A suggestion: Every screencap of hate speech or threats on this (or any) platform should include any ads that are nearby -- and the advertiser should be tagged. If enough people do this, the advertisers, not the platform, may feel called to answer for what they are funding.
@ldkop I try to translate the words into music
https://t.co/W5NGqdjA8Q
https://t.co/ZkKpzbLLsw
and sometimes into visual beauty
https://t.co/2S3qubMycD
@AsmadiGames "That color you see exploding behind your eyeballs, just before you die, is infra-black" - Good Omens (disclaimer: quote is from memory and almost certainly actually a paraphrase)
@cherriesandgin@TheRaDR I'm consistent within a given context, but sometimes it's Sh'ma and sometimes it's Shema and that's fine.
But it's always Tu biShvat because that is such a great teachable moment. :-)
@zackamenetz I am fortunate that one one line, my gggf was the _parnas_ of the community, and there are many legal documents about him and the community in the Staatsarkiv.
Do you manage? Come work with me!
My team's current manager has an increased scope, so we're looking to hire a new manager for the Adobe Doc Cloud Data Team. It's a great team; we're working on cool projects; and we take data ethics very seriously.
https://t.co/bULGKsCvzE
Naftali and Zili Deller's daughter, Peppi, married my first cousin 4 times removed, Leopold Erlanger. I have to assume that Leopold visited this sukkah in FIschach, and perhaps other members of my family did as well.
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More seriously, I have a fantasy about commissioning panels that replicate the Deller Sukkah, which is in the permanent collection of the Israel Museum, Jerusalem
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https://t.co/HixWZT4nbV
The Deller family lived in Fischach, and Naftali and Zili Deller commissioned this remarkable sukkah, which was used as well by their son and daughter-in-law, Abraham Deller and his wife Sofie, until it was smuggled out of Germany to Jerusalem in 1937.
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