Wow! @BudgetRentalJA the WORST customer service at PBI. Ridiculous long line - not enough staff - no one offering to help move things along. Everyone will be in line for at least an hour or more. Last time I use budget! This is ridiculous.
Don’t ever dare tell me that someone came to rescue our grandparents from the gas chambers.
Because no one did.
They didn’t come when they put up those “No Jews allowed” signs.
They didn’t come when families were kicked out of schools, jobs, banks, and homes.
When fathers were dragged off and never seen again for being Jewish.
When mothers sewed yellow stars on their coats—like that made them less human.
They didn’t come when they burned down synagogues.
When they shattered our windows and crushed our lives.
When they beat our kids in the streets and no one stopped it.
They didn’t come when we were shoved into ghettos, and hunger tortured us.
When disease spread like wildfire and everything we had was taken, erased.
They didn’t come when the trains rolled in—train after train packed with the sick, the children, the elderly.
No food. No water. No idea where we were going—just away forever.
And the world knew.
Of course, they did. They had the reports, the witnesses, the headlines, the news.
But they ignored it.
America didn’t want us.
Britain didn’t care.
Canada said, “None is too many.”
And the 'Neutral' countries. They stayed neutral.
While families like mine vanished, they stayed neutral. F their neutrality.
All my grandparents had numbers on their arms.
Tattooed, not by choice (it’s forbidden by Jewish law), but by force, to be counted like stock.
Some were the last ones left of entire families—gone.
Not lost. But taken, robbed, stolen, ripped away.
Ask yourself: If Japan hadn’t attacked Pearl Harbor, would America have stepped foot in Europe?
If Hitler hadn’t betrayed Stalin, would Russia have interfered to rescue the Jews he hated?
Without those events, the world would’ve stayed still.
It might’ve been years, and then…
You wouldn’t known about us outside of museums.
We’d be like the Romans.
Like the Babylonians.
A “once-was.”
Just old photos.
An exhibit.
A memory.
So don’t tell me someone came to save us.
They didn’t save us.
They showed up after the fire was almost burned out and acted like heroes.
They came to see the piles of shoes.
The rooms of hair.
The bones that didn’t completely burn.
They found people barely alive.
Eyes sunken into their faces, empty of thought and full of pain.
Children who couldn’t cry because they were too busy convincing themselves they were alive.
That’s not a rescue.
That’s showing up after the damage is done and saying, “Look, I did something.”
Of course, we’re grateful for those who fought. For the soldiers who stormed hellholes, who risked everything to tear down the gates and ultimately lead our grandparents to freedom.
But don’t you dare talk about Jews like you have no blood on your hands.
Don’t pretend you weren’t silent while we burned.
Don’t even think about it.
After the war, suddenly everyone cared.
They built museums.
Lit candles.
Made speeches.
Wrote “never again” on signs.
But do you know what that is?
Guilt dressed up as remembrance.
Grief with no consequences.
Regret with no price.
They wept for what was left.
But when it mattered? When my family needed someone?
They did nothing.
And you—sitting here reading this—ask yourself:
If you were alive then, would you have done something?
Would you have opened your door? Taken a family in?
Spoken out while everyone else stayed quiet?
Be real.
Most didn’t need to be Nazis to be complicit.
They just needed to stay silent.
They just needed to do nothing.
And that’s exactly what they did.
We didn’t survive just to be polite about it.
We didn’t crawl out of the ashes to make everyone feel better.
We’re not a tragedy.
We’re not a statistic.
We’re not some story you hear once a year.
We are not a remembrance month or day.
We’re what’s left.
And we will never forget that when it counted, no one came.
Not then.
Not when it mattered.
We know history repeats itself.
So let me ask: How confident do you think we are that this time the world would step in earlier?
Not too confident, I can tell you that.
So very frustrated with my experience with #ihg hotels. Awful customer service. Reservation not as booked. No humans who can help with the problem. Shameful.#staybridge
Before October 7, I believed a lot of negative things about Israel because I’ve gotten all my news about their conflict from loaded sources like these.
So I did the responsible thing. I took time to read the history. Was this progressive storyline of noble Palestinians standing up to Israeli aggression true? Were the maps I saw about disappearing Palestine factual?
Little of it was true. Every part of the conflict is deliberately framed in a misleading way.
In a lot of ways, Israel / Palestine history is complicated. But it’s also not complicated. There are 400 million Muslims in the region and one of the main political projects that unites them is trying to destroy the country with 7 million Jews.
@medeabenjamin Here’s the thing - had Hamas released the hostages, there would be a ceasefire. Had Hamas not broken a ceasefire, there’d be no hostages. Who is guilty? Hamas. On all accounts. Get real.
@NPC_Dale@radzi_syed@janm18459@NiohBerg Gaza had self determination since 2005 and voted Hamas into power. Israel offered peace on 12 different occasions. 99% of land swaps. Online the Palestinians walked away. Nothing. Absolutely nothing can justify October 7. Hamas wants to see every Jew dead. No justiciation
@realrabbilinda Hosted? If you mean host as innocent hostage held against her will while her mom died of brain cancer pleading for her daughter’s release from captivity. A real host would have ensured her safe passage home. If you aid Hamas, you are complicit. Get real.
@radzi_syed@janm18459@NiohBerg Majority were from Arab countries - Yemen, Morocco, Tunisia, Syria, Iraq. Those are all places Jews are not welcome, were expelled from and cannot return to. You’re trying to crate a narrative that all Jews are white Eastern European. That’s false.
@janm18459@NiohBerg Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Morocco, Tunisia, Iraq, Iran were expelled from and are not welcome back. Where one does not have any personal freedom. Jews are unwelcome in those countries because their home is Israel.