There are no toilets, no running water, no sanitation facilities — nothing to protect children from disease. — the reality of the open air morgue that Jews have invented!
Oct 27, 2025
Gilad Atzmon is a critical and committed secular humanist with firm views, who delights in being provocative. Born into a Jewish family in the state of Israel in 1963, he served in the Israeli army from 1981 to 1984. His transformation began after a 1984 visit to Ansar prison in Lebanon. It was not until the time of the Oslo accords in 1993 that his transformation was completed, when he became convinced that Israel did not want a truly fair, peaceful settlement. Gilad left for England in 1994 and has not returned to Israel since 1996. He has vowed not to return unless and until that state ceases to be an exclusive Jewish state, becomes a true democracy, guarantees equal rights to all its non-Jewish as well as Jewish citizens, allows Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza to become citizens with equal rights, and accepts the right of return for Palestinians, displaced since 1948.

Since 1996, Gilad Atzmon has developed his ideas and has been increasingly outspoken. His most recent book The Wandering Who?, published in 2011, is to date the most complete expression of his views.
The study of philosophy has greatly influenced Atzmon, most especially the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, which has had a profound effect upon him. Although Heidegger, one of the 20th century’s most creative and original philosophers, never claimed that his philosophy was concerned with politics, he and his philosophy became embodied in political considerations. This was due to some extent to the debate over Heidegger’s involvement with the Nazi movement. That notwithstanding, it was Heidegger’s emphasis upon ontology, the study of being, as best expressed in his great work, Being and Time, that seems most to have affected Atzmon. In some intriguing ways, Heidegger’s philosophy had a similar effect upon four different, gifted individuals who came from assimilated Jewish backgrounds and became intellectual giants: Hannah Arendt, Herbert Marcuse, Hans Jonas and Karl Lowith. Atzmon may not yet be the sophisticated philosopher he strives to be, but he nevertheless expresses some thoughtful and creative ideas that should be seriously considered, regardless of agreement or disagreement.
In addition to his being influenced by Heidegger, Atzmon credits Otto Weininger (1880-1903) for helping him grasp who he is, what he is trying to achieve and why his detractors invest so much effort in trying to thwart him. This was so, even though Atzmon acknowledges and explains that Weininger was an outrageous misogynist and anti-Semite, who converted from Judaism to Christianity. Weininger wrote only one book, Sex and Character, in which he regarded homosexuality and Jewishness as symptoms of society. Unable to cope with his own homosexuality and a myriad of other psychological problems, Weininger committed suicide at age 23. The Weininger influence upon Atzmon is not unique. Regarded as a genius, Weininger and some of his ideas impressed and influenced a variety of intellectually creative people, including the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein and the prolific writer August Strindberg.
Atzmon not only rejects the Jewish state and condemns Israeli oppression of the Palestinians; he also attacks what he calls Jewish identity politics. In doing so, he generalizes, adds some specific criticisms, suggests far-reaching analogies and inserts some psychological analysis. He focuses primarily on individuals and groups in one of his three designated categories of Jews. The Jews in that category, he maintains, put their Jewishness over and above all their other traits. These Jews include both Zionists and self-declared, secular anti-Zionists. From Atzmon’s perspective these Jews are tribal. Within this context Atzmon criticizes many aspects of Jewish cultural history and Jewish exclusive political activism.
Atzmon’s critique of Jewish identity politics may itself have been sufficient to disturb some Jews, Palestinians and others in or associated with the Palestine solidarity movement. Atzmon has seemingly provoked increased hostility by disagreeing with and rejecting the basic, leftist anti-Zionist argument: namely, that Zionism is a settler-colonial project and movement, similar to movements in many other parts of the world that attempt to displace indigenous people and build new European societies on their lands. Atzmon additionally argues to the dismay of many that Israel is not an apartheid state but is instead a state with a unique, racially driven, expansionist philosophy that seeks to cleanse itself of Palestinians.
Atzmon praises and relies heavily upon Shlomo Sand’s recent book, The Invention of The Jewish People (available from the AET Book Club).There Sand, a history professor at the Tel-Aviv University, negates the idea that Jews ever existed as a nation or race or had a common origin. The idea of a people came late, he argues, probably in the 19th century, and was a made-up notion. Sand denies the Jewish exile and accepts the argument about the Khazars put by Arthur Koestler is his book The Thirteenth Tribe. Although Sand mostly repeats some points made by others in the late 19th and 20th centuries, he does present some additional insights and contributes a well put-together case.
+—+
Those other Jews who are Still JEWS! Klansmen.

Charles Kushner, the wealthy New Jersey developer who served nearly two years in prison more than a decade ago in a tax fraud case that grew into a bizarre tale involving sex tapes and a prostitute, was granted a full pardon late Wednesday by President Donald Trump.
Kushner is the father of Trump’s son-in-law, Jared, who is married to Ivanka Trump and is a senior advisor to the president.
In a clemency statement released by the White House at about 7:20 pm, the president granted full pardons to 26 individuals and commuted part or all of the sentences of an additional three people. In regard to Kushner, Trump said that Brett Tolman, the former U.S. Attorney for Utah, and Matt Schlapp and David Safavian of the American Conservative Union, supported a pardon of Kushner.

Kushner was a multimillionaire real estate executive and top Democratic donor when he was sentenced in 2005 to two years in federal prison after he pleaded guilty to 18 counts, including tax evasion and making illegal campaign contributions.
Once Kushner discovered his brother-in-law and former business partner was assisting federal authorities in their investigation, he set out for revenge (and, as prosecutors would argue, witness intimidation).
The wealthy New York real estate magnate hired a prostitute to seduce his brother-in-law in a New Jersey motel, arranging to have the encounter recorded with a hidden camera.
Then, he showed the video to his brother-in-law’s wife: Kushner’s sister.

The Haitian machete’s history is deeply intertwined with its use as a tool for both survival and revolution. It was famously used by enslaved people as a weapon to fight for liberation during the Haitian Revolution (1791-1804), defeating the French army when firearms were scarce. This legacy has developed into the martial art of Tire Machèt (”pulling machetes”), a practice blending African combat techniques with European fencing, which has roots in the revolution and was later taught in the Haitian Army.


Faces only a machete could love! From left: Michael Bloomberg, Josh Kushner, Jared Kushner, and Ghislaine Maxwell in 2013

Fucking Jewish TRASH, KLANSMEN:

People to MACHETE!



Kushner Cos. has repeatedly faced regulatory scrutiny over the conditions of its buildings, where some tenants reportedly call Jared a “slumlord.”

Another worthless Asian Goy JEW: Inside Priscilla Chan’s Multibillion-Dollar Wager to Outsmart Disease. As the initiative she co-founded celebrates its 10-year anniversary, Chan is pursuing


The Israeli army and the United Nations’ peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon said peacekeepers shot down an Israeli drone over the weekend but gave conflicting statements about the circumstances.
The incident took place as Israeli strikes over Lebanon intensify amid scrambles to hold a tense ceasefire that ended Israel’s war with Hezbollah last November, and mounting pressure on the Lebanese government to disarm the powerful group.
Israel’s latest conflict with Hezbollah began the day after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel triggered the war in the Gaza Strip. The militant group Hezbollah, largely based in southern Lebanon, began firing rockets into Israel in support of Hamas and the Palestinians.
Israeli Arabic military spokesperson Avichay Adraee said Monday that while the drone was near peacekeeping forces from UNIFIL in the southeastern border town of Kfar Kila, it was conducting “routine information-gathering and reconnaissance activity” and did not fire at the peacekeeping troops.

Every Jew in the WORLD supports EVERY fucking thing about Is-Ra-HELL.

God, from this fucking propaganda shit rag: Haaretz! Are We Alone in the Universe? Most Classic Ancient Philosophers Didn’t Think So
Alien life isn’t a modern concept. Speculation about multiple worlds and extraterrestrials can be traced back to ancient Greece and earlier, but not all the great philosophers were on board.

Jews: The SMR Surge: Nuclear’s Quiet Comeback Is Now A Commercial Race

Kara Hurst, chief sustainability officer at Amazon, introduces TRISO-X Pebbles, next-generation nuclear fuel developed for small modular reactors, during Amazon’s “Delivering the Future” presentation at DUR3 Delivery Station in Milpitas, California on October 22, 2025.

Oh, that Minyan in the White House:
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Sunday that service members will miss paychecks by Nov. 15 if the government shutdown stretches on, despite the Trump administration’s previous assurances that members of the military will be paid amid the funding lapse.
“I think we’ll be able to pay them beginning in November, but by Nov. 15 our troops and service members who are willing to risk their lives aren’t going to be able to get paid,” Bessent said on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan.”

Note: John Jenrette, a member of the United States House of Representatives who was convicted of accepting a bribe in the FBI’s Abscam sting operation, was Bessent’s uncle,

US President Donald Trump has not ruled out the possibility of seeking a third term for the White House, saying he would “love to do it”.
But Trump rejected the possibility of running for vice-president in 2028 – an idea floated by some supporters as a way for him to circumvent the US constitution that bars the president from running for a third term.
Speaking to reporters during his trip to Asia, Trump described the idea as “too cute” and said it “wouldn’t be right”.
It is unclear what method he would use to run again. Last week, former Trump strategist Steve Bannon said that a “plan” was in place to secure the 79-year-old president another term.



Fucking Carnival, a freak side show, U$A: ‘I am not done’ – Kamala Harris tells BBC she may run for president again
When Donald Trump Was Part of a “Minyan”

In 1995 Donald Trump [now president elect] was among the crush of “Who’s Who” guests at the December 18th “Minyan of the Stars” Chanukah celebration at the Pennsylvania Hotel was who had been invited by fellow real estate giant Abe Hirshfeld then celebrating his 75th birthday and who two days earlier on December 16 had placed a full-page ad in the New York Times inviting “the world” to the Minyan’s Chanukah Celebration cum birthday simcha.
Following Cantor Joseph Malovany’s Chanukah blessings, a beaming, tall Donald Trump—flanked by “birthday boy” Hirshfeld and his wife Zipora [in a smashing black velvet floor length gown who kept reminding me “I’ve known Donald since he was in diapers—was introduced by Minyan founder and celebrity maven Tim Boxer who told the crowd that then newlyweds Lt. Gov. Betsy McCaughey and her beaming husband Wilbur Ross would “later join everyone in singing Ma-O-Tsur.
Donald Trump told the crowd—that included then mayor hopeful Fernando “Freddy” Ferrer, Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, Marilyn Michaels and Dr. Ruth Westheimer “I want you to know that theirs was a more beautiful wedding than mine. Now I have twenty-two blood-sucking lawyers in my office and they charge by the second and Abe sent me an eight-paragraph letter —seven of which are about me—which is why I am here.”

The economy is in uncharted territory — Capitalism always charts the territory and owns the bloody territory.
Here, broke back fucking dough boy Johnson:

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Monday said House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) is working with the chairs of three House committees to compile a Republican health care plan as the government shutdown nears the one-month mark and Democrats demand action on expiring ObamaCare subsidies.
“Republicans have been working on a fix for health care, we’ve been doing this for years,” Johnson said in a press conference on Monday when asked about the coming “health care cliff.”

The Gezhouba, a new 13,000-ton all-electric bulk carrier launched in Yichang, is more than a technical milestone. It is a sign that the electrification of inland shipping is moving from concept to inevitability. The vessel’s 24 MWh of containerized lithium battery modules can move cargo roughly 500 km on a single charge per the launch announcement, and its home port already hosts the first dedicated charging station on the Yangtze River. For years, analysts have speculated that the physical scale of bulk carriers would make batteries impractical. Now the question is no longer whether electric bulk transport can work, but how quickly the infrastructure will spread to support it.

Fucking dirty Genocidal JEWS:

El Al faces new competition as foreign airlines flock back to Israel – opinion
While many take umbrage with the government using the label “revival” for this war, make no mistake that the tourism industry sees this period as “Operation Revival.”

TOURISM, these fucking perversion, man, JEWS:
Palestinian children search for usable objects among piles of trash and rubble in Gaza City, Gaza on October 21, 2025. (

A Torturous Sanitation Disaster Is Unfolding in Gaza’s Displacement Camps
Every morning we wake to disease, dust, and the unbearable stench of open sewage. Sara Awad , Truthout

Ceasefire is a relief. After two years of surviving war, we can finally breathe — but that doesn’t mean our suffering is over. For many of us, it’s only just begun. The tents, and the people still living in them, stand as a heavy reminder that our struggles are far from over. After two years of immense destruction by the Israeli military, most families in Gaza are now living in tents — nylons and fabric that don’t protect them either from summer or winter.
In tent life, there is an unlivable war — a war that doesn’t begin with bombs, but with the absence of everything that makes life human. It is a war whose weapons are the denial of clean water, the lack of hygiene, the absence of toilets, dignity, and safety. I am not writing this as a distant witness. No — I am writing this from within it. From the ground. From inside the tent. These are not stories I’ve heard; these are the sensations I experience.
One month living in a tent was enough for me to understand the immense sanitation disaster and horrific conditions that make displaced people feel suffocated by everything around them. This kind of news doesn’t make headlines, and you might not have heard about it. But it is a silent kind of violence — one that kills us every day.
I am here to tell you how my people — including my family — are facing the devastating consequences of the sanitation crisis in these tents.
Thousands of makeshift tents at displacement camps all across Gaza are full of families seeking refuge.
A lack of sufficient toilets, access to clean water, and the presence of open sewage are catastrophic consequences faced by displaced Palestinians — conditions that have persisted since the early months of Gaza’s displacement crisis.
After spending over a month in Gaza City under Israeli occupation, 39-year-old Asma Mohammad and her family fled to the central Gaza Strip, seeking refuge in Al-Nuseirat Camp to escape the ongoing Israeli offensive. Speaking to me via WhatsApp, she described the daily struggle to access basic sanitation. “I have to walk nearly half an hour just to reach the bathroom,” Asma said. “I stopped drinking coffee or tea so I wouldn’t have to walk so far to use a filthy toilet that’s shared by hundreds of people.”
This is something that touches our dignity. I know what she meant because I am experiencing the same thing. Here where I am in az-Zawayda, in central Gaza, men spend a whole week building a bathroom — a toilet. It takes so long because there is no sewage system anywhere anymore. Israel has destroyed the vast majority of sewage facilities in every part of Gaza.
People have tried to find a solution to this disaster, but it’s not really a solution — it’s the spread of a new disease. They dig deep, endless holes to replace proper sewage systems, but these holes only create more health risks.
The sanitation crisis in Gaza worsened rapidly during the summer months. Foul odors spread across the entire camp — the only shelter available for thousands of Palestinian families. “It is unbearable,” Amsa once told me. “I escaped from the heat inside the tent,” she added.
Asma and her five family members were lucky enough to get a toilet basin and dig a hole near their tent. But it doesn’t just take effort — it costs money that no family surviving through war can afford: $600 to $700 to build a basic toilet, and that’s without considering the worsening sewage situation.
The struggles don’t end there. Accessing clean water has become a harsh new challenge for most Palestinian families — not only during the war, but even now, after the ceasefire.
“We can only get water once a week — if we’re lucky, maybe twice,” said Refaat Abu Jami, 24, a writer and journalist now displaced in a tent at Al-Mawasi site.
He has been displaced from his home in Khan Younis since the early months of the war. “We live in fear of disease spreading in the horrible conditions we face inside the tent,” Refaat said. “There is no possibility of having a clean or sufficient water supply to keep anything sanitized,” he added in a WhatsApp message.
With no proper sanitation infrastructure, many families are forced to share makeshift toilets. In areas near my camp, I personally witnessed long lines — 20 to 30 people — just waiting to meet their most basic needs. There was no privacy, no security, nothing.
Sharing one toilet with so many people is unimaginable. It strips away our dignity and increases the risk of disease, especially for children and the elderly. “It feels like a nightmare when I stand in the toilet line,” my brother Baraa once told me.
These are the details that media outlets, and even most displaced Palestinians themselves, will never tell you. I’m shedding light on them because I feel a deep sense of responsibility — as someone who both witnesses and lives through these disasters.
For mothers, keeping their children clean and healthy is a constant challenge. Living in tents pitched on sand, dust and dirt find their way into every corner. There are no toilets, no running water, no sanitation facilities — nothing to protect their children from disease. Most mothers are forced to walk to the beach just to collect water to wash their children.
“I’m not used to seeing my children like this. I’m exhausted,” said Hadeel Ahmad, a 35-year-old displaced mother who left her home and now lives in a tent.
Winter is now at the door, and we are all overwhelmed trying to protect our tents from the leaking rainwater. “For multiple nights last winter, I didn’t sleep. I was up all night trying to keep our belongings safe from the rain,” said Refaat.
Despite everything we have lived through, even the weather became a threat.
Sanitation should be a basic right — not a luxury. Digging holes instead of having toilets is a reality far removed from anything normal or humane.
The war never truly ends for those of us living in tents. Every morning, we wake to the same suffocating atmosphere, surrounded by disease, dust, and the unbearable stench of open sewage.
This is a silent kind of suffering. I am not just witnessing it — I am living it. And I am telling you: It is unbearable. We are dying in silence because of the smallest things — things so basic, so human — that no one has done anything to change.

Jews are fucking FREAKS:

