André Feldman
12.2K posts

André Feldman
@feldm_andre
Brasileiro, cidadão e ciclista
Katılım Nisan 2019
944 Takip Edilen111 Takipçiler
André Feldman retweetledi

@pait Exemplo de regra.
Estadão 🗞️@Estadao
EDITORIAL | Abuso de poder econômico é legalizado – “Ao permitir que governantes se beneficiem eleitoralmente durante campanha, o Congresso tratou os eleitores como reles peões a serviço de seus desígnios de poder”. Leia o texto completo em x.gd/DYuwP
Português

@feldm_andre Há exceções, parlamentares dedicadas ao interesse público. Já votei em quase todas.
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André Feldman retweetledi

A land without a people, for a people without a land.
Anti-Zionists will never forgive us for defeating malaria, drying the swamps, making the desert bloom, creating a job market that drew people from all over the Middle East, bringing running water, electricity, and roads to a desolate land.

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🚨 GAZA FLOTILLA ACTIVIST SAYS THE QUIET PART OUT LOUD
Rosa Martinez, an activist from the flotilla to Gaza, admits in his own voice that the purpose of the flotilla is not really to bring aid to Gaza’s residents.
It is to confront IDF soldiers and drag Gaza back into the headlines after international attention moved elsewhere.
That is the entire strategy.
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André Feldman retweetledi
André Feldman retweetledi

One of the biggest and lesser known stories of Nov 29 is that the lands allocated to a Jewish state (two color map) were essentially those the Zionists reclaimed from malaria through land purchase, science and education (the two-tone blue map is the incidents of malaria and the middle map shows Jewish land ownership of those lands reclaimed from malaria).
Moreover, the sudden and extremely rapid increase of the Arab population in the 1920’s and 1930’s in this barely populated backwater region (this was the highest population increase rate in the world in 1931/2) was only in part due to immigration spurred by Zionist development of the land. The major share of the massive Arab population increase was thanks to Malaria eradication, which was the work of the Galician born famed microbiologist and ardent Zionist Dr. Israel Kligler (credit to the great historical work of Anton Alexander).
With this knowledge it remains even a greater tragedy that the now much more numerous Arabs of the land directed their efforts towards brutally fighting Zionism rather than choosing to live side by side with an emerging Jewish state. More than a year after the Oct 7 massacre we mark once more the Nov 29 moment when the Jews said yes to the UNGA plan of partition (having prioritized having a state, even if tiny and mostly desert and lands reclaimed from malaria and no Zion and no Judea) and the Arabs said no and proceeded to wage a brutal war to the present day (having prioritized - still - the goal of the Jews not having a state at all and of any size).
(Note on map titles: for twenty centuries, before a campaign of denial was underway, it was well understood that the name “Palestine” merely denoted the Roman/Christian/Colonial/European name for the geographic region where the Land of Israel was and was therefore deeply associated with Jews and the their continuous connection to the land.
Hence the League of Nation in establishing the mandate recognized the “historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine" as the "grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country” and which is why the Palestine Philharmonic Orchestra of Jewish musicians became the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra…)

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For some reason, any discussion on the “Nakba” jumps straight to April 1948, deliberately ignoring the first 4 months of the war.
That’s why it’s important to tell the story from the beginning: the partition plan, the war declaration on Jews, the blockade on Jerusalem and the coordinated attacks on Jewish villages and Kibbutzim.
The attack on Kibbutz Efal in December 1947 is just one example of many:
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The Committee to Protect Journalists, the organization that Nicholas Kristof used as a major source for his "dog rape" story, has been caught silently removing the names of people from their list of journalists killed in Gaza.
Because those "journalists" turned out to be less interested in reporting the news and more interested in killing Jews.
Instead of acknowledging that they mistakenly put the names of terrorists on their journalist list, they silently deleted them instead.
Because acknowledging they made a mistake would be giving Israel a little bit of credit, and they'd rather do anything than that.

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André Feldman retweetledi

🗓️ Network data show #Iran's internet blackout is entering its 13th week after surpassing 2016 hours of digital isolation from the outside world.
Daily life for most Iranians is now shaped by the loss of opportunities and access to information others can reach in seconds.

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If you’re wondering why X has been overrun by Nazis, woke Jew hating freaks, and Islamist conspiracy nut jobs … here is your answer.
Thousands of accounts repeating and regurgitating false and debunked claims as nauseum, targeting Jewish voices, and spreading very clear yet untrue narratives that everything happening anywhere is somehow related to Jews.
What you are seeing on X right now is coordinated inauthentic behavior at levels I’ve never seen before. The entire app is overrun by sock puppet and bot accounts. The Islamic regime must fall.

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André Feldman retweetledi
André Feldman retweetledi
André Feldman retweetledi

In September 1943, Italy fell under German occupation. The SS hunted Jews for deportation to Auschwitz.
In Assisi, a 32-year-old Franciscan friar named Rufino Niccacci—peasant-born, Guardian of San Damiano Monastery, and someone who had never met a Jew—received an order from Bishop Giuseppe Nicolini.
“We are hiding Jews in every monastery and convent in Assisi.”
“If we’re caught, we’ll be shot,” Rufino replied.
“Yes,” the bishop said. “As many as can come.”
Rufino accepted.
What followed was one of the war’s most daring rescues. Jews fleeing from Rome, Florence, and the north poured into Assisi.
Rufino hid them across 26 monasteries and convents—including the Basilica of Saint Francis and ancient cloistered houses that had never admitted outsiders.
They disguised Jews as monks and nuns. Rufino taught them Latin prayers, how to walk, pray, and sit in chapel. Children memorized Catholic rites they didn’t understand.
A local souvenir shop owner, Luigi Brizi, and his son printed hundreds of flawless fake identity cards, claiming the bearers were from already-liberated southern Italy.
The SS raided repeatedly. They searched monasteries, convents, and homes. They found nothing.
For eight months, an entire town kept the secret. Not a single betrayal. A German colonel, devout Catholic Valentin Müller, was stationed there. He loved Assisi’s churches, attended Mass, and even toured holy sites with Rufino—never knowing (or never acknowledging) the hundreds of hidden Jews around him. He successfully petitioned to make Assisi a protected hospital town, removing combat troops.
Inside the convents, quiet miracles occurred. Jews observed Yom Kippur with the nuns’ blessing; the nuns prepared the breaking-fast meal. Rufino arranged Hebrew lessons for the children, ensuring they could still practice their faith while pretending to be Catholic.
“They were children of God,” he later said. “What else were we supposed to do?”
The network nearly broke in May 1944 when the Bishop’s secretary, Father Aldo Brunacci, was arrested and interrogated. He revealed nothing. Vatican pressure secured his release.
One month later, on June 16, 1944, the Allies liberated Assisi. All 300 hidden Jews walked out alive. Not one had been caught or deported.
They had been sheltered by hundreds of nuns, priests, and townspeople who knew the penalty: priests across Europe were being executed for less.
One informant could have doomed them all. It never happened.
After the war, Rufino returned to quiet Franciscan life. He founded a settlement for poor Christian and Jewish families, served as a parish priest, and avoided fame.
In 1974, Yad Vashem named him Righteous Among the Nations. He planted a tree in Israel and quietly reunited with one of the women he had saved.
He died in 1976 at 65, asking to be cremated in solidarity with Holocaust victims. The Church buried him traditionally. Today, few outside Assisi know his name.
Yet his legacy endures in the thousands of descendants of those 300 saved souls.
An entire town proved it was possible to choose humanity over fear.
No collaborators. No betrayals. No exceptions.
They did not yield.
May all of their memories be a blessing, especially Friar Rufino Nicacci.

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André Feldman retweetledi

On NPR's @MorningEdition, @LeilaFadel claimed Palestinians faced 78 years of "mass expulsion and killings" since 1948. In one swift move, @NPR acted as if Israel's war for independence didn't start because its Arab neighbors declared war.
The truth? Israel’s Declaration of Independence explicitly appealed for Arab residents to stay. Over 150,000 did, and their descendants make up 20% of Israel’s population today. They are judges, lawyers, doctors, and leaders in the country. Many Arabs fled after their leaders rejected the UN Partition Plan and chose war, often ordering them to leave with promises of a swift return upon the destruction of the fledgling Jewish state. The Arab nations lost that war. NPR's introduction to the "Nakba" reflects ignorance of the history of the region or a purposeful effort to rewrite it.
NPR also conveniently omitted the actual massacres and kidnapping of Jewish villagers by Arab forces during that same conflict.
Distorting history to manufacture a one-sided narrative of exclusive victimhood is activism, not journalism.
camera.org/article/nprs-a…

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What if the west isn't the villain they told you it was?
We’ve spent years accepting accusations about racism, intolerance, and slavery without challenging the bigger historical reality:
The societies most condemned today are also the ones that led the world in ending slavery, expanding rights, and building the most tolerant nations on earth.
That’s the conversation nobody wants to have.
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André Feldman retweetledi

🎥 WATCH:
“We are seeing calls to fire Jewish doctors, the praising of terrorist groups in and outside of clinical settings, the refusal to treat patients because of their faith, national origin or Zionist identity, and the demand that Jewish colleagues renounce Israel as a condition of workplace acceptance,” said Eveline Shekhman at a House hearing.
“This is antisemitism,” she said. “This is discrimination, and it is a distraction. It has no place in medicine.”
(Jewish Insider)
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