Did you know German company AEG was founded by a Jewish business man (from a wealthy lineage of course) named Emil Rathenau?
Emil also was involved in the International Exposition of Electrity, which of course was held in this magnificient building that’s no longer around:
This is where the terms and units we now learn w/r/t to electricity were set and standardized.
> As part of the exhibition, the first International Congress of Electricians, which met in the halls of the Palais du Trocadero, presented numerous scientific and technical papers, including definitions of the standard practical units volt, ohm and ampere,[1] the International System of Electrical and Magnetic Units.
He was also a member of the Jewish “Gesellschaft der Freunde” (https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gesellschaft_der_Freunde, German only) society which was a Jewish “support group” turned… something else:
Translated from German Wikipedia:
> From 1880 onward, the association withdrew from public view and became the informal hub for the leadership of Berlin-based private and joint-stock banks, publishing houses, chemical, electrical, and other major companies.
It featured the “who is who” of influential Jewish society in Germany of that time.
His son Walther was later killed:
> Rathenau's insistence that Germany fulfil its obligations under the Treaty of Versailles, led right-wing nationalist groups (including a nascent Nazi Party) to brand him part of a Jewish-communist conspiracy.
> Two months after the signing of the treaty, Rathenau was assassinated by members of the ultra-nationalist Organisation Consul in Berlin in the belief that he was a literal "Elder of Zion".


Emil Rathenau - Wikipedia
Palais de l'Industrie - Wikipedia





