some Irish whiskey and beer since we taught them how to ferment food into alchohol
 

Mess World

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The snakes weren't the British cacs?

Someone school me on history brehs and brehettes

The snake is the serpent order the Druids

The Naga cobra found on pharoah's crowns to East Asian Buddhism, the dragon

The kundalini The awakening , death and rebirth, eternal life

The true reptilian , black folks
 

George's Dilemma

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The snakes weren't the British cacs?

Someone school me on history brehs and brehettes


The Day of St Patrick and the myth of snakes being cast out of Ireland

St Patrick banishes the snakes from Ireland
The absence of snakes in Ireland gave rise to the legend that they had all been banished by St. Patrick chasing them into the sea after they attacked him during a 40-day fast he was undertaking on top of a hill. However, all evidence suggests that post-glacial Ireland never had snakes. Water has surrounded Ireland since the end of the last glacial period, preventing snakes from slithering over; before that, it was blanketed in ice and too chilly for the cold-blooded creatures. Scholars believe the snake story is an allegory for St Patrick’s eradication of pagan ideology.

The snake was the symbol of the Celts and their spiritual elite, the Druids - who inhabited the island of Ireland long before the arrival of Christianity in the 5th century AD. When Patrick arrived, the only “pesky and dangerous creatures” that St Patrick wished to cast away were the native Celts.

Since snakes often represent evil in literature, "when Patrick drives the snakes out of Ireland, it is symbolically saying he drove the old, evil, pagan ways out of Ireland [and] brought in a new age," said classics professor Philip Freeman of Luther College in Iowa.

- See more at: The Day of St Patrick and the myth of snakes being cast out of Ireland


St. Patrick's Day | How That Whole Snakes Thing Got Started - CraveOnline


So how did the whole snake thing get started? Well, since modern readers seem to be uncomfortable with poetry and metaphor, the snakes in question tend to be pictured as literal snaked. Little scaly animals. In more ancient texts, St. Patrick's driving of snakes from Ireland was actually his ability to drive evil out. Serpents have long been a symbol of corruption in ancient literature (See: Genesis. Not the band), and St. Patrick's ability to spread the peaceful word of Jesus was seen as an expulsion of evil. Or snakes.

As for the shamrock thing, the legend says that St. Patrick used them to describe the Holy Trinity. Three Gods, three cloverleaves. That one is pretty much still in practice today. As for green beer, there is no mention in any legend of St. Patrick's capacity for drinking great quantities. That's a tradition that started as recently as the 1970s, and mainly in America.

But the modern traditions have stuck, and we can think of no reason to curtail them. If you're of age, try some fine beers (stay away from the green stuff). If you want a nice Irish drink, try some Bushmills. Wear green. Pinch friends. Wear shamrocks. Celebrate your Irish heritage, no matter how tenuous. But know that the snake thing was never really a thing.


Read more at St. Patrick's Day | How That Whole Snakes Thing Got Started - CraveOnline



Myself personally, I don't view the story in a racial concept (Moors or whatever), but more of a religious thing. Christianity spread faster and farther via the sword than any amount of preaching could have ever done.
 

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The Day of St Patrick and the myth of snakes being cast out of Ireland

St Patrick banishes the snakes from Ireland
The absence of snakes in Ireland gave rise to the legend that they had all been banished by St. Patrick chasing them into the sea after they attacked him during a 40-day fast he was undertaking on top of a hill. However, all evidence suggests that post-glacial Ireland never had snakes. Water has surrounded Ireland since the end of the last glacial period, preventing snakes from slithering over; before that, it was blanketed in ice and too chilly for the cold-blooded creatures. Scholars believe the snake story is an allegory for St Patrick’s eradication of pagan ideology.

The snake was the symbol of the Celts and their spiritual elite, the Druids - who inhabited the island of Ireland long before the arrival of Christianity in the 5th century AD. When Patrick arrived, the only “pesky and dangerous creatures” that St Patrick wished to cast away were the native Celts.

Since snakes often represent evil in literature, "when Patrick drives the snakes out of Ireland, it is symbolically saying he drove the old, evil, pagan ways out of Ireland [and] brought in a new age," said classics professor Philip Freeman of Luther College in Iowa.

- See more at: The Day of St Patrick and the myth of snakes being cast out of Ireland


St. Patrick's Day | How That Whole Snakes Thing Got Started - CraveOnline


So how did the whole snake thing get started? Well, since modern readers seem to be uncomfortable with poetry and metaphor, the snakes in question tend to be pictured as literal snaked. Little scaly animals. In more ancient texts, St. Patrick's driving of snakes from Ireland was actually his ability to drive evil out. Serpents have long been a symbol of corruption in ancient literature (See: Genesis. Not the band), and St. Patrick's ability to spread the peaceful word of Jesus was seen as an expulsion of evil. Or snakes.

As for the shamrock thing, the legend says that St. Patrick used them to describe the Holy Trinity. Three Gods, three cloverleaves. That one is pretty much still in practice today. As for green beer, there is no mention in any legend of St. Patrick's capacity for drinking great quantities. That's a tradition that started as recently as the 1970s, and mainly in America.

But the modern traditions have stuck, and we can think of no reason to curtail them. If you're of age, try some fine beers (stay away from the green stuff). If you want a nice Irish drink, try some Bushmills. Wear green. Pinch friends. Wear shamrocks. Celebrate your Irish heritage, no matter how tenuous. But know that the snake thing was never really a thing.


Read more at St. Patrick's Day | How That Whole Snakes Thing Got Started - CraveOnline



Myself personally, I don't view the story in a racial concept (Moors or whatever), but more of a religious thing. Christianity spread faster and farther via the sword than any amount of preaching could have ever done.

It's history , blacks were in Ireland at one point. Watch the BBC which is British on Ireland they go to a ancient settlement in Ireland and find African fossils
 

George's Dilemma

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It's history , blacks were in Ireland at one point. Watch the BBC which is British on Ireland they go to a ancient settlement in Ireland and find African fossils


Its history, that much I agree with you, but still its largely if not entirely irrelevant when it comes to modern day racial inequities. The average Irish American is clueless about their own historical ancestry and St Patty's day is just an excuse to get faded and fukk. Moors and Druids probably sounds like something Mulder and Skully should be investigating to them.

I dont see the need to draw upon that part of history as a sort of validation of Black pride and self worth. Its similar to the way some brehs obsess over Egypt to the point of rewriting that history in their minds thinking all ancient Egyptians were Black when the truth is more nuanced. Egypt being in Africa, along with some hieroglyphic images being dark doesnt mean all ancient Egyptians were Black even though a significant portion were. That obsession with the racial makeup of ancient Egypt and the Moors relationship with Ireland and St. Patrick is irrelevant in modern times. There's no points to be gained other than knowledge which is fine. But to use that knowledge as a smug fukk you to cacs, is unfruitful to me.
 

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Its history, that much I agree with you, but still its largely if not entirely irrelevant when it comes to modern day racial inequities. The average Irish American is clueless about their own historical ancestry and St Patty's day is just an excuse to get faded and fukk. Moors and Druids probably sounds like something Mulder and Skully should be investigating to them.

I dont see the need to draw upon that part of history as a sort of validation of Black pride and self worth. Its similar to the way some brehs obsess over Egypt to the point of rewriting that history in their minds thinking all ancient Egyptians were Black when the truth is more nuanced. Egypt being in Africa, along with some hieroglyphic images being dark doesnt mean all ancient Egyptians were Black even though a significant portion were. That obsession with the racial makeup of ancient Egypt and the Moors relationship with Ireland and St. Patrick is irrelevant in modern times. There's no points to be gained other than knowledge which is fine. But to use that knowledge as a smug fukk you to cacs, is unfruitful to me.

When they take all the knowledge we have had and turned it into the bible to brain wash is is when I have to draw the line. They say all the books that they didn't use in the bible would circle the earth . It was all in the library of Alexandria . What they did was take out all the alchemy and magic and use that God is destructive in the bible . They left out 99.9 of the literature
 
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