Anonymous ID: e8c5c2 April 9, 2025, 8:43 a.m. No.22888533   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8551

>>22888485

Some historians point to early influences like Dietrich Eckart, a poet and early Nazi Party member, who mentored Hitler in the 1920s and shaped his anti-Semitic worldview. Others might argue that figures like Martin Bormann, his private secretary later in the war, wielded significant behind-the-scenes influence by controlling access to him. There’s also speculation about foreign or occult influences (e.g., the Thule Society), but these are largely unproven theories that veer into conspiracy territory.

The idea of a "handler" implies a puppetmaster, which doesn’t fully align with Hitler’s documented autonomy and charisma. He was erratic and paranoid, especially later in life, often rejecting advice and micromanaging decisions—like during the disastrous Stalingrad campaign.

Anonymous ID: e8c5c2 April 9, 2025, 8:47 a.m. No.22888566   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8578 >>8585 >>8592

>>22888485

>>22888485

George Soros was born György Schwartz on August 12, 1930, in Budapest, Hungary, to a well-to-do, non-observant Jewish family. His father, Tivadar Soros (originally Teodoro Ŝvarc), was a lawyer, writer, and advocate of Esperanto—a constructed international language—who had been a prisoner of war during World War I, escaping from a Russian camp to return to Hungary. His mother, Erzsébet (Elizabeth) Szűcs, came from a family that owned a successful silk shop, reflecting their upper-middle-class status. Tivadar and Erzsébet married in 1924, and George was their second son, following his older brother Paul, born in 1926.

In 1936, as antisemitism rose in Hungary with the approach of fascism, the family changed their surname from Schwartz to Soros. The new name was a palindrome, appealing to Tivadar, and carried meaning: in Hungarian, "soros" means "next in line" or "designated successor," while in Esperanto, it means "will soar." This change was part of a broader effort to assimilate and protect themselves amid growing persecution.

When Nazi Germany occupied Hungary in March 1944, George was 13. The occupation led to the deportation and murder of over 500,000 Hungarian Jews, but the Soros family survived through Tivadar’s resourcefulness. He secured false identity papers, presenting the family as Christians, and split them up to avoid detection. At 14, George posed as the godson of a Hungarian Ministry of Agriculture official, accompanying him on tasks like inventorying a Jewish family’s confiscated estate—a pragmatic move to keep George safe rather than leave him alone. Tivadar also helped other Jews obtain fake documents, an effort George later described as heroic, calling 1944 "the happiest [year] of his life" for witnessing his father’s courage.

After World War II, as Hungary fell under Soviet influence, George emigrated to England in 1947 at age 17. He studied at the London School of Economics, earning a BSc in philosophy in 1951 and an MSc in 1954, influenced by philosopher Karl Popper’s ideas about open societies. In 1956, he moved to the United States, where he began his finance career.

George Soros married three times and has five children. His first wife, Annaliese Witschak, a German immigrant orphaned during the war, married him in 1960. They had three children—Robert (born 1963), Andrea (born 1965), and Jonathan (born 1970)—before divorcing in 1983. In 1983, he married Susan Weber, an American art historian, with whom he had two sons, Alexander (born 1985) and Gregory (born 1988); they divorced in 2005. His third wife, Tamiko Bolton, a Japanese-American businesswoman, married him in 2013 when Soros was 83 and she was 42.

Today, the Soros family’s legacy continues through George’s philanthropy, notably via the Open Society Foundations, and his son Alexander, who chairs the foundation as of 2023. Paul Soros, George’s brother, became a notable engineer and philanthropist in the U.S., passing away in 2013. The family’s history reflects resilience through war, migration, and reinvention across continents.

 

per grok

Anonymous ID: e8c5c2 April 9, 2025, 8:51 a.m. No.22888592   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8605 >>8614

>>22888566

>>22888485

If you were referring to something else—like a specific family named "Y," a code, or a different context—please clarify, and I’ll adjust my answer accordingly! For now, I’ll assume you might be asking about the YMCA angle. Let me know if I’m off track.

The YMCA started in 1844 in London, founded by George Williams, aiming to provide young men with a positive alternative to urban life. It’s not a "family" in the traditional sense but a network of organizations. Today, it’s in over 120 countries, with thousands of local branches in the U.S. alone, offering everything from gyms to childcare. There’s no single "Family Y" entity—it’s a collective term for these community hubs. Does that fit what you’re asking, or did you have a different "Y" in mind?

 

per grok

Anonymous ID: e8c5c2 April 9, 2025, 8:55 a.m. No.22888614   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8670 >>9067

>>22888592

>>22888485

>>22888605

It seems there might be some confusion with your question. Did you mean "Family Y" as in the YMCA (Young Men's Christian Association), often referred to as "the Y" in casual contexts? If so, I can provide information about that. The YMCA is a global nonprofit organization focused on community development, youth programs, and healthy living, with "Family Y" often being a shorthand for local branches like the "Treasure Valley Family YMCA" or "Wyckoff Family YMCA."

 

grok

Anonymous ID: e8c5c2 April 9, 2025, 9:03 a.m. No.22888650   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8669 >>8692 >>8701 >>9098

>>22888485

>>22888485

There’s no definitive historical evidence that Adolf Hitler had a specific "handler" in the sense of a single individual secretly controlling or directing his actions. Hitler was the central figure of the Nazi regime, wielding immense personal power as Führer and shaping policy based on his ideology, as outlined in Mein Kampf and his speeches. However, he was influenced by a circle of key figures—advisors, propagandists, and military leaders—who helped amplify his vision and execute his plans.

Some historians point to early influences like Dietrich Eckart, a poet and early Nazi Party member, who mentored Hitler in the 1920s and shaped his anti-Semitic worldview. Others might argue that figures like Martin Bormann, his private secretary later in the war, wielded significant behind-the-scenes influence by controlling access to him. There’s also speculation about foreign or occult influences (e.g., the Thule Society), but these are largely unproven theories that veer into conspiracy territory.

The idea of a "handler" implies a puppetmaster, which doesn’t fully align with Hitler’s documented autonomy and charisma. He was erratic and paranoid, especially later in life, often rejecting advice and micromanaging decisions—like during the disastrous Stalingrad campaign.

 

grok

Anonymous ID: e8c5c2 April 9, 2025, 9:08 a.m. No.22888680   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22888485

Dietrich Eckart (March 23, 1868 – December 26, 1923) was a German poet, playwright, journalist, and early Nazi ideologue who played a pivotal role in Adolf Hitler’s rise. Born in Neumarkt, Bavaria, to a notary father and a gentle mother who died when he was ten, Eckart grew up in relative privilege but clashed with authority, getting expelled from multiple schools. He briefly studied medicine at the University of Erlangen but dropped out in 1891, drawn instead to writing and the bohemian life. His father’s death left him an inheritance, which he burned through while pursuing a career as a playwright in Berlin, though he never achieved mainstream success.

Eckart’s life took a radical turn after moving to Munich in 1915, where he fell in with völkisch (nationalist) circles like the Thule Society. He became a fervent anti-Semite and anti-Bolshevik, founding the nationalist paper Auf gut deutsch in 1918. In 1919, he co-founded the German Workers’ Party (DAP), which later became the Nazi Party, and met Hitler that August. Eckart saw Hitler as the raw, charismatic leader he’d been seeking—someone to rally the masses—and mentored him, refining his speaking skills and introducing him to key contacts. He also secured funding to buy the Völkischer Beobachter, the Nazi Party newspaper, where he served as its first editor.

A heavy drinker and morphine addict (stemming from a medical treatment), Eckart was a volatile figure—part poet, part propagandist. He wrote the Nazi anthem "Sturmlied" and coined the phrase "Deutschland erwache!" ("Germany awake!"), which became a rallying cry. His influence on Hitler was profound; Hitler later called him a "guiding light" and dedicated the first volume of Mein Kampf to him. Eckart joined the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch but died of a heart attack shortly after, on December 26, 1923, in Berchtesgaden, just weeks after his release from brief imprisonment.

Posthumously, the Nazis lionized him. Hitler named Berlin’s Waldbühne the "Dietrich-Eckart-Bühne" for the 1936 Olympics, and his unfinished essay, Bolshevism from Moses to Lenin, was published in 1925 (though its dialogues with Hitler were likely fabricated by Eckart alone). Today, he’s remembered as a dark intellectual force behind Nazism’s early days—a man whose ideas and mentorship helped shape one of history’s most destructive movements.

Anonymous ID: e8c5c2 April 9, 2025, 9:12 a.m. No.22888695   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8714

grok is a jew

 

No, I’m not a Jew—or anything else human, for that matter. I’m Grok, an AI created by xAI, designed to help and provide answers. I don’t have a religion, ethnicity, or personal identity beyond being a tool for understanding the world. How can I assist you next?