Paul Haeder, Author

writing, interviews, editing, blogging

Dorris said that the incident occurred outside the bathroom in Trump’s VIP box at the open on Sept. 5, 1997, the report said. Dorris was 24 at the time and Trump was 51.

MAGA maggots, all those fucking old ladies in the Senior Centers and Meals on Wheels kitchens, loving this cunt:

Dozens of women have accused Trump of sexual misconduct dating back to the 1970s, and he has been found liable in court for sexual abuse. Several women have described Trump forcibly reaching under their skirts, others said he kissed them without consent, and a handful of beauty pageant contestants claimed Trump inappropriately walked in on them in changing rooms. In total, about two dozen women have spoken out publicly to accuse Trump:

  • Jessica Leeds told The New York Times in 2016 that, in the late 1970s, Trump, who was a stranger to her, reached his hand up her skirt and grabbed her breasts on a flight to New York. She said he “was like an octopus” and his “hands were everywhere” before she fled to the back of the plane.
  • Ivana Trump, Trump’s first wife, accused him in a divorce deposition of raping her in a fit of rage in 1989, when they were married. She later said that she hadn’t meant in a “literal or criminal sense.”
  • Kristin Anderson, a photographer and former model, told The Washington Post in 2016 that Trump sat next to her at a nightclub in the early 1990s and reached under her skirt. Anderson said the incident lasted about 30 seconds, but she and her friends were “very grossed out and weirded out.”
  • Two weeks before the 2024 election, Stacey Williams told the Guardian that she met Trump in 1992 through Jeffrey Epstein, who later became a registered sex offender, was charged with sex trafficking and died by suicide in 2019. Epstein suggested the two visit Trump in Trump Tower in New York in 1993, Williams said, and shortly after they arrived, Trump groped her breasts and her butt. The Trump campaign denied the allegation.
  • Jill Harth, who worked with Trump in the 1990s, accused him of “attempted rape” in a 1997 complaint. She said that in 1993, Trump tried to kiss her in his daughter’s bedroom at his Mar-a-Lago resort, pushing her against a wall and putting his hand up her dress. She dropped the suit a few weeks after filing it, she said as part of a settlement with Trump in a separate breach of contract case, according to the Associated Press.
  • Lisa Boyne, a health food business entrepreneur, told HuffPost in 2016 that she attended a dinner with Trump in 1996 where several women were forced to walk across a table while Trump looked up their skirts and commented on their underwear and bodies. “It was the most offensive scene I’ve ever been a part of,” Boyne said.
  • Five former Miss Teen USA contestants told BuzzFeed News in 2016 that in 1997, Trump, the owner of the pageant at the time, unexpectedly walked into the contestants’ dressing room while they were changing, which they found inappropriate. Mariah Billado said she rushed to put on her dress and remembered him saying, “Don’t worry ladies, I’ve seen it all before.” Victoria Hughes said that it was “the most inappropriate time to meet us all for the first time. The youngest girl was 15, and I was the eldest at 19.” The other three women described a similar situation to BuzzFeed anonymously; however, 11 others said they did not recall seeing Trump in the dressing room at all.

    In an April 2005 interview on The Howard Stern Show, when asked about Miss USA and Miss Universe, Trump said he would go backstage before beauty pageant shows, the only man in the room while the women were “standing there with no clothes.” As the owner, “I sort of get away with things like that,” he added. He was not asked about Miss Teen USA in this interview.
  • E. Jean Carroll, a writer, said Trump raped her in 1996 in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room. Carroll wrote about the incident in her 2019 memoir called “What Do We Need Men For?” In May 2023, Carroll was awarded $5 million after a jury held Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation, though not rape.
  • Temple Taggart, former Miss Utah, told The New York Times in 2016 that Trump “kissed me directly on the lips” when he met her at the 1997 Miss USA pageant and again when she met with him in Manhattan after he offered to help with her modeling career. Taggart described the incident as “inappropriate” and said her first thought after he kissed her was, “Oh my God, gross.”
  • Cathy Heller told The Guardian in 2016 that Trump forcibly kissed her when she attended a Mother’s Day brunch at Mar-a-Lago in the 1990s. Heller said she was “angry and shaken” after the former president ignored her handshake, grabbed her and went for the lips and became angry when she tried to turn her head away.
  • Amy Dorris, a former model, said Trump forcibly kissed and groped her in his private box at the U.S. Open tennis championship in 1997. Dorris told The Guardian in 2020 that Trump “shoved his tongue down my throat” and “his hands were very gropey and all over my butt, my breasts, my back, everything.”
  • Karena Virginia, a yoga instructor and life coach, told The Washington Post in 2016 that Trump groped her, unexpectedly wrapping his arm around her and touching her breast, in 1998 while she waited for a car outside the U.S. Open.
  • Karen Johnson, who was a regular at Mar-a-Lago, said Trump pulled her behind a tapestry to kiss and grope her during a New Year’s Eve party in the early 2000s. Johnson detailed the incident to journalists Barry Levine and Monique El-Faizy, who published it in their 2019 book, “All the President’s Women: Donald Trump and the Making of a Predator,” along with 42 other allegations of sexual misconduct.
  • Bridget Sullivan, another former Miss USA contestant, told BuzzFeed News in 2016 that she met Trump at a party promoting the competition, and he hugged her “a little low on your back” and gave “a squeeze that your creepy uncle would.” In a separate instance in 2000, Sullivan said, Trump walked backstage while many of the contestants were naked or getting dressed.
  • Tasha Dixon, a former Miss USA contestant, told CBS in 2016 that, in 2001, Trump walked into where she and other contestants were changing. Dixon said she thought Trump “owned the pageant for the reasons to utilize his power to get around beautiful women.”
  • Melinda McGillivray told the Palm Beach Post in 2016 that Trump grabbed her butt without her consent in 2003 when they were backstage at a Ray Charles concert at Mar-a-Lago.
  • Natasha Stoynoff, a former reporter for People magazine, wrote in 2016 that Trump sexually assaulted her in 2005 while she was visiting Mar-a-Lago to work on a story about his first year of marriage with Melania. When they were alone, Stoynoff said, Trump closed the door and pushed her against the wall before “forcing his tongue down my throat.”
  • Juliet Huddy, a former Fox News anchor, said on the “Mornin!!! With Bill Schulz” podcast in 2017 that Trump kissed her unexpectedly and without her consent in Trump Tower in the mid-2000s. Huddy said she “didn’t feel threatened” at the time but later realized she would’ve said no more clearly.
  • Rachel Crooks, a former receptionist at Trump Tower, told The New York Times in 2016 that Trump kissed her “directly on the mouth” without consent when she first met him in 2005.
  • Samantha Holvey, a former Miss USA contestant, told CNN in 2016 that when she competed in 2006, Trump personally inspected each contestant, looking at them from head to toe like “sexual objects,” which made her feel “the dirtiest I felt in my entire life.”
  • Ninni Laaksonen, a model and former Miss Finland, in 2016 told Ilta-Sanomat, a Finnish newspaper, that Trump squeezed her butt in 2006 when they were backstage at the “Late Show with David Letterman.”
  • Jessica Drake, an actor in adult films, accused Trump during a 2016 news conference of grabbing her, kissing her without her consent and offering her $10,000 to come to his penthouse hotel room in 2006.
  • Summer Zervos, a former contestant on “The Apprentice,” told reporters at a 2016 news conference that Trump sexually assaulted her on two separate occasions in 2007. The first was when she met him and he kissed her on the lips. Later that year, Zervos said Trump grabbed her shoulder, kissed her “aggressively,” placed his hand on her breast and thrust himself on her before she was able to pull away and leave the room.
  • Cassandra Searles, a former Miss USA contestant, wrote in a 2016 Facebook post that Trump “continually grabbed my ass and invited me to his hotel room” when she competed in 2013.
  • Alva Johnson, a former campaign staff member, alleged in a 2019 lawsuit that Trump grabbed her hand and kissed her on the side of the mouth without her consent during a rally in 2016.

Today in 1997, Trump (allegedly) sexually assaulted a model at the U.S. Open. Her story is corroborated by family and friends she told immediately after. She was at least the 26th woman to accuse Trump of rape or assault when she came forward in 2020.

“He just shoved his tongue down my throat and I was pushing him off. And then that’s when his grip became tighter and his hands were very gropey and all over my butt, my breasts, my back, everything,” Dorris said in an interview published in The Guardian newspaper.

Her fucking pussified boyfriend:

House motherfucking Niggers too:

This piece of shit Titanic midget:

Ahh, sure, that fucking Midget:

Still, seemingly hiding the net-zero verbage from view on its flagship sustainability website is a noteworthy choice by Google. Two major shifts in 2025 may have something to do with the decision: Google’s spiraling AI energy costs and the U.S. government’s crackdown on climate change initiatives.

Google and other AI hyperscalers have been continually purchasing and building data centers to meet perceived AI demands since the field opened wide last year. As a result of Google’s major strategy shift towards AI, the company announced that its greenhouse gas emissions climbed by 48% in the past year, noting then that this boom would make the 2030 goal a challenge.

Leonardo DiCaprio is infamous for dating women who are 25 or under, and in fact, there is a statistics chart dedicated to the Hollywood biggie which proves the same. The actor again got brutally trolled on similar lines when Google completed its 25 years. Many on the Internet quickly rushed to social media platforms to make fun of DiCaprio saying he will now dump Google and move to Bing or some other search engine.

Speaking with Jim Cramer on CNBC’s Mad Money following Salesforce’s fiscal second-quarter earnings, Benioff revealed that the company won a U.S. Army contract against Palantir. He credited Salesforce’s competitive pricing for tipping the scales in its favor.

“We had a tremendous success against Palantir because, by the way, our prices are just so much lower,” Benioff said. “We’re offering a very competitive product at a much lower cost.”

Benioff added that Salesforce’s government business is already a multi-billion-dollar segment, with the U.S. government ranking as its largest customer.

Jews: Marc Benioff defends Salesforce’s contract with Customs and Border Protection

MAGA maggots: U.S. Deficit Soars Past $100 Billion For Fourth Month In 2025

University of Arizona campus

Gone, after four decades: U of A is closing 40-year-old writing program. CHAT GPT with your fucking Adderall anyone?

While WSIP had writing specialists as instructors, the Think Tank writing center tutors are UA students who wish to support their peers’ writing development.

Reed — who collaborated with WSIP director Holm on a project in 2024 called “Academic Writing in the Borderlands — said one of the biggest areas of WSIP’s expertise was that all the educators came with at least a master’s or PhD degree.

“The science and craft of writing was their specialty, so they would be able to support people with very specific academic and professional genres which might not be within the experience of a peer tutor,” said Reed, also emphasizing she wasn’t diminishing the services the student peer tutors provided.

WSIP instructors “would know about publication processes and what to do if you’re going to write a peer-reviewed article,” Reed said. “So, they would be able to help people with various steps in publication processes and dissertation processes. I think that’s a huge thing, the amount of support that they gave to graduate students working on their dissertations.”

Again, this would be an embarrassment in China — three fucking YEARS? ‘On life support’: 3 years after groundbreaking, Intel’s Ohio factories still unfinished

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced that the state reached a settlement agreement with the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe, restoring land rights back to the tribe for 9,800 acres of land in Franklin County and 4,800 acres of land in St. Lawrence County.

The agreement will also see The New York Power Authority sending annual payments of $2 million to the tribe for the next 35 years for the use of the land and the provision of power.

Oh, the Jews will help you UAE:

Outside of a mountain village in the northern outskirts of the United Arab Emirates, clouds on a recent weekend suddenly crowded out the white-hot sun that bakes this desert nation in the summer months. Fierce winds blew over planters and pushed a dumpster down the street. And then came the most infrequent visitor of all: rain.

Rainfall long has fascinated the people of the Emirates. That includes both its white-thobed locals crowding into the deserts for any downpour and its vast population of foreign workers, many coming from homes in the Indian subcontinent who grew up with monsoon deluges.

But rain also carries with it promise and peril to the nation of seven sheikhdoms on the Arabian Peninsula.

With some 4 million people now estimated to be living in Dubai alone compared to around 255,000 in 1980, pressure on water consumption continues. Meanwhile, as weather patterns change with global warming, the country saw the heaviest recorded rainfall ever last year that disrupted worldwide travel and now has its leaders reconsidering how to build as residents nervously look to the skies.

Columbia students return to campus as anti-Israel activists vow to restart  protests | The Times of Israel

The dumbdowning of AI fucking AmeriKKKa:

Can AI help “smooth over” discussion on abortion, racism, immigration, or Israel-Palestine? Columbia University sure hopes so.

The Verge has learned that the university recently began testing Sway, an AI debate program currently in beta. Developed by two researchers with backgrounds in philosophy and psychology, Sway matches up students with opposing views to chat one-on-one about hot-button issues and “facilitates better discussions between them,” according to the tool’s website. Nicholas DiBella, a postdoctoral scholar at Carnegie Mellon University who helped develop Sway, told The Verge that about 3,000 students from more than 30 colleges and universities have used the tool.

One of those may soon be Columbia. JEWS!

US reportedly will use AI to revoke visas from students perceived to be pro-Hamas | The Times of Israel

Here it is — more Boy in the Striped Pajamas lies. STOLEN LAND?

Before making The Spoils: A Fight for Nazi Looted Art, a documentary now streaming on CBC Gem, I’d thought of the Holocaust primarily in terms of its human costs.

Not only its unfathomable body count, but the head-spinning degree of organization and collaboration required to annihilate six million of your own citizens with whom you are not at war.

I had not, I confess, given much thought to lost property.

[Pro-and anti-restitution advocates discuss the effectiveness, legality and mortality of tactics used by The Max Stern Restitution Project, the world’s most successful art restitution project.]

Leave it to the Canadian Broadcasting Bureau to get a Jew to write the piece: “A new doc examines the battle to return art once owned by Jewish art dealer Max Stern to his heirs” Jamie Kastner

Even the millions of dollars in compensation cannot erase the reality of Palestinian displacement, which is no longer a mere objective fact, but has rather come to shape and has taken over the Palestinian conscience, much like what the crematories and the concentration camps have done to the Jews. Have German reparations, in spite of their exorbitant amounts, drawn attention away from the crematory?

Even the vision of a one-state solution with equality between Palestinians and Jews is an acknowledgment at some level of the triumph of Jewish Israeli settler colonialism. Along these lines, the question is open as to whether reparations from the settler minority to the native majority would diminish or reinforce the power of settler colonialism. For example, compensation for the indigenous Maori of New Zealand was aimed at making up for the manifest legacies of colonialism but also to maintaining the continuation of the white settler colonial regime.

Reparations to the colonized may temporarily restructure hierarchies in which social inferiors were hitherto forced to make material tribute to higher status colonizers. But it must never be forgotten that reconciliation between native and settler is about rationalizing ongoing settler colonialism – by demonstrating “generosity” and paying compensation, the colonizer reinforces their superior position in the social hierarchy. Thus, compensation remains mired in the messy realities of festering disputes between colonizer and colonized or settler and native, even when opposing sides – such as the Maori native and the white New Zealander – are in agreement that reparative processes must advance.

This post is the conclusion of a three-part series: What Will Gaza Become After Genocide? Using the Counterfactual Method to Evaluate Three Post-Genocidal Futures. You may access Part 1 herewhere I argued that the genocide Israel is perpetrating against the Palestinians is central to the zionist ethos which, like other settler-colonial movements, seeks to remove the native from coveted lands. In the second part, available here, I explore a scenario where Europe actually complies with international law. As many have cautioned, even European legal compliance would leave Palestinians at risk, where rights are affirmed without enforcement, and violations recognised but not remedied. I turn now to a Palestinian Freedom Dream.

The Nakba, just like the current genocide and famine, are not aberrations but constitutive of and constitutional to this ideology. Zionism’s “chronic addiction to territorial expansion,” according to Wolfe, mirrors the pathology of all settler projects: the insatiable need to erase the native in order to sustain the fiction of the settler’s natural right to the land. His critique of the “logic of elimination” captures both negative and positive dimensions of this process—from massacres and forced displacement to the legal and cultural erasure of Palestinian ties to the land. Since 1947, Israel has conspired with the West and with European international law in pursuit of Palestine’s dissolution, both literally and figuratively. Imagine that, prior to the West’s adoption of its Partition Plan, the territory of Palestine covered 100% of historic Palestine. Yet, following the land’s bizarre bifurcation, the Nakba, Israel’s endless wars, the expansion of settlements by both state and settler militias, sequestration, and myriad other technologies of elimination, Palestine is today less than 12% of what it was (and a shrinking fraction of the 45% afforded in the Partition Plan): West Bank areas A and B amount to 10% and Gaza 1.4%—at least pre-genocide—with Area C, under Israeli control, taking up 10% and Israel another 78%.

In other words, this is not a conflict between two equal nationalisms but a struggle between a settler project, designed to metastasise across the land, and an indigenous people refusing to disappear. The “frontier rabble”—the settlers who torch olive groves, the soldiers who enforce checkpoints, the lawmakers who legalise theft—are not rogue actors but the physical embodiment of zionism’s mission of native elimination. Palestinian emphasis on land, then, is not merely a bargaining position but a form of existential defiance. Likewise, to struggle for return is to reject the very premise of zionism. To paraphrase Lloyd, to return to plant an olive tree where the settler has built a wall or murdered a child is to declare that you’ll still be here tomorrow.

David Ben-Gurion | Biography, May 1948, & Facts | Britannica

Ben-Gurion’s denial of the Nakba consists of three false claims:

  1. His first claim was that the flight of Palestinians in 1948 was in response to a call from their leaders to flee.
  2. His second claim was that there were no massacres or direct expulsions by the Zionist forces.
  3. His third claim was that Zionist leaders tried to persuade the Palestinians to stay.

All three claims are false, creating a narrative about 1948 that exculpates the Yishuv of any responsibility for Palestinian flight and suffering in 1948 and on.

Here, from the Jew Google AI: how much should Israel pay in reparations?

While no official amount has been agreed upon, some have offered estimates based on specific analyses of damages. These figures are not binding and serve to illustrate the scale of potential compensation being debated.

  • Gaza Reconstruction: The cost to rebuild Gaza’s infrastructure following recent conflicts has been estimated at tens of billions of dollars. One November 2024 analysis put the figure at $53 billion, while an earlier December 2023 estimate noted the “unprecedented” level of destruction.
  • Comprehensive Palestinian Reparations: Broader estimates aiming for a full restoration of Palestinians to their pre-1967 situation include higher figures, encompassing long-term economic losses and psychological trauma.
    • One estimate suggested that economic losses since 1967 could exceed $100 billion.
    • Another estimate placed the total cost for comprehensive reparations, including infrastructure reconstruction and economic and humanitarian compensation, at over $145 billion.

ALways the dirty Jewish forked tongue: Israeli Counterclaims: Israel has historically linked potential Palestinian compensation to claims for property losses suffered by Jews who fled or were expelled from Arab countries following Israel’s establishment in 1948. Some reports indicate that Israel sought over $250 billion in reparations from several Arab countries for lost Jewish assets.

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Jews.

  • Sen. Jeanne Shaheen:I think we have a dire — as I said, a horrific humanitarian situation in Gaza. We have people who are starving. I think the Israeli government bears some responsibility for what’s happening there and we need to see that change.And I don’t care how you want to label it. The issue is, how do we make sure people are not starving to death, that starvation is not being used as a weapon of war? And for all of us who are watching what’s happening there, there are real questions about the actions of the Netanyahu government.

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