Paul Haeder, Author

writing, interviews, editing, blogging

the critical mass is building, and daily, it’s as if the fucking prognosticators and pundits and analytical types are surprised minute by fucking Israel, fucking Israel’s mafia — USA — and genocide?

What’s it all about Alfie
Is it just for the moment we live

What’s it all about
When you sort it out, Alfie
Are we meant to take more than we give
Or are we meant to be kind?

And if, if only fools are kind, Alfie
Then I guess it is wise to be cruel
And if life belongs only to the strong, Alfie
What will you lend on an old golden rule?

As sure as I believe there’s a heaven above
Alfie, I know there’s something much more
Something even non-believers can believe in

I believe in love, Alfie
Without true love we just exist, Alfie
Until you find the love you’ve missed
You’re nothing, Alfie

When you walk let your heart lead the way

And you’ll find love any day Alfie, Alfie

Fucking Kissinger, Friedman and Bernays — Jews on Parade:

A retired Chilean soldier accused of torturing and killing beloved folk singer Victor Jara 50 years ago at the start of the country’s military dictatorship, was extradited from the United States Friday to stand trial at home.

Pedro Barrientos, 75, arrived in Chile after being expelled from the United States, where he had been living for 34 years.

He was stripped of his US citizenship after it was found he had lied to migration services. Police told AFP he arrived in Santiago Friday on a regular American Airlines flight from Miami.

Jara, 40, was arrested the day after the September 11, 1973 CIA-backed coup that overthrew Salvador Allende and installed Augusto Pinochet as dictator. Jara’s body was found days later, riddled with 44 bullets. He had been held, along with around 5,000 other political prisoners, in a sports stadium where he was interrogated, tortured and then killed.

A Florida court in 2016 declared Barrientos liable for Jara’s torture and murder as part of a civil lawsuit filed by the singer’s family, which was then awarded $28 million.

[Víctor Jara was a strong supporter of socialism and the administration of Chilean President Salvador Allende, and a key figure in the Nueva Canción Chilena (New Chilean Song Movement), which garnered popularity and support for the Popular Unity government of President Allende through socially committed folk music.]

Massacre at the Stadium HD Watch

The US government, acting on behalf of US-based transnational corporations and the dependent Chilean bourgeoisie, had never wanted Allende to win the presidency – which he did, on 4 September 1970 – and so they set out to destabilise the Popular Unity government from the day it took office in November 1970.

Allende raised five key issues that he argued needed to be addressed in the transformation from the neocolonial, capitalist world order to one committed to advancing humanity:

(re: The Coup Against the Third World: Chile, 1973)

1. Reform monetary and trade systems. The Third World states had minimal representation at the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference in the United States, where the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank were created, and were entirely absent (except for some colonies) when the Western countries created the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT) in 1947. As a result, these monetary and trade systems were designed to benefit the affluent nations. The Third World created UNCTAD as the platform to rethink these systems, but, from its founding in 1964, the West tried to marginalise UNCTAD as well as the inputs of post-colonial states on the debate about monetary and trade policy. In 1971, the United States unilaterally abandoned the gold system, enshrining the dollar as the global fiat currency, and by the 1973 Tokyo Round of GATT negotiations, the United States, the European Economic Community, and Japan had begun to reconsider the monetary and trade system without any input from the Third World. Faced with this scenario, Allende said, UNCTAD needed to build a trade system that prioritised increasing popular consumption, eradicating hunger and illiteracy, and regulating the power of transnational corporations.

2. Cancel debt burdens. At the World Bank meeting in Nairobi (Kenya) in 1973, roughly a year after Allende’s speech at UNCTAD III, the bank’s president, Robert McNamara, made the point that the ‘essence of the debt problem’ is not the volume of the debt, but rather that ‘debt, and debt payments, are growing faster than the revenues required to service them’. Countries in the developing world were trying to attract finance not for the purpose of capital investment, but in order to service their debt.

At UNCTAD III, Allende pointed out that the debt of developing countries had already reached $70 billion. These debts, he said, are ‘largely contracted in order to offset the damage done by an unfair trade system, to defray the costs of the establishment of foreign enterprises in our territory, [and] to cope with the speculative exploitation of our reserves’.

3. Consolidate control over natural resources. In May 1969 in Viña del Mar (Chile), the governments of Latin America underscored the need to wrest control over their own natural resources. The text that emerged from this meeting, The Latin American Consensus of Viña del Mar, influenced the Lima Declaration (1971), from which Allende quoted during UNCTAD III, declaring that: ‘The recognition that every country has the sovereign right to freely dispose of its natural resources in the interests of the economic development and well-being of its own people [and that] any external, political, or economic measure or pressure brought to bear on the exercise of this right is a flagrant violation of the principles of self-determination of peoples and of non-intervention, as set forth in the Charter of the United Nations, and, if pursued, could constitute a threat to international peace and security’. ‘Chile has nationalised copper’, Allende said, and this nationalisation has been paid for by the excess profits pilfered by the copper conglomerate. The Popular Unity government was not merely asserting ideals, Allende said – it had put these ideas into practice with ‘profound conviction’.

4. Affirm the right of nations to technology and science. The Third World countries, Allende explained , ‘watch the march of science as outsiders’ and import ‘technical know-how which in many cases simply constituted an instrument of cultural alienation and of increased dependence’. Countries such as Chile needed to develop their own scientific and technological capacity, and they needed to collaborate with other countries to create technologies ‘to suit our needs and our development plans’.

5. Build a peace economy. The need of the hour, Allende argued, was to ‘turn a war economy into a peace economy’, to use the waste spent on war and armaments to ‘cement a solidarity economy on a world scale’. In 1970, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute noted that seven percent of the global Gross Domestic Product went towards military expenditures, ‘equivalent to the total income of the poorer half of the world’s population’. A cut in arms spending, Allende pointed out, ‘would finance major projects and programmes for [Third World] countries’.

Kissinger in Chile

“A man has died whose historical brilliance never managed to conceal his moral wretchedness,” Chile’s ambassador to the United States, Juan Gabriel Valdes, wrote on X, the former Twitter.

The envoy posted his acerbic remark after the death Wednesday of Kissinger, who greenlighted the 1973 coup that brought down Chile’s elected socialist president and installed the rightwing dictatorship of general Augusto Pinochet.

We can just simply quote Henry Kissinger briefing Richard Nixon five days after the coup. He [said], “The Chilean thing was getting consolidated.” And Nixon expresses his slight preoccupation about whether the U.S. role is going to be exposed. Nixon says, “Our hand doesn’t show on this, does it though?” Kissinger’s response is a three-sentence summary of what the U.S. role was. First, he says, “We didn’t do it.” And he’s referring to the fact that the United States was not on the ground 50 years ago today, with agents driving the tanks, supplying the intelligence, piloting the planes that bombed the [presidential] Moneda Palace. The United States did not stand side by side that day with the Chilean military as they destroyed Chile’s long democratic tradition.

And then Kissinger continues, “I mean, we helped them. Blank/We” — a word that is omitted, which you can fill in — “created the conditions as best as possible.” And that’s an accurate summary of what the U.S. role was. Starting almost the day after Allende’s election [in 1970] but weeks before he actually was inaugurated as President of Chile, it was the U.S. goal and mission to foment a coup in Chile, to create what the CIA referred to as a “coup climate” and maximize the likelihood that Allende’s model would be a model of failure. And if that also, at the same time, created the conditions, “as best as possible for a military coup,” so be it. It was the political goal of Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon to assure that Allende did not have a successful model of electoral socialist change that other countries in the world might want to emulate, and the United States [intervened] through both an invisible economic blockade, a cut off of multilateral credits, and a five-pronged covert operations effort that targeted the military. The U.S. funneled a bunch of money into El Mercurio, which was kind of, in those days, the Fox News of Chile, openly pushing for a coup against the Allende government. Those were the operations that helped, as the CIA itself put it, set the stage for the September 11,1973, coup.

Chile coup 50 years later: The U.S. role and its unintended consequences :  NPR

So it wasn’t that the United States had a direct role on the ground here. It wasn’t that the Chilean military were puppets of the United States of America. It was that the United States contributed to a set of conditions that would enhance the likelihood that there would be social pressure for the military to move, and the military did move.

Rather than protecting individuals from state repression, neoliberal human rights operated primarily to preserve the market order by depoliticizing society.

Friedrich von Hayek and Milton Friedman are the founding fathers of neoliberal economics. When Augusto Pinochet overthrew Chile’s elected government, they helped devise his economic agenda and endorsed the brutal repression that was needed to force it through.

(source: Neoliberal Economists Like Milton Friedman Cheered on Augusto Pinochet’s Dictatorship)

Edward Bernays: Propaganda and the U.S.-Backed 1954 Guatemalan Coup The Controversial History of United Fruit Brothers in arms – Israel’s secret pact with Pretoria

South Africa's prime minister John Vorster (second from right) is feted by Israel's prime minister Yitzhak Rabin (right) and Menachem Begin (left) and Moshe Dayan during his 1976 visit to Jerusalem. Photograph: Sa'ar Ya'acov

During the second world war the future South African prime minister John Vorster was interned as a Nazi sympathiser. Three decades later he was being feted in Jerusalem. In the second part of his remarkable special report, Chris McGreal investigates the clandestine alliance between Israel and the apartheid regime, cemented with the ultimate gift of friendship – A-bomb technology!

Gaza or Guatemala? Same to the Israelis, the Jews there.

Israel’s military relations with right-wing groups and regimes spans Latin America from Mexico to the southernmost tip of Chile, starting just a few years after the Israeli state came into existence.

Since then, the list of countries Israel has supplied, trained and advised includes Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela.

But it isn’t only the sales of planes, guns and weapons system deals that characterises the Israeli presence in Latin America.

Where Israel has excelled is in advising, training and running intelligence and counter-insurgency operations in the Latin American “dirty war” civil conflicts of Argentina, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and now Colombia.

In the case of the Salvadoran conflict – a civil war between the right-wing landowning class supported by a particularly violent military pitted against left-wing popular organisations – the Israelis were present from the beginning. Besides arms sales, they helped train ANSESAL, the secret police who were later to form the framework of the infamous death squads that would kill tens of thousands of mostly civilian activists.

From 1975 to 1979, 83% of El Salvador’s military imports came from Israel, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. By 1981, many of those in the civilian popular political movements who had survived the death squads headed for the hills to become guerrillas.

By 1981 there was an open civil war in El Salvador which took over a decade to resolve through negotiations.

Even though the US was openly backing the Salvadoran Army by 1981, as late as November 1983 it was asking for more Israeli “practical assistance” there, according to a declassified secret document. (Israel’s Latin American trail of terror)

book cover

Fucking Jews, man, and look at this fucking ghost with this ghoul:

More bullshit lies. This fucking prick Biden and his slut Jill, two fucking monsters.

Jill issued the warning on Tuesday night during a Ramadan gathering at the White House with Muslim community members. During the dinner, a guest confronted Biden, saying that his wife had denied him attending the meeting due to the president’s support for Israel.

In response, Biden stated that he understood because his own wife, Jill, had put pressure on him over the matter. A witness who heard Biden stated that he took notes since they were surprised by the First Lady’s staunch position on the issue.

When questioned about Biden’s comments on Wednesday, White House representatives claimed there was no disagreement between Jill and the President about the Israel-Hamas war. Biden and Jill have similar goals, according to a statement made by the First Lady’s communications director, Elizabeth Alexander.

“Just like the president, the First Lady is heartbroken over the attacks on aid workers and the ongoing loss of innocent lives in Gaza. They both want Israel to do more to protect civilians.”

Before leaving the Tuesday meeting, a doctor, who is Palestinian-American, raised his voice over killings in Gaza and gave Biden a note and a picture of an 8-year-old orphan from Rafah, which Israel intends to attack next.

Biden finally calls for Gaza ceasefire in call with Netanyahu

US President Joe Biden finally came out with a call for an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, as the risk of escalation mounts in the region

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Dirty Sam Altman, Dirty Larry Summers, Dirty Dell and the entire Mossad and Unit 8200 and Silicon Wadi and the others in the rabbies rabbi world.

The Israeli military has been using an artificial intelligence (AI) tool known as ‘Lavender’, to identify targets across Gaza and direct their bombing campaign, responsible for many of the 33,000 Palestinians killed since October.

Lavender has played a “key role in the unprecedented bombing” of Palestinians, the investigation carried out by +972 Magazine and Local Call, stated and based on intelligence officers with first hand experience of the AI tool in the war on the Gaza Strip.

Sources said that 15 or 20 civilians could be killed in targeting low-level Hamas members, while the military authorised the killing of as many as 100 civilians to take out a Hamas commander, as happened with the flattening of an apartment block on 31 October.

Jewish fucking values, part of the investment stream, the dual use fucking monsters teaching engineering and their other STEM monsters how to KILL.

The Lavender machine joins another AI system, “The Gospel,” about which information was revealed in a previous investigation by +972 and Local Call in November 2023, as well as in the Israeli military’s own publications. A fundamental difference between the two systems is in the definition of the target: whereas The Gospel marks buildings and structures that the army claims militants operate from, Lavender marks people — and puts them on a kill list. 

Palestinians wait to receive the bodies of their relatives who were killed in an Israeli airstrike, at Al-Najjar Hospital in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, October 24, 2023. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)

Do you get it yet? Jews and Israelis and whatever the fuck a Zionist is, they hate Goyim, writ large. Totally. While the fucking Biden Deranged Family dukes it out on now, what 33,000 dead and thousands sick and dying?

Read it and weep, because this sinister AI military stuff has run like a virus into the rest of the major militaries, and then exported to those Third World countries. ‘Lavender’: The AI machine directing Israel’s bombing spree in Gaza — The Israeli army has marked tens of thousands of Gazans as suspects for assassination, using an AI targeting system with little human oversight and a permissive policy for casualties, +972 and Local Call reveal.

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