Let me just read what you said. You said in 2013, is it hyperbole to say that the people who run our vaccine programs should be in jail? They should be in jail. To me, this is like Nazi death camps. Look at what it does to the families who participate in the vaccine program.
This year has been marked by numerous World War II-related “80th Anniversary” celebrations, keyed to 1944 as the penultimate and most decisive year of the war. D-Day has been commemorated, and Anzio,
Elon Musk referenced Adolf Hitler and other Nazi leaders in a social media post filled with puns early Thursday.
Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) clashed during her confirmation hearing with Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) over comparisons of Elon Musk’s gesture during an Inauguration Day speech to a Nazi salute.
Most would shy away from being associated with a Nazi salute. But not billionaire Elon Musk. On Monday, Musk made
Menachem Rosensaft, the son of survivors, challenges the comforting messages of Judaism’s best-known collection of verse.
Musk aggressively thumped his open palm onto his upper chest and—to the shock of millions of viewers around the Western world—delivered a Roman, or fascist, salute.
Elon Musk’s controversial gesture, which some interpreted as a Nazi-style salute, drew criticism from Trump’s political opponents and energized fans on the far right.
In a post Tuesday on Bluesky, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) also confirmed that Medicaid portals across multiple states were down following the federal funding freeze. Only South Carolina’s Medicaid program was reported to have no issues as of Tuesday afternoon, according to a spokesperson for that state’s health department.
Since then, Auschwitz has become the foremost symbol of the Holocaust’s atrocities. Yet the 80th anniversary of the camp’s liberation reminds the world that the scars of genocide, though deep ...
(RNS) — The Holocaust famously teaches us that what makes mass atrocities possible isn’t only the agency of the powerful — it’s the silence of everyone else. (RNS) — On Jan. 27 ...
Holocaust Remembrance Day is recognized every year on Jan. 27, and this year marks 80 years since the end of World War II and the Holocaust. The day is meant for people across the globe to ...