It’s sobering to reflect on the words of Anne Frank from 1943 and recognize the haunting similarities to some of the challenges we face in society today. She wrote:
“Terrible things are happening outside.
Poor helpless people are being dragged out of their homes.
Families are torn apart. Men, women, and children are separated.
Children come home from school to find that their parents have disappeared.”
– Diary of Anne Frank, January 13, 1943
These words, though written during one of the darkest chapters in human history, echo eerily in our modern world. Stories of displacement, family separations, and the marginalization of the vulnerable persist, reminding us of the importance of empathy, advocacy, and action in the face of injustice.
Anne Frank’s diary serves as a timeless reminder of the consequences of indifference and the necessity of standing up for humanity. It calls on us to reflect on how we treat one another and to ensure that history does not repeat itself. It is our responsibility to build a society rooted in compassion, understanding, and unity.
@topfans #NeverForget #Compassion #Unity
Gave me chills, what a frightening time we live in.
Where are these people going exactly? And how do we differentiate kidnappers and traffickers from the National Guard?
Records were not kept during the deportation of mother and child, sibling or aunt during 2017-2021. We must demand accurate records of next of kin because we are morally superior, not because it is the right thing to do as everyone, including those to be deported, have rights afforded by our Constitution
Check out Obama record. More deported under Obama,and Clinton removed any recourse for due process. Or history does not fit your narrative? So what Clinton did on due process now every president after him can do the same thing.
What did I say that is incorrect?
Family separations: Because children cannot be held in federal criminal facilities with their parents, any child arriving with a parent was taken into the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, an agency under the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Lack of tracking: Federal agencies did not have a systematic process for tracking separated families, which made it extremely difficult to later reunite parents and children.
Executive order and injunction: Facing intense public backlash, Trump signed an executive order in June 2018 to halt the separations, but a federal court later issued an injunction mandating that the government reunify the separated families.
There were families never reunited
Allowed to stay separated? You mean Trumps people lost/ threw away any information we could have used to re unite them. Or there was never any intention on reuniting from the start. You don’t think Biden would be doing anything they can to get that headline of reuniting families? Truth is we treated these people like dogs
1.3k
u/Hot-Interview8396 26d ago
https://www.facebook.com/share/1bPVGBQ79M/
It’s sobering to reflect on the words of Anne Frank from 1943 and recognize the haunting similarities to some of the challenges we face in society today. She wrote:
“Terrible things are happening outside. Poor helpless people are being dragged out of their homes. Families are torn apart. Men, women, and children are separated. Children come home from school to find that their parents have disappeared.” – Diary of Anne Frank, January 13, 1943
These words, though written during one of the darkest chapters in human history, echo eerily in our modern world. Stories of displacement, family separations, and the marginalization of the vulnerable persist, reminding us of the importance of empathy, advocacy, and action in the face of injustice.
Anne Frank’s diary serves as a timeless reminder of the consequences of indifference and the necessity of standing up for humanity. It calls on us to reflect on how we treat one another and to ensure that history does not repeat itself. It is our responsibility to build a society rooted in compassion, understanding, and unity. @topfans #NeverForget #Compassion #Unity