Paul Haeder, Author

writing, interviews, editing, blogging

…and there will be no mass fucking hack, mass smash and grab by the people, no fucking rolling strike, no fucking peep out of the Managerial Class and their Minions and their Masters!

Seems like the good old days outrunning the fucking foolish feds. Look at this fucking mincemeat shit bunch of verbiage to say: Citizens Who Speak out against the Covid-19 Vaccine. “3 Years Prison and €45,000 Fine”

Ghosts, blood sucking ghosts these fucking French People ARE! (Source)

France's Macron launches political reset with PM change | Reuters

Article IV, “aims to fight against “charlatans” and “gurus 2.0”, who promote on the Internet methods presented as “miracle solutions” to cure serious diseases such as cancers. Often without scientific training and in defiance of science, they can drift towards behaviors of sectarian influence.

The “dérive sectaire” (sectarian abominations) has allegedly increased dramatically, …”in particular because of the Covid-19 epidemic and the use of social networks.”

By punishing these behaviors, the crime of “provocation to abstention from care” would therefore serve to “fill a real gap in our arsenal by equipping us with effective means to fight against therapeutic excesses of a sectarian”… Up to three years in prison for these “provocations”

After long debates, the deputies adopted at first reading the draft law against “sectarian abominations” [dérive sectaire]  on February 14, in which they reintegrated the controversial article 4, which creates a new crime of “provocation to abstention from medical care”.(“provocation à l’abstention de soins”) (France Info)

Enough for a minyan: A Jewish Who’s Who of Biden’s Cabinet-to-Be

Moving onto the Jewish side of AR-VR-MR-AI “things”, the Oppen-Monster-Heimer of Nano-Bot Things:

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says it’s not a fear of “killer robots,” or any other Frankenstein-tech creature that AI could power that keeps him up at night. Instead, it’s the technology’s ability to derail society, insidiously and subtly, from the inside. 

Shoot the rabid dog:

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman walking in the U.S. Capitol

WHEN that famous psychologist, Mr. Phineas T. Barnum, arrived in London accompanied by General Thomas Thumb, he was there for the purpose of welcoming the curious to his box office. A less astute manager would have taken a theatre, opened his ticket stall, and plastered the walls and the newspapers with advertisements. That would have been publicity. ‘Professor’ Maelzel, who managed the automaton chess player at Concert Hall, had observed of Mr. Barnum that ‘he understood the value of the press, and that there is nothing helps the showman like the types and the ink.’ All this was quite elementary to Mr. Barnum. But he understood something deeper than that. He understood that mysterious, whimsical Monster — the Mass Mind; therefore, before he resorted to the types and the ink, he went to work shrewdly upon the Monster.

These are FUCKING Jewish values:

Altman or Bernays? Take your fucking charlatan pick:

Right up to the end of his life, Bernays held fast to his belief that leadership would come from an elite, technocratic few who would shape the masses’ reality and thus produce a better society.

Major Works

  • Bernays, Edward L. [1923] 1961. Crystallizing Public Opinion. Liveright. ISBN 0871409755
  • Bernays, Edward L. [1928] 1972. Propaganda. Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press. ISBN 080461511X
  • Bernays, Edward L. [1952] 2004. Public Relations. Whitefish, MT: Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 1419173383
  • Bernays, Edward L. [1955] 1969. The Engineering of Consent. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0806103280
  • Bernays, Edward L. 1965. Biography of an Idea: Memoirs of a Public Relations Counsel. New York: Simon and Schuster.

References

  • Cutlip, Scott. 1994. The Unseen Power: Public Relations: A History. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. ISBN 0805814647
  • Ewen, Stuart. 1996. PR! A Social History of Spin. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 0465061680
  • Ross, Irwin. 1960. The Image Merchants: The Fabulous World of American Public Relations. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  • Spiegel, Alix. 2005. “Freud’s Nephew and the Origins of Public Relations” National Public Radio. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
  • Tye, Larry. 1998. The Father of Spin: Edward L. Bernays and the Birth of Public Relations. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0517704358

External links

All links retrieved February 12, 2024.

Spinning for a Fight 30 Years After | MoneyTalks

Bernays also pioneered the industry’s use of psychology and other social sciences to design its public persuasion campaigns:

If we understand the mechanism and motives of the group mind, is it not possible to control and regiment the masses according to our will without their knowing about it? The recent practice of propaganda has proved that it is possible, at least up to a certain point and within certain limits. (Bernays 1928)

He called this scientific technique of opinion-molding the “engineering of consent.”

Bernays’ celebration of propaganda helped define public relations, but it did not win the industry many friends. In a letter to President Franklin D. RooseveltUnited States Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter described Bernays and Ivy Lee as “professional poisoners of the public mind, exploiters of foolishness, fanaticism and self-interest.” And history showed the flaw in Bernays’ identification of the “manipulation of the masses” as a natural and necessary feature of a democratic society. The fascist rise to power in Germany demonstrated that propaganda could be used to subvert democracy as easily as it could be used to “resolve conflict.”

In his autobiography, entitled Biography of an Idea, Bernays recalls a dinner at his home in 1933 where:

Karl von Weigand, foreign correspondent of the Hearst newspapers, an old hand at interpreting Europe and just returned from Germany, was telling us about Goebbels and his propaganda plans to consolidate Nazi power. Goebbels had shown Weigand his propaganda library, the best Weigand had ever seen. Goebbels, said Weigand, was using my book Crystallizing Public Opinion as a basis for his destructive campaign against the Jews of Germany. This shocked me. … Obviously the attack on the Jews of Germany was no emotional outburst of the Nazis, but a deliberate, planned campaign. (Bernays 1965)

Then this semian monster: The United States Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield warned that if the Algerian proposed resolution calling for a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza were to come up for a vote at the UN Security Council as drafted, it would not be adopted by Washington.

US ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, in New York, United States, on January 30, 2024.

Jewish Values, and the Jewish State of Jewish Occupied Isra-Hell is a stomping ground for Bernays, ALtmans, Mossad, Unit 8200, Wadi Valley mother fucking monsters of the circumcision !

AFP An injured youth lies on a bed at a makeshift camp in an area of the European Hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on December 31, 2023

Spin it , mother fucking Israeli Jews, spin it.

“Because of the shortage of painkillers we leave patients to scream for hours and hours,” one told the BBC.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has described the state of healthcare in Gaza as being “beyond words”.

It said 23 hospitals in Gaza were not functioning at all as of Sunday – 12 were partially functioning and one minimally.

The health agency said air strikes and a lack of supplies have “depleted an already under-resourced system”.

Three Jews in a Nuclear Fusion Reactor, for the AI-VR-MR-AR! Backed by renowned entrepreneur Sam Altman, Helion Energy Inc. is garnering attention for its ambitious endeavors in nuclear fusion power. With Altman’s substantial investment of $375 million, the company is spearheading a groundbreaking initiative to revolutionize the renewable energy sector.

Alongside other notable backers like Reid Hoffman and Dustin Moskovitz, Helion has secured a total funding of $577 million, signaling robust support for its vision.

Reduced to this shit! NBA protests?

3 years after Kaepernick took a knee, the NFL is back to business as usual  - Vox

Brothers in Crime: Who’s got time for the real work of stopping the racist Israel? Biden’s brother used his name to promote a hospital chain. Then it collapsed. Jim Biden played a major role in a company called Americore, which the government has accused of massive Medicare fraud.

White Fucking BLood Suckers:

Jim Biden (left) in front of a hospital sign and Joe Biden (right) in front of ripple lines.

Something about that fucking Queen Scott Ritter saying what about the USA’s murder incoporated capabilities? Navy envisions ‘hundreds of thousands’ of drones in the Pacific to deter China!

Sam Altman’s et al’s Jewish Swarms!

There’s a reason that the U.S. Navy has been much more open about its experiments with unmanned systems in the Middle East and South America than about the ones it’s conducting in the Pacific. 

“And it ain’t because we ain’t doing anything,” Adm. Sam Paparo, the head of U.S. Pacific Fleet, said at the AFCEA West conference here. “We don’t want to expose it to an adversary that would emplace a counter to that capability.”

Jewish Values: Why desperately needed aid is failing to reach the people of Gaza

Why desperately needed aid is failing to reach the people of Gaza

These Jews in Israel, or who knows who else are their masters, are the dirtiest Homo Sapiens Bellum on Earth. Sick mother fuckers.

And everything the USA touches turns to death, cocaine murder, addiction, etc.

Uruguay, home to 3.4 million people, suffered a record 426 murders in 2018. Violence has remained high ever since with grisly turf battles between small drug-dealing clans shocking a country largely unaccustomed to gang violence.

With 382 people killed last year, President Luis Lacalle Pou is struggling to defend his government’s security record ahead of a general election in October, while some far-right lawmakers are calling for troops on the streets.

“We have a problem,” said Mario Layera, Uruguay’s police chief from 2016-20, who led the force when the DEA left. “Cocaine is a problem.”

Nicolás Martinelli, Uruguay’s interior minister, told Reuters that Lacalle Pou’s government had repeatedly asked the DEA to return but has yet to get a positive response. He said he was pleased Argentina-based DEA agents are now visiting Montevideo twice a week, up from once every two weeks.

A DEA office is no panacea. Several Latin American nations have a deadly drug problem despite a strong DEA presence. Still, Martinelli said his country is desperate for U.S. equipment and expertise; he lamented that Uruguay’s status as a high-income nation excludes it from U.S. counter-narcotics donations.

“Uruguay remains a valued DEA partner,” a DEA spokesperson said. “We continue to actively explore new opportunities to expand our efforts to dismantle transnational criminal organizations operating worldwide.”

Nelson Vargas, who ran the DEA’s Montevideo office from 2013-2017, said “it was kind of cloak and dagger” when he arrived, with local cops wary of working with the DEA.

Politics played a part. Leftist governments ruled Uruguay from 2005-2020, and their negative view of U.S. policy towards Latin America – including support for the country’s 1973-85 dictatorship – hindered counter-narcotics collaboration, Layera, Martinelli and U.S. sources said.

Uruguay’s proud reputation as a regional role model bred complacency, two current and four former U.S. officials said. Authorities were in denial about the scale of cocaine moving through their country, they said.

Uruguay seized over 2 metric tonnes of cocaine in 2021, according to United Nations data, up over 1,300% compared with the 144 kgs apprehended in 2017.

In 2019, when Germany seized a record 1 billion euro haul of cocaine in a soybean shipment from Montevideo, the Uruguayans didn’t believe the drugs originated in their country, initially claiming they were loaded in Brazil, two ex-DEA agents said.

“For Uruguay, I think it was their heads in the sand, you know: ‘This is not happening,'” said a former Montevideo DEA chief, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss his past work. “But the reality was that it was happening, and I think it had been going on for a while.” (source)

Cocaine!!!!. Oh, that American Dream, Kill the Fucking Hero Messenger!

In 1996, a bombshell report by journalist Gary Webb claimed that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) supported cocaine trafficking into the U.S. by Nicaraguan Contra Rebel organizations.

Gary Webb on the CIA’s Role in the 1980s LA Crack Epidemic

An explosive report from a relatively unknown journalist, Gary Webb, claimed the CIA helped foster the crack epidemic that ravaged Los Angeles in the 1980s.

In 1996, a bombshell report by journalist Gary Webb claimed that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) supported cocaine trafficking into the U.S. by Nicaraguan Contra Rebel organizations. The U.S. support was an effort to destabilize the left-wing Nicaraguan government which the U.S. viewed as a threat. The report claimed that trafficking lead to the crack epidemic in Los Angeles in the 1980s.

Gary Webb wrote the three-part exposé called “Dark Alliance”, for the San Jose Mercury News in California, in August 1996. Webb had anonymous sources (he eventually named one in a later book) who had been involved in the Nicaraguan drug ring to back his allegations up.

Some of Webb’s sources would later speak out in a 2015 documentary called “Freeway: Crack in the System” which was about Rick “Freeway” Ross who created a crack empire in the 1980s. Ross was a central character in Webb’s Dark Alliance allegations.

According to Webb in the 1980s, when the CIA exerted a certain level of control over Contra groups such as the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN), the agency as well as the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) granted amnesty to and financially backed important Contra supporters and fundraisers who were known to the U.S. Government as cocaine smugglers.

The Contras were U.S.-supported right-wing rebel groups, active from 1979 to the early 1990s, in opposition to the socialist Sandinista Junta of National Reconstruction government in Nicaragua.

The U.S. Justice Department and its agencies — who were aware of the Contra-linked drug trafficking operations of the FDN supporters — allegedly thwarted local police investigations and blocked the prosecution of the Contra-linked cocaine traffickers.

Gary Webb’s claims in the Dark Alliance report were bold:

“For the better part of a decade, a San Francisco Bay Area drug ring sold tons of cocaine to the Crips and Bloods street gangs of Los Angeles and funneled millions in drug profits to a Latin American guerrilla army run by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, a Mercury News investigation has found.

“This drug network opened the first pipeline between Colombia’s cocaine cartels and the black neighborhoods of Los Angeles, a city now known as the ‘crack’ capital of the world. The cocaine that flooded in helped spark a crack explosion in urban America and provided the cash and connections needed for L.A.’s gangs to buy automatic weapons.

“Thousands of young black men are serving long prison sentences for selling cocaine — a drug that was virtually unobtainable in black neighborhoods before members of the CIA’s army started bringing it into South-Central in the 1980s at bargain-basement prices.”

The explosive allegations enraged the communities most affected by the crack epidemic here in the U.S.

In October 1996, two months after the publication of Webb’s articles, a Boston Globe reporter wrote that the story was “pulsing through [L.A.’s] black neighborhoods like a shockwave, provoking a stunning, growing level of anger and indignation. Talk-radio stations with predominantly black audiences are deluged with calls on the subject. Demonstrations, candle-lighting ceremonies and town-hall meetings are becoming regular affairs. And people on the street are heatedly discussing the topic.”

Webb would publish a book based on his articles two years later, entitled “Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion”.

The book won a Pen Oakland Censorship Award and a Firecracker Alternative Book Award.

Given the high-profile subject and its incendiary matter, many observers dismissed Webb’s report as conspiracy theory too.

Eventually, the media would mostly turn against Webb, attempting to discredit him. Notably, The New York TimesThe Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times ran articles calling his allegations unfounded. The Mercury News, who originally stood by Webb’s reporting, complied with these new denunciations and published an apology for the series in May 1997.

This came at the price of Webb’s career and ultimately his life: on December 10, 2004, the journalist was found dead in his apartment, with two .38-caliber bullets to the head — from an apparent suicide.

Two years later, Gary Webb’s own story would become the subject of a biography written by award-winning investigative journalist Nick Schou, who also worked as a consultant on the 2014 film of the same name, Kill the Messenger. The film was a depiction of Webb’s life, starring Jeremy Renner.

Perhaps the extreme backlash Webb faced was inevitable since he was taking on such a large, furtive and powerful entity as the CIA.

It was acknowledged that Webb did not state outright that the CIA ran the drug trade or even knew about it. However, the implications were deemed clear — and this was dangerous for the public image of the agency.

Webb would later say that he did contact the CIA during his research but that the agency would not return his calls. Along with no mention of this in his “Dark Alliance” series, many thought he refused to contact the CIA which undermined his credibility in the eyes of other reporters.

Allegedly, the CIA did not have to do much to unravel the journalist’s reputation afterward; the controversy surrounding Webb’s work proved enough for his fellow journalists and media outlets to attack him.

In a 2013 interview, reporter Jesse Katz recounted with remorse: “As an L.A. Times reporter, we saw this series in the San Jose Mercury News and kind of wonder[ed] how legit it was and kind of put it under a microscope. And we did it in a way that most of us who were involved in it, I think, would look back on that and say it was overkill. We had this huge team of people at the L.A. Times and kind of piled on to one lone muckraker up in Northern California.”

Was Gary Webb wrong?

According to The Intercept, Nicholas Dujmovic, a CIA Directorate of Intelligence staffer who wrote an internal report on Webb’s series, pointed out that much of what was reported in “Dark Alliance” was, in fact, not new.

As early as 1985, Associated Press journalists Robert Parry and Brian Barger found that Contra groups had “engaged in cocaine trafficking, in part to help finance their war against Nicaragua.”

A special Senate subcommittee, chaired by then-senator John Kerry, investigated the AP’s findings and, in 1989, released a 1,166-page report on covert U.S. operations throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.

It found “considerable evidence” that the Contras were linked to running drugs and guns — and that the U.S. government knew about it.

The report stated:

“On the basis of this evidence, it is clear that individuals who provided support for the Contras were involved in drug trafficking, the supply network of the Contras was used by drug trafficking organizations, and elements of the Contras themselves knowingly received financial and material assistance from drug traffickers. In each case, one or another agency of the U.S. government had information regarding the involvement either while it was occurring, or immediately thereafter.”

Curiously, this remained largely unnoticed by the media until Gary Webb picked up the story years later in 1996, and linked it to the CIA.

In a related affair, in 1993 Robert Bonner, the head of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), said on the CBS show “60 Minutes” the Venezuelan national guard smuggled cocaine into the United States in cooperation with the CIA. However, when Webb’s report came out three years later, this accusation seems to have been forgotten.

But there are those who still believe Webb’s reporting got it wrong. As recently as 2014, Jeff Leen, an assistant managing editor for major investigations for the Washington Post, wrote an article titled “Gary Webb was no journalism hero, despite what ‘Kill The Messenger’ says.”

Leen alleged that Webb’s report was overblown and his claims were insufficiently substantiated. Leen referenced a 1998 report by CIA Inspector General Frederick Hitz as evidence the CIA was not involved in drug trafficking. However, Hitz’s report echoed the Senate subcommittee’s findings that while the CIA did not conspire to bring drugs into the U.S., it did not cut off ties to individuals alleged to be involved in trafficking drugs.

Hitz’s report stated:

“As I said earlier, we have found no evidence in the course of this lengthy investigation of any conspiracy by CIA or its employees to bring drugs into the United States. However, during the Contra era, CIA worked with a variety of people to support the Contra program. These included CIA assets, pilots who ferried supplies to the Contras, as well as Contra officials and others.

“Let me be frank about what we are finding. There are instances where CIA did not, in an expeditious or consistent fashion, cut off relationships with individuals supporting the Contra program who were alleged to have engaged in drug trafficking activity or take action to resolve the allegations.”

Some say Webb’s downfall was linking the cocaine to the socioeconomic effects of drugs on the black community in Los Angeles. Some interpreted the connection as part of a CIA conspiracy to purposefully target the black community, an allegation Webb denies he ever made.

“I never believed, and never wrote, that there was a grand CIA conspiracy behind the crack plague,” Gary Webb wrote in his book. “. . . The CIA couldn’t even mine a harbor without getting its trench coat stuck in its fly.”

Webb’s biographer would eventually state that perhaps this was the main legacy the late journalist ultimately paid the price for: “he documented for the first time in the history of U.S. media how CIA complicity with Central American drug traffickers had actually impacted the sale of drugs north of the border in a very detailed, accurate story. And that’s, I think, the takeaway here.”

A new collection of work by the late investigative reporter Robert Parry, titled “American Dispatches,” chronicles the late journalist’s career, from his origins as a student activist to his later reporting on corruption and wrongdoing at the highest heights of government. Parry’s son Nat, who edited the book, joins Jon Schwarz to discuss his father’s life and work.

+—+

Says it all about AmeriKKKa, the Cocaine Regime of AzovNaziZioLensky, the trillions for the fucking mercenatires and their bitches and bros, all those buggering generals and ex-colonels and offensive weapons CEOS.

Video shows Target store sliding down hillside in West Virginia as store is forced to close!

Crumbling mother-fucking Goyim Country under the Thumb of the Minyan.

Wailing Wall White House has it all ready for our collective demise! How Israel lobby turns American politicians around its finger | Why United States backs Israel on all occasions despite international criticism

HOW ISRAEL LOBBY TURNS AMERICAN POLITICIANS AROUND ITS FINGER | WHY UNITED STATES BACKS ISRAEL ON ALL OCCASIONS DESPITE INTERNATIONAL CRITICISM
Spate of anti-Semitic cartoons seen in Arab media after Trump's Jerusalem  move | The Times of Israel
Washington Post cartoon slammed as 'racist, vile', ignites controversy |  Israel War on Gaza News | Al Jazeera
The kosherest nosh ever
Iran–Contra affair - Wikipedia

Ray-Gun or Genocide Joe?

Joe Biden broke with many of his Democratic colleagues and said he believed Reagan.

”I’m not angry with the president,” Biden said, as he began his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1987. “I think his action was one from the heart. I think his action was not one that was political. I think his action was not one done with any malevolence.” Biden justified Reagan’s motivations, saying, “I think he bled for those hostages.”

Biden said that through Reagan’s sincere desire to win the hostages’ release, he had been misled “by people who had no competence in the area of foreign policy.” In his book on the affair, Lt. Col. Oliver North, who was the public face of the scandal, wrote:

“Ronald Reagan knew of and approved a great deal of what went on with both the Iranian initiative and private efforts on behalf of the contras and he received regular, detailed briefings on both.”

In a deposition after he left power, according to press reports, Reagan

“said he was unable to recall virtually any specific details of the affair.”

Jew Biden:

Biden's deep Israel ties could ease Obama-era tensions

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