Japanese
scientists made an important discovery about the behavior of killer
asps, which can turn spiders into “zombies” that work for them and help
them multiply (see below).
Nevertheless,
due to their narrow specialization as entomologists, they were unable
to envision the far-reaching implications of their discovery, nor did
they speculate on its significance as a meta-phenomenon.
A
multidisciplinary team of experts (historians, theologians,
ethnographers, evolutionary psychologists and political scientists) is
needed to explore the incredible similarity in patterns of behavior and
mechanisms of action seen in our species, whereby Jews turn the Goyim
into Shabbat Goyim (“zombies”) that serve them.
A few parallels are striking:
•
The killer asps’ supreme goal is “safety” (“see “security” in JewSpeak)
to propagate (“be fruitful and multiply”), in the service of which
spiders (“Goyim”) are expendable tools (“put on this earth to serve
us”).
• Hyper-defensive behavior distinguishes killer bees from other bees: they are more likely to attack a perceived
threat and, when they do so, attack relentlessly and in larger numbers.
Also, they have been known to pursue a perceived threat for long
distances (“Never forget, never forget.”)
If
Judaism is a manifestation of a meta-phenomenon and Judeozionism can be
said to be occurring naturally, perhaps conclusions can be extrapolated
from the killer asps study. It is important to find out why some spiders
are not vulnerable to the killer asps’ venom. Whatever confers them
immunity must be applied to creating a vaccine for Goyim.
Manipulated spider forced to express fibrous decoration
“New
research shows that wasps can hijack spiders, turning them into
zombies, before getting them to build a web to keep their larvae safe.
The
chilling finds were reported in the Journal of Experimental Biology and
shows how the parasite has the ability to take over the hapless spider.
Keizo Takasuka of Kobe University undertook the research. He and his
team made the discovery after collecting spiders from the species
Cyclosa argenteoalba.
The
wasp, which is called the Reclinervellus Nielseni and is found in
Australia and Japan, manages to overcome the spider’s nervous system by
using poison. The start of the process is inconspicuous, as the wasp
innocently lays its larvae on the arachnid, but as it does so, it also
injects a poison.”
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