Chicago – February 09, 2026
Baal in the Qur’anic worldview
In the Qur’an, Baal (mentioned in Surah As-Saffat 37:125) represents a false god—a system of worship where:
- Power is idolized
- Moral boundaries collapse
- The weak (including children) are exploited
In broader Near Eastern tradition, Baal worship is associated with child sacrifice, not just as ritual killing but as a system where children are consumed to maintain power, fertility, wealth, or dominance.
The Qur’an’s critique isn’t just about an idol—it’s about a structure of corruption where human beings are reduced to fuel.
Epstein and modern elite trafficking
The Epstein case exposed a networked system where:
- Children were exploited sexually
- Powerful people were protected
- Abuse was hidden behind wealth, influence, and institutions
No altars, no statues—but the function is chillingly similar:
- Children are sacrificed (psychologically, physically, spiritually)
- The “benefit” flows upward: pleasure, blackmail leverage, power cohesion
- The system sustains itself by silence and intimidation
This isn’t religion—it’s modern idolatry of power and desire.
The relationship between the two
The connection is not prediction, but pattern.
The Qur’an repeatedly teaches that:
When societies abandon moral limits and worship power, desire, or status, the most vulnerable pay the price—especially children.
