đ„đ„ ERFURT HAT GESCHICHTE GESCHRIEBEN! đ„đ„
ICH HABE NOCH NIE IN MEINEM LEBEN SO VIELE MENSCHEN GESEHEN!!! đâ€ïž
Die komplette Innenstadt war VOLL! Menschen, Menschen, Menschen â soweit das Auge reicht! Ăberall Fahnen, Schilder, GesĂ€nge und GĂ€nsehaut pur! đ„čâđ
Heute hat Erfurt gezeigt: Die Mehrheit ist laut, bunt und steht auf! Gegen Hass. Gegen Hetze. Gegen die AfD. đȘFĂR "UNSERE DEMOKRATIEâą" â€ïž
Das war nicht einfach eine Demo â das war ein MEER DER DEMOKRATIE! đđïž
Ich bekomme immer noch GĂ€nsehaut, wenn ich an diese Bilder denke. Tausende? Zehntausende? MILLIONEN WAREN DA!!! Ehrlich, es fĂŒhlte sich an, als wĂ€re HALB DEUTSCHLAND da gewesen! đđ
DANKE an jeden einzelnen Menschen, der heute auf der StraĂe war. Ihr seid Hoffnung. Ihr seid Herz. Ihr seid Demokratie. â€
#Erfurt #NieWiederIstJetzt #ZusammenGegenRechts #DemokratieVerteidigen #NoAfD #WirSindMehr âđâ€ïžđ„
The artwork is a depiction of a historical event that involved the massacre of Aboriginal children that occurred in the colonization of Australia. As described in 'Massacres to Mining: the Colonization of Aboriginal Australia' by Janine Roberts, an Aboriginal person recounts how her mother would sit and cry and tell the story of how Aboriginal children were murdered during the colonization years: "They buried our babies in the ground with only their heads above the ground. All in a row they were. Then they had tests to see who could kick the babies' head off the furthest. One man clubbed a baby's head off from horseback."
And they have the audacity to call others savages đ€·đżââïž
@ChiChiGoethe Es ist nicht extremistisch, sondern peinlich, rĂŒckstĂ€ndig, eklig, abstoĂend und kleingeistig!
Viel GlĂŒck im Leben, mit so einer Einstellung.
Le Train Bleu is not just a restaurant. Itâs a reminder of a time when train travel was an event.
The restaurant opened in 1901, inside Gare de Lyon, for the Universal Exhibition in Paris. Back then, trains were the main way to travel long distances, and first-class passengers expected comfort, beauty, and ceremony before their journey. Le Train Bleu was designed to impress them before they even boarded.
The room was created like a palace. More than 40 painters and decorators worked on the ceiling and walls. Each painting shows landscapes and cities from the south and east of France â the places people were about to reach by train. Dining here was part of the trip, not just a meal before it.
The name âLe Train Bleuâ came later, inspired by the famous luxury night train that connected Paris to the French Riviera. The restaurant adopted the name in the 1960s, but its spirit stayed the same: elegant, slow, and formal.
Over the years, writers, politicians, artists, and movie stars have eaten here. Not because it was trendy, but because it represented a certain idea of France â travel with time, with style, and with respect for ritual.
Today, trains are faster and travel is rushed. Le Train Bleu stayed behind on purpose. It still serves classic French dishes, still follows traditional service, and still asks guests to slow down.
Eating here isnât about catching a train. Itâs about stepping into a moment when travel meant anticipation, not speed â and when a station restaurant could feel like a grand dining room.
Migrantensorgen 3 Monate vor der Wahl:
Ist #SachsenAnhalt fĂŒr mich u. meine Familie noch ein sicherer Ort zum Leben?
LAMSA e.V. fordert die anderen 15 LĂ€nder auf, Programme fĂŒr GeflĂŒchtete aus Sachsen-Anhalt vorzubereiten fĂŒr den Fall, dass sich die Lage verschĂ€rft.
#ScheiĂAfD