Stan Kreis

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Stan Kreis

Stan Kreis

@stanik2

Masters in Economics, Accounting and BS in Sociology. Fought for African-American civil rights in the South, former Communist in my youth. Working class.

Beigetreten Mayıs 2009
939 Folgt949 Follower
Captain Allen
Captain Allen@CptAllenHistory·
Albert Einstein died with a speech for Israel in his hands. This day (April 17) in 1955, the world’s most celebrated genius was hospitalized with internal bleeding. It was just 9 days before Israel’s 7th Independence Day & Einstein was scheduled to give a major televised address (to air on ABC, NBC & CBS) - he had a draft of his speech with him in the hospital. Sadly for the world, Albert Einstein passed away the very next day. He was never able to share any more of his genius or the speech he intended to give marking Israel’s rebirth days later. However, you can read here what Einstein intended to say: “The establishment of Israel is an event which actively engages the conscience of this generation ... It is a bitter paradox to find that a State which was destined to be a shelter for a martyred people is itself threatened by grave dangers to its own security. The universal conscience cannot be indifferent to such peril.” Einstein had been a passionate Zionist for decades. In 1921, he toured America with Chaim Weizmann raising funds for Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The following year, he lectured there and proudly declared Jews were once again becoming “a force in the world.” In a letter to Jawaharlal Nehru in 1947, Einstein wrote: “Long before the emergence of Hitler I made the cause of Zionism mine because through it I saw a means of correcting a flagrant wrong ... The Jewish people alone has for centuries been in the anomalous position of being victimized and hounded as a people.” When Israel offered him the presidency (a largely ceremonial position) in 1952, he declined with characteristic humility: “I am deeply moved by the offer from our State of Israel ... but I lack both the natural aptitude and the experience to deal properly with people and to exercise official functions.” Here, in the picture below, he is smiling and laughing with Israel’s first Prime Minister - David Ben-Gurion. Einstein supported the project for Jewish sovereignty from its earliest days. He even spoke at the 1939 Palestine Pavilion (a purely Jewish pavilion at the time) at the New York World’s Fair, calling the Zionist project “a refuge in a stormy sea of turmoil.” Yet even in America, Einstein faced antisemitism. Princeton University wouldn’t hire Jewish professors until the late 1940s. That’s right - Princeton would not hire EINSTEIN to teach at its university because he was a Jew. So while people often say “Einstein taught at Princeton,” that’s inaccurate. In truth, he worked at the Institute for Advanced Study, a prestigious but entirely separate entity located in the town of Princeton that had to be created by American Jews as a haven for refugee scholars escaping Nazi-occupied Europe. While Einstein largely rejected organized religion, he described himself as having a “deep religiosity” rooted in wonder at the universe. For Einstein, Judaism was a cultural and ethical tradition; and he maintained his strong solidarity with the Jewish people. Regarding being a Jew, Einstein once famously remarked: “A Jew who abandons his Judaism is like a snail that abandons its shell. It’s still a snail.” Einstein’s mind helped change our understanding of the world. Einstein’s heart never abandoned his people.
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Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
What are your thoughts on Modern Art
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Marco Foster
Marco Foster@MarcoFoster_·
Kyle Kulinski: “We should probably have a national divorce. There should be the Red States of America and the Blue States of America. We’ll come check back in a hundred years and see what’s going on. The blue states would have universal healthcare, free college, a living wage, higher standard of living, their GDP would be much higher. The red states would be fucking catastrophe”
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Emmanuel Macron
Emmanuel Macron@EmmanuelMacron·
Aux côtés de plus de cinquante pays, nous portons une initiative pour la liberté de navigation dans le détroit d’Ormuz.
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@MrPitbull07 Please provide a citation from a reputable source for this storyline.
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
Remember Dan Price...that CEO who took a pay cut so he could pay all his employees a minimum annual wage of $70,000? Here’s what happened next: “Six years later after the decision that others said would destroy his business, Dan reports that revenue has tripled, the customer base has doubled, 70% of his employees have paid down debt, many bought homes for the first time, 401(k) contributions grew by 155% and turnover dropped in half. His business is now a Harvard Business School case study.” In his own words: “6 years ago today I raised my company's min annual salary to $70k. Fox News called me a socialist whose employees would be on bread lines. Since then our revenue tripled, we're a Harvard Business School case study & our employees had a 10x boom in homes bought. Always invest in people.” Courtesy of Craig Henley
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@CptAllenHistory I often think about the number of Nobel Prizes given out that includes about 22% of Jewish origin. How much higher that figure might be if these Jews were not murdered in the Holocaust.
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Captain Allen
Captain Allen@CptAllenHistory·
Exactly - Einstein didn’t just “see” the persecution, he watched the Nazis systematically exterminate an entire generation of Jewish genius while he himself barely escaped the noose in 1933. While Einstein got out of Germany in time, many brilliant minds were lost forever to the barbarism of the Holocaust: Jewish writers like Irène Némirovsky (gassed in Auschwitz, 1942, after her masterpiece Suite Française was hidden in a suitcase) and Bruno Schulz (shot execution-style in the streets of Drohobycz, 1942); Artists like Charlotte Salomon (gassed in Auschwitz at 26, pregnant, her 800-painting life’s work smuggled out by a doctor); Composers like Viktor Ullmann (murdered in Auschwitz after creating masterpieces inside Theresienstadt); and Thousands of Jewish scientists, physicians, and researchers whose discoveries died with them. Einstein understood the stakes with chilling clarity because he saw what was being erased: not just lives, but the Jewish people’s irreplaceable contribution to civilization. That’s why Einstein's commitment to Zionism and Israel only deepened. The Holocaust proved there was no safety in “assimilation” - only in a sovereign Jewish homeland that could protect its people, their minds, and their future.
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
Einstein was a deep thinker, and the persecution of Jews did not escape him. Many good Jewish scientists, artists, writers, etc. died in the Holocaust. He saw that, and deeply understood that in his "take" on the World.
Captain Allen@CptAllenHistory

Albert Einstein died with a speech for Israel in his hands. This day (April 17) in 1955, the world’s most celebrated genius was hospitalized with internal bleeding. It was just 9 days before Israel’s 7th Independence Day & Einstein was scheduled to give a major televised address (to air on ABC, NBC & CBS) - he had a draft of his speech with him in the hospital. Sadly for the world, Albert Einstein passed away the very next day. He was never able to share any more of his genius or the speech he intended to give marking Israel’s rebirth days later. However, you can read here what Einstein intended to say: “The establishment of Israel is an event which actively engages the conscience of this generation ... It is a bitter paradox to find that a State which was destined to be a shelter for a martyred people is itself threatened by grave dangers to its own security. The universal conscience cannot be indifferent to such peril.” Einstein had been a passionate Zionist for decades. In 1921, he toured America with Chaim Weizmann raising funds for Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The following year, he lectured there and proudly declared Jews were once again becoming “a force in the world.” In a letter to Jawaharlal Nehru in 1947, Einstein wrote: “Long before the emergence of Hitler I made the cause of Zionism mine because through it I saw a means of correcting a flagrant wrong ... The Jewish people alone has for centuries been in the anomalous position of being victimized and hounded as a people.” When Israel offered him the presidency (a largely ceremonial position) in 1952, he declined with characteristic humility: “I am deeply moved by the offer from our State of Israel ... but I lack both the natural aptitude and the experience to deal properly with people and to exercise official functions.” Here, in the picture below, he is smiling and laughing with Israel’s first Prime Minister - David Ben-Gurion. Einstein supported the project for Jewish sovereignty from its earliest days. He even spoke at the 1939 Palestine Pavilion (a purely Jewish pavilion at the time) at the New York World’s Fair, calling the Zionist project “a refuge in a stormy sea of turmoil.” Yet even in America, Einstein faced antisemitism. Princeton University wouldn’t hire Jewish professors until the late 1940s. That’s right - Princeton would not hire EINSTEIN to teach at its university because he was a Jew. So while people often say “Einstein taught at Princeton,” that’s inaccurate. In truth, he worked at the Institute for Advanced Study, a prestigious but entirely separate entity located in the town of Princeton that had to be created by American Jews as a haven for refugee scholars escaping Nazi-occupied Europe. While Einstein largely rejected organized religion, he described himself as having a “deep religiosity” rooted in wonder at the universe. For Einstein, Judaism was a cultural and ethical tradition; and he maintained his strong solidarity with the Jewish people. Regarding being a Jew, Einstein once famously remarked: “A Jew who abandons his Judaism is like a snail that abandons its shell. It’s still a snail.” Einstein’s mind helped change our understanding of the world. Einstein’s heart never abandoned his people.

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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@StefanMolyneux If there exists no "hell" then what does punishment mean? You are free to pursue your sins and encounter the consequences.
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@voiceofrabbis G-d commands you to protect other Jews. Apparently, you don't care what G-d commands.
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Voice of Rabbis
Voice of Rabbis@voiceofrabbis·
Last year, hundreds of thousands of authentic Jews flooded the streets with one message: We will never serve in the Zionist military! To a G-d-fearing Jew, their army is a spiritual death sentence. We belong to the G-D, not to the Zionist state or its wars. This is the only message of true Judaism. Source @authenttorahjew @TorahJudaism
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@BriannaWu It's in your nature to try to look after people. I'll bet the father understood that immediately...right or wrong.
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Brianna Wu
Brianna Wu@BriannaWu·
Ethical question. I was in the hotel gym just now in a dad came in to do weights with two of his children. While he wasn’t paying attention to his son, who was about seven years old, climbed on the treadmill and kept hitting buttons until it was going at 8 miles an hour. Worried he was going to get killed. I warned him to turn it down. He then got back on it and did it again. I ended my workout early and talk to the dad saying I thought that was dangerous and I didn’t want someone a child to get hurt. He said it was fine and he did 8 miles an hour yesterday. At that point, I left and informed the front desk. I said it was their call, but it was my judgment a child could get seriously hurt. Was this the right thing to do?
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@nickyslex You have a lot of life left in you. Use it wisely.
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Nicole
Nicole@nickyslex·
i’m a 1972 baby, am I still a cutie?
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
We will carry on. And beyond us, others will carry on. No Jew dies in vain, even those that work against us. We have a trump card, we have Hashem.
Mazelit Airaksinen 🎗@Mazelit_

“I have no more earth to cling to” 🎗️ Yosef Wiener, a Holocaust survivor who lost his grandson Yahav, his granddaughter Hadar, and her husband Itay on October 7th, has passed away. Before his passing, he wrote these inconceivable words: "My name is Yosef Wiener, and I am 97 years old. I was saved from the fire of the Nazi beasts; my entire family was annihilated in that terrible inferno. I was severed from my deep roots, and I erected a monument of basalt stones in their memory. Out of total exhaustion, out of despair, while drowning, I clung to the earth and planted myself in Zion. I married Aviva, and together we raised two magnificent children, Ofer and Nurit. From Ofer and Michal, four grandchildren were born to us in Kfar Aza. From Nurit and Miki, six grandchildren were born to us in Kfar Aza. I had reached the stage of a family tree firmly planted in the soil of the homeland, bearing fruit. But suddenly, from within the fences of evil, October 7th, 2023, arrived. The terrifying sights of fire and dust, the slaughter and horrific murder of innocents reached me once again. My grandson, dearer to me than all, Yahav (of blessed memory), was murdered while protecting his wife, Shaye-Lee, and his one-month-old daughter, Shaya. My granddaughter, dearer to me than all, Hadar (of blessed memory), and her husband Itay (of blessed memory), were murdered while protecting their ten-month-old twins, Roee and Guy. Once again, I am at the end of my strength, in despair, drowning. And I have no more earth to cling to." 💔

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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@Mazelit_ We will carry on. And beyond us, others will carry on. No Jew dies in vain, even those that work against us. We have a trump card, we have Hashem.
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Mazelit Airaksinen 🎗
“I have no more earth to cling to” 🎗️ Yosef Wiener, a Holocaust survivor who lost his grandson Yahav, his granddaughter Hadar, and her husband Itay on October 7th, has passed away. Before his passing, he wrote these inconceivable words: "My name is Yosef Wiener, and I am 97 years old. I was saved from the fire of the Nazi beasts; my entire family was annihilated in that terrible inferno. I was severed from my deep roots, and I erected a monument of basalt stones in their memory. Out of total exhaustion, out of despair, while drowning, I clung to the earth and planted myself in Zion. I married Aviva, and together we raised two magnificent children, Ofer and Nurit. From Ofer and Michal, four grandchildren were born to us in Kfar Aza. From Nurit and Miki, six grandchildren were born to us in Kfar Aza. I had reached the stage of a family tree firmly planted in the soil of the homeland, bearing fruit. But suddenly, from within the fences of evil, October 7th, 2023, arrived. The terrifying sights of fire and dust, the slaughter and horrific murder of innocents reached me once again. My grandson, dearer to me than all, Yahav (of blessed memory), was murdered while protecting his wife, Shaye-Lee, and his one-month-old daughter, Shaya. My granddaughter, dearer to me than all, Hadar (of blessed memory), and her husband Itay (of blessed memory), were murdered while protecting their ten-month-old twins, Roee and Guy. Once again, I am at the end of my strength, in despair, drowning. And I have no more earth to cling to." 💔
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Stan Kreis
Stan Kreis@stanik2·
@RevRayCistman He didn't get a fair and impartial trial. His pardon would be one way of backing out of his undeserved sentence.
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