@AviMayer What is remarkable is that hezbollah really thought Israel would just keep it taking it from them. But when you keep on poking a bear, you get what you deserve. With God’s help we will take back our beautiful north and leave hezbollah a distant memory 💙🇮🇱💙
⭕️It is time for PM Netanyahu to confront Trump publicly and make it clear that any part of this surrender deal does not bind Israel. Israel will do whatever is necessary to protect its citizens. If Trump retaliates against Israel, so be it—ensure the entire US knows and witnesses this. Make it public. The pro-Israel crowd in the GOP and the independents who helped Trump win will turn against him in the midterms. The only way for Trump to understand and possibly change course is if he feels he could lose the midterms. If Netanyahu waits until after the midterms, it will be too late.
TEHILLIM: A 2-year-old girl is in critical condition after falling from a second-floor window on East 2nd Street near Avenue N in Flatbush on Monday morning.
Flatbush Hatzolah paramedics rushed the child to Maimonides Medical Center, where she remains in critical condition.
Please daven and say Tehillim for Gabriella bas Miriam.
⭕️ I am hoping that the old Trump is back; that is the only way to negotiate with Iran using bombs. Keep bombing them 24/7 until they sign a surrender agreement.
The world should stand with humanity against the Islamic regime in Iran. The regime has just declared war on the world. The regime is now targeting civilians, including women and children in Israel. Missiles aimed at the lives of Jews, Christians, Muslims, and Arabs in Israel. It is time for NATO, the EU, and America to stand together with the people of the Middle East and support efforts to counter terrorism, deter aggression, and protect civilians. Trump saying that we are reaching a ceasefire with such evil is WRONG. Stand with the Iranian people. Stand for peace, security, and a future free from fear and extremism.
Right war, maybe the wrong president. The war against the Islamic regime in Iran is the right decision, but it is being led with the wrong strategy. Negotiating with a terrorist regime is seen by many allies as a betrayal. Offering Iranian assets to compensate Gulf countries for Tehran-linked damage looks less like a solution and more like paying for a temporary ceasefire. The Islamic regime in Iran attacks the region for decades, funds militias, launches missiles and drones, threatens global shipping, and then the solution is to hand over some of its frozen assets and call it peace?
That's not strategy. That's paying the arsonist to stop playing with matches. The regime's assets would not cover a single day of the damage it has caused across the Gulf.
If the regime is the problem, why keep negotiating with the problem? Why save the virus instead of curing the disease?
The Iranian people deserve freedom. The region deserves security. The world deserves a solution that lasts longer than the next press conference.
🟥 Czy Henry Nowak mógł przeżyć?
Dr Krzysztof Magier @DrMagier , lekarz pediatra i były konsul honorowy RP w Cowes, przeanalizował nagrania z policyjnej kamery nasobnej pokazujące śmierć Henry'ego Nowaka.
Dr Magier jest lekarzem prowadzącym oddział intensywnej terapii dziecięcej, z doświadczeniem w szkoleniach z medycyny pola walki oraz po specjalistycznym kursie leczenia ciężkich urazów (w tym ran postrzałowych i kłutych).
Nie zgadza się z opinią patologa i sędziego, że Henry Nowak nie miał żadnych szans na przeżycie i ze skucie go w kajdanki nic w zasadzie nie zmieniło. Wręcz przeciwnie – istnieje duże prawdopodobieństwo, że to interwencja policji przyczyniła się do jego śmierci.
Przeanalizował on raport z sekcji, który wskazuje na uszkodzenie żyły podobojczykowej jako główne źródło krwawienia i tłumaczy, gdzie leży problem.
U zdrowej osoby krwawienie żylne odbywa się pod niskim ciśnieniem i często samoogranicza się dzięki powstającemu naturalnie skrzepowi, a samo zbliżenie krawędzi rany i ucisk otaczających tkanek domyka żyłę na tyle, że spowalnia albo nawet zatrzymuje krwawienie.
Z nagrania z policyjnej kamery nasobnej wynika, że gdy policja przybyła na miejsce (prawdopodobnie 5-10 minut po zranieniu), Henry był na tyle przytomny, że mówił dość głośno. Nie był zatem jeszcze w stanie terminalnym. Po wykręceniu rąk do tyłu i skuciu za plecami najprawdopodobniej doszło do rozciągnięcia żyły, rozerwania skrzepu i gwałtownego nasilenia krwawienia. W ciągu zaledwie ok. trzech minut stracił przytomność i zmarł.
Osoby z podejrzeniem urazów wewnętrznych nigdy nie powinny być gwałtownie przemieszczane ani szarpane – takie działanie może zniszczyć naturalny skrzep i doprowadzić do masywnego krwotoku wewnętrznego.
Zamiast natychmiastowego wezwania zespołu ratownictwa medycznego i przekazania pacjenta w ręce ratowników, policja go skuła. Gdyby na miejscu jako pierwsi pojawili się paramedycy, szanse Henry’ego na przeżycie byłyby znacznie większe. "50%" - pisze dr Magier.
Ratownicy mogliby szybko założyć kroplówkę, podać płyny zwiększające objętość krwi krążącej oraz kwas traneksamowy stabilizujący skrzep, a w razie potrzeby wykonać dekompresję igłową (wkłucie grubej i długiej igły w płuco), bo problemem nie był tyle brak funkcji płuca, ale ucisk zalanego krwią płuca na serce i śródpiersie, który blokuje krążenie.
Co gorsza, incydent miał miejsce zaledwie kilka minut jazdy samochodem (2–3 minuty karetką na sygnale) od Southampton University Hospital – regionalnego Major Trauma Centre dysponującego pełnym zapleczem specjalistów, procedur i sprzętu. "Jestem przekonany, że gdyby Henry dotarł tam żywy, lekarze nie pozwoliliby mu umrzeć" - pisze dr Magier.
Podsumowując: agresywna interwencja policji, zamiast ratować życie, doprowadziła do śmierci przez nieodpowiednie postępowanie z ciężko ranionym człowiekiem, mimo że najwyższej klasy opieka była w zasięgu kilku minut. "Obawiam się, że Sędzia i patolog byli zbyt łaskawi dla policji" - pisze dr Magier.
🇺🇸 NYC, May 31, 2026: A 23 year old Jewish woman sent CAM footage of her assault on a subway train.
Around 2:15 PM, a woman told her she could “smell the babies” she had eaten and yelled that “Jews eat babies” before choking her, throwing her to the ground, and beating her.
On This Day — June 3, 1948
Over half a million Arabs poured into Mandate Palestine in just 12 years to take advantage of the economic opportunities created by Jewish development — the only place in the entire Middle East with a growing Arab middle class.
Robert F. Kennedy, then only 22, made that striking observation in his reporting from British Mandate Palestine in April 1948 (just weeks before Israel’s independence). His dispatch was published this day in the Boston Post.
RFK wrote:
“The Jews point with pride to the fact that over 500,000 Arabs ... came into Palestine to take advantage of living conditions existing in no other Arab state. This is the only country in the Near and Middle East where an Arab middle class is in existence.”
He described how the Jews had transformed arid desert into flourishing orange groves through relentless labor and ingenuity. Tel Aviv had grown from a small village into a modern metropolis of over 200,000 in a single generation.
RFK noted that the Jews had already built a thriving community with its own institutions, language, and national characteristics — and were determined to reclaim their ancient homeland “as of right and not on sufferance.”
A young Bobby Kennedy saw the truth clearly: a people returning home, rebuilding their land with their own hands, and refusing to live as guests in their own country.
@bethanyshondark I'm sorry, Bethany.
I wish she knew the true depravity she is "fighting" for, and the horrific conditions women and children live in because of Hamas. The media is disgusting for not telling the truth.
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On August 7, 1942, a 28-year-old German oil executive stood outside a Jewish orphanage in Nazi-occupied Poland and watched SS soldiers throw babies out of windows.
That moment changed his life forever.
His name was Berthold Beitz.
At the time, he wasn’t a resistance fighter. He wasn’t a politician. He wasn’t part of an underground movement.
He was a businessman working for the German oil industry in Boryslaw, a town in occupied Poland where Hitler’s war machine depended heavily on oil production.
Beitz had a wife at home.
A small daughter.
A comfortable position.
And after witnessing what the SS were doing to Jewish families, he went home and told his wife Else:
“We have to do something.”
Most people in occupied Europe survived by looking away.
Berthold and Else refused.
Over the next several years, they would save around 800 Jewish lives.
Not with weapons.
Not with speeches.
With forged papers.
False job titles.
Hidden rooms.
And unimaginable courage.
Beitz discovered that Jews officially classified as “essential oil workers” were temporarily protected from deportation.
So he started expanding the definition.
Tailors became “petroleum technicians.”
Hairdressers became “oil specialists.”
Rabbis and scholars suddenly had paperwork claiming they were critical to Germany’s fuel production.
He signed the papers himself.
When deportation trains arrived, Beitz sometimes walked directly up to the cattle cars and demanded prisoners back, claiming they were essential workers needed for the war effort.
And astonishingly, it often worked.
While Berthold rescued people publicly, Else turned their home into a sanctuary.
Jewish children hid in the cellar while Nazi officers sat upstairs eating dinner.
Parents who knew they were about to be murdered entrusted their children to her arms.
If the Gestapo had searched the house thoroughly, the Beitz family would have been executed.
They did it anyway.
In 1943, the Gestapo finally investigated Berthold after forged work permits were discovered.
He denied everything.
Somehow, he escaped arrest.
By the end of the war, approximately 800 people were alive because the Beitz family refused to accept evil as normal.
After the war, Berthold rebuilt his life quietly.
He became one of the most powerful industrialists in Germany, eventually helping lead the massive Krupp steel empire and later ThyssenKrupp.
He advised world leaders.
Helped strengthen postwar Germany.
Worked behind the scenes during the Cold War.
But he almost never spoke publicly about what he had done during the Holocaust.
His own grandson later admitted the family learned many details only by reading newspapers.
When people called him a hero, Berthold rejected the word.
He said:
“I was just a human being who saw what was happening.”
In 1973, Israel honored Berthold and Else Beitz as Yad Vashem “Righteous Among the Nations,” one of the highest recognitions given to non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust.
Berthold Beitz died in 2013 at age 99.
Else died the following year.
The children they saved went on to have children of their own.
Today, thousands of people exist because one German couple refused to look away while others did.
Berthold Beitz spent the rest of his life believing he had simply done what any human being should do.
History tells us otherwise.
Because when cruelty becomes ordinary, the people who choose compassion become extraordinary.
On This Day — May 25, 1948
They put a bullet in the back of his head.
The man they executed that day was Witold Pilecki — the only person in history who voluntarily walked into Auschwitz.
In 1940, this Polish cavalry officer deliberately got himself arrested during a Nazi roundup in Warsaw. Using a false identity, he entered hell as prisoner #4859.
For two and a half years, Pilecki lived as a starving skeleton in striped rags while secretly building a resistance network inside the camp. He smuggled out the first detailed eyewitness reports of the Nazi death machine to the Allies — gas chambers, selections, medical experiments, and the systematic murder of Jews.
While he was there, more than 1,000 Jews per day were being gassed and burned. At its peak in 1944, the killing rate reached more than 6,000 per day.
He saw it all.
He documented it all.
He risked everything so the world would know.
In April 1943, Pilecki escaped by overpowering a guard at a bakery outside the wire. He rejoined the fight, battled in the Warsaw Uprising, and later resisted the Soviet occupation of Poland.
For his courage, the communist regime tortured him, staged a show trial, and executed him on May 25, 1948.
One of the great heroes of the 20th century.
Remember his name: Witold Pilecki.
The family of a missing Toronto girl hopes sharing a Global News interview with Esther from a year ago could help generate more tips in finding her.
https://t.co/URS7Z2Iqfk
🚨 14 year old Esther “Esti” has been missing from Toronto for over a week.
Her family asked Global News to re-share this clip from last year because they hope someone recognizes her face, her voice, or remembers an interaction that didn’t seem important at the time.
Watching it is honestly devastating. She comes across as bright, warm, articulate, and genuinely sweet. Her parents describe her as extremely intelligent, deeply caring, and trusting. Esti is on the autism spectrum and her family is terrified that someone may have taken advantage of that.
She was last seen late Friday night on May 15 near Earl Bales Park in North York. Police later released security footage appearing to show her in a restaurant shortly after midnight. Toronto Police launched a Level 1 search, the highest level search operation available, involving multiple specialized units.
She’s 5’2 with brown hair and was last seen wearing a turquoise sweater with writing on the front and grey sweatpants. Police say she was not wearing shoes.
If you are in the Toronto area, please look at her face carefully and share this as widely as possible.
Let's find Esti!
🚨TORONTO: STOP SCROLLING.
A 14-year-old Jewish girl is missing.
Her name is Esther. Her family and friends call her Esti.
She has been missing since Friday night, May 15.
She was last seen after midnight near Bathurst and Hotspur.
She had no shoes.
If you know anything, even something that feels small, call it in now.
Do not wait.
Do not assume someone else called.
Toronto Police: 647-355-4148
Shomrim Toronto: 647-557-6735
Someone knows something. Make sure they see this.