January 29, 2015 SnyderTalk—Islamic India: The biggest holocaust in World History… whitewashed from history books

1--Intro Covering Israel and ME

“Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: may they prosper who love you.” Psalm 122: 6

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2--SnyderTalk Lead Headline for use

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Jew News—Islamic India: The biggest holocaust in World History… whitewashed from history books:

The only similar genocide in the recent past was that of the Jewish people at the hands of the Nazis.

The holocaust of the Hindus in India was of even greater proportions, the only difference was that it continued for 800 years, till the brutal regimes were effectively overpowered in a life and death struggle by the Sikhs in the Panjab and the Hindu Maratha armies in other parts of India in the late 1700’s.

We have elaborate literary evidence of the World’s biggest holocaust from existing historical contemporary eyewitness accounts. The historians and biographers of the invading armies and subsequent rulers of India have left quite detailed records of the atrocities they committed in their day-to-day encounters with India’s Hindus.

These contemporary records boasted about and glorified the crimes that were committed – and the genocide of tens of millions of Hindus, mass rapes of Hindu women and the destruction of thousands of ancient Hindu / Buddhist temples and libraries have been well documented and provide solid proof of the World’s biggest holocaust.

Quotes from modern historians

Dr. Koenraad Elst in his article “Was There an Islamic Genocide of Hindus?” states:

“There is no official estimate of the total death toll of Hindus at the hands of Islam. A first glance at important testimonies by Muslim chroniclers suggests that, over 13 centuries and a territory as vast as the Subcontinent, Muslim Holy Warriors easily killed more Hindus than the 6 million of the Holocaust. Ferishtha lists several occasions when the Bahmani sultans in central India (1347-1528) killed a hundred thousand Hindus, which they set as a minimum goal whenever they felt like punishing the Hindus; and they were only a third-rank provincial dynasty.

The biggest slaughters took place during the raids of Mahmud Ghaznavi (ca. 1000 CE); during the actual conquest of North India by Mohammed Ghori and his lieutenants (1192 ff.); and under the Delhi Sultanate (1206-1526).“

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To continue reading, click here.

SnyderTalk Comment: The history of Islam is littered with horrific atrocities.  The Hindus in India are one of them but there are many others, and the butchery continues to this day.  Islamist terrorists are trying to wipe out the entire Christian population in North and West Africa, and they are doing the same thing in Iraq and Syria.  Additionally, they have brazenly declared their intent to “wipe Israel of the map”.

If you dare to question Islamist philosophies or their underpinnings, you are considered the enemy no matter where you live.  Islamists have the same attitude toward each other.  Competing factions fight to the death for control of their religion.  I’ve called it the ultimate game of Last Man Standing.  As peculiar as this is, Islamist terrorists have a friend in the White House.

Islamism is a problem that we can’t continue to ignore.  We must confront it and defeat it.  There is no other option.

That’s the lesson Israel has learned over the years; it’s the reason that Israel has taken a strong stand against Islamist terrorists who routinely test Israel’s resolve; and it’s what the whole world should be doing.  But the Obama administration thinks otherwise.

As usual, Obama thinks he knows best, and he won’t consider the possibility that he is wrong.  He won’t even negotiate with Republicans in the House and Senate, but he insists that Israel make unilateral concessions to Palestinians who have vowed to destroy Israel.  Go figure.

Now we learn that Obama is sending his attack dogs to Israel: see “Obama’s campaign team arrives in Israel to defeat Netanyahu”.

Obama can’t abide Prime Minister Netanyahu addressing Congress and telling them the truth about Islamist extremists—particularly those in Iran who want nuclear weapons that they can use to annihilate Israel.  He would rather spend his time and money trying to unseat Netanyahu for doing what he should be doing.

They say that a year in politics is an eternity.  Well, I have another take on it: two more years of Obama seems like an eternity.  I’m not picking on Obama, mind you.  I’m just telling the truth.

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13--Perspectives 2

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Gil Troy: European no-go zones become conversational no-go zones—For over two weeks now, politically correct bullies have been making yet another legitimate topic off-limits. Anyone who dares suggest that some Muslim-dominated neighborhoods in Europe are hostile to non-Muslims risks mass mockery. I’m not a Europeanist, a sociologist, a criminologist or an urban anthropologist, but I know an intellectual mugging when I see one: Muslim “no-go zones” are becoming conversational no-go zones. Such thought suppression is all too familiar. In the 1960s, Daniel Patrick Moynihan dared to admit that the black family was in crisis. In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and pope John Paul dared to suggest that the Soviet Union might fall. In the 1990s, Dan Quayle dared to question encouraging single parenthood by attacking the television character Murphy Brown’s decision to become an unwed mother. Each time, these truth-telling deviants from the conventional wisdom were called not just wrong, but stupid and racist. Today, the Soviet Union no longer exists, and many acknowledge the growing gap, overall, between kids raised in single-parent homes and traditional homes, black or white.

Octavia Nasr: The maddening reality of the Middle East—The Middle East’s political landscape, in contrast with how it was four years ago, is unfathomable. Change is always to be expected, but today’s reality is chaotic and maddening. The broken ties within communities mirror the shattered communication and people’s inability to relate to one another, let alone accept their differences or mend their rifts. The only guarantee we have at this point is that the dramatic free fall some Arab countries are undergoing is unavoidable and even necessary. Let things fall where they may to see how and with whom the future will rise from there.

Burak Bekdil: Justice, Erdogan Style— Shortly before parliamentary elections in 2011, a prominent opposition deputy visited Sakarya, a province not far away from Istanbul. Muharrem Ince, from the main opposition Republican People’s Party [CHP], hopped on a minibus and made a speech to locals for about 15 minutes. Later, Ince would learn that a prosecutor had charged him with “blocking the city traffic by speaking on a minibus and attempting to wear down the government.” The prosecutor was asking parliament to remove his immunity so that he could stand trial. That never happened, but the indictment against the opposition deputy was the precursor to how Turkey’s justice system would evolve and become an instrument to suppress any kind of dissent.

SnyderTalk Comment: I have made no attempt to hide my consternation about Turkey under Erdogan.  I fear for the Turkish people, and I am equally concerned about the damage Erdogan is doing around the world.

Khaled Abu Toameh: How Iran Is Encircling the Gulf and Israel— As U.S. President Barack Obama continues to seek a negotiated deal on Iran’s nuclear program, the Iranians have been working hard in recent weeks to infiltrate the Palestinian arena and re-establish ties with their erstwhile ally, Hamas. Emboldened by Obama’s obsession with the nuclear negotiations, which are set to resume next month, Iran’s leaders apparently trust that the Obama Administration is prepared to turn a blind eye to whatever they do. So the Iranians are apparently feeling free to meddle once again in the internal affairs of the Palestinians, to strengthen their hand still further in the Middle East. With bases in Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iraq, Iran has surrounded Saudi Arabia and all the oil fields of the Persian Gulf. This encirclement can be comfortably backed with Iran’s ongoing nuclear weapons program.

Lee Smith: Is Iran Behind the Murder of Alberto Nisman?— After publicly speculating about what drives a man to kill himself, Argentina’s President Cristina Kirchner now says that Alberto Nisman, the special prosecutor into the 1994 bombing of the Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires that killed 85 people and wounded hundreds, didn’t commit suicide after all. “In Argentina, as in all places, not everything is what it appears to be, and vice versa,”. Kirchner said in a statement posted on her Facebook and Twitter accounts. According to Kirchner, the 51-year-old Nisman, who was found Sunday evening in his apartment with a gunshot wound to the head, was killed to make her look bad. The way she sees it, his investigation into the AMIA case wrongly implicated her in a cover-up to protect the Islamic Republic of Iran, and his murder just as wrongly implicates her as part of a larger conspiracy to silence him. Maybe Kirchner did have something to do with Nisman’s murder, maybe it was a faction in the Argentine intelligence community that his investigation also pointed at. But there’s another player here that shouldn’t be overlooked—Iran.

Harvey Morris: ISIS Still Strong Despite Major Defeat in Kobani—Kurdish fighters may have declared victory in a 134-day battle for Kobani and described it as the beginning of the end for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) but the group continues to hold large parts of both countries and the countryside that surrounds Kobani. The loss of Kobani is certainly a setback for the jihadists, who first targeted the strategic crossing point between Syria and Turkey last year, long before the town took on symbolic status as a focus of resistance against the seemingly unstoppable insurgents. With the support of air strikes by the U.S. and its allies, and the backing of Iraqi Kurdish armored troops who joined the fight in November, the Syrian Kurds gnawed away at ISIS positions to secure the last occupied pockets of a shattered town whose civilian population mostly fled months ago.

Jonathan Edelman: Russia in crisis: Can Putin survive?—Putin’s Russia seems to be under dire threat. Ukrainian sanctions by the European Union and the United States coupled with the plunge of oil prices could cost the Russian economy as much as $130 billion or $140 billion this year. This will likely push the Russian economy into recession and make its debt rating “junk.” The open contempt shown by Western leaders – “bored kid in the back of the classroom” (US President Barack Obama), “only a regional power” (Obama), “Hitlerite” (Hillary Clinton”) and ”thuggish, dishonest and reckless” (British Ambassador to the United States Peter Westmacott ) – reflect the depth of Western hatred of Putin. Russia seems vulnerable to following the path of the color revolutions that have overthrown authoritarian rulers in the former Soviet republics of Georgia (2003 Rose Revolution), Ukraine (2004 Orange Revolution) and Kyrgyzstan (2005 Tulip Revolution) and helped dissolve the Soviet Union (1991).

Elizabeth Dickinson: Can Saudi Arabia’s New King Manage a Restive Middle East?— We are passing startling days,” Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah declared in February 2012, candidly revealing his astonishment at events across the Middle East. In the year prior to the king’s statement, the monarch had lost close allies in Tunisia and Egypt. Libya’s Muammar al-Qaddafi — never trusted by the kingdom — was also gone. Riyadh was pushing for the downfall of another foe, President Bashar al-Assad in Syria, who was in the midst of an increasingly bloody crackdown on his own citizens. When Russia and China vetoed a U.N. resolution calling for Assad to leave power, the Saudi king could hold his tongue no more. “[T]he event that took place foretells nothing good,” he predicted. King Abdullah, who sought nothing more fervently during his reign than stability, lived his final days in one of the modern Middle East’s most turbulent periods.

Mohamad Bazzi: King Salman’s War— In March 2009, the Obama administration’s top counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, met with Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah at his palace in Riyadh. Brennan requested on President Barack Obama’s behalf that the kingdom reach out to then-Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. Brennan asked the Saudis to appoint an ambassador to Baghdad, and to invite the Iraqi leader to Riyadh. Abdullah refused, saying that al-Maliki had “opened the door for Iranian influence in Iraq” and had lied to him. “I don’t trust this man,” Abdullah said, according to a classified U.S. cable disclosed by WikiLeaks. “He is an Iranian agent.” Since his death on Friday at age 90 and his succession by his half-brother Salman, Abdullah has been praised as a cautious reformer and shrewd politician who shaped Saudi policy for nearly 20 years, after his predecessor had a stroke and Abdullah ruled as crown prince in the king’s name. Abdullah introduced modest political reforms, shaped a muscular foreign policy and oversaw economic expansion fueled by periods of booming oil prices. But Abdullah also presided over a proxy war with Saudi Arabia’s regional rival, Iran—a series of battles in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon and Bahrain—that have defined the Middle East since the United States invaded Iraq in 2003. He also oversaw Saudi attempts to choke off revolutionary momentum in the region since the Arab uprisings of 2011. The House of Saud was the primary regional force that propped up Bahrain’s Sunni minority regime after popular protests in 2011 and backed Egypt’s military when it ousted the elected president in July 2013.

Wall Street Journal: West Africa’s Islamic State— Boko Haram on Sunday killed three people and kidnapped 80, many of them children, in a raid on villages in northern Cameroon. After years of rampaging unchecked across its home base in Nigeria, Africa’s version of Islamic State is now terrorizing neighboring countries. By the next day Cameroonian troops had freed 24 of the captives in a counterattack, pursuing Boko fighters back to Nigeria across the porous frontier, according to Cameroon’s Defense Ministry. Troops from Chad are also assisting in the anti-Boko fight. The insurgency launched by Boko Haram—the name means “Western education Is forbidden”—is stretching into its sixth year, and the group has distinguished itself as a resilient fighting force. Its kidnapping of some 300 Nigerian school girls triggered an international campaign last summer. The girls weren’t brought back, and many are believed to have been married off to Boko’s jihadists. Does anyone remember Michelle Obama ’s #BringBackOurGirls?

Yaakov Amidror: Israel Cannot Allow a Hizbullah Presence in the Golan—The strike on high-ranking Iranian and Hizbullah officials in the Golan Heights last week was a direct hit to the other side’s capabilities (a hit that will result in the postponement, if not the cancellation, of the action they were planning). This can be seen as a signal to the Iranians and to Hizbullah that there are red lines, and that the response will be severe if they dare cross them. Israel must show, not by talk but by action, what its limits are. The growing presence of Hizbullah in the Golan could present Israel with a dual front in every future war against it in the north. We cannot allow a Hizbullah presence there.

David Schenker: Hizbullah’s Limited Options after Israeli Strike— On January 18, six senior members of the Lebanese terrorist organization Hezbollah and a commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were killed while visiting Quneitra in the Syrian Golan Heights, reportedly by an Israeli missile. The attack came just days after Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah threatened to deploy troops across the border into the Galilee in retaliation for repeated Israeli strikes against militia targets in Syria. In the past, the audacious timing and resultant high-profile casualties would have prompted significant and unambiguous Hezbollah military retribution. While the group may eventually retaliate — anonymous Hezbollah officials in Lebanon say it is “inevitable” — its ongoing military operations in Syria and the evolving sectarian dynamic in Lebanon may constrain its actions. The pressure to respond is great, but the last thing Hezbollah needs right now is an escalation with Israel that devolves to war.

Ronen Bergman: Nasrallah, a Secretary-General in Distress— The Israeli public’s state of mind on security issues changes at once: From a sort of joy and satisfaction, maybe pride, over the strike against Hezbollah’s command group in the Golan, to deep anxiety about a war that is about to take place with Hezbollah, and perhaps even a wider conflict, with Iran too, after a Revolutionary Guards general was killed in the assassination. But on the other side, if we look at things from the eyes of Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, the situation isn’t great, and the strike caught him at a really bad time. If it were up to him, he would rather not face the dilemma of whether to retaliate against Israel or to keep quiet. This is the most difficult period for the talented secretary-general since being appointed to lead Hezbollah after his predecessor, Abbas Musawi, was killed in an Israeli assassination.

Lee Smith: Is Iran’s Lebanese Client Hizbullah Losing Its Grip?—The fact that Jihad Mughniyeh and his cohorts were killed in the Golan Heights is an embarrassment for Hizbullah and its leader, Hassan Nasrallah. In an interview with a pro-Hizbullah TV station just two days before the Israeli strike, Nasrallah claimed that Hizbullah was not active in the Golan. In Hizbullah’s stronghold in Beirut’s southern suburbs, everything is worse than when I was last here nearly three years ago. There’s less electricity and more blackouts, the water shortages are worse, and so is the sewage. The economy is moribund and parents are urging their children to get out of Lebanon and start a career and family elsewhere.

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9--Jerusalem Post

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Secret Israeli-Saudi Ties Likely to Continue after King’s Death

IDF soldiers hurt in anti-tank missile attack on Lebanon border; Hezbollah takes credit

Israel denies Lebanese reports that IDF soldier captured in Hezbollah attack

Netanyahu on Lebanon attack: I suggest those trying to challenge us in the North look at Gaza

IDF digging near northern border amid fears of Hezbollah attack tunnels

Amid Golan tensions, US stresses Israel has legitimate right to self-defense

On Iran, Congress plays its hand with a deadline of its own 

B’Tselem: PM culpable for Gaza war Palestinian civilian deaths; NGO Monitor demurs

The uniqueness of anti-Semitism

IDF strikes Syrian army targets following Golan rocket attacks

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10--Arutz Sheva

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84% of Palestinians Believe Israel Behind Charlie Hebdo

Casualties as Hezbollah Attacks IDF Positions on Lebanon Border

Netanyahu Warns Hezbollah ‘Look What Happened to Hamas’

Major Canadian Muslim Group Found to have Funded Hamas

Angry Gazans Try to Storm UN Headquarters—“After UN says it can’t pay to repair for Hamas’s war because world donors didn’t deliver, protest in front of HQ turns violent.”

Ya’alon: Strike on Assad Targets ‘Clear Message’

Israelis Hit by Rocks Driving Through Arab Village

IDF Attacks Syrian Artillery

Week After TA Stabbing, Jew Smuggles Arabs

Top Nazi Hunter: Eastern Europe Rewrote Holocaust

BBC Accused of Race-Baiting British Jews

BBC Asks ‘Is it Time to Lay Holocaust to Rest?’

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11--THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

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Netanyahu’s White House-defying speech could backfire

Life in Golan back to normal after 2 rockets hit

Survivors return to Auschwitz amid warnings of resurgent anti-Semitism

70 years later, Hitchcock’s Holocaust footage airs

France anti-Semitic attacks doubled in 2014, Jewish org says

Hungarian premier admits country’s ‘shameful’ Holocaust role

Where Holocaust survivors gather to live out their days

New sanctions will improve chance of Iran deal, Israel says

Israel prefers no deal over bad Iran deal, FM tells Russia

BBC exec: Don’t call Charlie Hebdo killers ‘terrorists’

SnyderTalk Comment: You can take political correctness too far, and the BBC has managed to cross the line—again.  The Charlie Hebdo killers were Islamist terrorists working under orders from an Islamist terrorist organization that is bent on death and destruction.  There is no other way to explain what took place in Paris.  Saying otherwise is inaccurate, dishonest, and just plain stupid.

Actually, it’s worse than that.  Failing to tell the truth invites more attacks and causes people to miss the urgency of the dilemma that we face at this moment.

I think the New York Times and the BBC must be drinking the same polluted water because they are afflicted with the same warped hallucinations.  Members of the Obama administration are fond of both the New York Times and the BBC.  Enough said.

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12a--Other News

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Reports: Jordan ready to trade prisoner for pilot with ISIL

Islamic State Gives 24-Hour Deadline for Hostages

Nigeria: Boko Haram top dog says, ‘We killed the people of Baga. We indeed killed them, as our Lord instructed us in His Book.’

Gaza: Hamas Test Fires Rocket Barrage From Ruins of Jewish Village

Israel Warns Hezbollah Via Russia: Back Off Our Border and Interests Abroad

Top British Jewish Columnist Blasts Media Hypocrisy Over Antisemitism

Kosher Supermarket Gunman Caught on Tape Casing Jewish School in August

Panicked super rich buying boltholes with private airstrips to escape if poor rise up

‘Only Netanyahu can talk about radical terrorism threat’

Two rockets fired from Syria explode in Israel’s Golan Heights

Argentine president seeks overhaul of intelligence services 

Emirati Airlines Halt Flights to Baghdad After Shooting

At least eight dead as gunmen storm hotel in Libyan capital

Greece elections: How do Greeks feel about the future?

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12b--TRIC

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Why counter Iran if you can attack the Right?

What Is Turkey’s Future Under Erdogan?

Erdogan presidential palace cost soars for Turkey

Facebook complies with Turkey page block order

IAEA Cannot Conclude that All Nuclear Material in Iran Is in Peaceful Activities

Netanyahu: “I Am Obligated to Make Every Effort to Prevent Iran from Achieving Nuclear Weapons Aimed at Israel”

US Democratic senators set resolution countering push for tougher Iran sanctions

Iran, Portugal a bridge connecting ME to Europe: Rouhani

Iran Nuclear Deal Prospects Fade as Israel Digs In Against Terms

It’s not time for Congress to play ‘bad cop’ on Iran

Ex-Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko ‘killed at third attempt’

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4--Scripture of the Day Yahweh

Genesis 46: 8-27

8 Now these are the names of the sons of Israel, Jacob and his sons, who went to Egypt: Reuben, Jacob’s firstborn. 9 The sons of Reuben: Hanoch and Pallu and Hezron and Carmi. 10 The sons of Simeon: Jemuel and Jamin and Ohad and Jachin and Zohar and Shaul the son of a Canaanite woman. 11 The sons of Levi: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari. 12 The sons of Judah: Er and Onan and Shelah and Perez and Zerah (but Er and Onan died in the land of Canaan). And the sons of Perez were Hezron and Hamul. 13 The sons of Issachar: Tola and Puvvah and Iob and Shimron. 14 The sons of Zebulun: Sered and Elon and Jahleel. 15 These are the sons of Leah, whom she bore to Jacob in Paddan-aram, with his daughter Dinah; all his sons and his daughters numbered thirty-three. 16 The sons of Gad: Ziphion and Haggi, Shuni and Ezbon, Eri and Arodi and Areli. 17 The sons of Asher: Imnah and Ishvah and Ishvi and Beriah and their sister Serah. And the sons of Beriah: Heber and Malchiel. 18 These are the sons of Zilpah, whom Laban gave to his daughter Leah; and she bore to Jacob these sixteen persons. 19 The sons of Jacob’s wife Rachel: Joseph and Benjamin. 20 Now to Joseph in the land of Egypt were born Manasseh and Ephraim, whom Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera, priest of On, bore to him. 21 The sons of Benjamin: Bela and Becher and Ashbel, Gera and Naaman, Ehi and Rosh, Muppim and Huppim and Ard. 22 These are the sons of Rachel, who were born to Jacob; there were fourteen persons in all. 23 The sons of Dan: Hushim. 24 The sons of Naphtali: Jahzeel and Guni and Jezer and Shillem. 25 These are the sons of Bilhah, whom Laban gave to his daughter Rachel, and she bore these to Jacob; there were seven persons in all. 26 All the persons belonging to Jacob, who came to Egypt, his direct descendants, not including the wives of Jacob’s sons, were sixty-six persons in all, 27 and the sons of Joseph, who were born to him in Egypt were two; all the persons of the house of Jacob, who came to Egypt, were seventy.

SnyderTalk Comment: Read His Name is Yahweh.

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5--HNIY Print form 3

His Name is Yahweh explains why the Name of God, Yahweh, is so important.  It’s available in eBook format and in paperback.  It’s also available for free in PDF format.

  • God also said to Moses, “Say to the Israelites, ‘Yahweh, the God of your fathers—the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob—has sent me to you.’ This [Yahweh] is my name forever, the name by which I am to be remembered from generation to generation.” (Exodus 3: 15)
  • “Therefore behold, I am going to make them know—this time I will make them know My power and My might; and they shall know that My name is Yahweh.” (Jeremiah 16: 21)
  • “Behold, the days are coming,” declares Yahweh, “when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch; and He will reign as king and act wisely and do justice and righteousness in the land. In His days Judah will be saved, and Israel will dwell securely; and this is His name by which He will be called, ‘Yahweh our righteousness.’” (Jeremiah 23: 5-6)
  • Yeshua said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was born, I am.” (John 8: 58)

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6--His Name is Yahweh Audio Presentation 5

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Does it matter what we call God?

Click here to download the entire audio presentation for free and with no strings attached.  Share it as often as you want.

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14--Blessings from Revelation 2

Blessings in the Book of Revelation is a book that you need to read, especially now.  There are blessings throughout the Scriptures but Revelation is the only book in the Bible actually containing a specific blessing for reading it. It’s repeated twice, once at the beginning and again at the end. This is the reason that I believe Revelation should be the first step toward studying biblical prophecy. Though not easy to do, Revelation can be broken down and understood by anyone, not just the academic elite. So, Revelation’s blessings are for everyone.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.

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Other Books by Neil Snyder

  • Stand! is a suspense novel that exposes the lies, corruption, and greed underlying the theory that man-made CO2 emissions are responsible for global warming. Professor Wes Carlyle and Karen Sterling, his research collaborator, carefully scan the audience for their would-be attacker—a member of the enviro-gestapo who has been following them for days.  Wes spots his man in the back of the room leaning against the wall.  Suddenly, another man in the audience steps forward and moves toward Karen at a menacing pace.  With a vicious stroke, he swings a billy club at her head.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.
  • What Will You Do with the Rest of Your Life? deals with a question that every Christian has to consider: what should I do with my life? Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.
  • Falsely Accused is a true story about a young woman who was accused of committing a double homicide. It’s about a travesty of justice, and it reveals Yahweh intervening in the life of a believer to rescue her from danger in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.  Everyone will enjoy the book, but young people in particular need to read it because the mistakes made that led to the problem could have been avoided.  They were the kinds of mistakes that young people are prone to make.  As they say, forewarned is forearmed.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.

15--Concentric Circles 5

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