In the pocket of James P. Cannon.

1.4K posts

In the pocket of James P. Cannon. banner
In the pocket of James P. Cannon.

In the pocket of James P. Cannon.

@david_rowl62668

Long time participant in the socialist and labor movement. Non-Jewish American who stands with the Jewish people. Long live Ukraine. Gender-critical.

Ohio, the United States Katılım Mayıs 2025
355 Takip Edilen124 Takipçiler
Kosher
Kosher@koshercockney·
Pro-Palestine terror supporters handled by German police. Germany knows that Free Palestine is the new Heil Hitler and they aren’t having it.
English
6
15
177
2.3K
In the pocket of James P. Cannon. retweetledi
Tami 🇮🇱
Tami 🇮🇱@roitele1·
En 1950, el gobierno iraquí aprobó una ley despojando a los judíos de su ciudadanía 🕍 Más de 120,000 judíos dejaron atrás hogares, negocios y una comunidad que había existido en Mesopotamia durante más de 2.600 años, desde el exilio babilónico de 586 a. C. La Operación Ezra y Nehemías fue el transporte aéreo secreto que los trajo a Israel. A las familias se les permitió una maleta. Irak congeló las cuentas bancarias. Las propiedades fue confiscada. Abordaron aviones con casi nada, muchos de ellos viendo un avión por primera vez en sus vidas. No eran refugiados del Holocausto. Eran refugiados de un borrador diferente, uno del que el mundo rara vez habla. Las comunidades judías de Irak, Egipto, Siria, Yemen y Libia fueron desmanteladas casi por completo en una sola generación. 850,000 judíos fueron desplazados de tierras árabes. Su historia merece ser contada. 💛
Tami 🇮🇱 tweet media
Español
115
1.5K
3.2K
42.5K
In the pocket of James P. Cannon. retweetledi
Vivid.🇮🇱
Vivid.🇮🇱@VividProwess·
This is Gaza before the war. They had everything, yet they chose to invade Israel, slaughter 1,200 Israelis, and promised to do it again and again. Never forget who started this war.
English
348
1.7K
6.3K
56.2K
In the pocket of James P. Cannon. retweetledi
Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
“I won’t do it. Send me to the gas chamber if you want.” Auschwitz, 1943. A French doctor stands before a group of terrified Jewish women. A Nazi officer has just issued an order. “You will assist with the sterilization experiments.” Adélaïde Hautval looks at the women. They already understand what’s coming. Medical torture disguised as science. She turns back to the Nazi doctor. “No.” Silence. No one refuses orders at Auschwitz. No one survives refusal. “You’ll be executed,” the Nazi says. Adelaide doesn’t hesitate. “Then execute me. I still won’t help you harm these women.” The officer backs down. Sends her away. Doesn’t kill her. How did she get there? One year earlier. April 1942. Adelaide is traveling through occupied France. She sees German soldiers humiliating an elderly Jewish woman, forcing her to wear the yellow star. Adelaide steps in. “Leave her alone.” Big mistake. The soldiers arrest her immediately. “You defend Jews? You’ll share their fate.” They pin a yellow star to her coat. Write across it: “Friend of Jews.” Adelaide wears it without resistance. Never removes it. They send her to prison. Then to concentration camps. Eventually to Auschwitz. Adelaide is a doctor. The Nazis need doctors. So they assign her to the camp infirmary. But they keep testing her. Keep giving impossible orders. “Assist in experiments or die.” Adelaide refuses. Again and again. For two years. She dares them to kill her. They never do. They need her skills too much. So she uses that to fight back. She treats prisoners in secret. Steals medicine. Hides sick women from selection lines. When Nazi doctors request subjects for experiments, Adelaide lies: “She’s too ill. You’ll get nothing useful.” The women weren’t ill. Adelaide was protecting them. It works. For two years, she blocks experiments. Protects hundreds. Survives by refusing to cooperate. May 1945. The war ends. Adelaide walks out of Ravensbrück concentration camp alive. She returns to France. Goes back to medicine. Tries to rebuild a normal life. But prosecutors soon find her. They need her testimony against Nazi doctors. Adelaide agrees. She testifies at the Nuremberg Trials, in Frankfurt, and in other war crimes cases. Defense lawyers challenge her. “You’re lying. German doctors wouldn’t do this.” Adelaide stands firm. “I was there. I saw it. I refused to take part. These are facts.” Her testimony helps convict multiple Nazi physicians. In 1965, Yad Vashem honors her as Righteous Among the Nations—for protecting Jewish prisoners and risking her life to resist. Adelaide rejects the spotlight. “I only did my duty as a doctor. As a human being.” She continues practicing medicine, later specializing in psychiatry. Many of her patients are Holocaust survivors. Dr. Adélaïde Hautval dies in 1988 at 81. Thousands attend her funeral. Former prisoners. Their children. Their grandchildren. One woman says: “Dr. Hautval saved my mother at Auschwitz. Hid her during selection. I exist because she said no.” Think about that. Adelaide had every reason to comply. She was already imprisoned. Already marked. Already condemned. Helping the Nazis wouldn’t have saved her. But refusing could have killed her. She refused anyway. Not once. Dozens of times. For two years. She used the one thing they needed—her medical expertise—and turned it into resistance. Protection. Survival. Most who resisted in camps died. Adelaide lived. Testified. Helped deliver justice. Then lived decades more—healing others. Never seeking recognition. Today, few people know her name. A memorial in France. A plaque in Israel. A few lines in history books. But mostly forgotten. The woman who faced evil and said no. Who dared them to kill her. Who lived—and made them answer for it. Dr. Adélaïde Hautval. Proof that refusing evil can save lives. Proof that one person saying “no” can protect hundreds. Proof that courage isn’t the absence of fear
Mr PitBull tweet media
English
321
4.7K
16.7K
609.9K
Sara Mary ⭐❤️
Sara Mary ⭐❤️@saniyafatma1278·
My 12-year-old granddaughter is nonverbal… today she handed me this drawing and said, “Grandma, I drew you.” 💔❤️ I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry… I mean, do I really look like this? 😂 But honestly, I’m so proud of her talent and the love behind it. That’s what matters most. She’s going to read your comments with me… so tell me—how did she do? 🥹
Sara Mary ⭐❤️ tweet media
English
166
57
594
7.5K
Eva Kurilova
Eva Kurilova@eva_kurilova·
First time we have both left our daughter 😭😭😭 freaking out!!!
English
11
0
80
1.9K
In the pocket of James P. Cannon. retweetledi
Israel ישראל
The Druze community in Israel is marking Ziyara Nabi Shuaib’ in the Galilee, an annual pilgrimage honoring the Prophet Jethro, a central figure in Druze faith and tradition. We extend our warm wishes to the Druze community in Israel and across the region. May this sacred gathering be a time of blessing and unity, honoring deep-rooted traditions. Ziyara Maqbula ❤️
English
71
481
2.4K
53K
In the pocket of James P. Cannon. retweetledi
Mossad Commentary
Mossad Commentary@MOSSADil·
🚨 ANTISEMITIC ATTACK IN BRUSSELS A Jewish man was brutally assaulted on the Brussels metro — punched repeatedly while attackers ripped a Star of David necklace from his neck. They didn’t take his wallet. They didn’t take his phone. They targeted one thing: that he was Jewish. The victim says the attackers made antisemitic remarks during the assault. The necklace, a gift from his father 30 years ago, was stolen.
Mossad Commentary tweet media
English
318
834
2.2K
45.8K
In the pocket of James P. Cannon. retweetledi
Adam Sellers
Adam Sellers@YisraelChaiAdam·
If Owen Jones was born 900 years ago he’d be in the town square screaming that Jews are poisoning the well and drinking children’s blood.
Adam Sellers tweet media
English
108
202
1.8K
33.1K