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Farrakhan Tweet/Videos Will Make Your Hair Stand Up: 'I Am That Jesus'

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Notorious anti-Semite and black nationalist leader Louis Farrakhan, who has ties to Democrat leadership, went on a sickening anti-Christian tirade and claimed that Jesus didn’t die on the cross.

On Saturday, Farrakhan posted a disturbing clip on Twitter showcasing the anti-Christian and anti-Semitic speech he delivered in February for The Nation of Islam.

Farrakhan began his disgusting anti-Christian rant by attacking the well-known Bible verse, John 3:16.

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life,” the King James version puts it.

Farrakhan has a different take.

“God does not love this world. God never sent Jesus to die for this world,” Farrakhan claimed.

“Jesus died because he was 2,000 years too soon to bring about the end of the civilization of the Jews. He never was on no cross. There was no Calvary for that Jesus.”

Farrakhan’s comments should be enough to make anyone’s blood boil, but that’s not even the worst thing the black supremacist said at the conference.

The Nation of Islam leader also proclaimed himself to be Jesus.

“I represent the Messiah. I represent the Jesus and I am that Jesus,” Farrakhan tweeted.

Farrakhan has made anti-Semitic comments in the past, calling Jews “satanic” and praising Adolf Hitler as a “very great man.”

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Did you find Farrakhan's tirade disturbing?

These statements might be easy to ignore as the ravings of a lunatic, except they were coming from someone influential, a man who has notorious connections to Democratic lawmakers and leaders.

Evidence of those contacts isn’t hard to find.

Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters gave Farrakhan a big hug after Farrakhan made a speech defending Palestinian bombers in 2009.



When he was still the junior senator from Illinois, former President Barack Obama posed for a picture with Farrakhan in 2005 at a Congressional Black Caucus meeting.

In August, former President Bill Clinton stood on the same stage as Farrakhan at the funeral service for Aretha Franklin.

At the same event, Obama’s first attorney general, Eric Holder, stood side-by-side with Farrakhan for a photo.

It’s disgraceful that multiple Democrats have happily posed with an anti-Christian and anti-Semitic radical who has the nerve to call himself the Messiah.

It’s not hyperbolic rhetoric when conservatives refer to leftists as “the Godless left.” The left’s association with evil people like Farrakhan is impossible to ignore.

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Malachi Bailey is a writer from Ohio with a background in history, education and philosophy. He has led multiple conservative groups and is dedicated to the principles of free speech, privacy and peace.
Malachi Bailey is a writer from Ohio with a passion for free speech, privacy and peace. He graduated from the College of Wooster with a B.A. in History. While at Wooster, he served as the Treasurer for the Wooster Conservatives and the Vice President for the Young Americans for Liberty.
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Politics, History




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