Zeus hurling his lightning at Typhon, Chalcidian black-figured hydria, c. 550 BC, Staatliche Antikensammlungen (Inv. 596).
It was Zeus who decided to war against the giants and exterminate them. His descendants were also instructed to kill the giants who were abusive to humankind. This decision was made due to their abuse of humans including enslaving them, raping them, torturing and murdering them, and eating them. Here is a passage about his war with the Giants.
Zeus also had other wars against the Giants, we are told in Macedonia near Pallene and in Italy on the plain which of old was named Phlegraen (“fiery”) after the region about it which had been burned, but which in later times men called Cumaean.
Now the Giants were punished by Zeus because they had treated the rest of mankind in a lawless fashion and, confiding in their bodily superiority and strength, had enslaved their neighbours, and because they were also disobeying the rules of justice which he was laying down and were raising up war against those whom all mankind considered to be gods because of the benefactions, they were conferring upon men generally. Zeus, then we are told, not only totally eradicated the impious and evil-doers from among mankind, but he also distributed honours as they were merited among the noblest of the gods and heroes and men. And because of the magnitude of his benefactions and his superior power all men accorded to him as with one voice both the everlasting kingship which he possess and his dwelling upon Mount Olympus.
Diodorus Siculus, Library of History, Volume 3, Page 291.
Now the son of Zeus who was an ancestor to the Semites, Heracles, also killed giants. Heracles was a murderer of his own wife and children, though, and had to make amends for his evil deeds.
Heracles killing the giant Antaeus
Heracles was known for his brute strength and is similar to the Biblical Sampson all though I believe Sampson was a different person. Heracles had to be similar in body build to the giants in order to kill them in the way described as squeezing the Libyan giant Antaeus to death.
Per Wikipedia:
Antaeus (/ænˈtiːəs/; Greek: Ἀνταῖος, Antaios), in Greek and Berber mythology was the son of Poseidon and Gaia.[1] His wife was the goddess Tinge, and he had a daughter named Alceis or Barce.He would challenge all passers-by to wrestling matches, kill them, and collect their skulls, so that he might one day build out of them a temple to his father Poseidon. He was indefatigably strong as long as he remained in contact with the ground (his mother earth), but once lifted into the air he became as weak as other men.Antaeus had defeated most of his opponents until it came to his fight with Heracles (who was on his way to the Garden of Hesperides for his 11th Labour). Upon finding that he could not beat Antaeus by throwing him to the ground as he would reheal due to his parentage (Gaia), Heracles discovered the secret of his power. Holding Antaeus aloft, Heracles crushed him in a bearhug.[3] The story of Antaeus has been used as a symbol of the spiritual strength which accrues when one rests one’s faith on the immediate fact of things.[clarification needed] The struggle between Antaeus and Heracles is a favorite subject in ancient and and Renaissance sculpture.
So there you have it, another Giant of equal strength to the ancient white gods. There is a book missing from the Bible. It is called the Book of the Wars of the Lord. This book is completely lost and I can pretty much assure you it will be about Zeus’ war with the Giants.
I am aware that many Biblical scholars believe Zeus was just a giant or a Nephilim. He was not, he was God as I’ve already proven and exposed. As for the Semites and Jews, it is not for you to have a kingdom much less run the world as you believe you are destined to do. That kingdom belonged to the Osirian-Isis bloodline of which you are not of, but which Jesus Christ was of.
The Book of the Wars of the Lord ( סֵפֶר מִלְחֲמֹת יהוה ) is one of several non-canonical books referenced in the Bible which have now been completely lost.[1] It is mentioned inNumbers 21:14–15, which reads: “From there they set out and camped on the other side of the Arnon, which is in the desert and bounding the Amorite territory. For Arnon is the border of Moab, between Moab and the Amorites. That is why the Book of the Wars of the LORD says: ‘… Waheb in Suphah and the ravines of Arnon, and at the stream of the ravines that lead to the dwelling of Ar, which lies along the border of Moab.'”Amongst academics[who?], it is generally thought to be a collection of victory songs orpoems,[citation needed] although some readers[who?] have suggested it may be a prosemilitary history. David Rosenberg suggests in his The Book of David that it was written in 1100 BCE or thereabouts. It has been suggested by the theologian Joseph Barber Lightfoot that the book was one and the same as the mysterious biblical Book of Jasher.The Book of the Wars of the LORD is cited in the medieval Book of Jasher (trans. Moses Samuel c. 1840, ed. J. H. Parry 1887) Chapter 90:48 as being a collaborative record written by Moses, Joshua, and the children of Israel.[2]
Links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_the_Wars_of_the_Lord
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhon