i see what you mean, but black people are very diverse looking ppl.
for instance a person from one country in africa in comparison to one from another sharing boarders look for different then a white person in comparison to an asain.
i have a little cousin that we call ching chong cause she looks like a little black chinesse girl lol.
Asians are also diverse. If you don't see many of them, it is harder to distinguish. For example many asians don't have a fold in their eye lids like the photo of the asian man posted.
Oh bOy !
theres no real truth in shit based on shit.
he probably looks like that. Egyptians aren't black. I've seen them. YOU'VE seen them, tho he was probably a lot darker then that.
taking pride in the hope that an arab civilization was black is pathetic, cause 1. YOU didn't build the pyramids ya know. Black ppl do dope shit all day, why would i take pride in micheal jordan being the best bball player of all time when i suck at basketball and have nothing to do with him.
and 2. what you consider black is a bantu facial structure from coastal and rain forest sub saharan africa. Tho dark, egyptians would have less to do with us (bantu coastal and rain forest africans) and more to do with arabs.
ya sniff?
egyptians aren't black....lol. the people who built the pyramids black, the people who built the sphinx black, the people who built them temples black, them people who mapped that stars black, them people who discovered pi black, them people who lived along all the various niles black, the people of the hpy vally black........he likes the devil because the devil gives him nothing.
I enjoyed this one.
Got some creative minds here.
Peace
Amorites Highlanders, or hillmen, the name given to the descendants of one of the sons of Canaan (Gen 14:7), called Amurra or Amurri in the Assyrian and Egyptian inscriptions. On the early Babylonian monuments all Syria, including Palestine, is known as "the land of the Amorites."
The southern slopes of the mountains of Judea are called the "mount of the Amorites" (Deu 1:7, Deu 1:19, Deu 1:20). They seem to have originally occupied the land stretching from the heights west of the Dead Sea (Gen 14:7) to Hebron (Gen. 13. Compare Gen 13:8; Deu 3:8; Deu 4:46), embracing "all Gilead and all Bashan" (Deu 3:10), with the Jordan valley on the east of the river (Deu 4:49), the land of the "two kings of the Amorites," Sihon and Og (Deu 31:4; Jos 2:10; Jos 9:10).
The five kings of the Amorites were defeated with great slaughter by Joshua (Jos 10:10). They were again defeated at the waters of Merom by Joshua, who smote them till there were none remaining (Jos 11:8). It is mentioned as a surprising circumstance that in the days of Samuel there was peace between them and the Israelites (Sa1 7:14). The discrepancy supposed to exist between Deu 1:44 and Num 14:45 is explained by the circumstance that the terms "Amorites" and "Amalekites" are used synonymously for the "Canaanites." In the same way we explain the fact that the "Hivites" of Gen 34:2 are the "Amorites" of Gen 48:22. Compare Jos 10:6; Jos 11:19 with Sa2 21:2; also Num 14:45 with Deu 1:44.
The Amorites were warlike mountaineers. They are represented on the Egyptian monuments with fair skins, light hair, blue eyes, aquiline noses, and pointed beards. They are supposed to have been men of great stature; their king, Og, is described by Moses as the last "of the remnant of the giants" (Deu 3:11). Both Sihon and Og were independent kings. Only one word of the Amorite language survives, "Shenir," the name they gave to Mount Hermon (Deu 3).
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