YouTube. I just typed in Soros Nazi informant and this was the first video YouTube showed. It wasn't the exact thing I was looking for but it was the interview I recalled with him talking about what he did with the Nazi against the Jews. I am not blaming him for it. I think it is wrong to judge someone for something they did so long ago, especially when he was a kid, and all of the pressures. I even stated that above as well. I was just posting the video to give understanding to why people say that Soros helped the Nazi. Again there is more to it than just this. It is not a conspiracy theory. Are there lies about it and have people probably blown it out of proportion? I am sure some have. But we can at least stick to what he himself admits to here.
Again I wouldn't want to be held accountable to something I did when I was a kid, and I certainly would not hold someone else accountable. I am no judge anyway. I don't judge Soros for what he did. I in fact feel quite a lot of pity for what he went through. I think his mind got screwed up real bad even if he doesn't want to admit it, like he tried not to at the end of that clip. It certainly showed the type of person he was. And it was probably that "save your own skin" attitude that helped him amass his fortunes while he plowed through and stomped so many others to the ground to get to where he is.
OK, it is a snapshot of a longer interview on "60 Minutes". The full interview is here:
It does not
remotely establish that Soros "helped the Nazis". All he seems to admit to in this video is witnessing, as a 14 yr old spectator, other Jews being dispossessed, while he was not.
He was not "saving his own skin". Someone was saving it for him.
This is what the Wiki article on Soros says about his experiences in the war:
QUOTE
His father
Tivadar (also known as Teodoro Ŝvarc) was a lawyer
[35] and a well-known
Esperanto-speaker who edited the Esperanto literary magazine
Literatura Mondo and raised his son to speak the language.
[36] Tivadar had also been a prisoner of war during and after
World War I until he escaped from Russia and rejoined his family in Budapest.
[37][38] The two married in 1924. In 1936, Soros's family changed their name from the German-Jewish Schwartz to Soros, as protective camouflage in increasingly antisemitic Hungary.
[39][40] Tivadar liked the new name because it is a
palindrome and because of its meaning. In Hungarian,
soros means "next in line," or "designated successor"; in
Esperanto it means "will soar."
[41][42][43]
Soros was 13 years old in March 1944 when
Nazi Germany occupied Hungary.
[44] The Nazis barred Jewish children from attending school, and Soros and the other schoolchildren were made to report to the
Judenrat ("Jewish Council"), which had been established during the
occupation. Soros later described this time to writer
Michael Lewis: "The Jewish Council asked the little kids to hand out the deportation notices. I was told to go to the Jewish Council. And there I was given these small slips of paper ... I took this piece of paper to my father. He instantly recognized it. This was a list of Hungarian Jewish lawyers. He said, 'You deliver the slips of paper and tell the people that if they report they will be deported'."
[45][46]
Soros did not return to that job; his family survived the war by purchasing documents to say that they were Christians. Later that year at age 14, Soros posed as the Christian godson of an official of the collaborationist Hungarian government's Ministry of Agriculture, who himself had a Jewish wife in hiding. On one occasion, rather than leave the 14-year-old alone, the official took Soros with him while completing an inventory of a Jewish family's confiscated estate. Tivadar saved not only his immediate family but also many other Hungarian Jews, and Soros later wrote that 1944 had been "the happiest [year] of his life," for it had given him the opportunity to witness his father's heroism.
[47][48] In 1945, Soros survived the
Siege of Budapest, in which Soviet and German forces fought house-to-house through the city.
UNQUOTE
Now, having read that, I invite you to reconsider the likely truth of these suggestions you are making.