HFU HF Underground
General Category => General Radio Discussion => Topic started by: fpeconsultant on September 28, 2016, 2246 UTC
-
YHWH apparent one-time broadcast on WBCQ 7490khz 9/29 (tonite local) at 0100-0215z Program is supposed to be "Christianity --- the World`s Greatest Hoax"
This could be interesting if you caught them in the past.
Thx to Glenn Hauser for the heads up!
FPE
-
Someone needs to record this (7490 has often faded out here by then).
-
I would appreciate posted audio also. There will likely be thunderstorms around here, and I don't know if I will have antennas connected.
-
Streaming audio link: http://www.splatterbox.us:7415/listen.pls
Thanks Skipmuck!
-
Currently listening online (SW Reception is poor), great program - brings me back to when YHWH was transmitting as a pirate.
-
T storms here last nite - does anyone have a link to a recording?
Thx
-
Thanks Chris, but I got the link for the WBCQ stream from kcpr! I started to listen and record for about 20 minutes via the stream, but honestly, I just couldn't listen to any more of the arcane religious beliefs of "Joshua". Admittedly, the op is very well spoken...it sounded like he was reading from a script(ure) 8) I did take the time to edit that eerie tune "Days of Hard Life" from what I did record and deleted the rest. There is nothing new here as far as I could tell...same doctrinal diatribes as the half a dozen broadcasts I heard before he got the knock. Anybody looking to add that scary sounding tune to their musical archives, let me know and I'll email it to you! I recorded it in 320 kbps mp3
-
Interesting. The case for Yahshuah (Yah meaning Yahweh, or YHWH, shuah meaning salvation), over Jesus is solid, there's no J sound in Hebrew or Aramaic, never has been. It may be a case where, like in Roman and Greek (as well as Egyptian) times the pagans created supergods out of the combination of two gods, perhaps Jesus is Jehovah Zeus?
Actually the J sound, originally pronounced as Y, is recent to English as well, as in no older than a few hundred years. Of course that also means Jehovah isn't the name either, it's Yahweh as made note of in the callsign, Hebrew has no vowels per se, just what are called vowel points so Yahweh is the phonetic transliteration of YHWH.
And then there's the case of the christian Sabbath, Sunday, the pagan day of sun worship. The Sabbath is from Friday sundown to Saturday sundown, and Yahshuah always observed the Sabbath. Imagine building entire religious industries around falsehoods. So technically, the christians have a lot of their core doctrine based upon error and their leadership knows all of this.
-
Interesting. The case for Yahshuah (Yah meaning Yahweh, or YHWH, shuah meaning salvation), over Jesus is solid, there's no J sound in Hebrew or Aramaic, never has been. It may be a case where, like in Roman and Greek (as well as Egyptian) times the pagans created supergods out of the combination of two gods, perhaps Jesus is Jehovah Zeus?
Actually the J sound, originally pronounced as Y, is recent to English as well, as in no older than a few hundred years. Of course that also means Jehovah isn't the name either, it's Yahweh as made note of in the callsign, Hebrew has no vowels per se, just what are called vowel points so Yahweh is the phonetic transliteration of YHWH.
And then there's the case of the christian Sabbath, Sunday, the pagan day of sun worship. The Sabbath is from Friday sundown to Saturday sundown, and Yahshuah always observed the Sabbath. Imagine building entire religious industries around falsehoods. So technically, the christians have a lot of their core doctrine based upon error and their leadership knows all of this.
The reason the name "Jesus" is used is because that's the spelling of the name in the Greek, and all of the New Testament manuscripts were written in Greek. The English pronunciation of the name is based on our pronunciation of the letter "J", the English pronunciation of the Greek name used by the original writers of the New Testament.
I used to hear YHWH on the 31 meter band. The guy sounded as if he was reading from some book, like he was reciting a bunch of stuff. It was hard to determine exactly where he was coming from because there was a lot of rambling.
-
Interesting. The case for Yahshuah (Yah meaning Yahweh, or YHWH, shuah meaning salvation), over Jesus is solid, there's no J sound in Hebrew or Aramaic, never has been. It may be a case where, like in Roman and Greek (as well as Egyptian) times the pagans created supergods out of the combination of two gods, perhaps Jesus is Jehovah Zeus?
Actually the J sound, originally pronounced as Y, is recent to English as well, as in no older than a few hundred years. Of course that also means Jehovah isn't the name either, it's Yahweh as made note of in the callsign, Hebrew has no vowels per se, just what are called vowel points so Yahweh is the phonetic transliteration of YHWH.
And then there's the case of the christian Sabbath, Sunday, the pagan day of sun worship. The Sabbath is from Friday sundown to Saturday sundown, and Yahshuah always observed the Sabbath. Imagine building entire religious industries around falsehoods. So technically, the christians have a lot of their core doctrine based upon error and their leadership knows all of this.
The reason the name "Jesus" is used is because that's the spelling of the name in the Greek, and all of the New Testament manuscripts were written in Greek. The English pronunciation of the name is based on our pronunciation of the letter "J", the English pronunciation of the Greek name used by the original writers of the New Testament.
I used to hear YHWH on the 31 meter band. The guy sounded as if he was reading from some book, like he was reciting a bunch of stuff. It was hard to determine exactly where he was coming from because there was a lot of rambling.
Sounds like a load of logos to me.
-
Interesting. The case for Yahshuah (Yah meaning Yahweh, or YHWH, shuah meaning salvation), over Jesus is solid, there's no J sound in Hebrew or Aramaic, never has been. It may be a case where, like in Roman and Greek (as well as Egyptian) times the pagans created supergods out of the combination of two gods, perhaps Jesus is Jehovah Zeus?
Actually the J sound, originally pronounced as Y, is recent to English as well, as in no older than a few hundred years. Of course that also means Jehovah isn't the name either, it's Yahweh as made note of in the callsign, Hebrew has no vowels per se, just what are called vowel points so Yahweh is the phonetic transliteration of YHWH.
And then there's the case of the christian Sabbath, Sunday, the pagan day of sun worship. The Sabbath is from Friday sundown to Saturday sundown, and Yahshuah always observed the Sabbath. Imagine building entire religious industries around falsehoods. So technically, the christians have a lot of their core doctrine based upon error and their leadership knows all of this.
The reason the name "Jesus" is used is because that's the spelling of the name in the Greek, and all of the New Testament manuscripts were written in Greek. The English pronunciation of the name is based on our pronunciation of the letter "J", the English pronunciation of the Greek name used by the original writers of the New Testament.
I used to hear YHWH on the 31 meter band. The guy sounded as if he was reading from some book, like he was reciting a bunch of stuff. It was hard to determine exactly where he was coming from because there was a lot of rambling.
He would occasional read portions of some transcripts, but the majority of his program was original material.
At various times I caught his transmissions from as low as 4100 kHz to as high as 29130 kHz. What was probably his undoing was he started transmitting regularly, 3 or 4 times a day, for over an hour each time. He also used the same frequencies at the same time each day. And more than once he operated in the aviation segments of the band, as well as inside ham bands. At a rough estimate I have him in my log book over 300 times from mid 2013 to Dec of 2014 when he got popped. And I did not log every time I heard him, for example I often heard him in the mobile, and I almost never log what I hear mobile.
T!