was swimming around in CBTS earlier today looking for stuff in that hollowed out cave and I found this beauty lying around.
>we lost so much
was swimming around in CBTS earlier today looking for stuff in that hollowed out cave and I found this beauty lying around.
>we lost so much
the light will reveal those on the team and those…..
oh hi there@! I capped this a little bit ago. ring ring
https:// www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/01/09/north-south-korea-begin-first-direct-talks-two-years/
>redphonegreenphone
listening to thisanonscan Assange-ish vide.
Credico hmmmmmmmmm
sounds as sketchy as Stone/ truly/ nice guy but wow kinda letting himself get on the ropes in this interview.
1929-2013 Edgar Bronfman: The Last of the Jewish Patrician Benefactors
Edgar Bronfman led a long, industrious life, but ultimately saw his influence dim.
https:// www.haaretz.com/jewish/.premium-bronfman-last-patrician-1.5302658
In 1981, Bronfman became the president of the World Jewish Congress, stepping up the organization’s activism on behalf of Jewish communities around the world. From his perch at the WJC, in addition to battling with the Swiss banks, he continued the fight for Soviet Jewry, took the lead in exposing the Nazi past of Kurt Waldheim and worked to improve Jewish relations with the Vatican. In 1991, he lobbied President George H.W. Bush to push for the rescission of the United Nations resolution equating Zionism and racism.
Bronfman Family
Descendants of Russian immigrant tobacco farmer Yechiel (Ekiel) Bronfman and his wife, Mindel, members of the Bronfman family owned and controlled huge financial empires that were built from the profits of the family liquor business (see Seagram Company Limited). The best known members of the family are Samuel Bronfman, founder of Seagram and president of the Canadian Jewish Congress (1939–62), and his descendants. Sons Edgar and Charles Bronfman ran Seagram for decades, while grandson Edgar Miles Bronfman Jr. oversaw the sale of Seagram to Vivendi. Charles was also co-founder of the Historica Foundation of Canada and Heritage Minutes, as well as chairman and principal owner of the Montreal Expos. His sister Phyllis Lambert is a well-known architect who founded the Canadian Centre for Architecture. Their cousins, Edward and Peter Bronfman (sons of Allan Bronfman), developed a financial empire in their own right. The family has given generously to several charitable organizations and been involved in the Canadian Jewish Congress and World Jewish Congress
Bronfman Origins in Canada
Mindel and Yechiel Bronfman immigrated to Canada with their children in 1889, fleeing the anti-Semitic pogroms of czarist Russia. The Bronfman family settled at a homestead near Wapella, Saskatchewan, but soon moved to Brandon, Manitoba, where Yechiel started a wood-fuel delivery business with sons Abe (born 15 March 1882 in Russia; died 16 March 1968 in Safety Harbor, Florida), Harry (born 15 March 1886 in Russia; died 12 November 1963 in Montréal, Québec) and Samuel (born 27 February 1889 in Soroki, Bessarabia, or en route from Russia; died 10 July 1971 in Montréal). Samuel and his siblings experienced a childhood of poverty and hard work. In 1903, the family borrowed money to buy the Anglo-American Hotel in Emerson, Manitoba. Yechiel emerged as a leader in the local Jewish community and sent money to assist Jewish communities in eastern Europe.
The hotel business boomed with railway construction. By the middle of the First World War, the family was running three profitable hotels in Winnipeg. With the coming of Prohibition in Canada, the Bronfmans turned their energy to the interprovincial package liquor trade and purchased stocks of spirits that were sold at good profits (cont'd)
read:https:// www.jta.org/2013/12/21/news-opinion/united-states/edgar-bronfman-84-leading-philanthropist-and-jewish-communal-leader
http:// www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/37806218/bronfman-rothschild-named-a-2018-best-places-to-work-for-financial-advisers-by-investmentnews
http:// americanfreepress.net/the-king-of-the-jews-is-dead/
http:// www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/bronfman-family/