so, 600,000 murdered under Genocide Joe’s and Mowing the Grass Trump’s watcj, but the polls say the country is flipping out or flipped in favor of pedophile saying Semen Drip Cunt Trump is a Hero!
Oct 19, 2025
The cunts who are believing Trump is anything but Mussolini and Hitler all in one Golden Shower Session are dead men and dead women WALKING: Israel has violated ceasefire 47 times, killed 38 Palestinians – “Ceasefire” Day 9!


Frankfurt School scholars such as Herbert Marcuse, Erich Fromm and other critical theorists suggest that – like individuals – a society can also suffer from arrested development.
In their view, adults’ failure to reach emotional, social or cognitive maturity is not due to individual shortcomings.
Rather, it is socially engineered.


Working Hand in Mouth with the JEws, with the Ellisons and Altmans and other Jewish fucking assassins of humankind:

And why oh why would I be Anti-UN and Nato and WHO?

The World Health Organization has introduced a major overhaul of its global monitoring network, unveiling an AI-powered platform that tracks online conversations and media activity in real time.
Known as Epidemic Intelligence from Open Sources 2.0 (EIOS), the system is being presented as a new step in “pandemic preparedness,” but its reach extends well beyond disease surveillance.
The upgrade is part of a growing merger between health monitoring, digital tracking, and centralized information control.
Developed with the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC), the new version of EIOS is designed to scan the internet for signals of emerging health threats.
According to the WHO, it now automatically analyzes social media posts, websites, and other public sources to detect possible outbreaks.

And which genocide will the Chlamydia Capitalists of both party endorse?

They call it an embargo. We call it what it is—economic warfare, a colonial siege dressed up as policy, and proof that the crisis of imperialism has become a war against life itself.
The Epidemic of Propaganda: How El País Manufactures Decay in Cuba
The story begins like a fever. “By the end of the summer,” writes El País, “people in Cuba were wondering what rare disease had them bedridden.” The tone is already clinical and moral at once—curiosity spliced with suspicion. We are told that whole families are sick, laboratories lack reagents, officials deny deaths, and citizens despair on Facebook. The reader is ushered through the scene as though guided by a sympathetic but weary foreign doctor, shaking their head at a country too stubborn to heal itself. It is a familiar rhythm, repeated across decades of Western reporting: pity the people, blame the state, erase the blockade.
Carla Gloria Colomé’s article in the English edition of El País (October 16 2025) performs this ritual with professional grace. From her perch in Miami—the exile capital of anti-Havana mythology—she paints an island overrun by disease, denial, and decay. Her prose carries the weary authority of someone who has already made up her mind. Cuba is sick, not because it is strangled, but because it refuses the cure prescribed by Washington. The journalist becomes a diagnostician, and the diagnosis always ends in “failed socialism.”
The trick works through rhythm as much as argument. Each paragraph moves from rumor to revelation to despair, creating the sensation of chaos without ever naming its cause. The epidemic spreads through verbs that erase agency: “people were infected,” “rumors circulated,” “officials denied.” No one sanctions, no one sabotages—illness simply falls from the sky. Even the mosquitoes, it seems, are counter-revolutionary. The government’s supposed “silence” becomes proof of guilt; the absence of laboratory reagents becomes evidence of indifference, not of embargo. And when the minister finally speaks, acknowledging deaths, his words arrive too late in the narrative to matter. The verdict—Cuba is negligent—has already been handed down.
There is an artistry to this sort of journalism. It is not outright falsehood but narrative engineering. The reporter selects her material the way a painter chooses color: a Facebook post from a suffering artist, a quote from a dissident intellectual, an image of garbage piling on a Havana street. Each brushstroke is true enough in isolation, yet together they form a mural commissioned by empire. The technique is simple: elevate anecdote to pattern, omit structural context, and let despair masquerade as data. The reader, softened by pity and repelled by decay, is led to a quiet moral conclusion—surely this system, this government, must fall.
What goes unsaid is the real pathology: the deliberate asphyxiation of an entire society by the United States and its obedient allies. That omission is the beating heart of the piece, the silence that makes its words possible. To name the blockade would be to spoil the illusion, to replace mystery with motive. So instead we are offered the theater of humanitarian concern—a spectacle in which Western media shed crocodile tears for the victims of their own governments’ policies. The mosquito becomes the villain, the state the accomplice, and the empire the concerned bystander taking notes for history. — Genocide by Blockade: How the U.S. Empire Wages War on Cuba’s Right to Live

Of course, I have a million times more respect for sex workers, street walkers, prostitues than these fucking MEDIA cunts:



Presstitutes of the highest hooker order:

The release of Palestinian hostages from Israeli dungeons is always a lesson in steadfastness, unshakeable faith in God, and gratitude for His mercy. The piercing eyes and luminous faces of the Palestinian hostages shine through despite tears. As they kiss the feet of their mothers in reverence, hug their wives and siblings, and lift their children in warm embraces after years of separation, we see the deep familial values that the Palestinians are imbued with. When they say Alhmadulillah — all praise to Allah — after 20, 30, or 40 years in the Israeli rape-and-torture dungeons, we see people whose faith did not waver despite enduring years of the harshest conditions imaginable with barely a sliver of hope at the end of the dark tunnel of their incarceration. When we see their skeletal frames with telltale signs of excruciating, years-long torture, we encounter people whose dignity never faded despite insurmountable odds.
In an increasingly atomised world, where self-interest reigns and collective values are ridiculed, these Palestinian men and women stick out for being living embodiments of values that seem otherworldly, values that most of us read about only in books and hear about in lore passed down from our ancestors. Despite their elusiveness, these are the values that matter and these are the values on which a better world can be built. A world where there is no respect for ties of kinship, no purpose beyond self-aggrandisement, and no sense of the smallness of individual existence in the incomprehensible vastness of the universe, and therefore, the majesty of its creator, indeed, is a recipe for a fractured, disoriented, troubled world — the very world we are living in today.
I got caught in a hotel room with two books, but I was tired, and my laptop I left behind. Amazing the amount of Edwrds Bernays on crack those Mad Men of the Jewish Persuasion have the few brain cells left in Goy right in their greasy hands:
Allergies!

Chiplote
Buffalo Wings
Beer
Hair Loss prescription drugs
bent dick disease drug
Ask the Jew AI on Brin-Google, and you get this: “why are TV commercials so fucking stupid”
- To break through and get remembered. In a world saturated with advertising, agencies will try almost anything to grab a viewer’s limited attention. Absurdity and provocation can be highly memorable, even if they are not liked. An annoying but unforgettable ad can succeed by increasing brand awareness, even if it does so through negative attention.
- To go viral online. Advertisers create intentionally cheesy or low-budget-looking spots to be mocked and shared on social media. This strategy extends the ad’s reach beyond its initial broadcast and provides a new way for brands to get free publicity.
- To appeal to a specific target audience. Commercials may seem stupid to you simply because you are not the target consumer. Ad agencies will tailor ads to different demographics, and what resonates with one age group or culture can seem bizarre to another. For example, a commercial aimed at teens or young adults might lean into absurd, surreal humor that an older demographic would find nonsensical.
I was looking at Avatar, the second one, and some fucking Transformers movie:
Babyfication, man — fucking US military in all the fucking movies, man:
The summer movie season can be filled with action-packed, blockbuster movies. The 2009 season was no exception, presenting audiences with “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,” and “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra.” The hordes of ‘80s children who gleefully cheered on the giant robots and elite military teams may not realize how involved the Army was in helping make these movies.
Army liaisons from both coasts were present on the movie sets to help make dialogue authentic, demonstrate how to hold and fire a weapon, and provide general tips and real equipment.
Lieutenant Col. Gregory Bishop of Army Public Affairs-West was the film liaison officer for both movies. He helped coordinate logistics for the films, making sure dialogue and uniforms were straight, and helped with parts of postproduction on “G.I Joe.”

“G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra”
The film stars Sienna Miller, Marlon Wayans, Dennis Quaid and Channing Tatum, among others, and is about the elite G.I. Joe team. They use not only the latest in military equipment, but “next generation” weapons, too, while battling a corrupt arms dealer named Destro and the rising Cobra organization.

Bishop also made sure Soldiers were on-set daily to help filmmakers. Chief Warrant Officer 4 John “Buzz” Covington was one of those Soldiers. Covington was with the 21st Cavalry Brigade when he helped film a scene for “G.I. Joe” at Fort Hood, Texas.
“Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,”


The DOD’s Full Spectrum Dominance of the Entertainment Industry
The relationship between the Department of Defense (D.O.D.) and Hollywood dates back over 80 years.
During WWII, The Defense Department recognized the need to boost morale and garner public support for its war efforts. They saw Hollywood films as an open channel to affect public perception, so they partnered with legendary director Frank Capra to produce the patriotic rally cry film Why We Fight.
Together, they crafted a script that reiterated the U.S.’s fight to save the world from the tyrannical leaders of Germany, Italy, and Japan. The film was initially intended to rally soldiers around the central cause, but the D.O.D. released it to the general public after it effectively shaped wartime sentiment.
According to the book Five Came Back, written by film historian Mark Harris, this wasn’t the only effort of the War Department to engineer public opinion through film. The department linked up with four more legendary directors — Jon Ford, John Huston, George Stevens, and William Wyler — to create a series of movies, documentaries, and educational films to control the wartime narrative.
Harris wrote in Five Came Back:
this was an ideological aim, one on which Hollywood and the War Department were largely aligned.
Dyke:

Dyke and blue guy:

Fucking queer as a steer with tits:

Queerer:


Transformers’ put Airmen, aircraft on big screen > Air Force > Article Display


Amazing the deep fried shit and bent dick pills and fucking third grade reading level Edward Jew Freud Bernays shit is out there.

Source: Visiting America in 1946, French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss commented on the endearingly infantile traits of American culture. He especially noted adults’ childish adulation of baseball, their passionate approach to toy-like cars and the amount of time they invested in hobbies.
As contemporary scholars note, however, this “infantilist ethos” has become less charming – and more pervasive.
Researchers on both sides of the Atlantic have observed how this ethos has now crept into a vast range of social spheres.
In many workplaces, managers can now electronically monitor their employees, many of whom work in open spaces with little personal privacy. As sociologist Gary T. Marx observed, it creates a situation in which workers feel that managers expect them “to behave irresponsibly, to take advantage, and to screw up unless they remove all temptation, prevent them from doing so or trick or force them to do otherwise.”
Much has been written about higher education’s tendency to infantilize its students, whether it’s through monitoring their social media accounts, guiding their every step, or promoting “safe spaces” on campus.
Meanwhile, tourist destinations like Las Vegas market excess, indulgence and freedom from responsibility in casino environments that conjure memories of childhood fantasies: the Old West, medieval castles and the circus. Scholars have also explored how this form of Las Vegas-style “Disneyfication” has left its stamp on planned communities, architecture and contemporary art.
Then we’ve witnessed the rise of a “therapy culture,” which, as sociologist Frank Furedi warns, treats adults as vulnerable, weak and fragile, while implying that their troubles rooted in childhood qualify them for a “permanent suspension of moral sense.” He argues that this absolves grown-ups from adult responsibilities and erodes their trust in their own experiences and insights.
Researchers in Russia and Spain have even identified infantilist trends in language, and French sociologist Jacqueline Barus-Michel observes that we now communicate in “flashes,” rather than via thoughtful discourse – “poorer, binary, similar to computer language, and aiming to shock.”
Others have noted similar trends in popular culture – in the shorter sentences in contemporary novels, in the lack of sophistication in political rhetoric and in sensationalist cable news coverage.
High-tech pacifiers
While scholars such as James Côté and Gary Cross remind us that infantilizing trends began well before our current moment, I believe our daily interactions with smartphones and social media are so pleasurable precisely because they normalize and gratify infantile dispositions.
They endorse self-centeredness and inflated exhibitionism. They promote an orientation towards the present, rewarding impulsivity and celebrating constant and instant gratification.
They flatter our needs for visibility and provide us with 24/7 personalized attention, while eroding our ability to empathize with others.
Whether we use them for work or pleasure, our devices also foster a submissive attitude. In order to take advantage of all they offer, we have to surrender to their requirements, agreeing to “terms” we do not understand and handing over stores of personal data.
Indeed, the routine and aggressive ways our devices violate our privacy via surveillance automatically deprive us of this fundamental adult right.
While we might find it trivial or amusing, the infantilist ethos becomes especially seductive in times of social crises and fear. And its favoring of simple, easy and fast betrays natural affinities for certain political solutions over others.
And typically not intelligent ones.
Democratic policymaking requires debate, demands compromise and involves critical thinking. It entails considering different viewpoints, anticipating the future, and composing thoughtful legislation.
What’s a fast, easy and simple alternative to this political process? It’s not difficult to imagine an infantile society being attracted to authoritarian rule.
Unfortunately, our social institutions and technological devices seem to erode hallmarks of maturity: patience, empathy, solidarity, humility and commitment to a project greater than oneself.
All are qualities that have traditionally been considered essential for both healthy adulthood and for the proper functioning of democracy.
And so the infantilization is also monetized, so, jobs for, well, taking away freedoms and, well, jobs, motherfuckers. AND WATER, you fucking childish cunts.
Construction crews have begun clearing brush and working on the road leading to the planned $165 billion Project Jupiter data center in Doña Ana County, N.M.
The 3 million square-foot facility off Pete Domenici Highway will not only bring more than 3,000 permanent and temporary jobs to Southern New Mexico and West Texas, but also provide a spark to local businesses, universities, the housing and solar power industries, a local expert says.

“It’s going to bring in a lot of capital investment, we are counting on that,” said Jerry Pacheco, president and CEO of the Border Industrial Association. “We are already working with Project Jupiter to make sure they get in front of New Mexican companies, so we get a shot at supplying – from construction services to consulting to landscaping to feeding all these people.”

The project spearheaded by Oracle and OpenAI will also impact the speed and accuracy of searches you make online through a personal computer or smartphone. It is part of a half-a-trillion-dollar initiative called Stargate the White House announced last January to strengthen artificial intelligence development in the United States.

Signs? The fucking workers need to be fire bombed.

[Jew walking: A logo adorns a wall on a branch of the Israeli NSO Group, near the southern Israeli town of Sapir,]
Jews and their fucking GOYIM:
A United States judge has granted an injunction barring Israeli spyware maker the NSO Group from targeting WhatsApp users, saying the firm’s software causes “direct harm” but slashed an earlier damages award of $168m to just $4m.
In a ruling on Friday granting WhatsApp owner Meta an injunction to stop NSO’s spyware from being used in the messaging service, district judge Phyllis Hamilton said the Israeli firm’s “conduct causes irreparable harm”, adding that there was “no dispute that the conduct is ongoing”.

And, of course, they all should be fire bombed!
The U.S. federal government has entered a partial shutdown beginning October 1, 2025, and its ripple effects have penetrated deeply into essential services, even those that many Americans depend on daily. While Social Security benefit payments are technically protected from such shutdowns, the human infrastructure that supports them is under severe strain.
The US Senate is poised to approve Donald Trump’s nomination of an industry lobbyist to lead the US Environmental Protection Agency’s chemical safety office.
If the nominee, Douglas Troutman, is confirmed, the top four toxics office positions at the EPA will be held by former chemical industry lobbyists, raising new fears about the health and safety of the American public, consumers and workers, campaigners say.
“The lunatics are running the asylum, and industry is firmly in charge of chemical safety,” said Scott Faber, vice-president of government affairs for the Environmental Working Group non-profit, which lobbies on chemical safety issues. “They will stop at nothing to reverse the progress that we’ve made in recent years on toxic chemicals.”
Infants? Fucking babies with fucking Netflix and Costco and football and buffalo wings pacifier:
The US Senate is poised to approve Donald Trump’s nomination of an industry lobbyist to lead the US Environmental Protection Agency’s chemical safety office.
If the nominee, Douglas Troutman, is confirmed, the top four toxics office positions at the EPA will be held by former chemical industry lobbyists, raising new fears about the health and safety of the American public, consumers and workers, campaigners say.
“The lunatics are running the asylum, and industry is firmly in charge of chemical safety,” said Scott Faber, vice-president of government affairs for the Environmental Working Group non-profit, which lobbies on chemical safety issues. “They will stop at nothing to reverse the progress that we’ve made in recent years on toxic chemicals.”

And so the children will have quicker searches? Sure, gulag cunts! As AI ramps up, so the shit-a-centers in Abu Dhabi are actually being built.
Photos of the UAE datacenter construction site released Thursday show the footprints of the big buildings that OpenAI and its Stargate partners, Oracle, NVIDIA, Cisco, and SoftBank say will house 16-gigawatts of compute power for everything from curing cancer to sexting. Thus far, construction of the first 200 megawatts is “well underway” to meet the 2026 deadline.

The team behind the Oscar-winning documentary No Other Land says it is planning to self-release the film on U.S. streaming platforms beginning October 20.
The team cites those platforms as including Apple TV, Amazon, Google Play and YouTube, and says that 100% of VOD proceeds will go directly to Palestinian communities of Masafer Yatta, the occupied West Bank region portrayed in the acclaimed film about Israeli settler violence and Palestinian displacement.
Watch out for the Jews:
In an unusual move, the No Other Land team disclosed in a press release Friday that it had struck a domestic streaming deal with distributor Mubi after months of negotiation, but that the filmmakers ultimately decided to “reject” the pact due to the emergence of Mubi’s well-publicized backing from Sequoia.



Real men, please:
- What Ibrahim Traoré’s revolution means for the Caribbean
- How the Sahel states (Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger) are breaking away from the West
- Why the Caribbean remains under U.S. and Western influence
- Whether the Caribbean can truly find freedom by reconnecting with Africa
Firebomb their fucking HOMES:

Real MEN:
“People who come out of prison can build up a country. Misfortune is a test of people’s fidelity. . . . When the prison doors are opened, the real dragon will fly out.” — Ho Chi Minh

Fascism, said George Jackson, comes in different dimensions. There’s the idealistic, infantile movement that was created by finance capitalist tools like Hitler and Mussolini. There’s the openly terroristic dictatorship that fascism imposes when it comes to power. Then there’s the fascism that’s become solidified enough for it to disguise itself as democracy, which is how Jackson viewed the conditions of the United States.
About the open terroristic form, Jackson wrote:
“The second dimension would come after they’ve seized power, but were yet insecure. That’s the spectacular stage that we see on T.V., that we see in the movies, where doors are kicked down and people are being machined-gunned, herded off to camps– like here in this country, put in jails– the Communist Party banned, and forced to write into their constitution a statement that went like this, ‘Anyone who advocates the violent overthrow of the United States is subject to expulsion from the Party.’”
Jackson described how this “spectacular” type of fascism became visible when
a real opposition party did come into existence. The BPP, Black Panther Party. What happened?…They reverted back to the second stage, back to the second dimension. They were kicking doors in and killing people. It’s pretty obvious, it’s pretty obvious that mature fascism exists in this country and it exists in disguise…You’ve heard of Ho Chi Minh’s line, I think he wrote it while he was in prison, it goes something like this, in part: “When the prison gates blow open, the real dragon will fly out.” You’ve heard that. Panther was a counter-terror. The first act of terror was committed against us. I understand, I’ve read all the arguments about violence being immature, and violence being non-scientific; but of course, I disagree.
“As a slave, the social phenomenon that engages my whole consciousness is, of course, revolution. Revolution should be love inspired.” — George Jackson, Blood in My Eye

Israelis have a word called Hasbara which is defined as,
“It is a communicative strategy that “seeks to explain actions, whether or not they are justified”. As it focuses on providing explanations about one’s actions, hasbara has been called a “reactive and event-driven approach”. In 2003, Ron Schleifer called hasbara “a positive sounding synonym for ‘propaganda’”
Hasbara is a relatively new word coined by Nahum Sokolow (1859–1936) President of the World Zionist Congress from 1931–1935.
Also defined as,
“a made-up Hebrew word for lie.”
Zionists use Hasbara to explain away actions that are objectionable, unreasonable, false, embarrassing to the state of Israel, and to hide the Zionist dream of Greater Israel. The state of Israel also uses Hasbara to hide the genocide going on in the occupied territories. From a 2011 article in +972 Magazine titled, Hasbara: Why does the world fail to understand us?
“The Israeli government encourages all citizens to actively engage in Hasbara. Recently, it even distributed brochures with talking points to all Israelis traveling abroad (a Hebrew web version of the campaign can be viewed here). Israelis are asked to engage in politically-oriented conversations with their hosts and contacts abroad. Rather than discuss the Palestinian conflict, they are advised to cite Israeli technological achievements, mention environmental policies and take pride in notable cultural works. The West Bank is to be discussed — under its ancient Hebrew name, Judea and Samaria — as a potential tourist marvel.”
In other words, the lie of omission,
“Leaving out important details to intentionally…
More Jewish Bullshit:
IN HIS HEYDAY, they all came to Edward Bernays: Henry Ford, Enrico Caruso, Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes. He counseled Chaim Weizmann in the 1920s and Jawaharlal Nehru in the 1940s. He accompanied the American delegation to the Paris peace talks after World War I, and found an American publisher for his uncle, Sigmund Freud. From the electric light bulb to the American civil rights movement, Bernays was always called in — to promote the product, enhance the image, win the favorable press notices.
Things have slowed down for Bernays lately. The “father of public relations” has just celebrated his 100th birthday. Bernays, like his distingished relation, was born in Vienna. It seems fitting that a nephew of the man who first plumbed the human unconscious would excel at shaping public opinion.
“People ask me how I learned about psychology,” Bernays told a recent visitor. “Well, when I was young … we children would sit at the table while the parents talked. Now, my father was the brother of Freud’s wife, and my mother was the sister of Freud. So there would be talk of Freud’s ideas and the children would listen.’
Bernays is a little shaky on his dates these days: He insists that he last saw his uncle during a 1956 trip to Europe. (Freud died in 1939). But he does remember how he came to arrange publication of Freud’s “Introductory Lectures in Psychoanalysis.” While in France for the post-World War I peace talks, Bernays asked an American envoy headed to Austria to take a box of Havana cigars to his uncle.
“They were the first cigars he had received since before the war,” Bernays recalls. “He sent me a thank-you note and a copy of the Introductory Lectures’ in German. When I got back to the U.S. I called up a friend, a publisher, and said, Would you like to publish this book?’”
Later, Freud was wiped out financially in the hyperinflation that struck Germany and Austrian in the 1930s. “When the crown sunk to nothing, it was the [dollar] royalties from that book that kept the Freud family going.”
In the world of public relations, the tales of Bernays’s triumphs have become legends. Retained by the White House to doctor President Calvin Coolidge’s gloomy persona, he sent a trainload of singers and starlets down to Washington for a well-covered breakfast at the White House. The next morning, a sub-headline on Page 1 of the New York Times read: “President Nearly Laughs.” When the American Tobacco Association wanted to entice women to smoke, Bernays arranged for ten elegant debutantes to stroll down Fifth Avenue, lighting their Luckys while press photographers recorded the scene.
In 1919, he founded the first PR firm in history. Four years later, he wrote the first book on the subject, “Crystallizing Public Opinion,” and taught the first college course.
Bernays knows well that public relations can be used for evil as well as good.
He was chagrined to learn in 1933 that a copy of his textbook was in the library of Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s propaganda minister. But PR is a weapon of ideas, Bernays notes, and “you can’t prevent ideas from being used by anybody — for any purpose.”
Though cluttered with books, awards, and mementos, Bernays’s rambling home near Harvard Square is free of any Jewish influence. Early in the century, he “helped some of the Jewish charities in New York,” he remembers, “but I was never particularly active in them.” Nor has he visited Israel. “But I helped the fellow who started it,” Bernays claims. Asked whom he means, the name eludes him, but his autobiography, “The Biography of an Ideal” (1965), offers this clue: “In those days (the late 1920s), we had often entertained Chaim Weizmann, then a prime minister without a country, who was touring the United States to raise money to further the Zionist cause.
“I had turned down a provisional offer to be foreign minister of a country, Israel, not yet in existence. I greatly respected Weizmann, but I was not in sympathy with his goals.”
Bernays insists that his differences with Weizmann stemmed from concern about the vulnerability of small countries. “At the time, any small state… was in great danger. What they did around that time was just to raid them. All these small states wanted to exist, but large states took them over.”
Asked if he would take on the government of Israel as a client, he answers “Sure!” And here, gratis, is some public relations advice for Israel from the man who invented the game:
“What I would do, which apparently Israel has not done, is to establish much closer relationships with the democratic countries of the world and get those countries to make much more visible in the public mind how much they support Israel and how much they believe in freedom of religion, just as the democratic countries believe in freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom of petition.
“Israel should appoint an international public relations committee, made up of all the best public relations people in the democratic countries of the world England, France, Germany, Italy, even Spain.” —
The public be swayed: Edward Bernays, the ‘father of public relations,’ is still giving advice on his 100th birthday/ The Jerusalem Report/ February 13, 1992

Oppen-Monster-Heimers, man, all Jews: Oppenheimer’s ‘very late’ bar mitzvah
The usual portrait of the ‘father of the atomic bomb’ as utterly alienated from his Jewish roots needs some revision
Bernays, who died aged 103 in 1995, became extremely concerned at the ‘monster’ that he had helped to create.
“Public relations today is horrible. Any dope, any nitwit, any idiot can call him or herself a public relations practitioner. Some people just use public relations as a euphemism for press agentry. A firm sends articles or press releases to newspapers to win favour for a client and it usually ends up in the trash. It’s not only not good PR; it intensifies the antagonism toward the product. I’m pleased to be known as the father of public relations when the field is taken seriously, like law or architecture.”

As an outsider coming from America,” he said in his Rehovot speech,
I can say that the whole world sees in Israel a symbol, and not just a symbol of courage, and not just a symbol of dedication, but of faith and confidence in man’s reason, and a confidence in man’s future, and in the confidence in man, and of hope. These are all now largely and sadly missing in those vast parts of the world which not so long ago were their very cradle.

