They wear Saturn cube idols on his head, while they use the Star of Chiun/Remphan (name for Saturn) that was forbidden in the book they claimed to write. See Amos 5:26. Their source.
https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/4345-chiun https://
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remphan
Star of Chiun that is falsely called David per the Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Star-of-David
"The symbol—which historically was not limited to use by Jews—originated in antiquity, when, side by side with the five-pointed star (PENTAGRAM), it served as a magical sign or as a decoration... The term Magen David, which in Jewish liturgy signifies God as the protector (shield) of David, gained currency among medieval Jewish mystics, who attached magical powers to King David’s shield just as earlier (non-Jewish) magical traditions had referred to the five-pointed star as the “seal of Solomon.” Kabbalists popularized the use of the symbol as a protection against evil spirits. The Jewish community of Prague was the first to use the Star of David as its official symbol, and from the 17th century on the six-pointed star became the official seal of many Jewish communities and a general sign of Judaism, though it has no biblical or Talmudic authority."
https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/4345-chiun https://
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remphan
Star of Chiun that is falsely called David per the Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Star-of-David
"The symbol—which historically was not limited to use by Jews—originated in antiquity, when, side by side with the five-pointed star (PENTAGRAM), it served as a magical sign or as a decoration... The term Magen David, which in Jewish liturgy signifies God as the protector (shield) of David, gained currency among medieval Jewish mystics, who attached magical powers to King David’s shield just as earlier (non-Jewish) magical traditions had referred to the five-pointed star as the “seal of Solomon.” Kabbalists popularized the use of the symbol as a protection against evil spirits. The Jewish community of Prague was the first to use the Star of David as its official symbol, and from the 17th century on the six-pointed star became the official seal of many Jewish communities and a general sign of Judaism, though it has no biblical or Talmudic authority."