To the people who think theres a logical reason antisemitism has historically been one of the most prevalent forms of discrimination, here’s why that’s false.
Typically, in civilizations, a religion pops up sooner or later. Maybe it’s polytheistic, maybe it’s monotheistic, maybe it’s something else entirely. Atheism being so widespread is a pretty modern thing, back then the church and the government were one and the same. When civilizations were first forming, that’s when the Jews showed up. Side tangent, Jews have been around since Ancient Egypt. It’s one of the oldest religions in the world. Anyway, so imagine you’re the religious leaders of your ancient country, you work hand in hand with the government, and then some people show up who don’t follow the same gods you do. At first you might leave them alone, but the existence of people who don’t follow your gods makes other people wonder if your gods should be followed. After all, these people aren’t doing it, and they’re doing fine. So, you make something up. Jews drink the blood of children. Jews poison wells. Jews want money. Something to get people to think that not following your religion is something that evil people do. Rinse and repeat, and you’ve got the entirety of Jewish history. Well, aside from modern(past 100 years) antisemitism, which is much weirder. Antisemitism in recent times is an amalgamation of scientific racism, misconstrued punching up, and nonspecific antisemitism, just general “theyre evil”
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new reading of brba/bcs in which Mike has narrative awareness which makes his arc both more sad (because he knows he cannot save his sons but will try anyway. because he knows that the bad choice road will always be taken and where it will end) and simultaneously weirdly more hopeful (because if he knows it will all inevitably repeat, then what he does for Kaylee actually isn’t meaningless. as long as she’s happy and innocent and provided for within the confines of the story, it doesn’t matter what happens to the money after, because there is no after). this does not conflict with canon because Mike simply would not feel bothered to mention any of this to anyone
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The Pazyryk Carpet is the oldest known carpet on earth woven 2500 years ago (5th Century B.C.). It was discovered in the tomb of a Scythian prince in the Pazyryk Valley of Siberia by Ukrainian archaeologist Sergei Rudenko in the late 1940s.
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Good Omens has shown us, among other things...
-Crowley pointing the paintball gun at Aziraphale and giving the office workers miraculous escapes from death *before* it showed us The Blitz, Part 2's Bullet Catch that shows us what he was referencing to Aziraphale by doing so
-Aziraphale's love of human magic and his vanishing coins act and Crowley grumbling about all of it *before* it showed us "the farthing has vanished!" and The Marvelous Mr. Fell and his "volunteer assistant" on stage in 1941
-The 1862 breakup *before* the 1827 scene that gives context for their traumas that led to the breakup
-The sexy lunch in 2008 *before* the ox rib date that started it-- all the way back in 2500 B.C..
-Crowley telling Aziraphale about his night dealing with the antichrist baby: "Well, not, delivered-delivered, just... handed it over" *before* professional midwife/cobbler Bildad the Shuite "birthing" Job and Sitis some "new" kids
-Crowley, alone, forced into the start of Armageddon by delivering the antichrist in a picnic basket *before* 1967, in which Aziraphale dreams of a world they could get to before they run out of time in which they could go on a picnic together
-Aziraphale looking to the side Crowley always comes up on when he hears the miracle sound in the sushi restaurant in 1.01 *before* we even know that Crowley always comes up in the same way from various scenes teaching us this
-Aziraphale's tartan obsession *before* its origin story, which is the date in Edinburgh in 1827 wherein he became spirituality Scottish and thought he lost Crowley and after which he adopted the tartan as a thing related to the two of them and never stopped wearing it. See also: showed us 1967 and the tartan thermos *before* explaining to us that the tartan isn't just something Aziraphale likes but is something with meaning to the two of them together as a pair
-Crowley rambling drunkenly about bananas, fish and gorillas in the bookshop *before* his and Aziraphale's 'banana fish gorilla shoelace with a dash of nutmeg' conversation over wine in 1941, showing us that he was drunkenly remembering in a scene in S1 a romantic scene in their history that we didn't know then and wouldn't know until S2
-Crowley & Aziraphale dining at The Ritz in 2008 in 1.01 *before* we even know that was The Ritz or why it matters that it was, which they don't tell us until the final, romantic moments of S1
-Crowley obsessively growing a large, lush, overhanging canopy of plants in his apartment *before* telling us he's got a thing for vavoom-y erotic gazing and kissing under the shelter of canopies the likes of which have never been seen in a Richard Curtis film
So, my dear, dear loves... explain to me why I'm not going to be adding to this list next season:
-that heartbreaking 2.06 kiss *before* the first one they had a bazillion years ago?
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