AH
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When asked: 'how many babies have you sniped?' Eastland Christopher Staveley replied: 'not enough'. Staveley is a British jewish doctor.





On This Day — May 2, 1860: Theodor Herzl was born in Budapest. He began life as the most unlikely of Jewish prophets — a thoroughly assimilated, secular Viennese journalist and playwright who truly believed the Jewish people could simply vanish into enlightened Europe and be safe. He was wrong. The rising tide of modern racial antisemitism shattered him. In Vienna, Karl Lueger built a political career on Jew-hatred. In Paris, Herzl watched the Dreyfus Affair unfold — a Jewish officer framed for treason while mobs screamed “Death to the Jews!” — and realized emancipation had been a cruel illusion. Jews were no longer hated for their religion. They were hated for being Jews. Herzl saw what almost no one else did: the Jewish people would never be safe without a state of their own. In 1896 he published Der Judenstaat (“The Jewish State”), declaring: “The Jewish question persists wherever Jews live in appreciable numbers ... This is the case, and will inevitably be so, everywhere.” One year later, in 1897, he convened the First Zionist Congress in Basel and later wrote in his diary: “At Basel I founded the Jewish State.” He told the world: “If you will it, it is no dream” and “We are a people — one people.” For the next seven years he poured himself into the cause with superhuman effort — meeting the Ottoman Sultan, the German Kaiser, the Pope, and British officials — begging, negotiating, and pleading for the right of the Jewish people to return to their ancient homeland. He exhausted himself completely. He died on July 3, 1904, at the age of just 44 — worn out, broken in body, but never in vision. He never lived to see the catastrophe he feared was coming. He never saw the Holocaust. But he saw clearly what emancipation could not fix: that even in “enlightened” Europe, the Jews would never be truly accepted. He was right. In 1948 — just 44 years after his death — the State of Israel rose from the ashes of exile and genocide. In 1949 his remains were brought home to Mount Herzl in Jerusalem, the city he loved but barely knew. One assimilated Jew, shaken by the hatred he witnessed, dared to turn a 2,000-year-old dream into a political plan. Because of him, the Jewish people once again have a home. Am Yisrael Chai.




















A strange thing happened on my Uber drive today. The Indian driver complained to ME about the Indians being let into NZ. He said they are the WRONG Indians and NZ is importing big trouble. Religious people who war with each other. Mass import of Indians needs to stop NOW.




On Israel’s Memorial Day, we remember the 25,648 fallen soldiers and 5,313 civilian victims of terrorism. Behind every number is a life, a family, a story cut short. We honor their memory and carry their legacy forward. 🕯️ May their memory be a blessing.













