Powerful Projects :: Trump’s Quotes on Naked Bodies

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

http://bit.ly/2gAHuLL

Her name was Fatima al-Fihri

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

Source :: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1LRQcyFnb1/?mibextid=wwXIfr

In 859 CE, a woman used her inheritance to build the world’s oldest continuously operating university—and 1,165 years later, it’s still educating students.

Her name was Fatima al-Fihri, and she understood something that would echo through centuries: the greatest investment isn’t in wealth or status—it’s in knowledge.

Fez, Morocco. The 9th century.

Fatima al-Fihri and her sister Mariam had just inherited substantial wealth from their father, Muhammad al-Fihri, a successful merchant who’d moved the family from Tunisia to Morocco.

They were young women with resources in a world where women’s choices were often limited. They could have lived comfortably, married well, secured their own futures.
Instead, they chose to build something that would outlast them by over a millennium.

Fatima envisioned a center of learning—a place where knowledge could be pursued, where scholars could gather, where intellectual and spiritual growth would flourish together. Not just for the elite. Not just for one group. But a place where learning itself was sacred.

In 859 CE, she used her inheritance to found Al-Qarawiyyin in Fez.

It began as a mosque with an educational mission—but it became so much more. Within decades, Al-Qarawiyyin was attracting scholars from across the Islamic world and beyond. Students came to study theology, mathematics, astronomy, medicine, philosophy, law.

The library at Al-Qarawiyyin would eventually house some of the world’s oldest manuscripts. The institution would educate some of history’s most influential thinkers, including scholars whose work would later influence European universities during the Renaissance.

Meanwhile, Fatima’s sister Mariam founded the Andalusian Mosque nearby—also with educational functions, also still standing today.
Two sisters. Two enduring centers of learning. Built with inheritance money that could have been spent on anything else.

Think about what that choice meant.

In 859 CE, Fatima al-Fihri looked at wealth and saw possibility. Not just for herself, but for generations she’d never meet. She understood that knowledge doesn’t die with us—it multiplies, spreads, transforms.

Every student who walked through those doors for the next eleven centuries carried forward something she started. Every scholar who debated in those halls. Every manuscript copied in that library. Every idea explored, challenged, refined.

All because one woman chose knowledge over comfort.

Today, Al-Qarawiyyin is recognized by UNESCO and Guinness World Records as the oldest continuously operating educational institution in the world. It became a modern university in 1963, but it’s been teaching students for over 1,165 years.

The same institution Fatima founded in 859 still stands in Fez, still educates, still preserves knowledge.

Think about that timeline. Al-Qarawiyyin was already ancient when Oxford was founded. It was 600 years old when Columbus sailed. It had been teaching students for over a thousand years when the internet was invented.

And it all started with a woman who inherited wealth and chose to invest it in something that would outlive her.

Fatima al-Fihri’s story isn’t just about building a university. It’s about understanding legacy. About recognizing that our choices ripple forward in ways we can’t predict or control—but we can choose what kind of ripples we create.

She chose education. She chose knowledge. She chose to create a space where learning could flourish.

And 1,165 years later, students still walk through those doors.

That’s not just architecture. That’s vision becoming reality across centuries.

Fatima al-Fihri never saw the Renaissance scholars who would study texts preserved in her library. Never saw the thousands upon thousands of students who would pass through Al-Qarawiyyin’s halls. Never saw how her choice would influence education across continents.

But she didn’t need to see it to believe it mattered.

She planted seeds of wisdom in the 9th century, and we’re still harvesting them in the 21st.
That’s what happens when you invest in knowledge. When you choose to build something greater than yourself. When you believe education is worth dedicating your resources, your vision, your life’s work to create.

You don’t just change your own life. You change the trajectory of countless lives you’ll never meet.

Fatima al-Fihri: 800-880 CE (approximate dates).
Founded Al-Qarawiyyin in 859 CE.
The institution still operates 1,165 years later.
One woman. One choice. One thousand years of impact.

Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is believe that knowledge matters—and then build something to prove it.

She ruled Judea for 9 years of peace and prosperity

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

After her husband’s death, they expected chaos—instead, she ruled Judea for 9 years of peace and prosperity that ancient sources praised for generations.

Jerusalem, 76 BCE. King Alexander Jannaeus lay dying. His reign had been brutal—marked by civil war, mass executions, and conflict between religious factions. Judea was exhausted, divided, bleeding.

On his deathbed, Alexander did something unusual: he designated his wife, Salome Alexandra, as his successor. Not one of their sons. Not a military commander. His wife.
She was around 64 years old. She would rule for nine years—and those years would be remembered as among the most peaceful and prosperous in Judean history.

This is her actual story, remarkable enough without embellishment.

Salome Alexandra (known in Hebrew as Shlomtzion, meaning “peace of Zion”) was born around 141 BCE. Little is known about her early life, but she came from a priestly family and was well-connected to Jerusalem’s religious and political elite.

She married Alexander Jannaeus around 103 BCE. He was a Hasmonean king—descended from the Maccabees who’d won Jewish independence from Greek rule. But the Hasmonean dynasty had become corrupt, brutal, and increasingly unpopular.

Alexander’s reign was particularly violent. He fought constantly—external wars against neighbors, internal war against the Pharisees (a Jewish religious faction that opposed him). At one point, he crucified 800 Pharisees while feasting and watching them die.

Judea under Alexander was traumatized.
When he died in 76 BCE, Salome assumed the throne. She became “Queen” (basilissa in Greek, malka in Aramaic)—the only woman to rule Judea independently in the Hasmonean period.
Ancient sources—particularly the Jewish historian Josephus and the Talmud—describe her reign positively, which is notable given how critical they are of other Hasmonean rulers.
What made her reign successful?

Political balance: Salome reversed her husband’s policies toward the Pharisees. She allied with them, giving them influence in the Sanhedrin (Jewish council) while keeping the Sadducees (another faction) from becoming too powerful. This balance ended the civil conflict that had plagued her husband’s reign.

Domestic stability: Unlike Alexander, who was constantly at war, Salome focused on internal governance. The Talmud associates her reign with prosperity—harvests were good, peace prevailed.

Diplomatic skill: She maintained Judea’s position without major military campaigns. She recognized that Judea, surrounded by larger powers (Egypt, Syria, Rome), needed diplomacy more than conquest.

Respect for religious authority: By working with the Pharisees and supporting Torah scholarship (generally—not specifically for women), she gained popular support. The Pharisees emphasized law and learning over the priestly aristocracy favored by the Sadducees.

The Talmud (Tractate Taanit 23a) says of her reign: “In the days of Shimon ben Shetach and Queen Shlomtzion, rain fell on Wednesday nights, so that the wheat grains grew as large as kidneys, barley grains as large as olive pits, and lentils as large as gold dinars.”

This is obviously legendary exaggeration, but it indicates how her reign was remembered—as a golden age of peace and plenty.

Was she opposed because she was a woman? The historical sources don’t emphasize this. She seems to have assumed power relatively smoothly as her husband’s chosen successor.

While some Sadducees opposed her alliance with Pharisees, ancient sources frame this as political-religious conflict, not gender-based.
Did she champion women’s education specifically? There’s no historical evidence for this claim. While she supported the Pharisees who valued Torah study, nothing in Josephus, the Talmud, or other sources attributes specific policies about women’s education to her.

Women’s formal Jewish education remained extremely limited in this period and for centuries after. If Salome had implemented revolutionary policies expanding women’s education, it would likely have been noted in sources—either as praise or criticism.

This doesn’t diminish her accomplishment. Ruling successfully for nine years in the ancient world as a woman was extraordinary. She didn’t need to also be a feminist education reformer to be impressive.

What happened after her death reveals the fragility of her achievements—but not for the reasons sometimes claimed.

Salome died around 67 BCE at approximately age 73. She’d designated her older son, Hyrcanus II, as her successor. But her younger son, Aristobulus II, challenged him.
Civil war erupted immediately—not because people opposed female rule, but because of normal succession disputes between ambitious brothers.

The war weakened Judea at exactly the wrong moment. Rome was expanding eastward. In 63 BCE, Roman general Pompey intervened in the civil war, besieged Jerusalem, and essentially ended Judean independence.

Judea would remain under Roman control (directly or through client kings like Herod) for the next century, until the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE.

So yes, everything Salome built collapsed after her death. But not because of gender-based opposition or rollback of women’s rights. It collapsed because her sons’ ambitions destroyed what she’d carefully maintained.

Salome Alexandra’s actual legacy:
She proved women could rule effectively: In a world where female political power was rare, she governed successfully for nine years.
She ended civil conflict: Through political skill rather than military force, she brought peace after years of violence.

She balanced competing factions: Her diplomatic management of Pharisees and Sadducees maintained stability.

She prioritized domestic prosperity: Unlike her husband’s military adventurism, she focused on governance and peace.

She’s remembered positively: Ancient sources—which were often critical of rulers and rarely praised women leaders—speak well of her reign.

These accomplishments are remarkable and historically documented. We don’t need to invent claims about women’s education advocacy to make her impressive.

Why does this matter? Why not just accept the embellished version that makes her sound more feminist?

Because historical accuracy matters. When we project modern values onto historical figures without evidence, we:

Diminish their actual achievements by replacing them with what we wish they’d done
Distort history in ways that ultimately undermine our understanding of how change actually happens

Lose credibility when people discover the claims aren’t supported by sources
Miss opportunities to understand the real constraints and possibilities of women’s power in different historical contexts.

Salome Alexandra’s actual story—ruling successfully for nine years, maintaining peace, balancing factions, being remembered positively by sources that usually dismissed female rulers—is impressive precisely because it happened in a world that offered women almost no political power.

We honor her better by acknowledging what she actually accomplished within the constraints she faced, rather than inventing accomplishments that fit modern priorities.

To Salome Alexandra: You ruled Judea during a period of peace and prosperity after years of violence and chaos. You balanced competing religious factions without resorting to your husband’s brutality. You maintained Judea’s independence through diplomacy rather than constant warfare. You proved that a woman could govern as effectively as any king.

Ancient sources that were often critical of rulers praised your reign. The Talmud associated your years with abundance. Josephus acknowledged your political skill.

You didn’t need to revolutionize women’s education to be remarkable—though later generations sometimes claim you did because they want ancient validation for modern values.
Your actual accomplishment—ruling successfully for nine years in the ancient world—is impressive enough. The fact that civil war erupted immediately after your death shows how much your skill maintained stability.

You proved women could govern. That was radical in itself.

We don’t need to make you into something you weren’t. What you actually were—a capable ruler who brought peace and prosperity—deserves recognition without embellishment.

I Am Grateful

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

Occasionally, there are thought flows in the mind, a receptive glimpse into the collective energies of the world. It is sad. The mind says, “Can’t trust anyone, cannot be certain of this protection. Rejection has been the truth of cycles long gone, over and over, we do our work to be shut down, forgotten”.

The mind, the heart, the wounding of Collective Soul is so deep, so potent it nearly swallows the heart and the love energy, it begins to shift the thinking, the perception … and the senses begin to reject the safety, because the senses of the past remind us that eventually, the protection will disappear and once more we’ll be the only one left to guard our soul … and it is sad, even more so, that the cruelty of the soul shattering, spirit rending, flesh tearing trauma has been done by the hands of a man (for the most part) lifetime after lifetime … those men, made in the image of God, those hands meant to protect, have done their very best to destroy.

My heart, my soul, screams sometimes to “step back” !!!!!!! Do not get too comfortable !!!!! and I can feel myself pushing against that which is trying to love me. And it is hard …. perhaps you can relate?

I am grateful that if I sit with it for a while, if I allow myself to feel the shock and the hurt of it, to pray about it, ask for ease and grace, assistance with transmuting it … for Self, for the Collective Soul of Humanity … that after some time of focus and intent, the sensation fades, the upset of the mind trying to reject ~ eases ~ and I am able to smile once more and relax into the love of the connection.

I wonder sometimes what God thinks when He looks into my mind and sees me wrestling with my own past trauma, and the actual expansion into the Collective Human Soul, feeling even more of ‘centuries old traumas’ stored, sitting with it, while it is alchemized …

Thank you family, for I know you, too, are sitting with the Collective Human Soul shattering, bringing light love and healing to it, as you do for your own, personal healing. Thank you.

Aho. Wado. Amen

Whatever Species She Is, She’s Not Happy

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

An unseen female told the curator and his posse of trafficking bro hoes, “You have destroyed everything we’ve tried to do here.” Whatever species she is, they aren’t happy.

Kaparot (or Kapparot) must end

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

I tell you, waking, and hearing first thing this curator and his deep voiced guide, plotting on the elimination of the presence of Divine Feminine. It’s disturbing that this rhetoric is flooding the field of consciousness. The children of the future deserve a “clear” collective mental field.

Want to degrade the “miracle” my repeated efforts provided? You want to say my try, try, try again “attitude” is unworthy, and that my successes are just chance?

You want to strip me of my life and opportunity to live it, while reaping the reward and benefit of my work?

May you receive every foul deed you are plotting against we.

Every ounce of this energy, every stubborn bit of will that I have cultivated, will enwrap, magnetize, and empower the intention, and skillful will of my Kingdom Spouse.

You, waking me with ridiculousness, your opportunity to Eff with the mind of our family’s children, WILL come to a close. You offer our future no value.

May Mother Father, Creators of All that is, support and permit your swift elimination from this realm.

Our family deserves peace.

They’ve been at war with haters unknown, demanding a feud, or “competion” for far too long. We don’t even remember who you are, Jack-o. We just want to forget, fully, your energy and presence existence.

We want to be free to live the love the beauty the Divine has seeded into our Soul. We want you to stop feeding on us., replacing our inner wealth with your foul deeds.

Kaparot (or Kapparot) must end.

Aho. Amen. Wado.

————————————-

**AI Overview**

Kaparot (or Kapparos) is a traditional Jewish atonement ritual, often performed by Orthodox Jews on the eve of Yom Kippur, involving swinging a live rooster (or money) over one’s head while reciting prayers, symbolizing the transfer of sins to the bird, which is then slaughtered and donated to charity, though many modern rabbis encourage using money instead for ethical and practical reasons. The word means “atonements,” and the practice seeks to symbolically cleanse sins before the Day of Atonement.

How it works

  • With a Chicken: A person gently swings a live rooster over their head three times while reciting specific prayers, asking for sins to be transferred to the bird.
  • With Money: Alternatively, money (often in multiples of 18, representing “life”) is swung over the head with similar prayers, with the money then donated as charity.
  • The Ritual’s Purpose: The rooster is then humanely slaughtered (or the money donated), with the belief that God will transfer harsh decrees intended for the person to the bird (or the charity) in the merit of this mitzvah (good deed). 

Controversy and alternatives

  • Rabbinic Opposition: The practice is controversial, with strong rabbinic opposition due to concerns about animal cruelty and potential superstitious origins.
  • Modern Alternatives: Many religious leaders encourage using money instead of chickens as a more effective and humane form of atonement, giving the value to the poor or charity. 

Key takeaways

  • Timing: Performed just before Yom Kippur.
  • Meaning: Symbolic transfer of sins for atonement.
  • Alternatives: Money is a common modern replacement for the chicken. 

The Pre-Christian Logos

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

The term Logos (Greek for “word,” “reason,” or “logic”) was a central concept in ancient Greek philosophy long before the rise of Christianity. 

  • Greek Philosophy: Nearly every Greek philosophy, including Stoicism and Neo-Platonism, had a role for the Logos. It was generally considered a mediating principle between the ultimate, transcendent God and the created world.
  • Universal Principle: The Logos was understood as divine reason, the underlying principle of order and harmony in the universe, and the source of all truth. Philosophers like Heraclitus and the Stoics saw it as an immanent, rational principle in the cosmos.
  • Hellenistic Judaism: Jewish thinkers like Philo of Alexandria, who lived around the same time as Jesus but in Egypt, further developed the Logos as an intermediary divine being, distinct from God’s essence but the means by which God created and interacted with the material world. 

The Cosmic Christ

Early Christian apologists and Church Fathers adopted the philosophical term Logos to explain the nature of Jesus Christ to the Hellenistic world. 

  • The Gospel of John: The most famous biblical usage is in the prologue of the Gospel of John: “In the beginning was the Word (Logos), and the Word (Logos) was with God, and the Word (Logos) was God”. This passage identifies Jesus as the eternal Logos that became flesh.
  • Early Christian Theology: Early writers like Justin Martyr argued that Christ, as the Logos, was present in the world even before his incarnation. They believed that anyone who lived according to reason (logos spermatikos or “seed of the Logos”) had a share in Christ’s truth, effectively being “Christians before Christ”.
  • A Unifying Force: The “Cosmic Christ” is the theological understanding of Christ not just as a historical figure, but as the divine presence that pervades and unifies all of creation. This concept emphasizes that all matter is sacred because it is incarnate with the divine nature of the Logos. 

St. Anthony

St. Anthony the Great (c. 250–356 AD), an Egyptian hermit considered the father of Christian monasticism, is a prominent figure in early Christian spirituality. 

  • Athanasius’s Work: His life was documented in The Life of Antony by Athanasius of Alexandria, a pivotal work in Christian literature. This book helped shape the ideal of monastic life and the understanding of spiritual warfare.
  • Connection to the Logos: While St. Anthony himself might not have written extensively on the abstract philosophy of the Logos, his life exemplified a deep connection to the Divine (the Logos). His biography is available in resources such as those found on Logos Bible Software

The Battle Intensifies

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

“Saudi Arabia” was mentioned last night. “They tortured everyone,” a masculine said.

I just looked at the news …

https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/02/middleeast/yemen-saudi-uae-conflict-explainer-intl

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cjrz34qdr9no

Being a Woman isn’t a Competition

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender
Duchess Helene in Bavaria.

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/15Z8tuosM7L/?mibextid=wwXIfr

They are not rivals. They are collaborators.

Published January 9, 2026 by tindertender

Scripture said this would happen long before modern politics or economics.

Psalms 2:1–2

“Why do the nations rage, and the people imagine a vain thing?
The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together, against Yahuah and against His Anointed…”

This isn’t chaos. It’s coordination.
Kings don’t merely rule — they counsel together.
The people imagine it will last. Scripture calls it vain.

Fast-forward to the end of the system:

Revelation 18:3

“…the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth are waxed rich together…”

And again:

Revelation 18:23

“…for thy merchants were the great men of the earth; for by thy sorceries were all nations deceived.”

Notice the language:
• Kings act together
• Merchants grow rich together
• Nations are deceived together

This is not competition.
This is mutual benefit.

Psalm 2 shows the planning.
Revelation 18 shows the profit.

Add the prophets:

Isaiah 23:8

“Who hath taken this counsel against Tyre, the crowning city, whose merchants are princes, whose traffickers are the honourable of the earth?”

Commerce and rulership merge.
Merchants become princes.
Princes protect the merchants.

That’s the pattern.

So when people say, “These groups are fighting each other,” Scripture answers:
No — they are counselling together.
They quarrel in public and coordinate in private.

The deception isn’t that there is order.
The deception is believing it’s new.

Ecclesiastes 1:9

“There is no new thing under the sun.”

What’s new is the scale.
What’s old is the alliance.

Bottom line:
If you still believe the kings, merchants, and powers of this age are enemies of each other, Scripture says you’re watching the theatre — not the counsel.

Babylon falls suddenly because it is unified.
And what is unified against Yahuah is already judged.

“The people imagine a vain thing.”