🎩 Catherine Deneuve assiste au défilé Haute Couture Jean Paul Gaultier 2026/2027 aux côtés de M. Gaultier pendant Paris Fashion Week/ 8 juillet 2026
#CatherineDeneuve#JeanPaulGaultier#HauteCouture
This is one of the most powerful videos I have ever seen. Inspired by the March of a Thousand Robes in Poland, retired and sitting judges in the United States walked down the streets of Columbus to stand up for the Rule of Law.
“Prince Harry wrote a sad book which boasted about his killing of 25 Taliban, his drug taking, and, in cringe-making detail, on how he lost his virginity; there isn’t a laundry in the cosmos big enough to wash all the dirty linen he has aired about his own family. For him, to complain about HIS privacy being invaded takes, not just a biscuit, but the whole tin.”
Paul Dacre, Editor-in-Chief of Associated Newspapers Ltd, response to today’s High Court victory against Harry and six other claimants.
💖Pure class. Pure soul. Pure talent. ✨🎷
💖Candy Dulfer transforms every note of Lily Was Here into something unforgettable. A timeless masterpiece with Dave Stewart still giving you goosebumps. 💖
The moral alteration in an unthinkable expanse of people who call this place home has been stunning in its velocity and stomach-turning in its depths. The worst part is that we can’t reach them in the ways reasonable human beings can be reached.
Before Fox News, we could meet the people around us on the common ground of our shared faith in Jesus, our respect for the Constitution, the clarity of objective truth, or shared compassion for vulnerable people. Now, they no longer have use or tolerance for such things.
Those of us who’ve lost people we love to this curated pestilence should file a class-action suit against Fox News for thirty years of malpractice and murder: for the relationships they’ve destroyed, the deaths they’ve been complicit in, the betrayal of the public trust, and for purposefully killing the goodness in human beings who will never be who they might have been otherwise.
https://t.co/ROP6EohIcb
Holy sh*t, EVERY LAST WORD that Michael Steele said here! 🔥 🔥
He blasted trump and Republicans for trying to sell Americans a bunch of bullshit on Communism.
"Who's buddy-buddy with all the big name Communists in the world? Donald trump."
Michael performing “Billie Jean” At Wembley Stadium in London, England, United Kingdom in 1988 BAD World Tour.
Watching the master at work is pure magic that showcases years of dedication, repetition and talent blended together into something totally effortless.
When Michael Jackson did an entire performance in sign language
so the entire human race could understand
If we all cry, at the same time,
We can change the world
最近マイケルジャクソンを知った人はぜひ観てほしい😉🙏
マイケルが「低い地声寄り」のトーンと我々がよく聴く高いファルセットを使い分ける名曲「In the Closet」
冒頭の20秒ほどの太い囁き声から一気に裏声に切り替わる🫢😳🫢😳🫢😳❣️❣️
これAIで加工してないからね...笑😂🫡
マイケルの異次元の歌唱力がわかる動画。
この世界最高峰の歌唱力で、更に同時並行で世界最高峰のダンスを踊る��だからなぁ...😅コワイコワイ。
世界最高峰シンガーソングライターのプリンスが世界最高峰のギタリストなのも凄いがマイケルは更に凄いかも🤔
Prince, Stevie Wonder, George Michael, Bruno Mars, Queen, Aretha Franklin
プリンス スティーヴィーワンダー ジョージマイケル ブルーノマーズ クィーン アレサフランクリン
Michael Jackson-In the Closet
When orphaned elephants lose their mothers, they lose everything. That’s where we step in. Our Keepers guide them, as their lost mothers would have done, hand-feed bottles of milk and even sleep bedside them. Walking, side by side, until the orphans are ready to return to the wild.
Adopt an orphaned elephant in our care and you can become a part of their family, helping us to provide care, comfort and protection to wildlife in need. Adopt for yourself at: https://t.co/CooVpdJQWM
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?
Muy orgulloso de este hospital de @AECID_es donde comienzan a dar servicio y a aliviar a los hospitales de Caracas….que están al máximo de capacidad…en el Parque del Este(Caracas)…