Kem Dibbs

Kem Dibbs

  • Born: 1917-8-12
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Elroy 2021-12-30 17:21:42

      There is no freedom without law

      "Laws of Moses are recognized as the divine source of justice" (Edward Gibbon: "The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" Chapter 44 "Jurisprudence Thought"). Ten Commandments can be said to be the principles and cornerstones of the Law of Moses. I first came into contact with the...

    • Claud 2022-03-23 09:02:09

      Ten Commandments

      The Ten Commandments, cecil.b.demille, 1956, Their Moses, their Red Sea.
              
          "I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage, and you shall have no other gods before me."


        "You shall not make idols for yourself, nor make any image like heaven,...

    • Keenan 2022-04-21 09:02:29

      ★★★★ The oracle is indescribable. When the Red Sea is split, the scene is as spectacular as the voice of the gods. Just don't know how much of the adaptation is real?

    • Lola 2021-12-30 17:21:42

      Revisited and the time is right. It can be seen that the important contributions of medieval Christian theologians and Islamic preachers are otherwise not difficult to understand why there is an irreconcilable contradiction between Jewish and Greco-Romanized Egypt. The richness of mythology is far less than the latter. This does not count the epics of Northern Europe, Iran and India. The creation of such things and the promotion of the unknown and invisible gods have a great relationship. This quality is the basis for the continuous deconstruction of the Jewish nation and the cosmopolitanization.

    The Ten Commandments quotes

    • Sethi: The man best able to rule Egypt will follow me. I owe that to my fathers, not to my sons.

    • Moses: [to Sethi, after Sethi came to see Moses completing the city to be built] Pharoah is pleased?

      Sethi: With the obelisk, yes. But not with certain accusations made against you.

      Moses: By whom?

      Sethi: You raided the temple granaries?

      Moses: Yes.

      [Rameses puts first weight on scale. The other scale dish holds a heavier weight, which keeps that dish on the table]

      Sethi: You gave the grain to the slaves?

      Moses: Yes.

      [Rameses puts second weight on scale, which causes opposite scale dish to bounce, but it still rests on the table]

      Rameses: You gave them one day in seven to rest.

      Moses: Yes.

      [Rameses puts third weight on scale. It's now heavier than its opposite dish, which is yanked up off the table]

      Sethi: Did you do all this to gain their favor?

      Moses: [Moses puts a brick on the dish that was yanked off the table. It's now heavier than Rameses' weights and crashes to the table with a bang! Moses has defeated his accusers] A city is built of brick, Pharoah. The strong make many, the starving make few. The dead make none. So much for accusations.