Edited to remove My Book of BS quote. Because it was long and unnecessary.
Here's the biblical account instead: http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exodus%207:1-14:31;&version=31 ;
Here are the ten plagues:
1: Water turned to blood. All fish in the Nile die.
2: Frogs.
3: Lice or Gnats or Flees.
4:Gadflies.
5: Egyptian livestock is killed.
6: Boils.
7: Hail, kills the livestock again, and the plants and some people.
8: Locusts eat all ramaining plants.
9: Darkness. (boring)
10: All firstborns killed, including the livestock again. (Not to mention all the livestock that were killed for the blood on the door.)
And to top it off, Pharaoh takes his ENTIRE depressed and hungry army, along with his zombie-cavalry into the Red Sea. They all die: (Exodus 14:28) . . .Not so much as one among them was let remain. . .
Okay, so the effects:
There are NO plants at all remaining in Egypt. (Exodus 10:15)
The livestock are almost all completely dead, after taking a hit in plague numbers 4, 7, and 10 and the Red Sea incident.
There are no fish to catch due to plague one. (Exodus 7:21)
The Egyptian workforce has left. (Exodus 14:5)
The entire Egyptian army was destroyed. (Exodus 14:9)
And the pharaoh died. Along with his oldest/most-prepared-to-rule heir.
Add to this, the fact that the Egyptians gave the Hebrews lots of money and animals for their trip. I quote: "They stripped the Egyptians" (Exodus 12:36)
They have no food, no army, no leadership, no workforce to speak of, and no morale, and a greatly decreased population.
Also, the land was scorched from the hail, so it would be extremely difficult to grow anything, even if they had the seeds.
How long do you think it would have taken them to recover? Would they have EVER recovered, or would that have been the end of the Egyptian empire?
Why is there no record of any of this, outside of the Bible?
According to the WTS, this was supposed to have taken place in 1513 B.C. (Insight book, under Exodus)
According to historians, 1513 BC was near the begining of the 18th dinasty, and I quote wikipedia about the 18 dynasty:
"This was a time of great wealth and power for Egypt"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_ancient_Egypt#Eighteenth_Dynasty
The only thing I could find, in the entire WT library to explain this blaring lack of evidence is this:
***
it-1pp.777-778Exodus***Authenticity
oftheExodusAccount. An objection against the Exodus account has been that the Pharaohs of Egypt did not make any record of the Exodus. However, this is not unusual, for kings of more modern times have recorded only their victories and not their defeats and have often tried to erase anything historical that is contrary to their personal or nationalistic image or to the ideology they are trying to inculcate in their people. Even in recent times rulers have tried to obliterate the works and reputations of their predecessors. Anything regarded as embarrassing or distasteful was left out of Egyptian inscriptions or effaced as soon as possible. An example is the chiseling away by her successor, Thutmose III, of the name and representation of Queen Hatshepsut on a stone monumental record uncovered at Deir al-Bahri in Egypt.—See ArchaeologyandBibleHistory, by J. P. Free, 1964, p. 98 and photograph opposite p. 94.Manetho, an Egyptian priest who evidently hated the Jews, wrote in the Greek language about 280 B.C.E. The Jewish historian Josephus quotes Manetho as saying that the ancestors of the Jews "entered Egypt in their myriads and subdued the inhabitants," and then Josephus says that Manetho "goes on to admit that they were afterwards driven out of the country, occupied what is now Judaea, founded Jerusalem, and built the temple."—AgainstApion, I, 228 (26).
While Manetho’s account is in general very unhistorical, the significant fact is that he mentions the Jews as being in Egypt and as going out, and in further writings, according to Josephus, he identifies Moses with Osarsiph, an Egyptian priest, indicating that, even though Egyptian monuments do not record the fact, the Jews were in Egypt and Moses was their leader. Josephus speaks of another Egyptian historian, Chaeremon, who says that Joseph and Moses were driven out of Egypt at the same time; also Josephus mentions a Lysimachus who tells a similar story.—AgainstApion, I, 228, 238 (26); 288, 290 (32); 299 (33); 304-311 (34).
And that's all they have to say about THAT.
I ask you, how could the Egyptians hide this?
Even if they managed to re-write their own history, there would still be evidence of a huge drop in population. All the surrounding nations would have written about it, or more likely, conquered them in their weakened state. It's not like they didn't know about it. After all, the whole point was to prove Jehovah's power: (Exodus 14:18)
And apparently this was a big story among nations back then:
Rahab speaking:
(Joshua 2:9-10) . . ."I do know that Jehovah will certainly give YOU the land, and that the fright of YOU has fallen upon us, and that all the inhabitants of the land have become disheartened because of YOU. 10 For we have heard how Jehovah dried up the waters of the Red Sea from before YOU when YOU came out of Egypt,. . .
This has been a Lore production. - W.W.S.D?