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Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein

Started byThe Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
First post2025-03-21 10:59 -0700
Last post2025-03-24 08:17 +0100
Articles 8 — 3 participants

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  Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2025-03-21 10:59 -0700
    Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2025-03-21 23:54 -0700
      Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2025-03-23 10:53 -0700
        Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2025-03-23 11:35 -0700
        Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein Gronk <invalide@invalid.invalid> - 2025-03-23 23:31 -0600
    Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2025-03-22 16:09 -0700
      Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2025-03-23 22:34 -0700
    Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> - 2025-03-24 08:17 +0100

#2910979 — Re: The Goal of Albert Einstein

FromThe Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Date2025-03-21 10:59 -0700
SubjectRe: The Goal of Albert Einstein
Message-ID<67DDA8E5.8AC@ix.netcom.com>
Thomas Heger wrote:
> 
> Am Mittwoch000019, 19.03.2025 um 18:18 schrieb The Starmaker:
> > Now, I'm going to tell you something you
> > never heard before...
> >
> > Albert Einstein's goal was to kill as many Japaneese people as possible.
> 
> As I see it, Einstein wasn't concerned with Japan at all.


I'm not about to give History lesson here just because you were cutting classes...


In WW2 Japan was an ally of Germany.


> 
> But Einstein had, as far as this is known, emotions against Germany.

and he a lot of Emotions against Japan!

I got tons of stuff, angry letters, etc.





> 
> Actually he was born in Germany (at least that is his usual CV), but
> didn't like Germans.


a self-hating German? We got a lot of self-hating Americans...they call themselves...Demcrats.




> 
> I had actually doubts about his German origin and assumed, that he was
> neither a Jew (possibly a Jesuit ?) nor a German, but Swiss citizen from
> birth.
> 
> This would fit to many way-points of his life, which included going to
> school in Aarau, studying at the ETH and working in Bern.
> 
> Doubts about being a Jew stem from his rejection of the presidency of
> Israel, which was offered to him.


Albert Einstein rejected the presidency of Israel because they were small fries. Albert Einstein considers
himself a...World Leader! Leader of the World...the planet Earth.

He tells the President of the United States, "Build an atomic bomb and kill those motherfuckers!"




> 
> His goal???
> 
> Well, I have studied his paper ' on the electrodynamics of moving
> bodies' extensively.

The only moving body Einstein was interested in was his Russian spy secretary at his house that he was banging!
(while his wife watched)

Yeah, go ahead Mr. Thomas Heger, tell us how Albert Einstein didn't even know how to speak, write, or understand the Russian language!

Then the Russian spy secretary's Husband builds a stature of Albert Einstein!  Go ahead and tell us Einstein never spoke Russian!







-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, 
and challenge the unchallengeable.

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#2911228

FromThe Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Date2025-03-21 23:54 -0700
Message-ID<67DE5E9C.68B7@ix.netcom.com>
In reply to#2910979
The Starmaker wrote:
> 
> Thomas Heger wrote:
> >
> > Am Mittwoch000019, 19.03.2025 um 18:18 schrieb The Starmaker:
> > > Now, I'm going to tell you something you
> > > never heard before...
> > >
> > > Albert Einstein's goal was to kill as many Japaneese people as possible.
> >
> > As I see it, Einstein wasn't concerned with Japan at all.
> 
> I'm not about to give History lesson here just because you were cutting classes...
> 
> In WW2 Japan was an ally of Germany.
> 
> >
> > But Einstein had, as far as this is known, emotions against Germany.
> 
> and he a lot of Emotions against Japan!
> 
> I got tons of stuff, angry letters, etc.



Here is a small part of a letter Einstein wrote to his angry friend in
Japan...

"I have always condemned the
use of the atomic bomb against Japan. However, I was completely
powerless to prevent the fateful decision for which I am as little
responsible as you are for the deeds of the Japanese in Korea and
China."

WHAT THE HELL DID JAPAN DO TO KOREA AND CHINA????


and why did it bother Einstein soooo much?







-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, 
and challenge the unchallengeable.

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#2911642

FromThe Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Date2025-03-23 10:53 -0700
Message-ID<67E04A82.24F0@ix.netcom.com>
In reply to#2911228
The Starmaker wrote:
> 
> The Starmaker wrote:
> >
> > Thomas Heger wrote:
> > >
> > > Am Mittwoch000019, 19.03.2025 um 18:18 schrieb The Starmaker:
> > > > Now, I'm going to tell you something you
> > > > never heard before...
> > > >
> > > > Albert Einstein's goal was to kill as many Japaneese people as possible.
> > >
> > > As I see it, Einstein wasn't concerned with Japan at all.
> >
> > I'm not about to give History lesson here just because you were cutting classes...
> >
> > In WW2 Japan was an ally of Germany.
> >
> > >
> > > But Einstein had, as far as this is known, emotions against Germany.
> >
> > and he a lot of Emotions against Japan!
> >
> > I got tons of stuff, angry letters, etc.
> 
> Here is a small part of a letter Einstein wrote to his angry friend in
> Japan...
> 
> "I have always condemned the
> use of the atomic bomb against Japan. However, I was completely
> powerless to prevent the fateful decision for which I am as little
> responsible as you are for the deeds of the Japanese in Korea and
> China."
> 
> WHAT THE HELL DID JAPAN DO TO KOREA AND CHINA????
> 
> and why did it bother Einstein soooo much?



Why would Albert Einstein want to drop an atomic bomb on Germany???? IT
WOULD KILL ALL HIS PEOPLE!

dat no make no sence.


Japan? He want them dead for a long time...


Japan interfered with Albert Einstein's Earth's Foreign Police.


While you people were boycotting your neigborhood strip club, he wanted
to boycott...Japan.


He's gots bigger fish to fry...








-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, 
and challenge the unchallengeable.

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#2911653

FromThe Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Date2025-03-23 11:35 -0700
Message-ID<67E0545D.2879@ix.netcom.com>
In reply to#2911642
The Starmaker wrote:
> 
> The Starmaker wrote:
> >
> > The Starmaker wrote:
> > >
> > > Thomas Heger wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Am Mittwoch000019, 19.03.2025 um 18:18 schrieb The Starmaker:
> > > > > Now, I'm going to tell you something you
> > > > > never heard before...
> > > > >
> > > > > Albert Einstein's goal was to kill as many Japaneese people as possible.
> > > >
> > > > As I see it, Einstein wasn't concerned with Japan at all.
> > >
> > > I'm not about to give History lesson here just because you were cutting classes...
> > >
> > > In WW2 Japan was an ally of Germany.
> > >
> > > >
> > > > But Einstein had, as far as this is known, emotions against Germany.
> > >
> > > and he a lot of Emotions against Japan!
> > >
> > > I got tons of stuff, angry letters, etc.
> >
> > Here is a small part of a letter Einstein wrote to his angry friend in
> > Japan...
> >
> > "I have always condemned the
> > use of the atomic bomb against Japan. However, I was completely
> > powerless to prevent the fateful decision for which I am as little
> > responsible as you are for the deeds of the Japanese in Korea and
> > China."
> >
> > WHAT THE HELL DID JAPAN DO TO KOREA AND CHINA????
> >
> > and why did it bother Einstein soooo much?
> 
> Why would Albert Einstein want to drop an atomic bomb on Germany???? IT
> WOULD KILL ALL HIS PEOPLE!
> 
> dat no make no sence.
> 
> Japan? He want them dead for a long time...
> 
> Japan interfered with Albert Einstein's Earth's Foreign Police.
> 
> While you people were boycotting your neigborhood strip club, he wanted
> to boycott...Japan.
> 
> He's gots bigger fish to fry...


Here is just some parts of the letters..
https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2005/07/05/2003262351



(Israel owns them now of course, dat means you won't see them all)


-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, 
and challenge the unchallengeable.

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#2911768

FromGronk <invalide@invalid.invalid>
Date2025-03-23 23:31 -0600
Message-ID<vrqqo3$7aku$1@dont-email.me>
In reply to#2911642
The Starmaker wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> Why would Albert Einstein want to drop an atomic bomb on Germany???? IT
> WOULD KILL ALL HIS PEOPLE!
> 
> dat no make no sence.

Then why was he living in America for so long? And
why the 1939 letter to Roosevelt urging research
and develoment towards a bomb before Germany got
further along?

https://www.atomicarchive.com/resources/documents/beginnings/einstein.html


> Japan? He want them dead for a long time...
> 
> 
> Japan interfered with Albert Einstein's Earth's Foreign Police.
> 
> 
> While you people were boycotting your neigborhood strip club, he wanted
> to boycott...Japan.

Because of what Japan was doing in Manchuria

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#2911435

FromThe Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Date2025-03-22 16:09 -0700
Message-ID<67DF4321.4B6A@ix.netcom.com>
In reply to#2910979
The Starmaker wrote:

> 
> Albert Einstein rejected the presidency of Israel because they were small fries. Albert Einstein considers
> himself a...World Leader! Leader of the World...the planet Earth.
> 
> He tells the President of the United States, "Build an atomic bomb and kill those motherfuckers!"

Keep in mind, Albert Einstein considers
himself a...World Leader! Leader of the World...the planet Earth.

Albert Einstein is a self-appointed Leader of the planet Earth.

Here is a letter Einstein wrote in 1932, (that's 10 years before Japan
attacked Pearl Harbor)


. Einstein replied on April 26, 1932:
Your letter of April 20 convinced me that I had misinterpreted your
telegram and was mistaken about the character of the congress which you
suggested. 
I was under the impression that all you intended was to make a rather
impotent protest in the hope of affecting the war policy which Japan is
pursuing at the moment. 
I realize now that you are aiming at a much larger target: to help
create a more effective antiwar movement than has thus far existed. In
such an endeavor I should be glad to participate as fully as possible.
I am convinced that only one policy will prove effective: All member
states of the League of Nations and, in addition, the United States must
accept the unconditional obligation to carry
 out all decisions of the League and the International Court of
Arbitration at The Hague.
If we succeeded in convincing the more educated groups in the various
countries of the necessity of so far-reaching a renunciation of national
sovereignty, we 
would actually be accomplishing something that would be useful. Had we
been able to accomplish this in the past, Japan's insolent action could
have been prevented by 
the imposition of a boycott of all Japanese goods and ships.
During the spring Einstein received a number of messages from Barbusse
reporting sponsorship by many other prominent persons as well as 
steady progress in the organization of the congress. Attached to a
letter dated May 18, 1932, was the text of an appeal, to be signed by
all the sponsors, which 
was to serve as a public announcement. The appeal pointed out that the
war unleashed in China by Japan was unmistakably directed at the Soviet
Union "with 
the approval and connivance of the great imperialistic powers." The
thought was particularly emphasized in the first paragraph of the
appeal: "While the Disarmament Conference 

is in full swing in Geneva, Japan has hurled itself against the Asiatic
mainland. It has slaughtered countless innocent people in Chapei. It has
occupied Manchuria. 
Crudely camouflaged as an independent republic, Manchuria is clearly to
serve as a strategic base for any war against the Soviet Union. For
fifteen years the Soviet Union 
has striven to build a new world order based on a co-operative community
of workers, a reasonable distribution of national income, the pursuit of
common welfare, and the 
abolition of exploitation and oppression of man by his fellow man: in
short, on principles diametrically opposed to the anarchy of the
capitalist system. 
The Soviet Union, dedicated to its great task of socialist and human
construction, has for months heroically resisted Japanese
provocation..." -Albert Einstein -Self-Appointed Leader of the planet
Earth.

















-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, 
and challenge the unchallengeable.

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#2911769

FromThe Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Date2025-03-23 22:34 -0700
Message-ID<67E0EF03.5B13@ix.netcom.com>
In reply to#2911435
The Starmaker wrote:
> 
> The Starmaker wrote:
> 
> >
> > Albert Einstein rejected the presidency of Israel because they were small fries. Albert Einstein considers
> > himself a...World Leader! Leader of the World...the planet Earth.
> >
> > He tells the President of the United States, "Build an atomic bomb and kill those motherfuckers!"
> 
> Keep in mind, Albert Einstein considers
> himself a...World Leader! Leader of the World...the planet Earth.
> 
> Albert Einstein is a self-appointed Leader of the planet Earth.
> 
> Here is a letter Einstein wrote in 1932, (that's 10 years before Japan
> attacked Pearl Harbor)
> 
> . Einstein replied on April 26, 1932:
> Your letter of April 20 convinced me that I had misinterpreted your
> telegram and was mistaken about the character of the congress which you
> suggested.
> I was under the impression that all you intended was to make a rather
> impotent protest in the hope of affecting the war policy which Japan is
> pursuing at the moment.
> I realize now that you are aiming at a much larger target: to help
> create a more effective antiwar movement than has thus far existed. In
> such an endeavor I should be glad to participate as fully as possible.
> I am convinced that only one policy will prove effective: All member
> states of the League of Nations and, in addition, the United States must
> accept the unconditional obligation to carry
>  out all decisions of the League and the International Court of
> Arbitration at The Hague.
> If we succeeded in convincing the more educated groups in the various
> countries of the necessity of so far-reaching a renunciation of national
> sovereignty, we
> would actually be accomplishing something that would be useful. Had we
> been able to accomplish this in the past, Japan's insolent action could
> have been prevented by
> the imposition of a boycott of all Japanese goods and ships.
> During the spring Einstein received a number of messages from Barbusse
> reporting sponsorship by many other prominent persons as well as
> steady progress in the organization of the congress. Attached to a
> letter dated May 18, 1932, was the text of an appeal, to be signed by
> all the sponsors, which
> was to serve as a public announcement. The appeal pointed out that the
> war unleashed in China by Japan was unmistakably directed at the Soviet
> Union "with
> the approval and connivance of the great imperialistic powers." The
> thought was particularly emphasized in the first paragraph of the
> appeal: "While the Disarmament Conference
> 
> is in full swing in Geneva, Japan has hurled itself against the Asiatic
> mainland. It has slaughtered countless innocent people in Chapei. It has
> occupied Manchuria.
> Crudely camouflaged as an independent republic, Manchuria is clearly to
> serve as a strategic base for any war against the Soviet Union. For
> fifteen years the Soviet Union
> has striven to build a new world order based on a co-operative community
> of workers, a reasonable distribution of national income, the pursuit of
> common welfare, and the
> abolition of exploitation and oppression of man by his fellow man: in
> short, on principles diametrically opposed to the anarchy of the
> capitalist system.
> The Soviet Union, dedicated to its great task of socialist and human
> construction, has for months heroically resisted Japanese
> provocation..." -Albert Einstein -Self-Appointed Leader of the planet
> Earth.

"Had we
been able to accomplish this in the past, Japan's insolent action could
have been prevented by 
the imposition of a boycott of all Japanese goods and ships." -Albert
Einstein


Or drop 2 atomic bombs on Japan...

(cause the boycott didn't work)



Albert Einstein did what Al Capone would have done, instead of
boycottying the store, he just bombed them out of business.


I like Capone's methods. 


It's ...efficient.









-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, 
and challenge the unchallengeable.

[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]


#2911787

FromThomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de>
Date2025-03-24 08:17 +0100
Message-ID<m4cf78FbrtbU1@mid.individual.net>
In reply to#2910979
Am Freitag000021, 21.03.2025 um 18:59 schrieb The Starmaker:
> Thomas Heger wrote:
>>
>> Am Mittwoch000019, 19.03.2025 um 18:18 schrieb The Starmaker:
>>> Now, I'm going to tell you something you
>>> never heard before...
>>>
>>> Albert Einstein's goal was to kill as many Japaneese people as possible.
>>
>> As I see it, Einstein wasn't concerned with Japan at all.
> 
> 
> I'm not about to give History lesson here just because you were cutting classes...
> 
> 
> In WW2 Japan was an ally of Germany.
> 
> 
>>
>> But Einstein had, as far as this is known, emotions against Germany.
> 
> and he a lot of Emotions against Japan!
> 
> I got tons of stuff, angry letters, etc.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>>
>> Actually he was born in Germany (at least that is his usual CV), but
>> didn't like Germans.
> 
> 
> a self-hating German? We got a lot of self-hating Americans...they call themselves...Demcrats.

I actually had doubts, that he was German at all.

His official CV contains situations, which I regard as simply impossible.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Einstein

Quote:

"The Einstein family moved to Italy, first to Milan and a few months 
later to Pavia, where they settled in Palazzo Cornazzani.[19] Einstein, 
then fifteen, stayed behind in Munich in order to finish his schooling."

I had doubts, that any family could leave the eldest son behind alone in 
a different country.


"On the advice of the polytechnic's principal, he completed his 
secondary education at the Argovian cantonal school (a gymnasium) in 
Aarau, Switzerland, graduating in 1896."

That would have been hard, because Gymnasium needed 13 years for 
'Abitur/Matura' in the Germany speaking countries. That would have been 
1879 +6+ 13= 1898

Well, possibly a genius could leave out a class and 'jump'. But Einstein 
missed a year of schooling, because he didn't attend school in Pavia, 
after he he moved from Munich to Italy.

To go to school in Switzerland, while his family lived in Italy is also 
a remarkable thing. I had actually doubts about the possibility to do 
that, because Swiss aren't and were not fond of foreigners, let alone 
unattended kids.

As far as I can tell, there were no entrance exams at 
German/Austrian/Swiss universities in that era, but actually I don't 
know. But at least these exams were held after the candidate has 
'Abitur/Matura' (which Einstein could not have under usual circumstances 
before the age of 18 or 19). But the story goes, that he failed the 
entrance exams at the age of 16.

Then the Swiss allowed the still unattended teenager to go to university 
in Zurich and study teaching for physics and mathematics.

Later the Swiss allowed the former German to work in the Swiss patent 
office. This would have required a certain status called 'Beamter', 
which usually requires to be a born citizen.

Now, to me it would have made more sense, if Einstein actually was a 
born Swiss, (possibly born with a different name and possibly not a Jew).



...


TH

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