The 21st centaury is full of deceit, crime, and weaponized everything. So love it or not, but protect yourself.

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Did Einstein have any Hungarian Jew in himAlbert Einstein’s direct ancestry was German Jewish, rather than Hungarian Jewish.Biographical and genealogical records detail his heritage through several specific contexts:1. The Lineage: Swabian Ashkenazi JewsBoth sides of Einstein’s family tree consist of Ashkenazi Jewish lineages rooted deeply in the southern German region of Swabia (specifically the Kingdom of Württemberg).His Father: Hermann Einstein was born in Buchau, Württemberg.His Mother: Pauline Koch was born in Cannstatt, Württemberg.The Background: For generations, his ancestors lived, worked, and married within German-speaking Jewish communities, rendering his direct genetic line German Ashkenazi.2. The Hungarian MisconceptionPeople frequently associate Einstein with Hungary due to three close professional and personal connections:The "Hungarian Quartet" of Physics: When Einstein famously wrote his 1939 letter to President Roosevelt warning about the potential development of an atomic bomb, he was closely collaborating with Leo Szilard, Edward Teller, and Eugene Wigner—three extraordinarily brilliant physicists who were Hungarian Jews. Because they operated closely as a unit in the U.S., their origins are sometimes conflated.His First Wife, Mileva Marić: Einstein's first wife, Mileva, was born in a region that was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the time (modern-day Serbia). Their first child, Lieserl, was born in the Austro-Hungarian city of Novi Sad.Prague Academic Stay: In 1911, Einstein took a prestigious professorship in Prague, which was also part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.While Einstein lived in Austro-Hungarian territories and his closest intellectual peers were Hungarian Jews, his own family lineage traces entirely back through generations of German Jewry.