I was born with a fire down below and I learned too fly a long time ago. I am not a 'Q' follower, the Holy Bible is all sufficient for what God wants us to know
He was 27 years old. Standing on a train platform in occupied Poland. Watching helpless men, women, and children being loaded onto cattle cars.
Most people looked away.
Berthold Beitz walked toward the train.
It is 1942. The war has consumed Europe for three years. The killing has become industrial — systematic, scheduled, relentless.
Beitz is not a soldier. Not a resistance fighter. He is a German businessman, born in 1913 in a small town in Pomerania, sent by the Carpathian Oil Company to manage their operations in Borysław — now western Ukraine. He oversees thousands of workers. Many of them are Jewish forced laborers.
The SS is methodically eliminating the Jewish population of the region. Deportation trains to the Bełżec extermination camp run on schedule. No one who boards them comes back. And no one — not even workers at strategically vital oil operations — is protected.
But Beitz has something most men in his position never use: access.
As director of a facility crucial to the German war effort, he has relationships with Nazi officials. He receives advance notice of planned deportation actions. And in the summer of 1942, standing at the transfer point watching what is being done to the people around him, he makes a decision that will define the rest of his 99 years on earth.
He starts warning people.
When a roundup is coming, he slips word to the Jewish community ahead of time. He obtains work papers — sometimes forged — declaring Jewish workers essential to oil production. He goes to the train platforms, again and again, and pulls people off the cattle cars. Tailors. Hairdressers. Talmudic scholars. He hands them cards that read "petroleum technician" and walks them away from death.
In August 1942, he removes 250 people from a single transport to Bełżec in one audacious act. He tells the guards these men and women are his workers. Critical to the war effort. Indispensable.
The guards let them go.
What makes Beitz remarkable isn't just what he did — it's where he came from. He had no background of moral heroism. He came from a family of Nazi sympathizers. He had no underground network, no organization behind him, no guarantee he would survive. He later described his only tools as "self-assurance and incredible luck."
And something else.
He witnessed the brutal SS evacuation of a Jewish orphanage — infants thrown from windows, children dragged barefoot through the night to the railway station. He watched a mother shot while holding her child. He once explained his response simply: "We watched from morning to evening, as close as you can get, what was happening to the Jews. When you see a woman with her child in her arms being shot, and you yourself have a child, then your response is bound to be completely different."
He had three daughters of his own.
His wife Else stood beside him through all of it. Together they hid Jewish families in the cellar of their home. They fed them. Sheltered them. Kept Jewish children inside their own walls while SS officers passed on the street outside. If discovered, the penalty for them — and for their children — was death.
They did it anyway.
By the end of the war, Berthold and Else Beitz had saved more than 800 lives.
After the war, Beitz became one of the most influential industrialists in postwar Germany — chairman of the Krupp steel conglomerate, a symbol of West Germany's rebuilding. His wartime reputation for integrity opened doors across Eastern Europe and helped restore diplomatic ties shattered by the Nazi era.
On October 3, 1973 — more than three decades after he first walked toward that train — Yad Vashem awarded Berthold Beitz the title Righteous Among the Nations, the highest honor Israel bestows on non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jewish people during the Holocaust. Else received the same honor in 2006.
Berthold Beitz died on July 30, 2013, at the age of 99. Ronald Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, called him one of the great Germans of the past century — a hero at a time when it was a crime to be a humane person.
Asked why he did it — why he risked his life, his wife's life, his children's lives — Beitz was clear. There was no political ideology. No organized resistance movement driving him forward.
He simply could not look away.
800 people lived because one man chose to walk toward the train instead of away from it. He had no special power. No guarantee of survival. He had a position, some connections, extraordinary nerve — and the knowledge that doing nothing was its own kind of choice.
What would you have done?
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Grok AI
"Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole Sarrine (of the DOJ’s Antitrust Division) is the most prominent official publicly associated with the case and its resolution. She delivered statements on the proposed settlements"
The most metabolically ill country on Earth has a control group living right inside it, and the results are deeply inconvenient.
The Amish eat butter, lard, eggs, meat, and raw milk straight from their own cows, by the bucket. They cook in animal fat. They eat the saturated fat the rest of us were told to fear for fifty years. Their obesity rate sits around 4%. The country around them is closing on 40%, four in ten adults. Ten times lower, on the diet that was supposed to be killing them.
They are not dropping from heart attacks at the rate the theory demands either. Their overall cancer rates run lower than the surrounding American population, despite skipping most of the screening that is meant to be saving everyone else.
Now, honesty, because it matters. The Amish are not low-carb. There are pies and bread and plenty of sugar on an Amish table. This is no clean carnivore case, and I will not pretend it is.
What it is, is a controlled experiment sitting in plain sight across Pennsylvania and Ohio. Same country. Same supermarkets down the road. The Amish simply opt out of two things: the ultra-processed food and the sitting still. Their men walk upward of 18,000 steps a day. They eat food their grandmothers would recognise, and they move like their lives depend on it, because for most of history they did.
The animal fat was never what made America sick. The seed oil, the sugar, the packet, and the sofa did that, and the Amish skipped all four. They ran the experiment by accident, by living in the same country as everyone else and politely declining to join in.
@JBPritzker You mean like parades where they walk around nude in front of children?Can you answer what your opinion is on being nude in public in front of children is?
Epstein's biggest client Leon Black should have never been given a platform to clear his name without penalty of perjury. The survivors faced that when they told their stories about him. @TheBeatWithAri
Let's stop pretending.
This week, in the city with the largest Jewish population on earth outside Israel, the candidates who ran hardest AGAINST Israel didn't just survive — they won. Not quietly. Not in spite of it. Because of it.
Darializa Avila Chevalier just took out a 5-term incumbent in a district that includes Yeshiva University. The day AFTER Hamas slaughtered more than 1,200 people, she stood at a Times Square rally where the crowd chanted "globalize the intifada" and made throat-slitting gestures at Jews. She has never condemned it. Not then. Not now. Her platform calls to stop all funding to Israel. She says every dollar sent there is stolen from the mouths of our children. She does not believe Israel should exist as a Jewish state. New Yorkers heard all of it — and handed her the seat.
Claire Valdez won the same night. At her victory party the crowd screamed an obscenity at AIPAC — a group with nothing to do with her race. When the most powerful Democrat in the House flashed on screen, they booed and chanted that HE was next.
And the mayor who blessed every one of them? Zohran Mamdani spent his entire campaign refusing to condemn "globalize the intifada," sneering that it wasn't his job to police language. He told a crowd the NYPD's brutality was trained by the Israeli military. He calls the largest pro-Israel group in America part of the "monsters" running the country.
This is not a fringe. This is not a campus tantrum. This is the winning coalition of America's biggest city, shipping its loudest enemies of the Jewish state straight to Congress.
The morning after, a Columbia encampment leader posted four words: "Let this election be a warning."
Hear that clearly. Not a prediction. A promise. Said out loud. The day after they won.
I'm not telling you a theocracy is coming. I'm telling you something simpler, and already TRUE: in New York, in 2026, being the loudest voice against Israel stopped being a liability and became a winning strategy.
So spare me "it can't happen here." It IS happening here. On the record. In daylight. With a mayor's endorsement and a cheering crowd.
Believe people when they show you who they are. They've stopped hiding it. Stop pretending you can't see it.
5/ The Warnings You Are Ignoring
This isn't a conspiracy theory. Iranian exiles who actually survived 1979 are screaming from the rooftops right now about NYC.
They recognize the exact rhetoric. The same tactical alliances. The identical trajectory.
They’ve seen this movie before, and they know how it ends.
3/ Fast Forward to New York 2026 🇺🇸
Sound familiar? Look at NYC right now:
A socialist mayor just watched his endorsed slate sweep Democratic primaries—a massive win for the hard progressive left.
These exact political circles overlap heavily with radical anti-Israel activism.
Mainstream spaces now feature explicit Islamist rhetoric, "Intifada" chants, and calls to dismantle the system.
The coalition is winning institutional power through your ballot box.
@KhanSaba1278 Believe it or not I had the same problem, called some of the neighborhood kids over with their chalk in hand. The chemical reaction between the chalk and glue made it so easy! I was so happy, ☺️ plus the cute drawings! ❤️