Saturday, March 28, 2009

Not Kosher

Oakdale, California's annual Testicle Festival is always a place to have ball. It's common practice on cattle ranches for young male bovines to be castrated into steers, which after the initial loss, eventually makes them more docile and easier to handle. Fans of the delicacy, also referred to as "mountain oysters," come from around the state.

The Talmud-Book of Law describes how the Jewish farmers of that day would fasten a coin the animal’s testicles and a non-Jew would come along and understand that the animal needed to be castrated and here was the reward—plus you could eat them.

The reason why castration is not allowed to the Jewish People from the Torah/Teaching is because we are the Chosen People—chosen to do 613 Commandments corresponding to the 613 divisions in the human body divided 365 connecting vessels to 248 limbs which is reflected in the 365 days of the earthly years and 248 years to Pluto’s cycle around the sun.

The non-Jew has the Seven Commandments of Noah: 1) prohibition against serving idol, 2) prohibition against using God’s Name in vain, 3) prohibition against murder, 4) prohibition against stealing, 5) the obligation to make laws concerning the earth and the life upon the earth, 6) the obligation to make laws concerning sexuality, 7) the obligation the make courts of law to administer justice. These seven commandments correspond to the seven continents upon the earth.

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