Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston
23.1K posts

Amy Winston
@_AmyWinston
There's a girl who lives in the High Country, who lives on Tea & Dreams...
Toronto Beigetreten Şubat 2009
415 Folgt341 Follower
Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston retweetet

@ShaykhSulaiman Oh great. Thanks. More places I can report you! Excellent
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Amy Winston retweetet

25 years ago today, March 26, 2001, a Palestinian sniper deliberately put a baby in his crosshairs and pulled the trigger.
Ten-month-old Shalhevet Pass was in her stroller near a public playground when the sniper’s bullet struck her tiny head, killing her instantly.
When her father, Yitzhak, tried to shield his daughter's body, the sniper fired two more times and wounded him in both legs.
This terrorist specifically chose a Jewish infant as his target.
This was pure, premeditated brutality - the kind Palestinian terrorists have shown again and again by targeting children and even babies in strollers, playgrounds, and bedrooms. It wasn’t collateral damage. It was the point.
The timing made it even more grotesque. Just months earlier, at Camp David, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered Yasser Arafat a Palestinian state with a capital in East Jerusalem; Arafat walked away without a counteroffer, ignited the Second Intifada, and unleashed a wave of terror that included this monstrous act.
The murder of Shalhevet Pass shook Israeli society to its core. An innocent baby in diapers, executed in broad daylight in front of her parents. Memorial candles blanketed the neighborhood. Her mother clung to her daughter’s lifeless body for hours.
Making matters even worse, the killer was Mahmud Amru, a member of Tanzim - the armed militia that reports directly to Fatah, the party founded by Arafat and still led today by Mahmoud Abbas. This wasn’t Hamas. This was the “moderate” Palestinian leadership’s own terrorist arm.
And here’s the part that exposes the moral rot at the heart of the Palestinian Authority: under its official “pay for slay” policy, the PA has funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars — likely half a million or more over two decades — in monthly salaries and benefits to Amru for murdering a Jewish baby. The more Jews you kill, the bigger the reward. It’s not welfare. It’s blood money, paid straight from the PA budget, incentivizing exactly this kind of savagery.
Shalhevet Pass was not a “settler” or a “soldier.” She was a baby. Her only “crime” was being Jewish in the Jewish homeland. Twenty-five years later, the same PA that glorifies her murderer still runs the same system, still funds the same hatred, and still pretends to want peace.

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Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston retweetet

Amy Winston retweetet

@ShaykhSulaiman It was a fire at a building. Sorry to break your little terrorist loving heart 🤡
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Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston retweetet

This line should stop every Canadian in their tracks.
"More synagogues in Canada in the past 28 months have been desecrated, burned, shot at, or threatened with bombings than any other country."
How many Canadians know that?
@MelissaLantsman @Roman_Baber @AHousefather @RachelBendayan

Bianna Golodryga@biannagolodryga
It’s hard to read this without concluding that @MarkJCarney is failing to protect his Jewish citizens. Canada’s Polite Pogrom Is a national tolerance for zealotry purging Jews from public life? theatlantic.com/international/…
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Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston retweetet
Amy Winston retweetet

They told her to hide her name. Six million had just died for theirs. She wore it like a crown.
September 1945. Weeks after World War II ended, as photos of liberated concentration camps shocked the world, a 21-year-old Jewish woman from the Bronx stepped onto the Miss America stage in Atlantic City.
Her name was Bess Myerson.
Pageant sponsors pulled her aside: “Change it. ‘Myerson’ sounds too Jewish. Pick something neutral—something that won’t hurt ticket sales.” In 1945, antisemitism was commonplace in America—country clubs, universities, neighborhoods, and help-wanted ads all excluded Jews. A Jewish Miss America was considered a liability.
Bess refused.
Born to Russian-Jewish immigrants who had fled pogroms, she grew up in poverty in the Bronx. Her parents sacrificed for music lessons; she became a gifted pianist and flutist, studying music at Hunter College while working to support her family. She entered the pageant almost by accident, for scholarship money, and won Miss New York City and Miss New York State—competing openly as herself.
Jewish communities rallied. Holocaust survivors with fresh camp tattoos and families still grieving six million murdered wrote urging her: Don’t hide. Stand proud.
On September 8, 1945, Bess performed Gershwin’s “Summertime” on flute, then swept the talent and evening gown competitions.
She was crowned the first Jewish Miss America—openly, defiantly.
Her victory was more than a title. For a people reeling from the Holocaust, it was proof they belonged.
The cost was immediate. During her reign, sponsors dropped her, hotels turned her away, and venues refused to book a Jewish Miss America. She spoke openly about the discrimination, refusing silence.
Instead of fading into decoration, Bess used her platform to speak nationwide on tolerance and prejudice. She later built a career in public service, becoming New York City’s first Commissioner of Consumer Affairs.
Bess Myerson didn’t win despite being Jewish. She won as a proud Jewish woman—just weeks after six million had been killed for who they were. She refused to hide her name, turning a crown into an act of courage and a quiet declaration: You don’t defeat hate by erasing yourself. You defeat it by standing unashamed.
Pageant sponsors wanted her invisible. She became unforgettable.

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@ShaykhSulaiman When you can’t win the war against Iran so you start to take your frustration out with the tiniest country in the world with no defence.
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