Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her)
7.6K posts

Jillian Allyse (she/her)
@Jillybean113
🌵Forever a Sun Devil 🌞Anthro•Sustainability | Climate ♻️| PubHealth Nerd🧠👩🏼⚕️ | Grieving Daughter, Resilient Spirit. 🌬🐢||🙏🏼 Justice against oligarchy
Medina, OH Beigetreten Haziran 2012
4.5K Folgt758 Follower
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet

Most Christians in Germany in the 1930s either supported Hitler or did not openly oppose his imperial ambitions. Why? According to historians, there were at least five reasons:
1. Nationalism
After World War I and the humiliating Treaty of Versailles, many Germans felt deeply wounded and longed for restored national pride. Hitler promised to “make Germany great again,” which resonated with nationalists — including many Christians who saw patriotism as a moral duty.
2. Economic desperation
Hyperinflation in the early 1920s wiped out savings, and the Great Depression left millions jobless and hopeless. Hitler promised jobs, economic revival, and stability — and many were desperate enough to believe him.
3. Desire for social order and traditional values
Hitler promoted family, discipline, obedience, and traditional gender roles. Many conservative Christians saw these as aligned with their moral worldview and felt reassured rather than threatened.
4. Antisemitism and anti-immigration prejudice
Antisemitic and anti-immigrant attitudes were widespread in European society long before Hitler. Nazi propaganda exploited these prejudices, portraying Jews and immigrants as threats to the nation’s “purity” and stability.
5. Fear of communism and social chaos
The 1920s and early 1930s were marked by economic depression, mass unemployment, and violent clashes in the streets. Many Christians — especially in middle-class and rural communities — feared a communist revolution that would suppress religion and destroy private property. Hitler presented himself as a shield against “godless Bolshevism,” winning support even from conservative church circles.
“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.” — Mark Twain

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They wrapped themselves in the flag so long they forgot it’s not a cloak of immunity.
Now a father with a son in the Army is the one saying what everyone’s been swallowing.
That’s the tell: when the people who actually serve this country feel shame, it’s not “security.”
It’s something uglier wearing a uniform.
Patriotism isn’t cheering raids.
Patriotism is recognizing a line has been crossed.
If this is what they call “America,” why does a real American sound like he’s grieving it.
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Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet

Today in Minneapolis, ICE agents shot and killed a woman in a shocking incident. Governor Walz has announced the state will ensure a fair investigation, and I am grateful for his swift action.
Many of us have seen the horrifying and painful video, which makes it clear that the Trump administration's explanation of this shooting is pure gaslighting. A full and fair investigation at the state level is absolutely necessary.
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Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet

I’m a Marine Corp veteran, trained by LEOs when I served in US embassies on how to handle unruly individuals or protestors.
1) If you are the guys with guns, you are the ones responsible for the situation. Doubly so if you outnumber the person you’re engaging.
2) You do not need to use force except to control the situation in order to deescalate it. Minimal force required.
3) You are NOT here to look for excuses to use more force. Even if the person gives you an excuse which “justifies” using force, that doesn’t mean using force is de facto the right move.
4) “Let the other person retreat” often resolves the situation just fine! Don’t surround people, back them up against a wall, etc. Your job is to control the situation. “I put myself stupidly in danger” is not an excuse to escalate “because I’m in danger.”
5) People will feed off of your energy. If you come rolling up like a fascist thug ready to break skulls, people will meet you at that level. If you show up calm, professional, and having a friendly chat, often that brings the temperature down.
Everything I see from ICE agents is they are relishing violence and exercising power, needlessly escalating situations, looking for opportunities to shoot their weapons and beat the shit out of people.
~ Alexander McCoy

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Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet

As a high school student, Dasia Taylor noticed a serious flaw in the way infections are detected after surgery. Traditional sutures give no visual warning when something goes wrong, often allowing infections to worsen before they are discovered. Determined to find a solution, she developed sutures that change color when harmful bacteria are present.
What began as a science fair project quickly gained national attention and evolved into a patented medical innovation. These sutures could help doctors catch infections earlier, reduce complications, and save lives, especially in under resourced hospitals. Dasia’s work is a powerful example of how curiosity and compassion can turn a simple idea into something with global impact.

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Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet
Jillian Allyse (she/her) retweetet

“Big food is taking over,” says Dr. Barry Popkin. The Gillings School professor recently co-led a group of nutrition experts in raising the global alarm on ultraprocessed foods. In a series of papers, they propose policy reforms to improve the food supply. nytimes.com/2025/11/18/wel…

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🌿 @NYU & USL's Timon McPhearson, Loan Diep & Ivonne Serna are at #COP30!
Join them Nov 20 at 9am at the Planetary Science Pavilion for the global launch of the NATURA Urban NbS Roadmap 🌍
"Taking Stock, Rooting Change: A Global Roadmap for Nature-Based Solutions"
#COP30Brazil


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