Paul Haeder, Author

writing, interviews, editing, blogging

It’s “impossible” to view the last decade of events as anything but “divine providence,” placing Donald Trump in the presidency during America’s 250th anniversary year.

Paulo Kirk

Jul 05, 2026

Edward Bernays was one of the most influential people of the 20th century  and it's rare people know of him. He was a nephew to Sigmund Freud raised  and living in America,

Bernays would be PROUD of Glosser-Miller:

Edward Bernays: The art of manipulation

Here, this fellow in my in-box this AM, JOHN SPRITZLER’S Substack

Jews in their bloody paradise: Dear Fellow Anti-Zionists: Here is the Zionist Game Plan in These Days of Anti-Israel Anger

Make sure the anti-Zionism movement is a truly antisemitic movement that refers to the bad guys as “the Jews” and that NEVER tells the truth, the KEY FACT, about Zionism. I discuss in my article here what this leads to. Note that the Nazis channeled people’s anger at the oppression of working class people by the rich into an antisemitism, non-class, framework in which the enemy was “the Jews.” The result? The billionaire class in Germany is still in power and working class Germans are still oppressed. The new anti-Israel voices, such as that of Tucker Carlson, are keeping the KEY FACT about Zionism, its pro-billionaire and anti-Jewish-working-class purpose, a secret, which provides a green light for overt antisemites to control the new anti-Israel discourse, as I discuss here and here. Remember, if the billionaire class remains in power then all working class people will continue to be oppressed, including the Palestinians whose oppression is what the anti-Zionism movement is trying to end, right? The Israeli billionaire class cares much more about staying in power than preserving the Zionist ethnic cleansing project, just as the South African billionaire ruling class cared much more about staying in power than it did about preserving the system of apartheid. This explains why the ultra-pro-apartheid South African president deKlerk led the movement to abolish apartheid, knowing that this was the way to keep the billionaire class in power and maintain the horrible oppression of the working class.

Sure, that’s the ticket: billionaires in Palestine? Fuck, bloody dirty fools, and the kibbutz freaks? Poor as mules coming to Palestine to destroy people for their own bloody dirty working class roots. Billionaires my ass.

A depiction of the tarring and feathering of a British Customs commissioner in Boston.

“Indian removal,” Ellis writes, “was the inevitable consequence of unbridled democracy in action.” While many in this nation might prefer to think otherwise, the foundations of popular government rested on the unraveling of Indigenous self-rule. The republic rests on the brutal fact that “ordinary American citizens seeking a better life and a parcel of land” colonized a continent with people already living on it. If US radicals and liberals had done a better job over the centuries in explaining this aspect of the nation’s history, perhaps Ellis would have been able to spend less time focused on it and to instead explore some of its subtleties—such as how settler colonialism in North America was not just an elite project, but one that involved “class collaboration”—unity across class lines by the interlopers—as well as a construction of whiteness that included even many born outside of Europe, particularly if they were Christian. — Banquo’s Ghost, The contradictions of the American Revolution. Gerald Horne

What do historical records, ancient texts, archaeology, and DNA research actually tell us about Palestinians?



In this episode of The Deep Dive, Ahmed Alnaouq is joined by historian and bestselling author William Dalrymple to explore the deep history of the Palestinian people, which he argues have too often been erased from mainstream narratives and the documented history of Palestine.



Together, they discuss how history is taught in Britain, the origins of the name Palestine, the continuity of the people who have lived on the land for thousands of years, and why understanding the past is essential to understanding the present.

Oh, that fucking dirty Jew, I know, a billionaire, Jew, for sure, but a JEW who whipped his Talmud to get his Chinese wife to convert before insemination:

Mark Zuckerberg takes business calls on a jet ski wearing his $800 Meta glasses—and insists ‘the other person could not tell’.

Mark Zuckerberg Celebrates First Hanukkah as a Family of Five

The couple embraces Judaism in their household by frequently hosting weekly Shabbat dinners, celebrating Jewish holidays like Hanukkah, and having Zuckerberg recite Jewish bedtime prayers with their daughters. Additionally, Chan formally converted to Judaism prior to the birth of their youngest daughter.

The LATIN AMERICANS are screwed AGAIN: Israeli AI Startup Eyes Expansion in Trump-Aligned Latin America.

Wisconsin residents sue Microsoft over noise caused by new data center — Residents have also complained the area has become a ‘dust bowl’ due to construction

Residents living near Microsoft’s Fairwater data center in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, are suing the company over the facility’s alleged noise pollution.

The class-action lawsuit was filed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, according to The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Three residents of Sturtevant — a village approximately 30 miles south of Milwaukee close to the data center—are named as plaintiffs.

“Through its operation and maintenance of the Data Center, Defendant has emitted, and continues to emit, unreasonable and excessive noise onto Plaintiffs’ properties, thereby causing property damages through private nuisance and negligence,” the lawsuit states.

Jews:

The bipartisan Ratepayer Protection Act, designed to shield individuals from soaring electricity prices amid the datacenter boom, would fail to meaningfully protect the public from the centers’ true costs, consumer advocates warn.

The bill, backed by some in big tech such as Microsoft, moved through a House subcommittee in mid-June, and a vote in full committee scheduled for 1 July was delayed. Its measures are largely voluntary, meaning the state utility commissions that set electric rates can ignore the law altogether.

The legislative package also includes benefits for big tech that would speed datacenter construction, prioritize the centers’ connection to the electric grid and open new loopholes that would allow companies to claim they are paying for their own power, said Jim Walsh, policy director with Food and Water Watch, which opposes the package.

Nazis in bed with each other: Germany expands missile defense network with second Israeli Arrow 3 site

The Arrow 3, one of Israel’s most advanced air defense systems, is capable of intercepting ballistic missiles at altitudes of over 100 km. and with a reported range of up to 2,400 km.

The RACKET, man, America at 250!

Defense tech startups are repurposing automotive chips and pipes used in fracking — while copying production methods from drugmakers — in an effort to deliver weapons to the Pentagon faster and at lower cost.

Soaring demand for rocket motors used to power missiles and other weapons has spurred new thinking about supply chains. Seeking big returns, Silicon Valley-style startups are now taking on defense companies that have long dominated the industry, pulled into the competition by a need for production speed, high volume and lower costs, according to 10 industry executives, experts and U.S officials interviewed by Reuters.

And here we are, one of a million stories how the focus on Jews will kill us all:

HOOD RIVER COUNTY, Ore. (KPTV) – Governor Tina Kotek signed a letter Thursday to the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture requesting a disaster designation for pear growers in Hood River and Wasco counties, as well as contiguous counties affected by severe crop losses in 2025.

The losses are estimated at $40 million to $45 million, with grower revenue reduced by roughly 50%.

Growers attributed the damage to the worst pear psylla infestation reported in nearly half a century. Pear psylla is a sap-sucking insect that in 2025 coated trees and fruit in honeydew, leading to black sooty mold and leaving many pears unmarketable.

In the high desert of Central Oregon, the Deschutes River is a lifeline for farmers and landowners — but a century-old water law entitles just a few thousand people to more than half of its volume.

Chris Casad awakens each day before dawn on the Central Oregon property he bought nine years ago, the farm where he once grew tons of potatoes before water shortages forced him to fallow fields and take a job feeding someone else’s cattle on someone else’s land.

At 38, he’s got tractors older than he is. His two kids are under 5. His wife, Cate, has two jobs. They’re staring down a pile of debt from their 85 acres and its unending supply of things in the process of breaking.

The crisis for their farm started in drought — three summers during which starving grasshoppers descended on the area’s remaining crops, tepid reservoirs bloomed with toxic algae, nearly 1,000 Oregon wells went dry and the springs feeding the Deschutes River shriveled to their lowest recorded flow.

But the death knell for Casad’s crops was Oregon’s century-old law, which protects some water users at the expense of others.

The couple saw the state cut their community’s share of irrigation water from the Deschutes in the name of that law. Farmers in Jefferson County, where they live, stopped cultivating a third of the county’s irrigated land. “There were a number of suicides, let alone people who closed up shop, older farmers just not wanting to waste their life’s worth of work and their savings on just trying to keep it going,” Casad said.

Estimates are averages for irrigation season, May to September, from data covering 2015 to 2022.

Casad grew up in Bend, the region’s biggest city, where he watched developers slice farmland into subdivisions. The lumber mill became a shopping mall anchored by an REI. An economy once dependent on timber and agriculture turned instead toward tourism and recreation.

Canals from the Deschutes still wind through Bend’s neighborhoods of single-family homes, and then to the estates, farms, ranches and destination resorts on the city’s outskirts. Among those sits a horse ranch owned by Phil and Penelope Knight of Nike fame, one of the wealthiest families in the world and, our analysis found, one of the largest consumers of COID water. The ranch raises “high-end” horses and sells hay, its website shows. A manager declined to comment on how it manages water.

Another long, gated driveway leads to an 80-acre property that was once dry scrubland. Cinematographer Byron Garth bought water rights from another landowner through COID a decade ago to irrigate part of the property.

The water helped him transform a rocky hillside into an “exclusive compound paradise,” as an auction listing last year put it, with a 6,300-square-foot mansion with radiant heated floors, three guest houses, a 10,000-square-foot garage and a swimming pool — all surrounded by a carpet of soft green grass.

For a few years, Garth used his water rights to grow hay for about 15 alpacas and goats, but in the end, he said, “it was cheaper to just mow it.” Garth said he did have reservations about using so much water during the drought, but he reasoned that somebody had to use it.

“For the aesthetic value,” realtor Jen Bowen said about the grass last year, as she gave OPB a tour of the estate shortly before Garth sold it for $4.8 million.

“I think most of us would agree — it’s nicer to look out over a lush pasture than it is the high desertscape,” Bowen said.

An Oregon law lets one wealthy region turn the desert green. When drought hits, farmers pay the price

CEO of The Historic Trust, Temple Lentz, left, and Anne McEnerny-Ogle, mayor of Vancouver, center, watch Duana Ricks, a Colville-Lakes tribal member give a blessing during the America 250 celebration at Fort Vancouver in Vancouver, Wash. on July 3, 2026.

Fort Vancouver celebrates ‘complex and inspired’ history of America

By Joni Auden Land (OPB) and Erik Neumann (OPB)

July 3, 2026 6 a.m. Updated: July 3, 2026 4:13 p.m.

From parades to rodeos, to commemorative products and virtual get-togethers, there are plenty of options in Oregon and Southwest Washington to celebrate America’s semiquincentennial.

Our Nazi Future: Top White House adviser Stephen Miller says ‘we’re actively looking at’ suspending due process for migrants

Stephen Miller Is Now Yelling About Immigrants Causing Traffic

Madison laundromat owner speaks out after ICE operations at both businesses.

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