I don't know what you're talking about here.
Okay, the term used in the Hebrew that is translated to "Grecia" or "Greece" is יָוָ֑ן or "ja-wan", it is used in more places in the bible than Daniel 8. In Daniel and Zechariah they translate that term to Greece, in Genesis, Chronicles, and Ezekiel they translate it as Javan. Because Javan is used first, being in Genesis, and it is a son of Japheth, I believe that's the most accurate way to view that term. Can the Javanites be Greek? Yes. I said as much. But they also might not be, as maps that show where historians believe Javanites settled is in West Turkey.
But either can be wrong as well.
So I say, Javan, because that is in agreement with Genesis, and is closer to Ja-wan which is the Hebrew term being translated.
I addressed this. You are wrong about that. Did you ignore what I said about this?
Doesn't work. Because Gabriel specifically says, that "for at the time of the end shall be the vision."
This specific vision, that he is talking about the one Daniel saw about the Ram and the Goat, is going to take place at the time of the end.
That is explicit. You can't dance around it, the way of phrasing this clause of the verse is "the vision will be at the time of the end"
No, it indicates that it will happen at the appointed time. You are misinterpreting the text. It's very obvious that it's talking about the ancient Medo Persian and Greek empires. Why deny something so obvious? I don't get it. We should be celebrating how the Bible accurately prophesied about those empires while being in awe of God's foreknowledge and here you are denying that it has anything to do with that.
"It's obvious" is horrible rationale applied to scripture.
Because what you're doing, is taking the text partially, looking at something that "kinda seems like this might have been it" and then assuming that's it, and handwaving any discrepancies.
God doesn't make discrepancies
The text outright says, this vision will happen at the time of the end
Gabriel also says that this is what will happen at the last end of the indignation.
Greece taking over Persia was not the indignation of God. There's a procession of different empires in the world, but only Babylon was destroyed specifically as vengeance for destroying Jerusalem, using the Persians. The Persians began the decree to rebuild Jerusalem and the Temple..