Bel was another name for Baal and Baal was sometimes called Lord of the Air.
Think about the TV show “Fresh Prince of Bel Air”.
Silverwing-N-ex on
What about the Greek gods then?
Superdude204 on
@upper class laughing at superstitious beliefs of the lower populace
GringoSwann on
At least 3600 years ago….
stoneruncle420 on
Alwayshasbeen.meme
itsurgod on
Since Abraham made a deal with Jehovah his descendants were to be chosen and become prophets😆
Altruistic-Lack7770 on
In Islam , these are Shayatin , Evil Jinns. They live upto thousands of years. They can be killed aswell.
They are very powerful that’s why they are able to help and these people call upon them.
It’s possible Baal has been alive for thousands of years and will live for some time.
Since the times of Atlantis, about 12000 years ago.
After the deluge there was an intermittent period, where there was nothing to control. Around 3000 BC they gradually started infiltrating the mystery schools (priesthood) of Egypt and Babylon.
soolar79 on
Honestly, I don’t think Baal or Moloch are “real” entities running the world. I see them more as **ideas**—old mythic scaffolding that keeps getting recycled. Across history, humans have repeatedly built belief systems that externalize responsibility, sanctify desire, justify harm, and produce intense emotional highs. Ancient myths like Baal just provide a convenient symbolic skin because they already *feel* heavy, unquestionable, and sacred.
What’s actually happening is that new belief systems—religious, political, economic, or ideological—adopt the same pattern. They demand obedience, reward status, frame suffering as inevitable, and give people the sense that they’re part of something bigger than themselves. The symbols and language change, but the psychological mechanics stay the same.
So when people today invoke Baal or Moloch, they’re not uncovering some eternal cult—they’re recognizing a pattern that has repeated for millennia: humans inflating ideas to feel meaningful, while masking power and indulgence in something that feels sacred. It’s less about gods and more about human nature.
JRose51 on
Time is flat circle
Ok_Class_8491 on
At this point, God should give a comeback
TH3HAT3TANK on
You mean the Canaanites/Phoenicians.
Virtual-Marsupial550 on
I strongly believe there are like 3 to 5 bloodlines in the world that lead everything, think of us as second-grade cattle and themselves as some superhuman race and they are still like that today. But what they don’t understand is that the only thing they are superior to us in is the miles of di ck they had in their mouths and buts
before686entenz on
What if the kid fucking is just plain kid fucking no satanic shit?
RTMSner on
And people to this day think that Rome overreacted when they destroyed Carthage.
17 Comments
About 600 BC.
Bel was another name for Baal and Baal was sometimes called Lord of the Air.
Think about the TV show “Fresh Prince of Bel Air”.
What about the Greek gods then?
@upper class laughing at superstitious beliefs of the lower populace
At least 3600 years ago….
Alwayshasbeen.meme
Since Abraham made a deal with Jehovah his descendants were to be chosen and become prophets😆
In Islam , these are Shayatin , Evil Jinns. They live upto thousands of years. They can be killed aswell.
They are very powerful that’s why they are able to help and these people call upon them.
It’s possible Baal has been alive for thousands of years and will live for some time.
Read this, it’s been going on forever! [CIA SATAN](https://www.cia.gov/library/abbottabad-compound/FC/FC2F5371043C48FDD95AEDE7B8A49624_Springmeier.-.Bloodlines.of.the.Illuminati.R.pdf)
Since the times of Atlantis, about 12000 years ago.
After the deluge there was an intermittent period, where there was nothing to control. Around 3000 BC they gradually started infiltrating the mystery schools (priesthood) of Egypt and Babylon.
Honestly, I don’t think Baal or Moloch are “real” entities running the world. I see them more as **ideas**—old mythic scaffolding that keeps getting recycled. Across history, humans have repeatedly built belief systems that externalize responsibility, sanctify desire, justify harm, and produce intense emotional highs. Ancient myths like Baal just provide a convenient symbolic skin because they already *feel* heavy, unquestionable, and sacred.
What’s actually happening is that new belief systems—religious, political, economic, or ideological—adopt the same pattern. They demand obedience, reward status, frame suffering as inevitable, and give people the sense that they’re part of something bigger than themselves. The symbols and language change, but the psychological mechanics stay the same.
So when people today invoke Baal or Moloch, they’re not uncovering some eternal cult—they’re recognizing a pattern that has repeated for millennia: humans inflating ideas to feel meaningful, while masking power and indulgence in something that feels sacred. It’s less about gods and more about human nature.
Time is flat circle
At this point, God should give a comeback
You mean the Canaanites/Phoenicians.
I strongly believe there are like 3 to 5 bloodlines in the world that lead everything, think of us as second-grade cattle and themselves as some superhuman race and they are still like that today. But what they don’t understand is that the only thing they are superior to us in is the miles of di ck they had in their mouths and buts
What if the kid fucking is just plain kid fucking no satanic shit?
And people to this day think that Rome overreacted when they destroyed Carthage.