Paul Haeder, Author

writing, interviews, editing, blogging

a walk on the wild and ex-con side with Kelly Kloss, AKA, Toothless in Wisconsin

Paulo Kirk

Jul 11, 2025

“Not being able to help people, especially when that’s in your heart, when what you want to do is serve—it kills you,” Lee Pool, the chief of the volunteer fire department in Hunt, Texas, told Rachel Monroe, who spent the past week reporting on the aftermath of the region’s deadly disaster. Pool described his harrowing experience on the night of the floods, when he got stuck while driving after the town’s major highway turned to a swift-moving river and his radio was alive with more sounds of distress than he’d ever heard. “I mean, it’s just constant,” he said. “Just, help, help, help, help.

Book Quotes A Tale of Two Cities - Etsy

Merrill, Wisconsin:

And we need training in Molotov timer-set cocktails, too.

Yep:

This is not a country of revolutionaries, so fuck off Thomas Paine:

The BBB legislation imposes deep cuts to Medicaid and new work requirements — changes that threaten to strip essential medical care from the very people who need it most.

Medicaid plays an outsized role in serving the disabled population. Over 41 percent of working-age (those ages 18 to 64) US adults with disabilities rely on Medicaid for their health coverage, compared to just 13.2 percent of those without disabilities. The share of disabled working-age adults enrolled in Medicaid is even higher in some parts of the country (Figure 1); 58.2 percent of working-age disabled adults in Puerto Rico rely on Medicaid, as do 46.3 percent in New Mexico and 43.8 percent in Massachusetts.

Get to work, COPD fucker. Get out of that fucking wheelchair, you slacker:

Disabled people are disproportionately represented among those who use Medicaid. Among working-age adults, 28 percent of Medicaid enrollees report at least one type of disability, compared to just 7.7 percent of those who do not use Medicaid. The trend is also not confined to states that declined to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (Figure 2). Disabled people who benefited from such Medicaid expansions face additional uncertainty in the wake of the cuts to federal funding. Several states that expanded coverage have so-called “trigger laws,” which require them to revisit or terminate their expansions if federal support falls below certain thresholds. If that happens, thousands of disabled adults in those states could lose coverage almost overnight, with no clear alternatives.

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Listen to Kelly and I go over this fucking American Bilking and Milking and Menacing Trump and Company, and all the fucking Republicans who were popping champagne corks over the pain they set upon their fellow Americans:

Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill is Filled With Hundreds of Billions in Waste Brett Heinz

Lobbyists are working overtime to fill the bill with giveaways to their clients, adding hundreds of billions in waste that will significantly increase the national debt over the next 10 years. Many of the bill’s corporate subsidies are disguised as tax cuts, a common tactic Congress uses to hide how much money it spends.

For instance, hidden on page 916 of the bill is a subsidy for the indoor tanning industry that will cost $365 million. A few pages later, a new benefit gives the entertainment industry $153 million to buy recording equipment. Even deeper in the bill, a new tax break for firearm silencers will cost $1.4 billion.

Unnecessary provisions that further complicate the tax code are everywhere: a $58 billion subsidy for auto loans, a $20 billion subsidy for private schools, and a $5 billion extension for flawed “opportunity zones” that only benefit real estate investors. These are just the tip of the iceberg.

Most significantly, the proposal would shovel an additional $150 billion into the government’s single largest source of wasteful spending: the Pentagon, which recently failed its seventh audit in a row.

The proposal for a “Golden Dome” missile shield alone will squander at least $25 billion on a program that will almost certainlynot work. Another $2.5 billion would go to the controversial Sentinel missile program, which is currently 81 percent over-budget. Meanwhile, the $13-16 billion meant for “expediting innovation” is filled with earmarks for Congress’ “pet projects.”

The Pentagon is already one of the most over-funded institutions on the planet. It doesn’t need a chance to waste more of our money. The plan to spend another $62 billion on “border security” schemes is similarly concerning.

Gandhi put it concisely when he declared, decades ago: “The world has enough for everyone’s need, but not enough for everyone’s greed.”

They — champagne poppers, politicians, CEOs and the rich — need to die, die slow deaths, but quick ones wouldn’t be so bad, but alas, we can’t say that shit on Community Radio, and alas, we can’t have a call to action, and we can’t direct people to organizations like Earth Liberation Front and Animal Liberation Front to learn how to make, err, bombs.

[The uploading of this work does not constitute an endorsement of any kind of violence. The purpose of the uploading of this work is to aid legitimate academic research and law enforcement agencies. The author of The Anarchist Cookbook, William Powell, admitted in an interview that he compiled most of his work from existing US Army manuals widely available to the public. This book has been created in the United States during a time of social and political turmoil and should be studied in that context.]

William Powell, ‘Anarchist Cookbook’ Writer, Dies at 66 — 2017!

The Anarchist Cookbook | Attention Deficit Disorder Prosthetic Memory  Program

1. Gaza genocide. Trump has perpetuated Joe Biden’s complicity with Israel in its genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. Like his predecessor, he has continued to furnish the IDF with bombs, missiles and high-powered rifles. He has ignored or dismissed evidence that those U.S. arms have contributed to the massive destruction of buildings and more than 50,000 civilian deaths (mostly women and children).

2. Arrests, detentions and deportations. Over the past few months, we have witnessed video coverage of ICE’s often violent seizures of immigrants, including international students whose only “crime” was to assert Palestinian rights in campus protests or publications. In early March, masked ICE agents forcibly seized Columbia University student Mahmoud Khalil and drove him away in an unmarked car. We later learned that he was and still is imprisoned in Louisiana.

3. Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill” (BBB). This eleven-hundred-page budget creates an economic time bomb by greatly expanding the federal deficit, increasing interest on the debt, and downgrading the US. credit rating.

Interviewed renowned author Pankaj Mishra on his latest book The World  After Gaza | Nisar Dharma

In his 2024 history, The World After Gaza, Indian scholar Pankaj Mishra expresses a dark reality. “After witnessing savage mass murder over several months…millions now feel less at home in the world.” Yet again referring to Gaza, the author finds some hope in the courage and personal sacrifices of campus protesters who refuse “complicity with corrupted institutions.”

Flags at half-staff for 18th anniversary of Virginia Tech shooting

What does 97 dead in school shootings, DAILY, look like?

  • Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting: (2012): 27 fatalities.
  • Uvalde school shooting: (2022): 21 fatalities.
  • Parkland school shooting: (2018): 17 fatalities.
  • the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, where 32 people were killed.
As the genocide grinds on, Palestinians mourn their loved ones at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.

Israel killed at least 82 Palestinians in Gaza on Thursday, including at least 9 aid-seekers. Also among the dead were 10 children (see below) and a Palestinian journalist.

In addition, Israel killed 3 Palestinians in the West Bank.

Imagine if the U$A DAILY, had 10 kiddos shot and murdered DAILY near medical facilities?

Shooting Texans waiting for food?

Shoot them while delivering water?

Volunteers drop off water donations at Round Mountain Baptist Church on Round Mountain Road outside Leander, which is a staging area to provide resources to those impacted by the floods in the area, June 6, 2025 after flash flooding caused widespread damage and evacuations in the area the day before.

All those corporations throwing in for Tex-ass:

Stepping up for Texas: How businesses are aiding flood relief efforts

ain’t going to be Mister Rogers, for sure, his Neighborhood!

The Neoliberal Predatory Penury Polluting Starving Terror Capitalism is putting our lives in the proper place — D.O.A.

The tools for participatory democracy and FIGHTING city/state capital Hall have been degraded to nothing more than performative no kings day and indivisible concerts.

Just the Lincoln County, Oregon, where I live — Taking out our transportation because of unpaid fucking parking tickets?

And, of course, the outrage, man, the fucking marching on the streets, the burning Trump and Company in Effigy, nah, because collectively, the society, this fucking one I am a part of, that one, has been brainwashed, and/or lobotomized, and/or colonized, and/or habituated to pain and buggering, and/or Stockholm Syndromed into prostration, and/or amnesia fed, and/or dumb-downed, and/or miseducated, and/or divided and conquered.

Giant Donald Trump Effigy Burned at UK Bonfire

Food?

Oh, that fucking Jewish-Israeli, Jewish-Nazi Ukrainian infrastructure. We can’t even have stormwater mitigation in a coastal tourist-dependent community without shit in the water, on the fucking beaches.

And so the pigs are enlisted as enforcers against people wanting to make a fucking living by helping citizens move their stuff? This is the state of Inverted Totalitarianism in the little county of Lincoln:

And so the tourist season is upon us, and even though it is in the 60s and foggy and we have all these green temperate rainforest stands, we have no mitigation efforts to store water, to rethink those tens of thousands of tourists coming into the county and flushing toilets, showering, and all the food prepping and bussing that increases water consumption.

And, of course, the state of the State of Oregon, what great work opportunities — changing IV’s, cleaning bedpans, wiping drool off of old granny’s chin and putting compression socks on the old guy.

Oh, the local rag is almost 50 percent “if it bleeds it leads” ;stories as well as valorizing fucking pigs all the time. Now, pigs with canines? Almost like Trump the God.

Always looking to put people in jail and hit them with tens of thousands of dollars worth of fines, penalties, fees, etc.

And the radio station where I broadcast my show, Finding Fringe, well, bye-bye, it just might happen:

Repeat story, again, the Jews of Israel, the Jews of Ackman-Altman-Zuckerberg-Ellison-Brin, they got our money: The bill didn’t pass. Ten percent of the transportation department will be laid off.

Mister Rogers? Our Neighborhood, man. Again, all the money for Kushners and the Genocides.

Ahh, the rangers? Cuts cuts cuts:

Back at it, as if houselessness isn’t on the rise with the Rapist-Pedophile Epstein Tapes Vice President Trump at the Helm.

Portland:

ICE in our WINE:

They don’t give a damn, Mister Rogers:

How do the kiddos make those last calls for help when those active shooters come to campus, Mister Rogers?

We are on our own, thanks to Rapist/Pedophile in Chief Vice President Trump.

There you go, solving our high energy costs and lack of water issues and lack of food and housing and shit in our water issues —

Oh, shit, we in the PNW, Blue States WA and OR: Manager: ODOT cuts will make Cascade highways ‘impassable for weeks and months’ in winter

Highways 230, 62 and 138 in Oregon would become impassable during winter if cuts to ODOT go forward as expected, an ODOT manager said.

Mister Rogers, how do we get our Safeway and Costco trucks through?

Mister Rogers, some of the protestors are in Portland and Eugene, Oregon. What do we do?

DHS investigated over 5,000 student protesters listed on doxxing website: Official

A trial is examining the administration’s removal of pro-Palestinian scholars.

Well, Mister Rogers, just one last word on the 51st state’s situation. This is fantastic news about our state of Israel. If only the entire Jewish Israeli population gets Lou Gehrig’s disease. Think of all the jobs here in Oregon to help them with their drool? And the social services for their fucking insanity?

The prevalence of ALS among Israeli combat soldiers is 2.5 times higher than among those who served in non-combat roles, according to a new study by Hadassah Medical Center. Among combat troops, the highest rates of ALS were found in soldiers who completed the IDF’s parachuting course.

Israel’s mental health services can’t cope with the mass trauma of October 7. Volunteers are trying to plug the gaps.

Mister Rogers? Remembering Gaza?

Fred Rogers, best known for his television show Mr. Rogers Neighborhood, once told his young audience:

“When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news my mother would say to me, ‘Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.’”

These words of wisdom are comforting to the young and old alike—when bad things happen, it is reassuring to remember that there are good and kind people in the world. Since the start of the conflict in Gaza, LHI has learned there is another reason to look for the helpers: those who respond in times of crisis are likely to need help themselves.

Doctors, nurses, first responders, and other aid workers in Gaza are not only responding to situations that are dangerous, stressful, and frightening, but they and their families are also living in those same situations. These helpers in Gaza are at an increased risk for developing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The symptoms of PTSD, which include chronic pain, dizziness, headaches, irritability, sleep problems, and difficulty concentrating, can get in the way of these helpers doing their jobs. And, unfortunately, in Gaza where borders and movement in and out are tightly controlled, Gazan first responders are the most consistent deliverers of aid and services in the region.

Earnie’s 93 and all there, and his experience back then 80 years ago, almost, is the blueprint for Jewish Stephen Miller and Rapist/Pedophile In Chief Trump’s White Man’s House

by Paul Haeder / July 10th, 2025

Spend an hour with me and Earnie Bell, of Newport, Oregon, as we look at his past as his California father was hired to assist this concentration camp feeding itself with vegetables and meat.

KYAQ. Ran in March of 2025.   Listen and Eat Your Heart Out — Earnie is ALL there, man.

A heck of an experience, for the Bell kiddos and the parents, and this is the shame, man, the continual criminal enterprise of this country, so when the democrats complain about Trump and his Billions for ICE CBP Alcatraz Alligator Gulag, well well, just burp up some history, folks, this country of a good Indian is a dead Indian, Chinese Exclusion Act, the whole Nine Yards until today, with legal residents and card holders and someone like me, a fucking US Passport Carrying Citizen born in San Pedro California but raised in Azores and France and UK and German, well well, I have ZERO Loyalty to the State of Genocide, and ZERO Loyalty for State of Oregon and the other Fifty States, including especially the 51st state of Israel.

A crowd of people in Manzanar, Calif., in 1942

I had David Suzuki on my radio show in Spokane, and introduced him for a reading with a poem I wrote him. On my show, he talked about Canadian Concentration Camps, and the one he was put in with his family.

Lucky you:  David Suzuki — scientist, environmentalist, author and documentary producer interviewed by Paul Haeder, Tipping Points: Voices from the Edge, KYRS-FM, Spokane:

In 1989, David Suzuki’s award-winning radio series It’s a Matter of Survival sounded an alarm of where the planet was heading. Over 17,000 of his shocked fans sent him letters asking for ways to avert the catastrophe. A group of people urged David Suzuki and Tara Cullis to create a new, solutions-based organization. That November, they hosted a gathering with a dozen thinkers and activists on Pender Island, B.C. By the end of the meeting, something significant was afoot. And after many planning meetings, on Sept. 14, 1990, the David Suzuki Foundation was incorporated.

spokane

Background —

Manzanar, California, too:

People drag bundles of belongings
 Japanese Americans at Manzanar internment camp

Source:

September 11, 2019

The “Central Utah Relocation Center”—more popularly known as Topaz—was located at a dusty site in the Sevier Desert and had one of the most urban and most homogeneous populations of the camps, with nearly its entire inmate population coming from the San Francisco Bay Area. Topaz is perhaps best known as the site of the fatal shooting of an inmate by an overzealous camp sentry in April 1943 and for its art school, which included a faculty roster of notable Issei and Nisei artists. It was also the site of significant protest against the “loyalty questionnaire” in the spring of 1943 and of a variety of labor disputes.

The second least populous of the War Relocation Authority camps (to Amache), Topaz had a peak population of 8,130 inmates. The Topaz Museum, which opened to the public in 2015, is located in nearby Delta, Utah and today owns much of the land on which the camp was once built.

Here are ten little-known stories from Topaz concentration camp:

“Swirling Masses of Sand in the Air”

While dust storms took place at many of the WRA camps and are part of the standard narrative about these sites, they seemed to be particularly bad at Topaz even by WRA standards. Tony O’Brien, the acting project attorney, wrote in a November 1942 memo that the “dust storms are much worse than those encountered at Minidoka. The dust is more powdery in texture and penetrates every crevice on the project,” he wrote.

Maxim Shapiro, a visitor to the camp, wrote of the dust in December 1942 that “no one who has not seen it can imagine its ill effects. It penetrates everything—it fills your mouth, nostrils, the pores of your skin, your clothing—and all efforts to keep yourself or your room clean are just futile efforts…”

“We could barely see one inch ahead of us,” wrote Japanese American Evacuation and Resettlement Study (JERS) fieldworker Doris Hayashi of a dust storm in November 1942. “It swept around us in great thrusting gusts, flinging swirling masses of sand in the air and engulfing us in a thick cloud…,” wrote Yoshiko Uchida in her memoir.

The Offal Was Awful

In the spring and summer of 1943, the camp was unable to purchase sufficient meat due to outside shortages, and began serving a succession of organ meats—livers, hearts, tripe, etc.—that most inmates found unpalatable. Widespread complaints followed, including appeals to the Spanish Consul and the State Department, and calls for the firing of the chief steward. The situation was eventually resolved when the camp farming operation began to deliver beef and pork to mess halls in August 1943.

The Topaz Music School

Two girls wearing patterned kimono and playing koto, next to a woman wearing a plain dark kimono and playing a shamisen. All three are seated on a stage, with a curtain in the background and three microphones in the foreground.
A musical recital in Topaz, c.1943-1944. Photo courtesy of the Utah State Historical Society, The KUED Topaz (Utah) Residents Photograph Collection.

While the Topaz Art School is relatively well-known, the equally notable Topaz Music School is much less well documented. “It is very strange because a lot of people didn’t know that there was a music studio except the people who actually went there, and even some of those people can’t remember the details about it,” recalled Kazuko Iwahashi in a 2011 Densho interview.

As with the art school, the impetus for its creation came from the relatively large number of artists/musicians among Topaz’s urban population. First organized in the Block 35 Recreation Hall, it later moved to Barrack 6 of Block 1. Teachers and students and their families spent ten days putting up walls, ceilings, and sheet rock prior to the November 1 school opening. The school offered courses in piano, vocal, violin, solfeggio, harmony, history of music, choir, ensemble, orchestra, and noh drama. The peak enrollment at the school was 653, ranging from four-year-olds to a seventy year old choral student. The school put on regular recital programs featuring the students.

As with other education endeavors, supplies and equipment were an issue. In particular, there was the matter of pianos. Though the school had access to seven pianos—many came from individual inmates and Japanese American churches in the Bay Area—this was not sufficient, and piano students were limited to mere minutes of weekly practice time. Violin students had to provide their own instruments. Nonetheless, the music school and its various performance programs provided a welcome diversion for students, teachers, and the community alike.

The Santa Anitans

Concentration camp life created some unusual groupings, alliances, and, sometimes, out groups. One of the oddest instances of the last was the fate of Santa Anitans at Topaz. Essentially the entire population of Topaz came from the San Francisco Bay Area, and nearly all came through the Tanforan Assembly Center. But one of the first groups to be removed from San Francisco in April 1942 was sent to Santa Anita instead, since Tanforan had still not been completed. This group spent nearly six months at Santa Anita and was among the last to arrive at Topaz on October 7. Even though this group shared common Bay Area roots with the rest of the Topaz population, it seems their time at Santa Anita had changed them.

Their long incarceration at Santa Anita along with the miserable conditions they faced as late arrivals at Topaz led to their being viewed by other inmates as having “a cocky attitude” and having “a chip on their shoulder.” Community Services Chief Lorne Bell described them as “something of a problem, reflecting to some degree the very unfortunate conditions which must have prevailed at that center [Santa Anita].” Their incarceration with Los Angeles people also seemed to have changed them in the view of the Bay Area people. Fred Hoshiyama, who was working as a JERS field worker, described their arrival with some degree of bewilderment:

Many of the young nisei boys who were conservative dressers came off of the bus in “zute (sic) suits” and other flashy dress wear. The girls wore their hair in styles different from the Tanforan group ala Hollywood glamour styles—either long like Veronica Lake or short and put up. Their language, their attitudes, their mannerism changed to the extent that It was easily discernible and many of the Tanforan girls and boys expressed surprise as well.

The Santa Anita group was housed in Blocks 33, 34, and 40 and apparently remained somewhat distinct from the rest of the population.

The Hawaiʻi Group

Topaz was one of two WRA camps to have a sizable contingent who had been shipped from Hawaiʻi. (Jerome was the other.) The group of 226 arrived in March of 1943 and were housed in Block 1. Most—176—were single men, most of them Kibei. Inmates and WRA staff went through great efforts to welcome them upon their arrival. Many had been interned at Sand Island previously or were family members of such internees. Most of them eventually ended up going to Tule Lake after segregation and many went on to Japan.

Hostile Reception for Outside Farm Workers

A Japanese American woman and child sitting inside a tent in a farm labor camp.
Harvest tent city near Provo, UT, where Topaz inmates were recruited to do farm labor. During the harvest, local residents fired rifles into the tent city and three inmates were wounded. Photo courtesy of the Utah State Historical Society, KUED Topaz (Utah) Residents Photograph Collection.

As at many camps, inmates were encouraged to go out on short term leave during the harvest season to do agricultural work in states like Utah, Idaho, and Colorado. Because so many workers were moving to the coast to take relatively well-paying war industry jobs, there were serious shortages of agricultural workers, leading to many farmers attempting to recruit incarcerated Japanese Americans. Thousands of Japanese Americans did do this, particularly in the falls of 1942 and 1943. So many left some of the camps in fact, that they created labor shortages in those camps.

While some at Topaz did leave to do such seasonal outside labor, the numbers were fewer for a couple of reasons. One was that the Topaz population was a largely urban one that included relatively few experienced farm workers. Another factor was the poor reception some farm workers received. One of the areas where laborers were most needed was in Utah County, where the WRA set up a housing camp in Provo that could house up to 400 Japanese American workers. Some of the workers reported that stores and restaurants wouldn’t serve them and that locals harassed them on the streets. In October 1943, some local youths even fired shots into the labor camp while the inmates were present. They refused to return to work until their safety could be guaranteed. Armed guards were quickly brought in, and the inmates did go back to work. But such incidents did little to encourage others to go out.

Issei and Nisei Resistance to Registration

Widespread resistance to registration emerged at Topaz, with Issei and Nisei alike questioning various aspects of the “loyalty questionnaire” and the segregated Nisei combat unit, delaying the scheduled February 10, 1943, start of registration a week.

As detailed by Cherston Lyon in her 2011 monograph Prisons and Patriots: Japanese American Wartime Citizenship, Civil Disobedience, and Historical Memory, Issei objected to the wording of question 28 that asked a population that was prohibited by law from becoming U.S. citizens to “forswear any form of allegiance or obedience to the Japanese Emperor.” They organized a committee of nine to ask that the question be changed and refused to register until the issue was resolved. With similar complaints coming from other camps, the WRA and army agreed to change the wording of the question.

Nisei also organized a Committee of 33 to demand the restoration of their civil rights before they would agree to register. But a hard line response—included threats of prosecution for violating the Espionage Act—by both local and national WRA officials along with counter protests by professed Nisei patriots broke the Nisei protest. Registration began in earnest on February 17 and was completed by February 27. While the initial number of Nisei who volunteered for the army was low, a group of volunteers formed the Resident Council for Japanese American Civil Rights, which spearheaded a propaganda campaign that helped recruit additional volunteers.

A year later, when Nisei eligibility for the draft was restored in early 1944, two groups formed to protest the continued segregation of Nisei in the army, the Topaz Citizens Committee and Mothers of Topaz. Though a faction of the former advocated draft resistance, the majority opted to protest segregation in the army but not to actively resist conscription. The latter sent a petition signed by 1,141 mothers to President Roosevelt and other national leaders objecting to the segregated Nisei military unit and to the fact that Nisei were banned from all branches of the military except the army.

Gambling Boom

Gambling became an issue at many of the WRA camps. But whereas gambling problems were mostly fueled by shadowy underground operations at other camps, they took an unusual form at Topaz. By the fall of 1943, many blocks had started bingo games as fundraisers, often for the purchase of athletic equipment. While they were effective in raising money, they had the unwanted side effect of creating bingo addicts, many of whom were children. As reports circulated of children raiding family kitties to fund their addiction, the Topaz Community Council passed an ordinance banning the bingo games, though some previously planned events were allowed to proceed at the end of the year.

To be sure, the other kind of gambling also existed at Topaz. The professional gamblers particularly targeted those who left the camp to pick sugar beets and returned to camp with a lot of cash. “The guys who stayed behind in the gambling place in camp took it all away from them in a short time,” recalled one gambler in a 1944 interview.

The Antelope Springs recreation camp

A unique aspect of Topaz was the existence of a separate recreation camp for kids. The camp education department made arrangements with the Department of the Interior to use a former CCC camp near Mt. Swasey, about forty miles west of Topaz named Antelope Springs. It served as a campsite mostly for children between the ages of twelve and fourteen, often in groups organized by the Boy Scouts, Girl Reserves or YMCA. About seventy-five kids at a time went out for stays of up to one week, accompanied by adult inmate leaders. The site was at a 7,300 foot elevation, providing a respite from summer heat, and included running mountain water, and level ground for camping.

In her Densho interview, Kazuko Iwahahsi recalled, “we slept in pup tents, two of us to a pup tent, and had open dining hall.”

“And boy, June on the lake bed out there at Topaz must have been well over a hundred degrees,” remembered Kinge Okauchi. “So this [Antelope Springs] was a great sort of respite from the hot summer.” During the summer of 1943, 338 campers went to the Antelope Springs in seven weeks.

An Extensive Library Program

In perhaps another nod to the urban roots of the Topaz inmate population, Topaz had perhaps the most extensive library system of any of the WRA camps that included a main Topaz Public Library (TPL), a library for Japanese language material, and libraries at the high school and each of the two elementary schools.

The TPL began as essentially a continuation of the library at the Tanforan Assembly Center, with books from that library being shipped to Topaz and two former library workers from there, Ida Shimanouchi and Alice Watanabe, taking the lead in setting up the new library. Work began on the library in Recreation Hall 32 on October 2, 1942. The space was unfinished and unheated, leading to days when work had to be canceled due to the cold. Inmates contributed books and magazines to the Tanforan collection, and the library was able to open to the public with a collection of nearly 7,000 books on December 1. The TPL soon moved to the Block 16 recreation hall, essentially an entire unpartitioned barrack with mess hall tables and benches running down the middle and inmate built shelves lining the walls. The collection grew to include fifty-two periodicals, including major national newspapers as well the Oakland Tribune and San Francisco Chronicle, as well as a rental collection of new books that rented for 5¢ a week.

In January 1943, the TPL was able to rotate in some books from the Salt Lake County Library at Midvale and also initiated interlibrary loan service with college libraries in Utah and the University of California at Berkeley. By the end of March 1943, the collection had grown to over 8,500 books and patronage peaked at nearly 500 a day. It became a popular place for young people to gather to socialize and do homework. Motomu Akashi recalled spending many hours in the library, since “[i]t was much more comfortable than our apartment, especially during the winter.” He called the library “my salvation” that “brought me just that small pleasure needed to overcome my depression.”

To serve the Issei and Kibei population, a Japanese language collection was formed out of donations from inmates. Opening as a part of the regular TPL in February 1943, the Japanese section became so popular that it moved to its own space in Recreation Hall 40 in May, later moving to Recreation Hall 31 in February 1944. The collection began with about 1,000 books and eventually grew to 5,000, with daily attendance of three hundred. The inmates from Hawaiʻi became frequent users of the library and put on a popular exhibition of craft items in Hawaiʻi. Later, the Japanese library hosted exhibitions of artists from the art school.

By Brian Niiya, Densho Content Director

The information presented here has been excerpted from Densho’s new and improved Sites of Shame project, coming to a device near you in 2020. Full citations will be included there, but feel free to post questions in the comments or email us at gro.ohsned@ofni in the meantime!

[Header image: Japanese American inmates and new arrivals at the Topaz “induction center” in 1942. Photo courtesy of the Utah State Historical Society, KUED Topaz (Utah) Residents Photograph Collection.]

A large group of former students gathered for the 40th Topaz High reunion, holding a colorful banner, in San Francisco, 1983.

Life Behind Barbed Wire

The single internment camp located in Utah was at Topaz, Utah, sixteen miles west of Delta, Utah. Named for a nearby mountain, Topaz was in the middle of an area charitably described as a “barren, sand-choked wasteland.” The first internees were moved into Topaz in September, 1942, and it was closed in October, 1945. At its peak, Topaz held 9,408 people in barracks of tarpaper and wood.

The George G. Murakami Collection

The items in this exhibit were graciously lent to the University of Utah by George G. Murakami, a young American from Berkeley, California, who was interned in Topaz.

Man oh man, Spokesman Review didn’t scrub all my stuff:  David Suzuki

Public Notices | The Spokesman-Review

David Suzuki is an internationally known environmental activist and scientist. Although he is well known for his radio broadcasts in Canada, he’s become an international celebrity through the television show The Nature of Things. Suzuki also cofounded the David Suzuki Foundation for the promotion of living in balance with the natural world. He’s got more than 50 books under his name.

‘Did Jesus Pack Heat?’ – Maine Community College Professor Attacks, Discriminates Against Christian Conservative Student for Views on Gun Control

Oh, the travails of teaching at a community college:

I was called into the president’s office at one community college where I taught after I chastised two male white faculty for leaving a Winona LaDuke talk after a few minutes and after I heard them say, “I am not about to be berated for being a white man”. I left the venue, closed the door quietly behind them, and told them the message they were sending to LaDuke — who was on campus and in Spokane on a book and speaking tour, and who was addressing students, the public at large and elders from several tribes in our area — crappy, unprofessional and a mark on faculty for not sitting still and listening to te guest. They two white psychotics of course went to the college president to tell on me, a part-time faculty.

I fucking brought dozens of famous authors and speakers to Spokane, not just to Spokane Falls Community College, and I put on the big Earth Day Spokane — Taking it to the Streets. I had a radio show promoting those people and events, newspaper column, magazine gig, and alas, this is the fucking shit a real faculty receives.

Old News:

This week marks the unofficial beginning of what is traditionally the busiest time of the year here in the Inland Northwest. While we count on you to be utilizing our Calendar/Events section , (and maybe even one of our handy widget s ) to see what kind of eco and sustainable events are going on in Spokane and the Inland Nortwest – there are times when we must direct your attention to something that we are particulary stoked on. As is the case with next Tuesday’s double-shot of Winona LaDuke in Spokane.

LaDuke, a Native American activist, environmentalist, economist, and writer who you might remember as Ralph Nader’s vice presidential nominee in 2004, will speak twice in Spokane next Tuesday – once at 11:30 a.m. at Spokane Falls Community College, and then again at 7:30 at The Magic Lantern. LaDuke is an inspiring figure in the environmental community for her work as the program director of the Honor the Earth Fund where she works to advocate, raise public support, and create funding for frontline native environmental groups on a national level.

Winona LaDuke is just the beginning – March and April are full of amazing opportunities for engaging discusssions and actions focused on sustainability and envrionmental issues in Spokane and the surrounding area – culminating in Spokane Earth Day, April 26th, at Riverfront Park. To stay up to date, be sure to visit the Earth Day Spokane website.

If you are an organization or business interested in displaying the Earth Day Spokane calendar of events – please print the following PDF attachement and display it proudly.

Interviews: | Paul Haeder, Author

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Grain of Truth

by Paul H. Haeder

Environmental advocate Winona LaDuke resigns from Honor the Earth -  KSTP.com 5 Eyewitness News

You probably remember Winona LaDuke as the two-time Green Party vice presidential candidate, running with Ralph Nader in 2000 and 2004. You probably didn’t know that she’s an enrolled member of the Anishinaabeg Tribe from the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota, where she’s locked in another tough battle — this time against huge multinational corporations that want to change her tribe’s traditional way of life.

At three engagements in Spokane last week, and in some private interviews, LaDuke talked about the need to defend native peoples’ rights to the Earth. And this epic debate can fit into a single grain of wild rice — the Manoominike-Giizis strain, or the “wild rice moon” grown by her people for many generations.

This small grain of plant life serves as a microcosm of the entire sustainability challenge we all face: making sure future generations — all peoples and all species — will have a planet worth living on with ecosystems and resources to achieve spiritual and material prosperity.

LaDuke has proven to be so much more than a media darling — she’s a spiritual guide for her tribe and for the thousands she’s come across along her journey. Mixing humor with a shaman’s intensity, LaDuke has written books like All Our Relations and Recovering the Sacred.

LaDuke sees the Minnesota reservations’ practice of harvesting wild rice as vital: “The wild rice harvest of the Anishinaabeg not only feeds the body, it feeds the soul, continuing a tradition which is generations old for these people of the lakes and rivers of the north.”

It struck me last week while spending time with LaDuke that her tribe’s battle to keep their wild rice wild, free from genetic manipulation, is a much more far-reaching illustration of what sustainability activists consider the struggle of our times: How to create an America that respects the land.

Many of us think along systemic lines, attempting to understand the steps the globe probably has to take to solve the collapsing systems, both environmental and societal. Yet we need reminding that this struggle to work with a burgeoning global human population — 9 billion by 2050 at the current 1.2 percent growth rate — needs nudging from storytellers like LaDuke.

Her struggle — our struggle — is tied to the biodiversity of wild rice, a sacred food. There are more than 60,000 acres of natural wild rice growing throughout the lakes and rivers of her tribal lands. But there are troubling parallels drawn to what’s happened to the sacred corn of Mesoamerica at the hands of the agri-business multinationals, where corn has been patented, controlled and even turned into what some call Frankenfood.

Domestication and genetic modification of wild rice threaten the genetic integrity of this plant. For more than 30 years, plant breeders have developed wild rice for commercial paddies. So today, most of the wild rice on the market comes from these paddies, almost 70 percent of it from California. “Millions of pounds of California wild rice come into [Minnesota] to be processed,” says LaDuke, “some of that rice, if genetically engineered, would irreversibly contaminate our manoomin.”

LaDuke’s tenacity in understanding the sacred and reclaiming the wholeness of her people’s food is a valuable lesson for our times. She’s up against the juggernaut of Monsanto and DuPont, the largest seed companies in the world. Monsanto has spent $8 billion in the last few years buying up United States seed companies, while DuPont purchased Pioneer, the second largest seed company in the world.

“This concentration of control over world seed stocks is alarming to farmers on a worldwide scale, especially considering that the closer seeds seem to be held, the fewer there are.”

LaDuke puts all of our struggles into a feedback loop, connecting wild rice in Minnesota to sustainability in Spokane with the goal of creating a more independent, safe and stable food supply. “However you cut the statistics,” LaDuke says, “from the villages of India to the villages of northern Minnesota, there is a marked loss in worldwide biodiversity, and a closer hold on who controls the remaining seeds of the world.”

This issue of control took me back 32 years, to the time I was a newspaper reporter in the middle of a struggle for the soul of a mountain.

Environmentalists were trying to stop my school, the University of Arizona, from building roads and locating a large mirror telescope on Mount Graham, a 10,000-foot sky island sticking out of the Sonora Desert. Mount Graham was named after a white man who rode through the area many years ago, a Colonel James Graham, but for generations the San Carlos Apaches had referred to the entire range as “Pinaleno,” meaning “many deer.” It’s the holiest place for the Apaches, who acquire the power to become medicine men and women through singing and collecting herbs and water on that mountain.

Despite the importance and traditional use of the place, roads were cut and the telescope went up. LaDuke and I talked about that struggle, and she shared many similar struggles currently unfolding in Indian Country and elsewhere.

LaDuke’s power is in her ability to unearth the history of Native people’s struggles — and how that history is relevant today. There has been a lost connection between how the land should be used and how it actually is used — from wild rice in Minnesota to telescopes in Arizona. Reconnecting with the land is another step in the process, as her book puts it, of reclaiming the sacred.

Paul Haeder is the sustainability liaison at Spokane Falls Community College, where he also teaches English. His KYRS radio show, Tipping Points: Voices on the Edge, covers sustainability issues.

This is a trigger for me:

Nearly 50 Republican state lawmakers are calling on Eastern Maine Community College to fire an instructor there.

In a Monday letter, they accuse Dr. Carol Lewandowski of making “inappropriate and discriminatory comments” to a conservative student. The group also claims Lewandowski mocked a student’s Christian faith but did not provide specific details about what was said.

In that editorial, Rooks argued in favor of Democratic state lawmakers holding a hearing on the so-called “red flag” bill that will be put to Maine voters this November as a referendum. Rooks also argued in favor of the red flag law, claiming that Maine’s current “yellow flag” law is “cumbersome” and “stigmatizes” the mentally ill.

In her interview with George Hale and Ric Tyler on Wednesday, Parker said that in her essay for Lewandowski’s class, she agreed with Rooks on the first point that the legislature should have held a hearing on the bill, but disagreed with the veteran Maine journalist on the matter of whether the red flag law would be effective in Maine.

“I responded with agreeing with [Rooks] that the legislative session should have gone on as legally obliged, but I also disagreed, because red flags are not good for Maine in any capacity,” Parker said.

After submitting her rough draft to Lewandowski for feedback, Parker received a response from the community college professor that not only provided comments on her writing, but attacked the student’s opinion and used the student’s Christian faith against her (see below for screenshots of the professor’s response).

Lewandowski told Parker in the feedback to “avoid proselytizing with logical fallacies in a college class,” before referencing the student’s previous essay regarding her Christian faith.

“Wasn’t your former speech a testimony to finding Jesus [sic]. Did Jesus pack heat?” Lewandowski asked, in an apparent attempt to argue that the student’s religious beliefs are incongruous with her views on the red flag law.

Lewandowski then told the student to pick a different topic for her essay due to the professor’s inability to grade it fairly because of her own strong opinions on the subject.

“I find this 2nd amendment nonsense exhausting and highly recommend you choose a different topic since this one is not one I can easily grade, given my own disdain for the misinterpretations of the second amendment,” Lewandowski wrote.

“Hate to tell ya, but guns DO kill [sic],” the EMCC professor wrote, before launching into a list of mass shootings in recent years.

“You clearly do not care about people as much as you care about guns,” Lewandowski accused the student. “Your argument is a solid representation of that. For fairness to you and to me, please choose another topic.”

The community college professor then again tried to use the student’s religious beliefs against her.

“And think again about Jesus packing heat. Really. You and your ilk drive me nuts with your hypocrisy,” Lewandowski wrote.

“Guns kill. Own it,” she added.

Parker described Lewandowski’s response as not only deeply unprofessional, but also personally insulting.

“I knew that going into a community college I would face a degree of persecution. I was aggravated, because while I’ve been facing this type of thing since middle school, I’ve never been personally insulted by a professional college professor or any teacher at all,” Parker said.

She added that her first reaction was to call her mother to ensure she wasn’t overreacting, and her mother shared her aggravation.

Parker then emailed Lewandowski, firmly stating she would not change her essay topic.

“I didn’t tell her how infuriated I was, but I knew that this is more than not okay. This is unprofessional and it’s bullying of a student,” Parker said. “A professor at a college level should be able to grade a paper unbiased despite any topic, and they should not be personally insulting their students for their topic of choice.”

In response to Parker’s email saying she would not change her essay topic, Lewandowski again told her to change the topic, and suggested that Parker pursue the matter with the department chair and the dean.

“Please change your topic as I earlier requested as this is a trigger issue for me. No pun intended,” Lewandowski wrote.

“I admit I cannot assess the gun issue objectively,” the community college professor wrote.

+—+

Oh, that’s right, I wrote about that kind of shit already this year happening to ME in a college class here on the coast: I was right there in that bullshit Orwellian Chamber of Administrative Hell.

From the VP of the community college:

Received a note from one of your students this morning:

Can you issue a full refund for my registration to the “Writing As Gift Class” in Waldport which starts this afternoon? This class is not as described in the Catch the Wave. I write about nature and short stories of personal experiences. This class appears to be biased towards politics. Can you also let the instructor know to delete my email and contact information permanently? I do not give the instructor permission to forward my contact information or use it for any other purposes.

I’m going to ask that you not bulk email the students henceforth. Our team will send emails on your behalf about any announcements – assignments, presentations, date/time changes, etc. Just send those to us and we’ll distribute. (Of course, any student who wishes to hear from you directly can tell you so and provide their preferred email address; we have no interest in interfering with that.)

Time is short, but we’re forced to consider canceling the class this morning for two reasons: First, in your email, you introduce an experience far from what we advertised in our catalog. Second, in my estimation it doesn’t conform to our Academic Freedom policy. Based on your email, the class certainly does not appear to be an examination of issues, but presents a singular political agenda. (Note that I’m setting aside here the fact that you and I may share many viewpoints raised in your email to students; this isn’t about my personal beliefs and concerns.) If you wanted to present a workshop focused on your personal opinions, and your past writings, about the current or former administrations or other political issues, one alternative would have been to rent a room from the College or a Library and delivered the event without being tethered by the College’s commitment to freedom of expression of all viewpoints. That may be an option to consider in the future.

Our Academic Freedom policy reads as follows:

Approved by Board of Education: 01/21/2015 Institutions of higher education exist for the common good, and the unfettered search for truth and its free exploration is critical to the common good. The college seeks to educate its students in the democratic tradition, to foster recognition of individual freedoms and social responsibility, and to inspire meaningful awareness of and respect for a collaborative learning environment. Freedom of expression will be guaranteed to instructors to create a classroom atmosphere that allows students to raise questions and consider all sides of issues. OCCC instructors are responsible for exercising judgment in selecting topics of educational value for discussion and learning consistent with course requirements, goals, and desired outcomes. (Emphasis added, DP)

Finally, whether or not we wish to cancel, this drop brings us to near break-even for the course. If we lose another student today we’ll be forced to cancel for low enrollment, full stop. We don’t run Community Ed courses at a loss. The taxpayers don’t fund classes on chocolate enrobing of fruits, nor of sea-star wasting disease, nor of oil painting or writing. These courses must pay their own way. I will let you know if we hear from another student and are forced to cancel. In that case, we will post a sign on the door and email and call registrants so long as time permits.

I’m pasting the course description published in CTW below. It does not hint at the political focus that dominates your email to students.

Dave Price

+—+

Of course, the pre-course email did have articles on writing, writing programs, writing MFA workshops, all of that, now in a Time of Trump cuts. From JOURNALS. Some higher ed journals, and writing journals. And, of course, the course is described as working with topics around estrangement — any kind, but I put in familial and community estrangement. The class I have taught seven times down here, and I am giving students hundreds of examples of nature essays and poetry and memoir writing adventures, and alas, the resources I give the students are ALL about CREATIVE writing.

This is pre-class harassment by a fucking spineless fool, really, with that threatening letter. The class did make, and I asked all in the class if it was okay sending everyone emails “To the Class,” and if it was fine we worked as a writer’s workshop, sending comments about others’ work back and forth before we met weekly for our two hours.

This is someone who makes a cool $110,000 or more a year, plus benefits. Shame on him, shame on HIM.

+—+

Another example tied to the Christian Crap above in the Maine cas for me was a course I taught in composition with some books required, including a writing process book/texbook and a few novels, to include the Fight Club. Imagine that, and the author was coming to town and was invited and accepted said invitation to speak at my class and the school at large.

This is a state school, and the student went to the department chair to request and demand she get a replacement text for the Fight Club and to be excused from the class during talks about the book’s issues and when Chuck Palahniuk showed up to class.

SAME FUCKING Christian CRAP, man, as a state community college. I did not give alternative texts, and the fucking chair of the department did all sorts of arm twisting of another faculty to take this young woman into her course. Fucking A!
+—+

More fucking needle-using heroin addict news: RFK Jr. cancels USPSTF meeting as healthcare orgs urge Congress to ‘protect integrity’ of expert panel

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is made up of 16 volunteer members who are nationally recognized experts in prevention, evidence-based medicine, and primary care. Task Force members, appointed by the Secretary of HHS, serve staggered four-year terms to ensure all 16 members are not appointed by the same presidential administration.

Members are screened to ensure that they have no substantial conflicts of interest, according to the task force’s website.

The USPSTF was established in 1984 to make recommendations to general practice physicians and public health bodies on preventive care. Federal policymakers rely on the USPSTF recommendations, including Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

SCOTUS upholds ACA preventive services task force in 6-3 ruling

And, insurers must provide cost-free coverage for preventive services that have been recommended by the USPSTF, such as lung and colorectal cancer screenings, behavioral counseling, prevention of maternal depression, childhood vision screenings and adult diabetes screenings.

The Task Force meets remotely on a weekly basis and meets in-person three times per year.

The USPSTF was slated to discuss healthy diet, physical activity and other approaches to prevent cardiovascular disease at the July 10 meeting, according to the source.

The Supreme Court last month upheld the key preventive services task force in a 6-3 ruling. The decision, Kennedy v. Braidwood, preserved the Affordable Care Act’s preventive coverage mandate and also determined that members of the USPSTF are selected within the bounds of the Constitution.

Everything and everyone in the Rapist in Chief’s Soiled Depends Adult Diaper Wearing Minyan is Dirty.

Trump’s people, i.e. Larry Fink and Black Rock’s Schwarzman.

According to ABC Gulf Coast News, Slide Insurance CEO Bruce Lucas and his wife, Slide’s COO, earned $21 million and $16.5 million, respectively, last year. Together, they brought in over $50 million in compensation, even as many Florida homeowners face rate hikes topping 20%.

The payout comes at a time when insurance options in Florida are dwindling. Companies are pulling out of the state or slashing coverage, citing growing risks from extreme weather, like hurricanes, flooding, and wildfires.

“The greed! The rich get richer and the poor get poorer,” said Mary Bousquet, a Cape Coral resident. “It’s just so unbalanced. The whole thing is out of control — it has to be fixed somehow.”

[Sweden’s order, worth about $526 million— the country’s largest since the 1980s—will bolster the country’s Archer self-propelled artillery systems, Defense Minister Pål Jonson said.

German defense giant Rheinmetall and Norwegian company Nammo will produce the ammunition, Jonson said.

Building up artillery ammunition stocks is high on the to-do list for both NATO and the European Union. The most in-demand shells, 155mm rounds, have been harder and harder for Ukraine to get hold of as the war has dragged on.]

We will eat brass casings: US Ally Makes Largest Ammo Order in Decades

Racist Jew Miller and his Klan back at it: America First Legal Foundation filed a federal civil rights complaint against Colorado State University, alleging that its diversity, equity and inclusion programs are discriminatory and violate federal law.

The complaint was filed June 24 by the nonprofit law firm that was founded in 2017 by Stephen Miller, the current White House deputy chief of staff, and Gene Hamilton. America First Legal’s mission is to “oppose lawless government overreach and fight to restore the rule of law in the United States,” according to its website.

“As with any complaint filed with a governmental agency, the university takes the matter seriously,” CSU spokesperson Tiana Kennedy told the Coloradoan in a July 2 email. “We are reviewing the issues raised in the complaint and will respond appropriately.”

  • faculty recruitment toolkit that notes “there are many opportunities to embed best practices for enhancing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI)” in searches for new faculty members
  • The awarding of scholarships it says are discriminatory based on students’ “immutable characteristics.”
  • An all-university core curriculum that requires students to complete at least three credits in courses focused on DEI-related topics.

[Job creators — prosthetics, coffins, physical therapists, and land mine manufacturing and land mine demining.]

The Horror The Horror:

And, the inhumanity of it all, these fucking White Races: Lithuania, Finland pivot to landmine production, potentially supplying to Ukraine, Reuters reports

The horror the horror:

Kamala Harris’ Comeback Hopes Take a Blow

Kousser said a presidential run in 2028 “is unlikely” since the Democratic Party is “collectively soul-searching to find a new vision” and “may not turn to exactly the candidate who lost the last election.”

“I do not see much of a political future at the national level for Harris, due to a variety of factors,” Grant Reeher, a professor of political science at Syracuse University, told Newsweek.

“Even though she was dealt a tough hand in the presidential race, she struggled as a candidate, particularly when asked specific questions about her policy positions and about Biden administration policies, which presumably she was partly responsible for.”

Newsweek has contacted Harris’ office for comment via a contact form on her website.

Containers are pictured at Tecon Rio Grande, the container terminal of the Port of Rio Grande, in southern Brazil. The country was among the latest countries to receive a letter from President Donald Trump informing the nation of the rate its goods will be tariffed as of August 1, absent a trade deal.

The whores the whores: Trump threatens 50% tariffs on Brazil if it doesn’t stop the Bolsonaro ‘witch hunt’ trial

Jewish Leon Levine’s name is etched across Charlotte, a testament to decades spent investing in the state he cherished. But it’s his final act of generosity, a posthumous directive to dissolve the very foundation he built, that he hoped would ultimately fulfill his promise to underserved Carolinians and the Jewish community. “He wanted us to be part of the permanent solution,” said Tom Lawrence, president and CEO of the Leon Levine Foundation. “It’s more about self-sufficiency for our neighbors than it is self-preservation for the foundation.”

The horrors from the Whores of Bar Mitzvah: Family Dollar, and dollar stores in general, have been alleged by a number of studies, individuals, and organizations to proliferate food deserts: areas with limited access to healthy and affordable food. Dollar stores are alleged to outcompete local grocery stores, and end up being one of the few options available for purchasing food in some communities. In line with these allegations, a number of states have passed restrictions on where new dollar stores can be opened.

2023 study from experts at Tufts University School of Medicine and the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, which was published in the American Journal of Public Health, found that “dollar stores are now the fastest-growing food retailers in the contiguous United States.”

“It’s a notable evolution: Dollar stores once focused primarily on personal care and craft items,” the university wrote in a release. “Now, they’re expanding to offer prepackaged, shelf-stable food items. These items might be convenient, but they often have suboptimal nutritional value.”

“Sales in local grocery stores are known to drop by 30% following the opening of a nearby dollar store.”

It continued: “While dollar stores don’t tend to specialize in fresh foods and produce, they do fill a void that can’t be ignored, especially for people who live in remote areas. In some ways, their rise is actually a positive development, providing consumers with food options in low-access areas. On the other hand, the recent growth in dollar store food expenditures raises concerns that such stores could force out local grocers through competitive pricing, the researchers write — leaving consumers with limited, less healthy options.”

The Heart of Apocalypse Now HORRORS.

Looking back on his days serving in the Vietnam War with the U.S. Air Force, Larry Kerr remembers the regular exposure to Agent Orange.

The chemical was stored in large drums where he helped handle munitions as a weapons specialist. It was used to defoliate vegetation on the periphery of the bases and other areas where U.S. forces operated during the war, thus making them easier to monitor. Particles of the substance seemed to float everywhere and contaminate everything.

“We breathed it in. We bathed in it. We brushed our teeth in it,” Kerr said, seated in the living room of his Syracuse home.

He had no inkling of its dangers at the time, but after he suffered a heart attack in 1980 at the age of just 32, he started suspecting something was up. He suffered more ailments over the years, sowing his intense qualms with Agent Orange, and a head and neck cancer diagnosis in 2023 really jumpstarted his activism.

According to the National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine, the U.S. Air Force sprayed at least 11 million gallons of Agent Orange in Vietnam between 1962 and 1971 as part of what the U.S. government dubbed Operation Ranch Hand. The aim as the war with Vietnam intensified was to defoliate trees and plants in Vietnam, thus reducing enemy cover, and to destroy enemy crops.

Whatever the case, Kerr said more and more veterans of the war started reporting an uptick in cancer and a range of other ailments in the late 1970s, which he and others connected to Agent Orange. Ultimately, U.S. officials recognized a link between exposure to the herbicide and a long list of diseases and health conditions, creating a means of compensation for those impacted by the chemical.

Nevertheless, Agent Orange exacted a heavy toll, and Kerr says those who have suffered at the hands of the chemical merit recognition and that the broader public needs to be informed about what happened. The chemical has also taken a heavy toll on many Vietnamese people exposed to it, according to the Vietnamese government.

Larry Kerr, of Syracuse, pictured at his home on Tuesday, seeks installation in Utah of a memorial to victims of Agent Orange from the Vietnam War. He served in the war.
Larry Kerr, of Syracuse, pictured at his home on Tuesday, seeks installation in Utah of a memorial to victims of Agent Orange from the Vietnam War. He served in the war. (Photo: Tim Vandenack, KSL.com)

“Along with honoring veterans that have been impacted by Agent Orange, this memorial will serve as a monument to history, a place for the public to learn about our nation’s past and as a place for people to reflect and mourn for loved ones lost,” reads the Utah Agent Orange Veterans Foundation website. “The devastation Agent Orange has left behind is far reaching and we aim to provide solace to those who have suffered.”

Kerr, for his part, points to personal friends he’s lost and the impact the deaths of those exposed to Agent Orange has had on surviving loved ones. “If you get five or 10 of these spouses or widows in a room and have them talk about it, you would come out of there crying,” he said.

After a stroll in Detroit, a humanoid robot goes viral

WE ARE FUCKED. Look at those kiddos, man, fucking A, dude, the Jews Have the Next and the Next and the Next Generations. RFID chips in the neck and nanobots in the body along with RFK Junior’s FitBit Watch 6.0!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

And so more dead and dying kiddos, mixed in with 40 mandatory vaccinations, and the robots and the Jews RULE:

The producer of the world’s most popular weedkiller – Roundup – is replacing a notorious ingredient with what could be a “regrettable substitution“.

As scrutiny grows over the health risks of glyphosate, the herbicide diquat is increasingly used in its place.

A fresh analysis from researchers in China, however, suggests that the alternative is not without its harms. In fact, at some concentrations, it can cause irreversible damage to organs.

Diquat is a close cousin of paraquat – a herbicide that is 28 times more toxic than glyphosate and that is banned in 70 countries. Glyphosate was initially introduced as a safer alternative to paraquat; however, both chemicals now face scrutiny for their potential health effects.

Related: Controversial New Study Links Parkinson’s With Living Near a Golf Course

Diquat has begun to rapidly take their place.

Like paraquat, diquat is well known to be toxic, which is why it must be handled with protective gear, but there is disagreement on precisely what levels of exposure are safe.

Jobs to Kill For. We are all complicit, man, dirty dirty Murder Incorporated: Ohio awards $310 million to US defense contractor for 4,000-worker advanced manufacturing

They will be living in Quonset huts: Investors snap up growing share of US homes as traditional buyers struggle to afford one.

Nearly 27% of all homes sold in the first three months of the year were bought by investors — the highest share in at least five years, according to a report by real estate data provider BatchData.

Between 2020 and 2023, the share of homes bought by investors averaged 18.5%.

All told, investors bought 265,000 homes in the January-March quarter, an increase of 1.2% from the same period a year earlier, the firm said.

Free Free Palestine with Quonsets?

British band Idles dedicates concert to Palestine in Barcelona

And so the Romper Room MOTHER Fucking Depends Feces Filled Diapers Epstein Trump and Company will make US pay, even tubing down a creek, now: Coming to a state near you.

If you like to go out on the water in Oregon, get ready for some big changes for permits.

Starting next year, you’ll need a Water Access Permit to use any boat in Oregon waterways including kayaks and stand-up paddleboards, even two inner tubes tied together will be affected.

Previously, any watercraft 10 feet or shorter was exempt.

And so the world is in its final Romper Room fucking stupidity and, well, fascism, because when you follow TeleTubby and Seseame Street Walkers a la Disneylandians, we have no choice but to look at our fellow fucking anal leak Americans and say: “They gotta go too.”

The Persecution of Francesca Albanese By Chris Hedges!

Her latest report lists 48 corporations and institutions, including Palantir Technologies Inc., Lockheed Martin, Alphabet Inc. (Google), Amazon, International Business Machine Corporation (IBM), Caterpillar Inc., Microsoft Corporation and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), along with banks and financial firms such as BlackRock, insurers, real estate firms and charities, which in violation of international law, are making billions from the occupation and the genocide of Palestinians.

You can read my article on Albanese’s most recent report here.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned her support for the ICC, four of whose judges have been sanctioned by the U.S. for issuing arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant last year. He criticized Albanese for her efforts to prosecute American or Israeli nationals who sustain the genocide, saying she is unfit for service as a special rapporteur. Rubio also accused Albanese of having “spewed unabashed antisemitism, expressed support for terrorism, and open contempt for the United States, Israel, and the West.” The sanctions will most likely prevent Albanese from travelling to the U.S. and will freeze any assets she may have in the country.

The attack against Albanese presages a world without rules, one where rogue states, such as the U.S. and Israel, are permitted to carry out war crimes and genocide without any accountability or restraint. It exposes the subterfuges we use to fool ourselves and attempt to fool others. It reveals our hypocrisy, cruelty and racism. No one, from now on, will take seriously our stated commitments to democracy, freedom of expression, the rule of law or human rights. And who can blame them? We speak exclusively in the language of force, the language of brutes, the language of mass slaughter, the language of genocide.

“The acts of killing, the mass killing, the infliction of psychological and physical torture, the devastation, the creation of conditions of life that would not allow the people in Gaza to live, from the destruction of hospitals, the mass forced displacement and the mass homelessness, while people were being bombed daily, and the starvation — how can we read these acts in isolation?” Albanese asked in an interview I did with her when we discussed her report, “Genocide as colonial erasure.”

The militarized drones, helicopter gunships, walls and barriers, checkpoints, coils of concertina wire, watchtowers, detention centers, deportations, brutality and torture, denial of entry visas, apartheidesque existence that comes with being undocumented, loss of individual rights and electronic surveillance, are as familiar to desperate migrants along the Mexican border, or attempting to enter Europe, as they are to Palestinians.

This is what awaits those who Frantz Fanon calls “the wretched of the earth.”

Those that defend the oppressed, such as Albanese, will be treated like the opp

There is no such thing now of this Antisemitism Bullshit Passed as Logic and Social Justice by the Industry, the Hasbara, the Lying Jewish Jewish Double Jewish Bullshit Antisemitism Factories.

Google’s Jewish and Zionist and Anti-Goyim Sergey Brin calls U.N. “antisemitic” after report on tech and Gaza – The Washington Post

Yes, we are a reflection of the “news” from various rags and news (sic) services

Headlines to demonstrate how warped and wicked and rotten the WEST is? This is a short sample of my news feed, and it is schizophrenic, it’s half empty, half false, and it is a continuation of the perversity of Modern Life, and the Wicked Ways of Oppen-Monter-Heimer freaks.

Guns and butter issues? Data Centers from Hell? Layoffs? Shifting tides? War dressed as college campus majors? This is the end of the world as they know it, and you better start hearing some revolutionary spirit:

Army tests robotic coyotes to defend fighter jets!

Oh, that Outsized Jewish Global Dominance: NVIDIA Reportedly Plans Billion-Dollar Campus in Israel, Set to Be the Country’s Largest

[Nvidia Corporation[a] (/ɛnˈvɪdiə/ en-VID-ee-ə) is an American multinational corporation and technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, and incorporated in Delaware.[5] Founded in 1993 by Jensen Huang (president and CEO), Chris Malachowsky, and Curtis Priem, it designs and supplies graphics processing units (GPUs), application programming interfaces (APIs) for data science and high-performance computing, and system on a chip units (SoCs) for mobile computing and the automotive market. The company is also a leading supplier of artificial intelligence (AI) hardware and software.[6][7] Nvidia outsources the manufacturing of the hardware it designs.]

Jews: Intel CEO: “The strength, resilience and resolve of Intel Israel’s team has no bounds”

Jews: Intel announces plan to lay off more than 500 employees in Oregon

Jews: Integration, existing weapons and uncertainty: In Paris, industry makes its Golden Dome pitch

Executives from both Lockheed and Raytheon indicated interest in building a space-based interceptor, and hinted at their broad approaches to Golden Dome.

This dude, a Jewish Aussie, are you kidding me? Big tech has ALWAYS been EVIL. SIck dudes making bank on book sales. Silicon Valley and Internet have always been CIA, fucker. Yawn.

[Look at this vampire below, this cross-bearing fucking ZOMBIE. Shoot her with a silver fucking bullet blast from an AK-47.

Retired federal Judge Andre Davis learned the Justice Department had decided to sue his former colleagues when he boarded a flight to Charlotte, N.C., to attend a judicial conference.

His fellow passengers included several of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland’s 15 judges, who now find themselves on the other end of an unusual court case.

“It’s outrageous that they actually named individually in their official capacities all 15 judges on the court,” said Davis. “And so you have to ask yourself, ‘What is going on here? What kind of performance? What was the audience for this?'”

As AI use becomes more commonplace in higher education, students are now raising concerns about professors’ use of AI tools for tasks like grading and lesson planning. College professors told Fortune that the use of AI for tasks such as class preparation and grading has become “pervasive.” Some students argue that this diminishes the value of their education and raises transparency and fairness issues.

Oklahoma superintendent orders all districts to offer free meals, threatens sanctions

No state law exists that requires districts to provide free meals to every student, nor are there legal provisions allowing the Oklahoma State Department of Education to sanction or audit a school for not doing so, according to a memo the Oklahoma State School Boards Association (OSSBA) sent out Monday.

Hunger Free Oklahoma has been advocating for legislation to expand free school meals, but Bernard said, “We have never had the state Department (of Education) alongside supporting those bills with us.”

“There’s not a way to feed every Oklahoma kid for free without additional investment,” Bernard said.

[Note the fucking Nazi Flag, USA Stars and bars and strips on his bullet seeking helmet. ] A newly recruited Ukrainian soldier with the 33rd Separate Mechanized Brigade practices shooting and reloading his gun during military training in Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine on March 13, 2025.

Is Russia with Putin as Head that dumb to even consider Trump as a human being? He wants Russian people to suffer, man, suffer: Trump aides to discuss Ukraine weapons Tuesday after president says shipments will resume

Are these two fucking vassal nations really that buggered? Trump sets 25% tariffs on Japan and South Korea, and new import taxes on 12 other nations

Country music star says he may be deported as Trump inflicts ‘cruelty and suffering’: ‘This is my country too’

Dear America, today is the day we celebrate you and what you used to stand for. The words “liberty and justice for all” have faded into a distant past. To some of us those words were deeply personal. My family came here because of those words. I was born here because of those words. I have had an extraordinary life because of those words. And now those words have lost their meaning. They are now abstract concepts used to inflict cruelty and suffering on the unsuspecting, the weak, the sick, the poor, the needy. We can add Purple Heart war veterans to that list as several have been deported already. This is America right now.

Some will tell me that I should leave the country or my favorite “shut up and sing”. (A statement so void of any sense that it is impossible to execute) On the ‘leaving’ part…that may come true whether I want to leave or not. The way the new law stands my mother could be stripped of her naturalized citizenship, then my sister and I would be illegal birthright citizens and away we go. As far as “shut up and sing” well, clearly that’s not happening. You see the thing is this is my country too. Always has been. My country has been that beacon on the hill for so long and for so many. As Lady Liberty’s flame dims with every atrocity committed in her name We will not be afraid of the dark. We will find the light again. As we celebrate today, think about what the Stars and Stripes mean to you. Think about the words that we’re supposed to live by…The Constitution, The Declaration of Independence, our Bill of Rights. Think about the food you’re eating. Who harvested the corn? Who picked the strawberries? Who raised the beef for this feast? How did the apples end up in this pie? Who built this beautiful house with this beautiful deck that your family is enjoying today? Think about it. This isn’t about politics anymore. It’s about humanity. It’s about all of us. We, the people. Happy Birthday America!!

City Shuts Down Popular Dance Class Due to ‘Moral Standards’ [The city of Provo, Utah, late last month discontinued the Dirtylicious Dance Fitness program held at its recreation center, following a review that determined the class did not align with the city’s standards, morals and values, according to the program’s owners.]

Really? Shut the fuck, Iran. They are listening to you telegraph everything. Be prudent.

Iran’s Top General Issues Threat

Duh: People with higher cognitive ability have weaker moral foundations, new study finds

Well, lower IQ, too, creates fascists, too: Trump admin. withholds $94 million for Mass. K-12 schools

Jews: At 80, Oracle’s founder – one of the world’s wealthiest executives and an eccentric figurehead of the 2000s – has returned to the spotlight thanks to Donald Trump. He is a contender to buy TikTok and has begun capitalizing on the enormous contracts for artificial intelligence data centers.

Jews: Wartime innovation boosts Israeli defense tech growth, drawing global interest

[screen capture from video of Lital Leshem, co-founder of Protego Ventures, 2025.]

[Brig. Gen. (Ret.) Yair Kulas]

[IDF soldiers operate in the Gaza Strip, in a handout cleared for publication on July 4, 2025. ]

Jews: Google’s data centers using more power than ever before as AI surge continues

Orwellian: I just graduated from Yale. Now, I’m back with my family in low-income housing, and I’m not sure where I belong.

[The author, middle, has become close with his younger neighbors. After graduating from Yale, I moved back in with my parents in a low-income building in Brooklyn. When I was growing up, I became close with all my neighbors who struggled with poverty. Returning home after living on an Ivy League campus has been confusing.]

Scientists reconstruct 540 million years of sea level change in detail

Scientists reconstruct 540 million years of sea level change in detail

Oregon Transportation Department says 10% of state road workers will be laid off by August

Duh: Former FDA chief: Ultraprocessed foods are ‘addictive’ like drugs

These stories are enough to wear a strong man and woman DOWN.

…they are not just seeing us as useless, but they treat us like feedlot fodder, filling us up with roadkill, poisonous chemicals and data, and general junk until the slaughter house — slow death

The good old days, with this good old boy, fourth-generation cattleman, feedlot practitioner: Almost 20 years ago, my article, and then a documentary a decade old, and we are fucked.

  • Cattle: Around 1.5 billion cattle are raised worldwide.
  • Pigs: There are roughly 1 billion pigs on the planet.
  • Chickens: The number of chickens is significantly higher, estimated at around 26 billion.

Cowboy Critic

By Paul K. Haeder

“Hello, my name is Howard Lyman and I am a recovering meat eater … dairy consumer … factory farmer.” Something for an Oprah show? Dr. Phil’s forte?

Cattle at Visalia Livestock Market are being auctioned off at four- to five-times the usual rate on February 5, 2014 in Visalia, California.


The Oprah reference is an accurate one for Lyman, the former operator of a super-industrialized livestock lot and dairy farm, now author (Mad Cowboy and No More Bull, both co-written with Glen Merzer) and advocate of vegetarianism, animal rights and stewardship of the land through sustainable agriculture. It was during an April 1996 Oprah show that the fourth-generation Montana cattleman — now living in Ellensburg — “let the cattle out of the bag” by confronting a spokesman for the National Cattleman’s Beef Association about the practice of feeding vegetarian ruminants their own kind. He suggests that the practice is a bizarre cannibalistic ritual set upon the industrialized meat-raising system to satisfy greed and the bottom line.

On the show, Lyman asserted that he and thousands of other cattle operators had been feeding their herds dead cows — downer cows put down because of cancer, viral diseases, genetic anomalies and mysterious neurological ailments — mixed with parts from butchered cows, including pulverized cow manure.

The proverbial cow pie hit the fan when it was acknowledged that this practice had rendered America’s beef supply susceptible to Mad Cow disease (BSE, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy), which had already taken its toll in the United Kingdom just a year earlier. Lyman, known as the “Mad Cowboy” or the “Vegan Rancher,” continues to speak out about abuses in industrial dairy and beef operations like the one he ran outside Great Falls, Mont.


Lyman saw the light after more than 20 years of using road-kill and slaughtered cows as ground-up feed. After hundreds of gallons of antibiotics. After daily chemical fogs to douse flies — the No. 2 bane of feedlot operators “after bovine diseases in their various forms.” In the feedlot business, that pesky fly takes a toll on huge operations because of all those cattle unnaturally crammed into one small space.

“With every cow in a pen producing 25 pounds of manure in a day,” Lyman says, “the flies can get so thick that they actually threaten a cow’s ability to breathe.”

“Better farming through chemistry” was Lyman’s mantra before his transformation, so he attacked the insect problem on an industrial scale.

“Early in the morning I would fill up a fly fogger with insecticide and spray great clouds of it over the whole operation,” Lyman writes in his book. “The insecticide would of course fall into the feed and the water of the cattle, as well as on the trees and the grass and the crops.”

To Oprah — and Court

Lyman’s story hinges on his early years working with his grandfather and father.

“At 8 or 9 I began milking cows and branding calves,” he writes. “At 10 I learned how to castrate calves. At harvest time, I’d work long past dark cutting the grain. I’d rake hay and stack it, and I learned to drive a tractor and a team of horses. I worked every day of the year but two: July 4th and Christmas.”

Then he went off to college, leaving the 540-acre spread to his father and cancer-stricken older brother.

At the College of Agriculture at Montana State, Lyman was thrown into classes taught by chemists and academicians “without an hour’s worth of real farming experience among them.” It was the dawn of pesticides, herbicides, hormones and antibiotics.

In the early 1960s, his father was barely making ends meet; Lyman was going to take over the family business only if he could employ Big Ag’s bag of tricks. “My father had no choice,” he says. “He handed over the farm. But as he shook my hand on the deal, he had a few short words for me. He told me I was wrong.”

Eventually, Lyman saw the big picture when he scooped up that fourth-generation Lyman farm dirt and found it to be a lifeless, oily smelling, grey media for all the chemicals.

Jump ahead 20 years and picture Lyman in the Chicago studio of Harpo Productions. The audience is aghast at the commentary this ex-rancher is giving. Oprah and her brethren are freaked out by the prospect of that mad cow prion in the food supply, ready to attack humans — as it was doing in England.

Two months later Oprah, Harpo Productions and Lyman were hit with a “food disparagement” suit by Paul Engler, a Texas feedlot operator, and other Texas cattlemen as plaintiffs.

In 1998, Oprah, her production company, lawyers and Howard Lyman ended up in Amarillo, the first individuals sued under the Texas Food Disparagement Act. Her show went on, from Amarillo.

On Feb. 26, 1998, the jury found in favor of Lyman and Winfrey. No disparagement of beef. No damages levied.

Hold the Beef

Lazy R Ranch cattleman Maurice Robinette gets a kick out of Lyman’s claim to fame: “You have to hand it to him … he’s really found an interesting niche — vegetarian cattle rancher.” Robinette’s a third-generation Cheney cattleman with several university degrees who sees a future in responsible and sustainable cattle ranching. He runs 80 pairs of cattle and another 100 yearlings out of his Cheney operation. He also is Eastern Washington’s coordinator for the Washington Sustainable Food and Farming Network.

Robinette — who heads up Spokane’s Sustainable Agriculture Leadership Team, which helps local, small farmers — is battling against industrial farming, genetically modified crops, the huge bio-tech and ag giants, and the practice of concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs).

The reformed Lyman tips his hat to men like Lazy R’s owner for raising beef the old-fashioned way — grass-fed, with no hormones or antibiotics applied, in a manner that protects the soil and abates the impacts on the entire ecosystem.

MarkHarris_Vox_LandingPage

Oh, the readers who think ice core science and wetlands biology and wave energy research and coral reef bleaching reports and heating atmosphere studies and shifting jet streams analyses and weakening of ocean currents articles, and deforestation and desertification essays, all of that research is motivated by some fucking George Soros and World Economic Forum goddamned conspiracy to stop growth and to turn us into compliant Soylent Green eaters.

So, that Exxon conspiracy?

A comprehensive, peer-reviewed academic study of ExxonMobil’s internal deliberations, scientific research and public rhetoric over the decades has confirmed empirically that the oil giant misled the public about what it knew about climate change and the risks posed by fossil fuel emissions, the authors said on Tuesday.

The paper confirms the findings of a 2015 investigative series by InsideClimate News that was based largely on the company’s internal records, and also of independent work published by the Los Angeles Times. That reporting ignited investigations by state attorneys general that are still in litigation.

“On the question of whether ExxonMobil misled non-scientific audiences about climate science, our analysis supports the conclusion that it did,” Geoffrey Supran and Naomi Oreskes of Harvard University wrote in the study, published today in the scientific journal Environmental Research Letters.

Across the board, the paper found “a systematic discrepancy between what ExxonMobil’s scientists and executives discussed about climate change privately and in academic circles and what it presented to the general public,” the authors said.

“ExxonMobil contributed quietly to the science and loudly to raising doubts about it,” they wrote.

The authors explicitly rejected Exxon’s main defense, which was to claim that journalists were “cherry picking” the company’s record and that its positions had always been in step with the state of the science. The company often said that anyone who read the full documentary record would see matters Exxon’s way.

The Harvard researchers said their task was to accept Exxon’s challenge to review the full record. Among the documents they examined were dozens cited in ICN’s work, as well as more than 50 scientific papers Exxon frequently mentioned in its own defense and its issue advertising.

Supran and Oreskes called their conclusions “an expansive, quantitative, independent corroboration of the findings of investigative journalists.”

In an interview, Supran said the evidence was unambiguous.

The authors reviewed 187 public and internal Exxon documents over the past four decades, including many that were brought to light by ICN’s reporting.

In one finding, they judged that 83 percent of peer-reviewed papers written by company scientists and 80 percent of the company’s internal communications acknowledged that climate change is real and caused by humans. But among Exxon’s advertisements on the editorial pages of The New York Times, a proxy for communications aimed at a broad public audience, only 12 percent acknowledged climate change as real and human-caused, while 81 percent expressed doubt.

BRITAIN: 'No new oil': A young person holds up sign listing host of oil and fossil fuel giants as they join protest in central London last month
Visitors to the Louvre art gallery in Paris were left stunned by the incident which happened moments before closing time at the world-famous art gallery in May
Riot police arrived at the scene quickly and dispersed the protesters, with some officers picking up the activists and dragging them away in June. At least 10 protesters were arrested following the demonstration
In June, dozens of climate protesters covered Spain's parliament building in Madrid with red paint in a demonstration against the government's failure to act quickly against climate change
Activists of the climate protest group 'Last Generation' block an exit of the highway in Berlin, Germany, in July before being removed by police officers
Portuguese police officers move to push the activists off the premises of the UN Ocean Conference in Lisbon on June 30
Some protesters have dressed up as rats and 'dirty scrubbers' for the protest as they aim jabs at the nearly 340-year-old firm this morning
AMERICA: The Keystone pipeline has drawn activists from all across the country, seen protesting in 2013

Yep, these people, who actually are well informed but organized in a ruckus society kind of way, they are the protestors.

Do you see protestors doing the same thing — gluing hands to cars, defiling stupid fucking paintings in the Smithsonian, burning tires on roads, throwing rotting tomatoes at senators’ and congress people’s townhouses and cars?

Yeah, all those climate change derangement fucks, man, all over Substack, etc. It’s amazing how they believe oil and coal and natural gas are king. We are of course hooked, but we also are being led down the death march of millionaires and billionaires and your local blue collar pukes and your statewide white collar Eichmanns determining the dirty air, water, soil, food, products and media in your small community, or large one.

You like this fucking headline, then, climate change deniers?

Evaluation of Atrazine and Glyphosate Literature Reviews Analyzing and Comparing the Science and Politcs in the United States, Europe and Argentina

Climate Chage Deniers, Rejoice:

You can’t have your Wheaties without eating Atrazine, man:

Glyphosate exposures in food and in the environment need much more scrutiny, according to a group of 20 doctors and scientists who put their concerns in writing last month:

“Should the public be assured of the safety of glyphosate? We think not…” the group wrote. “We urge the public not to be duped by chemical company apologists who attempt to obscure independent scientific findings that threaten a highly profitable product.”

In 2015, the World Health Organization confirmed that glyphosate, the main ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup weedkiller, is a probable human carcinogen, based on strong evidence linking it to non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

Since then, 140,000 glyphosate-exposed cancer victims have filed lawsuits against Bayer. The company is expected to pay $16 billion in jury awards and settlements by the time all the cases have been adjudicated.

Cancer is just one risk of glyphosate contamination.

Recent research from the UC Berkeley School of Public Health shows that childhood exposure to glyphosate is linked to liver inflammation and metabolic disorder in early adulthood, which could lead to liver cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease later in life.

Glyphosate was found in 99 percent of pregnant Midwestern women tested by the Indiana University School of Medicine between 2013 and 2016. Higher maternal glyphosate levels in the first trimester were associated with lower birth weights and higher NICU (neonatal intensive care unit) admissions.

Sure, those climate change deniers just love their fucking masters below:

The toxicity, management, politics, economics and governance of pesticides are interrelated, with compounding detrimental impacts that require thorough analysis. According to Pesticide Action Network,

” Aſter World War II, chemical companies needed a market for wartime inventions and pesticides were put to work in the fields. In the decades that followed, trade and development policy — coupled with savvy marketing by chemical companies — effectively developed an entire model of industrial agriculture.”

Old news, that SARS-CoV2 biolab work, and then the stuff of Doctor Mengele, Terrorists of Biological Science in Tel Aviv, and Japanese Unit 731. (Read that old news of gain of function, genetic splicing, CRISPR report, which is the white man’s Oppen-Monster-Heimer DOMINATION.

And so we come back to THIS:

Don’t just repudiate….rescind the Doctrine of Christian Discovery!

Steven T. Newcomb (Shawnee, Lenape) is a scholar, educator, author, journalist, film producer, public speaker and workshop leader/facilitator. He is internationally recognized for his more than four decades of research and writing on the origins of federal Indian law and international law dating back to the early days of Christendom, most notably focused on the religious doctrine now known in history as the Doctrine of Christian Discovery. Steve and Tiokasin discuss the Vatican’s formal repudiation of the Doctrine in March 2023. Steve is the author of “Pagans in the Promised Land: Decoding the Doctrine of Christian Discovery” (Fulcrum Publishing, 2008 and Chicago Review Press) and a Producer of the 2015 documentary film, “The Doctrine of Discovery: Unmasking the Domination Code” directed and produced by Sheldon Wolfchild (Dakota). http://originalfreenations.com/

.

An Original Nations’ Examination of “Freedom,” “Human” and “Human Rights”

By : Steven Newcomb August 14, 2023

In our view, the claim of a right of domination, and the behaviors that follow from that claim, are the main cause of the global problems we all face. This is why opposition to that claim is a potentially unifying theme for homo sapiens.

This essay reveals why, from an Original Nations’ Perspective, the term “human,” in the Greco-Roman-Judeo-Christian sense, as traced to the Vatican papal bulls of the fifteenth century, means “living under domination,” which in turn changes our understanding of the term “freedom.” We will explain why the international framework of human rights is not designed to liberate Peoples from the claim of a right of domination.

Peoples who were labeled and categorized as “barbarous,” “infidel,” “heathen,” “pagan,” and “savage” by the ancient political powers of Western Christendom, are still being labeled and categorized in that manner by the present-day successors of those political powers. It’s a tradition held together by means of, for example, active Supreme Court precedents that have those labels and categories embedded in them.[3] Those labels and categories are rooted in the past and ongoing in the present.

Domination has been defined as “living under the arbitrary will of another, [or] having to conform one’s actions to a will external to one’s own.”[4] This essay will explain that the claim of a right of domination is a hidden dimension of the terms “barbarous” and “human.” We have identified this covert dimension by studying fifteenth century Vatican papal bulls that labeled our non-christian Peoples “barbarous” and called for the oppression (“deprimantur,” in Latin) of our Original Nations and Peoples.

An Original Nations’ Examination of “Freedom,” “Human” and “Human Rights” By : Steven Newcomb August 14, 2023

Listen now, climate change deniers.

+—+

scientists in a laboratory

‘One of the gravest threats we face’

Let’s start first with the “biodefense” rationale—which as bioweapons expert Sam Husseini explains, is just a euphemism for biowarfare:

“Governments that participate in such biological weapon research generally distinguish between ‘biowarfare’ and ‘biodefense,’ as if to paint such ‘defense’ programs as necessary. But this is rhetorical sleight-of-hand; the two concepts are largely indistinguishable. ‘Biodefense’ implies tacit biowarfare, breeding more dangerous pathogens for the alleged purpose of finding a way to fight them. While this work appears to have succeeded in creating deadly and infectious agents, including deadlier flu strains, such ‘defense’ research is impotent in its ability to defend us from this pandemic.”

Since the technology was developed, genetic engineering has played a central role in U.S. and international biowarfare.

Michael J. Ainscough, in a 2002 paper titled: “Next Generation Bioweapons: The Technology of Genetic Engineering Applied to Biowarfare and Bioterrorism,” wrote that the “history of warfare and the history of disease are unquestionably interwoven.”

Ainscough, a medical doctor, Air Force flight surgeon and one-time diplomat of the American Preventive Medicine in Aerospace Medicine, argued that “organisms with altered characteristics are the ‘next generation’ of biological weapons:

“In this century, it is widely predicted that advances in biology and biotechnology will revolutionize society and life as we know it. At the same time, [this technology], which can be used to create biological weapons, will be one of the gravest threats we will face.”

Genetic engineering technology has evolved since Ainscough wrote on the subject two decades ago. Today, scientists warn that the newer gene-editing and synthetic biology technologies pose even greater risks in the realm of biowarfare.

Toby Ord, senior research fellow at Oxford University’s Future of Humanity Institute, told GM Watch that the risks posed by these newer gene editing technologies are among “the highest existential threats we face.” As GM Watch reports:

“Ord’s concerns about gene editing being used to genetically modify a pathogen are shared by the U.S. intelligence community. In fact, in 2016, the technique was added to the list of ‘weapons of mass destruction and proliferation’ by the top U.S. intelligence official for this very reason. The late Stephen Hawking also thought the genetic engineering of viruses had created the risk of a lethal ‘own goal.’ And by ‘lethal’ he meant not just as deadly as the current pandemic, but something that could make the planet completely uninhabitable for humans.”

‘Research that panics people, without actually learning much—if anything’

The other rationale for gain-of-function research, “biomedical” research, sounds less nefarious. But it ranks low on both the plausibility and ethics scales.

In 2017, after learning that the Trump administration had lifted the “pause” on gain-of-function research that had been instituted under Obama (in 2014), Marc Lipstich, an epidemiologist who directs the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics at the Harvard School of Public Health, spoke out.

Lipsitch told the New York Times that recent gain-of-function experiments “have given us some modest scientific knowledge and done almost nothing to improve our preparedness for pandemics, and yet risked creating an accidental pandemic.”

In a recent interview with Organic Consumers Association, Jonathan Latham, who has a PhD in virology and directs the Bioscience Resource Project, said this about the risks vs. the benefits of gain-of-function research:

“You’ve shown that you can make a pandemic-type virus in the lab. But on a global scale, it is potentially disastrous but a scientifically trivial demonstration. These people are doing research that panics people, without actually learning much—if anything.”

So why create a “pandemic-type virus” in a lab, if the risks far outweigh the benefits?

The public-facing rationale, Latham suggests, is this: By creating highly transmissible, potentially deadly (on a massive scale) viruses in a lab, researchers can study how to respond should such a virus ever evolve in nature and infect humans.

But Latham rejects that argument. Why? Because it involves a whole lot of guessing about how a virus might evolve in nature:

“People can say they’ve made a pandemic virus in a particular set of cells, that’s their scientific finding, and that’s what they publish. But the natural world doesn’t say that it has to evolve in those kinds of cells. It could come from a different species via another backbone, with a different spike. Are they going to do these experiments forever? Creating pandemic viruses, simply to generate research funds?”

And that, suggests Latham—the prospect of landing huge government grants—is the primary motivation for most gain-of-function research. Even though that research could potentially wipe out a huge percentage of the human race, in return for little if any benefit.

‘Hundreds of accidents, safety violations and near-misses’

The risks scientists assign to gain-of-function research are grounded in facts, not speculation. Labs, including in the U.S. and China, have poor track records when it comes to ensuring that potentially lethal, genetically engineered viruses won’t escape.

“Inside America’s Secretive Biolabs,” an investigative report published in May 2015 by USA Today, revealed reports of hundreds of accidents, safety violations and near-misses at biosafety labs—and that was just in the U.S. (In April of this year, the Washington Post reported on memos relating to safety lapses at the Wuhan Virology Lab, in Wuhan, China, the lab where COVID-19 was most likely created).

A follow-up USA Today news report on biolab safety issues, published in June 2016, prophetically likened the combination of risky gain-of-function research and lax safety measures to a “screenplay for a disaster movie.”

In October 2019, the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health published the Global Health Security Index, which warned of the “increased potential threat of accidental or deliberate release of a deadly engineered pathogen, which could cause even greater harm than a naturally occurring Pandemic.”

The report also concluded, prophetically, that most countries, including the U.S., are woefully ill-prepared to address pandemics.

Scientists sounded alarms, years before COVID-19

In July, 2014, 327 international scientists signed a consensus statement calling for a moratorium on gain-of-function research, or what the group called “Potential Pandemic Pathogens.”

Citing biolab safety lapses, the Cambridge Working Group wrote:

“For any experiment, the expected net benefits should outweigh the risks. Experiments involving the creation of potential pandemic pathogens should be curtailed until there has been a quantitative, objective and credible assessment of the risks, potential benefits, and opportunities for risk mitigation, as well as comparison against safer experimental approaches.”

The Obama Administration took note, and in October 2014, shut down all U.S. funding for new gain-of-function research pending a thorough risks-benefits analysis.

But some gain-of-function research projects already in progress were allowed to continue. And then in December 2017, under the Trump Administration, the National Institutes of Health lifted the moratorium, paving the way for U.S. taxpayers to once again fund research that some scientists believe poses an existential threat to life on earth.

‘Exquisitely designed to infect humans’

Despite widespread efforts to convince a concerned public that COVID-19 occurred naturally, jumping from a bat, perhaps through a pangolin, eventually to humans, that narrative doesn’t withstand the scrutiny of scientists who have been studying, and opposing, gain-of-function research for decades.

Even the Chinese government has now admitted that COVID-19 did not arise from the Seafood Market in Wuhan, China.

In May, a team of Australian scientists studied COVID-19 and concluded that the virus targets humans more potently than any of the tested animal species. The study’s lead author, Nikolai Petrovsky, told one media outlet that COVID-19 is “exquisitely adapted to infect humans.”

GM Watch recently reported that Rutgers University Professor Richard Ebright, a biosecurity expert who has been speaking out on biosafety issues for nearly 20 years, suspects an accidental lab release led to the COVId-19 pandemic.

Stuart Newman, professor of cell biology and anatomy at New York Medical College in Valhalla, New York and co-author of Biotech Juggernaut, referred GM Watch to papers going back 20 years on engineering coronaviruses. Newman told GM Watch:

“Even most biologists are not aware that virologists have been experimentally recombining and genetically modifying coronaviruses for more than a decade to study their mechanisms of pathogenicity.”

Given the evidence, given the warnings, given that the risks far outweigh the benefits and given the urgency, all governments should immediately shut down gain-of-function experiments.

Not just Jews Working on Military testing:

Sewage in Palestine?

The JDAM bombs include precision-guided 1,000 and 2,000-pound “bunker-busters.”

“It turns earth to liquid,” said Marc Garlasco, a former Pentagon defense official and a war crimes investigator for the U.N. “It pancakes entire buildings.”

Washington has donated 100 BLU-109 bombs to Israel that are meant to penetrate hardened structures before exploding, the report said.

The 2,000-pound BLU-109 bomb was specifically designed to kill civilians by penetrating hardened targets below the ground where families may be taking cover. A delayed-action fuse detonates the 550 pounds of high explosive tritonal, ensuring complete destruction of the location.

Tritonal

Tritonal is made up mostly of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene, known as TNT. It accounts for a large portion of the explosives-related contamination in Gaza. TNT presents various health and environmental concerns. Potential symptoms of exposure may include irritation of the skin and mucous membrane, liver damage, jaundice, cyanosis, peripheral neuropathy, muscle pain, kidney damage, cataract, dermatitis, leukocytosis, anemia and cardiac irregularities. (NIOSH 2016)

The most likely routes of exposure to TNT are from drinking contaminated water or skin contact with contaminated surface water or soil. Potential exposure to TNT also occurs through inhalation, or by eating crops grown in contaminated soil (ATSDR 1995) The European Chemicals Agency, ECHA says this substance may cause cancer, is suspected of damaging fertility or the unborn child, and is suspected of causing genetic defects.

General Dynamics has made fantastic profits peddling this deathly substance. The company employs more than 100,000 people worldwide and generated $42.3 Billion in revenue in 2023, more than the annual gross national income of most nations on earth. (115 nations.)

A kind of false circular reasoning holds that manufacturing weapons for use in Israel by Boeing, General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin and others is good for the American economy. Actually, the weapons are provided to Israel at U.S taxpayer expense while the product of the munitions adds nothing of positive value, like building hospitals or rebuilding crumbling infrastructure in the U.S. or Gaza.

The explosive compound RDX helped make America a superpower. Now, it’s poisoning the world’s water and soil. ProPublica

The explosive charge in many conventional bombs often consists of RDX. Gazans may be exposed if they breathe RDX fumes from explosions. People may also be exposed to RDX by drinking contaminated water or by touching contaminated soil. RDX is associated with Liver Injury, Edema, Anemia, Hemosiderosis and Spinal Diseases.

Toxic Smoke Anatomy. Particulates. Asphyxiants/Toxicants.

The Holston Army Ammunition Plant in Kingsport, Tennessee. This ammunition plant is the only remaining manufacturer of RDX in the United States, and for years dumped as much as 68 pounds of RDX directly into the Holston River each day.

A combine harvests corn grown on the former Cornhusker Army Ammunition Plant near Grand Island, Nebraska. Chemicals from decades of operations at the plant contaminated the groundwater beneath it, spreading all the way to the taps of residents of Grand Island.

Dennis Mudloff, now 64, worked on the grounds of the former Cornhusker Ammunition Plant for twenty years, drinking from well water near the site of the old explosives building. Mudloff’s doctors say his numerous neurological and other health problems are likely caused by his exposure to the explosive RDX in drinking water.

This from 2017. We are cooked, climate change deniers.

The Bomb That Went Off Twice

Although Syria has long complained of Israel’s use of Napalm, we don’t have evidence of its use in Gaza, although we know the Israelis are using White Phosphorus, another frightening incendiary weapon. It is extremely toxic to humans.

Gazans are exposed to white phosphorus by breathing in air that contains the chemical or by swallowing water or food contaminated with it. White Phosphorus is a chemical made from phosphate rocks. Manufacturers use white phosphorus to make products like bombs, computer chips and rat poison. It’s a brave new world.

White phosphorus bombs can cause injuries that are more serious and harder to treat than injuries from conventional bombs. White phosphorus causes very painful burns. People have reported seeing smoke coming from their injury as the white phosphorus continues to burn in their skin. It’s evil. Because white phosphorus dissolves easily in fat, it is absorbed through the skin and into the body, where it can cause damage to the kidneys. liver, and heart.

As Nada Majdalani explained, Gaza is entering its rainy season. Rainwater washout of bomb sites contaminates nearby waterways, their sediment, and the aquatic life people consume.

Pesticides

Israel has a history of spraying heavy doses of pesticides along the buffer zones with Gaza to deprive potential ‘terror elements’ of cover, but farmers in Gaza say their crops and livelihoods are damaged.

We saw Israel’s lax enforcement regarding PFAS and brominated fire retardants, so it is not surprising that the nation is swimming in pesticides. Environmental and Health agencies designed to protect public health are instead subservient to the corporate national security state.

The use of pesticides and insecticides in Israeli agriculture is among the highest in the world, another factoid for the BDS folks. The most contaminated fruits and vegetables are: apples, leafy vegetables, wheat, barley, strawberries and grapes.

It’s not surprising that Israel also has among the highest rates of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in the world. Israeli children are widely exposed to organophosphate pesticides.

There aren’t any grownups in the Israeli room. We are witnessing the maturing of a rabid fascist state. Israel is leading the way to a new world order! Addressing the rise of the far-right in America, Noam Chomsky explains,

“The ground is well prepared for the rise of neofascism to fill the void left by unremitting class war and capitulation of the mainstream political institutions that might have combatted the plague.”

For tens of thousands of years, our Original Nation ancestors lived truly free here on this Turtle Island continent (“North America” ) with our own unique languages, values, and Sacred Responsibilities to care for our homelands. Our Ancestors used their free existence to evolve for us, their future generations, systems of Spiritual Understanding, Knowledge, and Wisdom. They were able to maintain a deep relationship with and an abiding appreciation for all Life, especially the Waters of Life, without which nothing can live. Our songs and ceremonies, our stories, our agricultural practices are all directed toward the accentuation and furtherance of Life.

However, centuries of unrestrained domination, which Christian Europeans call a “human” existence, have culminated in the waters of Mother Earth and our own bloodstreams being poisoned by carcinogenic and neurologically destructive toxic chemicals. The effect of this toxicity on the mind also needs to be taken into account. All this has happened as a result of a “human” economics of unbridled militarism, corporate gluttony, and greed.

The ecosystems of the planet have been horrifically impacted, while poverty and abuse have proliferated everywhere. The suffering caused by poverty and degradation is contrasted with a massive accumulation of wealth and power by the masters of the domination system. The wealthy and the powerful create the appearance of “green,” “healthy,” and “democratic” solutions, which are measures that merely reinforce the existing patterns of militarism, colonization, authoritarianism, and suppression.

During the past five centuries, the vast majority of the original old growth forests on this Turtle Island continent (“North America” ), which our ancestors nurtured, have been cut down, along with much of the rainforests to the South. Massive numbers of species have been wiped out. Genocide—the intention to destroy, in whole or in part, an entire nation or people—was committed against the Buffalo Nation, and against our Original Nations throughout this Western Hemisphere.

Here’s the list: Domination Vocabulary.

  • invade
  • capture
  • vanquish
  • conquer
  • conquest
  • subdue
  • subjugate
  • subordinate
  • subject
  • subjected
  • subjection
  • reduce
  • reduction
  • rule
  • sway
  • diminish
  • colonize
  • colonizing
  • colonization
  • civilization
  • civilizing (which means dominating)
  • mission
  • domestic
  • dependency
  • dependant
  • crown
  • empire
  • imperial
  • dominion
  • dominium
  • domanus
  • dominus
  • deprimantur (which means to push down, press down, weigh down, hold down)
  • dominorum
  • sovereignty
  • Government

The word “governments” appears in the papal bull of 1493 [The Bull Inter Caetera (Alexander VI.), May 4, 1493]. There’s a sentence that says, “We trust in Him”—capital H on him so we know who that’s talking about or we think we do but there’s no name, it’s just a Him so maybe we don’t—“from whom empires and dominations”—dominationes in Latin—“and all good things proceed”.

Ajaja, Madu, Mister Smart who I met in El Paso, as Adjunct professor at UT-El Paso, keeps his lion heart full of African blood

Yep, this is an interview coming up on KYAQ FM, 91.7, but streams at kyaq.org, Wednesdays, PST 6 pm.

https://paulokirk.substack.com/p/nigeria-on-my-mind

May be an image of ‎text that says '‎meDisband it doesn't interesto of African Africanpeople people" martMad art Madu Ma ConvenerOf erof Of Unite. ن AFRICAN UNION‎'‎

Madu was coming into our hallway, knocking on our adjunct abused faculty doors looking for books to buy for his used book gig, his biz, in Houston. English Department.

I’d request reviewer copies of history, sociology, lit, fiction, journalism, communications, writing, to get money in my pocket reselling them. Madu was there putting down hard Imperial Cash to buy the books, but alas, he and I talked talked talked, but again, I’m a fucking talker and communist, so, we had a lot to talk about.

Part-time faculty organizing was my gig, as well as working with Central American refugees and then having gone to Vietnam, that thing I organized, 20th Anniversary of Fall of Saigon. See below:

Here, ONN:

The deal is that Nigeria has the largest population in Africa, and it has been fucking sold down the river on so many accounts.

US out of Africa, for sure, Madu fights for, and more:

All Africans Should Condemn the Call for an ECOWAS-led Military Invasion of Niger

The Africa Team of the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) and the U.S. Out of Africa Network (USOAN) condemn the threats of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to lead a military intervention into Niger. We believe this would be an act of subservience to U.S./EU/NATO interests. As Western imperialism seems to be losing its neo-colonialist grip on Africa, it is trying to expand its use of puppets and proxies to undermine resistance.

The military coup in Niger on July 26 deposed President Mohamed Bazoum and installed General Abdourahamane Tchiani as the country’s new leader. In power since 2021, Bazoum and his party were reliable servants of French and U.S. imperialism. This may help explain why the United States and its NATO allies seemed overly concerned about this particular coup.

The West’s hypocritical claims of standing for “democracy” in Niger fall flat when compared to its response to the military coup in Sudan as well as the political repression faced by the popular movement in that country. The United States (and its Western partners) has had a hand in orchestrating countless coups in Africa, such as those against democratically elected leaders Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Patrice Lumumba of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), and Thomas Sankara of Burkina Faso, to name a few.

The objective of the U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination is colonial control of Niger and the Sahel region. France and other EU countries rely on Niger for 15-30 percent of their uranium imports, critical to Europe’s nuclear energy sector. Meanwhile, the majority of Niger’s population doesn’t even have access to electricity. Furthermore, Niger is the last state in West Africa where a large number of Western soldiers are stationed under the U.S. “War on Terror” regime. The $100 million U.S. base in Agadez, Niger, is where the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) operates its drones, and is just one such AFRICOM facility in that country.

As Ezra Otieno, member of the Revolutionary Socialist League in Kenya and BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network Steering Committee, says:

“For all of these factors, France, the EU, and the U.S. are keen to maintain control over Niger. They aim to push the new authorities to restore their puppet Bazoum or to reach an arrangement with General Tchiani to maintain his predecessor’s pro-Western stance. If these preparations fail within the next few days, Western imperialists want to intervene militarily with the support of their foot soldiers in the Nigeria-dominated ECOWAS bloc.”

It is clear that the United States and France have decided to draw a line here before France is expelled and U.S. interests are threatened. Without NATO, the United States or France, ECOWAS would not be able to intervene. It is telling that, of all the coups in Africa, ECOWAS is ready to intervene militarily in Niger. This is because their masters in the West demand it. Apparently, ECOWAS member states have chosen servitude to imperialism over the people’s will.

In Haiti, the imperialists use Kenya and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) as cover for their intervention. To do the same for the coup in Niger, they have the President of Nigeria, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and ECOWAS. Now they are facing a united front composed of Burkina Faso, and Mali, whose leadership have all expressed support for Niger’s sovereignty. While the CNRD of Guinea, Comité national du rassemblement et du développement (National Committee of Reconciliation and Development) is not part of the front, their Spokesperson, Aminata Diallo said that if “…requested by ECOWAS to send troops that we would refuse…”

ECOWAS is working as a comprador structure, along with the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA), which has levied financial sanctions against Niger and the coup leaders. The situation in Niger demands an African response, not the imperialist-led and anti-people militarized one suggested by members of ECOWAS.

The Black Alliance for Peace October 2023 International Month of Action against western militarization of the African continent, demanding that the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) is shut down, will be more important than ever before. The annual Month of Action is an opportunity for political education and action that links the domestic war being waged against African peoples in the United States with the war that the United States wages on the continent of Africa and globally.

From Haiti to Niger and beyond, we must build an understanding of Pan-Africanism and illuminate the interdependent geo-political and economic interests among African/Black people in Haiti, the Americas, the African continent, and among those domestically colonized in the enclaves of the imperialist countries.

No to imperialism in Black face. Yes to Pan-African self-determination. U.S. Out of Africa!

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Background: The Nigerian Civil War

Long live the Republic of Biafra! Remember the Nigerian civil war en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerian_Civil_War ? Remember Count Carl Gustaf von Rosen who helped create the Biafran Air Force en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Gustaf_von_Rosen. Uploaded 30 May 2015 by Sigfrid Lundberg. https://www.flickr.com/photos/sigfridlundberg/18243455236

Remember Count Carl Gustaf von Rosen who helped create the Biafran Air Force

A child suffering the effects of severe hunger and malnutrition as a result of the blockade. Pictures of the famine caused by Nigerian blockade garnered sympathy for the Biafrans worldwide. It was regarded in the Western press as the genocide of 2 million people, half of them children

Malnourished child during Biafran War


A child suffering the effects of severe hunger and malnutrition as a result of the blockade. Pictures of the famine caused by Nigerian blockade garnered sympathy for the Biafrans worldwide. It was regarded in the Western press as the genocide of 2 million people, half of them children

Because of Nigeria’s newfound independence in 1960, there were a few years of harmony between the states. However, by the mid 1960s, Post-Colonial Nigeria is riddled with corruption and the exploitation of the environment and people that live there. This corruption and exploitation can be traced back to the Nigerian civil war (1967-70) and its relationship with oil. According to Margery Perham’s article “Reflections on the Nigerian Civil War,” the war started with years of political unrest within Nigeria, culminating in assasinations of Northern Nigerian officials (231-232).

At the same time, the production of oil in Nigeria was just getting started. Chibuike Uche, fellow at the African Studies Centre in Leiden, accredits the mass discovery of oil in Eastern Nigeria in 1958 for weakening the region’s benefit to the Nigerian government (116). Oil became a large player for all parties involved in the Civil War.

Perham states that the rift between the north and east solidified when it became known that the assassins were all from the Ibo (or Igbo) tribe, primarily in the east. The Ibo were not tried, and many escaped unscathed. The new military head of state (Ironsi) was also Ibo and “abruptly put forward a plan for a much more unified Nigeria” (233). The North did not react well to these changes, which led to massacres of Southerners and the assassination of General Ironsi (233).

The massacres and assassinations in southern Nigeria led to the creation of Biafra. According to Perham, “Biafra was born in massacre and bred in starvation” (234). The leader who took over after Ironsi was assassinated, Odumegwu Ojukwu, decided to secede 3 of the 12 Nigerian States (234). Uche asserts that oil became a player when the Nigerian government realized that an independent Biafra (a land rich with oil, as it was in east of Nigeria) would cut down the government’s oil revenue substantially. This led to a civil war between the Nigerian Federation and Biafra (121).

The Nigerian Civil War ended in 1970, with the surrender of Biafra. According to Dr. Kairn Klieman, associate professor at the University of Houston, “it is estimated that three million people died, mostly due to starvation and disease” (163). After the war ended, many oil producing areas claimed that they weren’t being given a fair share of the oil revenues. This particularly impacted micro-minorities.

“Virtually every inch of the region has been touched by the industry directly through its operations or indirectly through neglect” – Michael Watts, “Sweet and Sour” 43

The Nigerian Oil Boom

According to Kairn Klieman, the oil boom for Nigeria is usually said to be in the 1970s, however she argues that the boom actually occurred between 1964 and 1965 (157). During that short time, the oil output in Nigeria skyrocketed. Oil in Nigeria had exploded and everyone wanted a piece of it as “Crude output increased from 84,000 barrels per day in January 1964 to 301,352 barrels per day in August 1965” (Klieman 157). From that time on, Nigeria became known as one of the biggest oil producers in the world. The oil business also proved lucrative, Klieman points out, as there was a large “increase in export revenues from £20 million to £60 million” (157). While it would make sense that the Nigerian population would benefit greatly from the oil production happening around them, that is not the case.

The Ogoni and Oil Devestation
Sosialistisk Ungdom (SU) via Flickr

Niger Delta Oil Exploitation

The Ogoni people are a particularly distinct indigenous group in the Niger Delta. Looking at the devastation in Ogoniland is a good example of how oil companies have exploited minority indigenous groups. According to Barisere (Rachel) Konne, “despite the revenue generated from areas like Ogoniland, which reached an estimated total of $30 billion, relatively little has trickled down to the indigenous communities” (182). As inhabitants of an area rich with oil, the Ogoni people should be receiving compensation. Because of the corrupt political system, however, little money is reaching them. Rob Nixon, Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, adds to the evidence of financial corruption by pointing out that “of the 50 percent constitutionally due to them, the Ogoni have been awarded a mere 1.5 percent, and in effect not even that” (106).

In addition to the lack of financial compensation to the Ogoni people, their land has been completely destroyed. Konne writes that the Ogoni people’s land has been subject to “oil spills, gas flares, and significant environmental pollution that has destroyed farms, streams, and fishing— key resources on which the indigenous people depend” (182). The havoc that has been wreaked on Ogoniland is extensive and is extremely harmful to the inhabitants. Prompted by the havoc that oil wreaked to the Nigerian environment, as well as the injustice done to Nigerian inhabitants, Ken Saro Wiwa created the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP).

“Most Nigerians are poorer today than they were in the late colonial period” – Nwafejoku Uwadibie (qtd. in Watts 44)

Works Cited

  • Klieman, Kairn A. “U.S. Oil Companies, the Nigerian Civil War, and the Origins of Opacity in the Nigerian Oil Industry.” Journal of American History 99.1 (2012): 155-65. Web. Academic Search Premier. 31 Mar. 2016.
  • Konne, Barisere Rachel “Inadequate Monitoring and Enforcement in the Nigerian Oil Industry: The Case of Shell and Ogoniland,” Cornell International Law Journal 47.1 (2014): 181-204. Web. Academic Search Premier. 31 Mar. 2016.
  • Nixon, Rob. Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2011. Print.
  • Perham, Margery. “Reflections on the Nigerian Civil War.” International Affairs 46 (1970): 231-46. ProQuest. Web. 31 Mar. 2016.
  • Uche, Chibuike. “Oil, British Interests and the Nigerian Civil War.” The Journal of African History 49.1 (2008): 111-135. Academic Search Premier. Web. 26 March 2016.
  • Watts, Michael. “Sweet and Sour.” Ed Kashi and Michael Watts, eds. Curse of Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta. Brooklyn: PowerHouse Books, 2008: 36-47. Pri

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Haeder here, below, but listen to Madu above in the Podcast format, man.

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Bat Caves and Vietnam – More than Just a War Log

Paul Haeder: Still, over the years it’s difficult to really engage Americans around the lies of this country, the murdering in that country, the entire rotten episodes of US invading and deploying bioweapons, napalm and all manner of bombs and machine-gun fire into that country.

I want you to guard against those who demand that you die just to prove something. It is not that I advise you to respect your life more than anything else, but not to die uselessly for the need of others… for you still have many years ahead of you. Many years of joy and happiness to experience. Who else but you can experience your life? ― Bao Ninh, author of Sorrow of War

Bat Caves and Vietnam

We toast with Huda and Su Tu Trang (White Lion) beer. I am with Brits, a Canadian and two Vietnamese biologists. We are in Central Vietnam near the Laos border, in a park now called Pu Mat.

There are nine of us in this camp. We are on a transect to record biological wonders and caches for this part of Vietnam. I am also here on a bat transect biodiversity blitz.

vietnam 451

I ended up getting hired on (no pay, but that’s part and parcel of the earth sciences and ecology world – MS and PhD students paying their own way to research, living on the cheap) because of skill sets.

Not that I am special, but I have the scuba diving, survival school, journalist, and motorcycle mechanical attributes that make for a good team member. Photographer, and a big knapsack of proverbial ecology and environmental activism in my background. Rough travel pedigree. And more.

At age 36, I am the oldest one in the camp. Twenty-three is the youngest. I am digging up much to help build our latrine.

Oh, and my amateur reptile and herpetology fun as a youth and into adulthood puts me to the top of the list of blokes who will look at, measure, and catalogue all the cool snakes we run into.

At the latrine I get to study one great specimen, with my jury-rigged bamboo snake hook.

The mythological Malayan pit viper was referred to as a thee-step snake. The veterans from the Vietnam War talked about supposedly dying only three steps after being bitten. Not true, but our base camp is nowhere within days of a hospital or medical care, other than our own first responder training.

The bites from this snake can be extremely unpleasant (severe pain, swelling & tissue necrosis), the chance of death is minimal if treated. We are in no man’s land, so to speak. Everything is jungle primed, and we use iodine to disinfect our drinking water. We all got various gut ailments out here, including Giardia.

A panga or machete cut while working here is a dangerous thing. We use panga machetes.

We hike through village after village – just a few homes (on stilts, bamboo, thatched and others dirt floors, all open to mother nature’s breezes, and many barely illuminated at night with homemade soda pop can lanterns). We encounter some of the amazing people who are considered members of the country’s ethnic tribes. Many of the local ethnic groups residing in mountain areas are known collectively in the West as Montagnard or Degar. The largest ethnic groups are Kinh (85.7%), Tay (1.9%), Tai Ethnic (1.8%), Mường (1.5%), Khmer Krom (1.5%), Hmong (1.2%), Nùng (1.1%), Hoa (1%_, with all others comprising the remaining 4.3%.

For me, although the bats, reptiles, birds, trees, mammals are amazing, it’s the people I gravitate to, as always. I’ve spent time in the Copper Canyon with Tarahumara, and at times in other parts of Mexico, Guatemala and Nicaragua with other indigenous ethnic groups. My own early teen days included friends with the White River Apache band and Navajo brothers and sisters.

vietnam 452

This is the Frontier – Society for Environmental Exploration, with marching orders from the Vietnamese government, Bird Life International, Audubon Society, and World Wildlife Federation. This group is out of England – London – and it is a non-profit that helps science projects by finding support teams to help real science get done.

As I said, I’m 36, the same age my professional US Army soldier father was in 1969 when he was mucking about under orders with his crypto high-level clearance and signal corps encampments.

Bronze star, purple hearts, and then a total of 31 years in the US military – the exact opposite of everything I stood for. In Vietnam, he was shot in the shoulder about two inches from his heart.

The slug sliced through the Huey (UH-1) aluminum shrouding and the helicopter pilot lost half his skull from another slug.

I have an old beat-up Chinese carbine at home in Oregon that is the same weapon that pierced the Huey and my old man’s chest cavity. I have his two purple hearts and the actual slug that was removed from his body in Japan after he was air-lifted from where he had been shot.

They sent him back after recuperation. He was 100 percent medically disabled (meaning he got more on his retirement package) because of the wound, arthritis, and lack of strength in the arm and shoulder.

(The irony is some 25 years later I was a social worker for a non-profit in Portland working with mostly disabled veterans in a homeless center for vets and their families. Most of my clients were disabled in boot camp or in training. Those in the Middle East wars were hit with PTSD and again, training exercise injuries. My job was to help them write and attend disability claims, many times rejected not once but twice before a third board hearing got these homeless vets something.)

My old man’s helicopter went down, and then, the reinforcements with Air Calvary came in and set up a new LZ and got the surviving army guys out of harm’s way. He was the CW4 who carried the communication codes and a thermite grenade to use in case of enemy capture.

Fast forward 25 years.

I am here in Vietnam working with science teams, and it’s 1994 and Clinton just normalized relations with Vietnam.

I am the lone American, or Yank in the parlance of the Brits. We are men and women, and many of my compatriots are constantly asking me questions right and left about America’s war with Vietnam, the pulse of this society in 1994, approaching the 20th anniversary of the Fall of Saigon. Scientists like their beer and rice wine whiskey, so there are a lot of loud and passionate talks after a hard day’s hiking.

vietname 453

Even inside these bat caves, while waiting for the rush hour of returning bats, we drink and argue. I find the Brits more defensive of the war effort by US and its allies than most of my colleagues back home. I am a Marxist and anti-imperialist, so I am like some new species to these Brits.

I love many things about my Irish and Scots roots, and spent time in the UK, but in the end, most Brits are arrogant, patriarchy, patronizing, and, well, rather shallow when it comes to the things I have learned in deserts, on reefs, and in myriad of Latin American countries.

They can’t fathom a Che Guevara supporter like myself having a few weapons back home. I won’t go on about my spin on the Anglo Saxon here, but I have written about that side of the pond a lot.

I’m a deep socialist and ecosocialist, so I easily notice how the Brits come at things much differently than a socialist and wobbly as I consider myself. Even though they are cool, existing somewhat on the edge, living in mud and doing biodiversity studies, they have colonized minds from a half a millennia being an empire. They are naturally arrogant, patronizing, and they believe the hubris of their nation as a land of good. They are also quick to quip about how the Vietnamese we work with being backward or too disconnected to the Western concept of ecology.

In fact, repeatedly they talk about how the word ecology is not in the language of the Vietnamese. Which is of course not true on so many levels, but when it comes to the natural and jungle world, yes, the Vietnamese go into areas to trap, kill and butcher things to eat. This is not a Marks and Spencer and Safeway land.

Vietnamese starved under so many invasions, so many wars, so much austerity and broken economic systems. Anything to stay alive. Including eating deep fried bats. Which I have tasted in Hanoi.

The Brits have leveled their island and Ireland’s as well, I remind them. There are no original natural ecosystems in England. The fox hunt is big. The fact that England imports everything including their own vaunted tea and coffee, well, we are sometimes hiking through villages that have had jungle cleared so tea can be grown. I run into coffee plantations.

So, for every high tea and coffee klatch in the UK, there are real world consequences thousands of miles away. Wood for homes, cement for foundations, and on and on, the British Empire does not stand on its own.

vietnam 722

It’s not that the Brits are daft, because I am with well-traveled blokes, and many are working on post master’s science degrees. However, I have always been in a world of night and day around academics, albeit some ecologists who are living it rough and tumble with me in the middle of jungle.

Our base camp is all self-made; there are no tents (I am the only one who has a small alpine tent); we dig our latrine and make our lean-to’s; we cut word for our fires where we boil water to soften up our rice while we throw in tins of tuna and bamboo shoots gathered in the forest.

I have known US and multinational military bivouacs and encampments since I was in the Army and around it many years as a teacher and with friends in “the service.” We have no phone service, no gas-flame cookers, no nothing. This is roughing it. Even hippies I once hung out with in Guatemala and Mexico had a shit load more amenities in their Jesus and God encampments than we do.

We have two laptops for which to type up reports and a small generator that gives us that capability and runs two 60-watt light bulbs, though we mostly use Chinese made kerosene hurricane lamps.

I know how my dad lived in Vietnam. They had Army-Navy football games flown in on reels of tape. Castle Rock burgers. Blue bunny ice cream. Stereos and cameras and all sorts of generators and a load of mess halls and they even hired local workers to do their laundry, cooking, and latrine cleaning.

Only deep long-range sappers and special ops went into the fold of jungle and mountains, and even they had communication equipment for home base logistics.

Briefings

Hanoi is amazing, and we are here for orientation, language classes, getting a look at the general lay of the land, and working on finding supplies and learning the tools and parameters we are going to use for the biological survey.

We get briefed by WWF Audubon, Bird Life International and a few other international outfits. Some agencies want us to look for pygmy rhino scat and others want to see if we find any Indochinese tiger scat. However, our basic job is to get into primary rainforest and conduct basic transect stuff, and get as much of the BioBlitz done in a few months.

There is time to explore the city, and I end up hanging out with Viet, who is actually, a PhD in biology who lives in Hanoi and speaks some English. He is amazing and kind, helping me get shots – I have my Nikons with me and plenty of 35mm film. He is amazed at how intrusive I am, but notices my aplomb and sleuth manner of getting photos. The things I want shot – in marketplaces, close-ups of hands, odd angles, and the like – he assist me in finding.

I am not doing a travel log postcard thing, and eventually, Viet gets my artistic and photojournalistic bent quickly.

I have a motorcycle I rent, and I drive it with Viet on the back as he directs me to Buddhist monasteries, farms, food production plants, rice fields, and any number of places he thinks I would get some decent shots of.

We drink strong green tea, get up early, get on a bicycle, drive through Hanoi and find a place to eat croissants, drink strong coffee. Sometimes we eat pho for breakfast. Viet knows I am a vegetarian, and he knows I will not refuse home-cooked food from family or anyone. He also knows I am not afraid to sip anyone’s rice wine or whisky — sometimes home-brewed concoctions with added delicacies like green sniper heads, centipedes and any number of botanical fauna put in each family’s batch.

A year later, when I returned to El Paso as an English teacher and journalist, I’ve hosted photo shows of my trips to Vietnam, through the jungle and into the cities wherein I spent time. I have helped to host big conferences to bring the Vietnam War into perspective in relationship to the people and the country the US and dozens of other countries invaded.

vietnam 454

Sure, I helped spearhead Vietnam War themes film series, landing historians on campuses to talk about the war from a geopolitical point of view. I’ve helped spearhead playwrights, Vietnamese artists (including friend and former student Thomas Vu), other artists and my photographic art in group shows. I have organized nurses who were in Vietnam and others, like soldiers and officers, to give symposia.

Still, over the years it’s difficult to engage Americans around the lies of this country, the murdering in that country, the entire rotten episodes of US invading and deploying bioweapons, napalm and all manner of bombs and machine-gun fire into that country.

Even my own adventures in the jungle and primary rainforest and elfin forest, well, most Americans then (in the 1990’s) and now, 2020, have little bandwidth for this sort of stuff. You know, this isn’t Steve Irwin kinda gimmicks, but I certainly have been in some pretty interesting and challenging ecologies.

Just going from base-camp high into primary forest to resupply with rice, food, beer, cigarettes and the like, it was 26 river crossings, on Russian motorcycles, Minsk’s. Breakdowns, mud slews, raging waters and leeches sticking to unmentionable parts of the bodies and on our eyes.

Cobras and vipers. Fifteen-mile hikes into the forest to conduct surveys. Gibbons tossing their feces at us from high above the canopy. Butterflies by the dozens of species. Birds and civets.

I remember one time looking at the heavens and the setting sky light, leaning on a tree. I thought it was a breadfruit tree or something of the sort. Darker and darker the air got and I jerked, coughing a couple of times on hot green tea.

Then what I thought were fruit pods exploded above me with unfurled wings.
More than 20 flying foxes, AKA fruit bats, took off in the dusk after my pulmonary spasms.

Shit like that happened daily. In Vietnam.

Trekking into small villages looking for limestone mountain tops. Asking families if they had any idea about where caves were. Hikes where the people offer food and rice whiskey, and we exchange cigarettes and tins of tuna.

We end up on some bat cave hike looped from all the sit downs and toasts the villagers demanded. With their home brew. Their moonshine.

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They want to know what this scraggly band of white men and women with a few Vietnamese scientists from Hanoi are doing way out in the middle of nowhere near the Laos border.

“We are here to study your country’s wildlife. We are here to help your government understand what you already know – this is an important part of Vietnam to know and to preserve.”

Variations on a theme. Dr. Viet is there and he helps with the translation. He helps to explain what ecology is not only as a scientific field but as a concept.

I am in a place – spiritual, emotional, intellectual – my old man could only dream of.

He is already dead and buried. Age 58, from sudden coronary death.

I know what he would say to me upon my return from Vietnam. I know how he would react to all the activism I undertake for years all tied to the history of his war with the country, our war with Vietnam, and my own travel to the place where our own people wanted to bomb back to the Stone Age.

Holy moly, Paul, you are doing things I could only dream of. I know you didn’t agree with what I was doing in the army, but, no matter what, the sins of the father at least are being washed away by his son. Up there with the bats. There in the rice paddies. On China Beach. It is like a dream I could never have.”

paul haeder

Paul Haeder

Upcoming: Part Two – “Deep Country, Bats, the Riot of Life in Viet Nam’s Cities”

and this rap duo, Bob Vylan did what with their machetes, mics, music . . . Oh yeah, called a Jewish Soldier a Murderer along the lines of Gestapo or SS ….

Starting with, Winston Churchill informed the 1937 Peel Report on the British mandate in Palestine that First Nations in North America and Australia had been colonised by “a stronger race, a higher-grade race”.

According to former British PM Harold Macmillan, Churchill floated “Keep England White” as a campaign slogan for the 1955 election. Perhaps most damning is the recollection of Churchill’s friend, the politician Violet Bonham Carter: when asked his opinion on China in 1954, he reportedly replied, “I hate people with slit eyes and pigtails”.

Churchill in Paris in 1947. AP

For Ali ( Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes – Tariq Ali/Verso) it is not Churchill’s racist views but the way they informed his policies that demands more attention. In popular memory, Churchill’s leadership in the second world war attracts the most praise. Ali joins a growing body of literature calling for a reassessment of Churchill’s legacy in light of the 1943 Bengal Famine where more than 3 million Indians (Ali claims 5 million) starved to death under British administration.

Churchill’s view that “Indians breed like rabbits” was surely relevant to his decision not to deliver food supplies to Bengal during this famine as a matter of urgency.

On March 30, 2018, tens of thousands of Palestinians approached the fences and walls that cut off the Gaza Strip from Israel and the outside world. In their hands they held Palestinian flags and signs bearing the names of the towns that their families had to flee during the Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of Palestine by Zionist militias that paved the way for the creation of the Israeli nation-state. Seventy percent of Gazans are refugees. Fifteen protesters were killed by the Israeli Military that day, and hundreds more suffered injuries from ammunition and tear gas inhalation, but that didn’t stop Gazans from repeating the protest after the Friday prayers every week for months in what came to be called the Great March of Return.

Oh, the good old days: Just a bunch of fucking Puritanical and Psychotic British Indian killers.

This is so criminal, no, death death to the IDF/IOF; death death death to the Marines, Army, Navy, Air Force; death death death to CIA and NSA. Fucking death to them all, since they are ALL murderers.

Whoops:

U.S. revokes visas for British band that chanted, ‘Death, death to the IDF’

British rap duo Bob Vylan’s lead singer, Bobby Vylan, made the remarks at the Glastonbury music festival, an annual event well known for political activism.

Truth never a defense for dissidents:

The singer of punk band Bob Vylan said the “only good pig is a dead pig” in an anti-police rant, new footage has revealed.

A video shared by the Campaign Against Anti-Semitism (CAA) appears to show the group’s frontman, whose real name is Pascal Robinson-Foster, saying to the crowd: “How do you lot feel about the police? The only good pig is a dead pig.”

It is understood that the incident occurred at the Rebellion Festival in Blackpool in August 2023.

Robinson-Foster sparked controversy last week after leading the crowd at Glastonbury in chants of “death, death to the IDF” [Israel Defence Forces].

Iraq: 20 years later, and Tony Blair is still a war criminal

The Scottish Greens external affairs spokesperson, Ross Greer MSP said:

“We may be 20 years on from one of the most immoral and disastrous foreign policy decisions ever taken by a UK Prime Minister, but the devastating effects are still being felt in Iraq and across the region.

“Hundreds of thousands of innocent people have died as a result of that illegal and outrageous invasion by British and American forces.

“Whether it was the ‘shock and awe’ bombing of Baghdad or the vicious siege of Falluja, those responsible showed a total disregard for the rights and the lives of Iraqis, and still continue to.”It is a grotesque injustice that the architects of this brutal invasion have yet to be held accountable.

“George Bush may have retired to his ranch and gone into hiding, but Blair is busy amassing a fortune swanning around TV studios and picking up paycheques from some of the world’s worst human rights abusers when he should instead be sitting in the Hague on trial for war crimes.

“What message does it send about the UK’s respect for human rights or international law when a Prime Minister can lie on that scale, inflict such awful atrocities and still end up with a knighthood?

“The International Criminal Court have rightly issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin, but why are we here two decades on without either Bush or Blair being similarly held to account for their heinous crimes.

“I hope that the survivors of this awful war live to see the justice that they and so many others deserve.”

[A convoy carrying Qasem Soleimani was targeted by a US drone near Baghdad’s airport]

EPA Aftermath of US drone strike that killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani in Baghdad (3 January 2020)

The US attack that killed top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani violated international law, a UN expert says.

Soleimani died along with nine other people in a drone strike near Baghdad airport in Iraq in January.

A report by the UN’s special rapporteur on extrajudicial killings, Agnes Callamard, says the US had not provided sufficient evidence of an imminent threat to life to justify the attack.

The US state department accused her of “giving a pass to terrorists”.

Last week, Iran issued arrest warrants for US President Donald Trump and 35 others on charges of murder and terrorism in connection with the killing.

DEATH TO AMERICA.

“Major General Soleimani was in charge of Iran military strategy, and actions, in Syria and Iraq. But absent an actual imminent threat to life, the course of action taken by the US was unlawful.”

The killing of Gen Soleimani pushed the US and Iran to the brink of war.

The drone strike therefore constituted an “arbitrary killing” for which the US is responsible under international human rights law, according to the report.

UTA subsequently dropped Bob Vylan, and the U.S. State Department revoked their visas, putting their upcoming North American tour in jeopardy. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau wrote on X on Monday that “foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country.”

The BBC also shared a statement saying the network regretted livestreaming Bob Vylan’s Glastonbury set, further stating that “the antisemitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable and have no place on our airwaves.”

Of the backlash, Bob Vylan wrote on Tuesday that the duo “are not the story” and argued that they were “being targeted for speaking up,” further encouraging their fans to continue to speak out on the matter.

“We are a distraction from the story. And whatever sanctions we receive will be a distraction,” Bob Vylan said. “The government doesn’t want us to ask why they remain silent in the face of this atrocity. To ask why they aren’t doing more to stop the killing. To feed the starving. The more time they talk about Bob Vylan, the less time they spend answering for their criminal inaction.”

Trump threatens to strike Iranian cultural sites and impose ‘very big’ sanctions on Iraq as tensions rise

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — President Trump served a bellicose brew of threats, rebukes and contempt on Sunday as he escalated tensions in the Middle East and awaited Iran’s possible retaliation for the U.S. killing of one of its top generals.

Trump projected a wartime posture as he wrapped up his holiday vacation here, reiterating that if Iran took military action against the United States he may order attacks on Iranian cultural sites, which could constitute a war crime under international law. He vowed on Twitter to “quickly & fully strike back, & perhaps in a disproportionate manner.”

Asked about the prospects for retaliation from Iran for the US strike that killed Iran’s top military commander, Trump said “If it happens it happens.”

“If they do anything there will be major retaliation,” Trump said.

Trump’s comments Sunday night come after two senior US officials described widespread opposition within the administration to targeting cultural sites in Iran should the United States launch retaliatory strikes against Tehran, despite Trump saying a day before that such sites are among dozens the US has identified as potential targets.

“Nothing rallies people like the deliberate destruction of beloved cultural sites. Whether ISIS’s destruction of religious monuments or the burning of the Leuven Library in WWI, history shows targeting locations giving civilization meaning is not only immoral but self-defeating,” one of the officials told CNN.

Death to the IDF? Death to the fucking Occupiers, death to ALL of them.

No Justice, No Peace: A List of Israeli War Crimes Since Oct. 7 Nadine Sayegh

While attempting to document the countless war crimes that the Israeli regime has committed against the people of Palestine — particularly the people of Gaza — since Oct. 7, the many faults in the international legal system have been exposed.

In addition to the breaches of international law that have taken place during the accelerated genocide of the Palestinian people, the overt availability of evidence has been met with inaction — or outright hostility — from world leaders.

While many find comfort in the concept of protection through “Universal Jurisdiction” regarding crimes against humanity, of what practical use are such concepts to the people subject to actual, physical, and visceral violence? This is especially so when a case is clear-cut, with the ongoing ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, as well as with the 75-year-long history of this erasure. What reprieve from grief is provided through these imaginary and increasingly redundant frameworks?

Still, we must attempt to keep track.

Thus far, throughout more than 80 days of mass-scale Israeli assaults throughout Gaza, the West Bank, and ‘48 territories (the heartland) — during and after the brief “humanitarian pause,” — the Occupation Forces, with certainty, have committed tens of thousands of war crimes and have broken numerous international laws.

While the following compilation is non-exhaustive, the evidence for the listed crimes is overwhelming. As the scope of this work is limited, this should be a call for immediate, further investigation and subsequent prosecution through capable parties. This article will cover issues relating to the breaching of “treaty law” — such as violations of articles within the Geneva Conventions (1949) — along with other infringements on separate conventions to which the Israeli state is either a signatory or has ratified, such as the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Genocide Convention, etc.

The following overview also considers violations of law under universal jurisdiction, namely customary international humanitarian law (IHL), understood to be a certain code of conduct during conflict accepted as a specific branch of international law, as well as “grave violations” of the Geneva Conventions and crimes against humanity or war crimes (under mandatory universal jurisdiction, of which no individual, nor state, is exempt). The below only refers to violations that are glaring and have a foundational basis to be brought forth in front of respective courts, i.e., the Israeli regime has either signed, ratified, or enforced treaties related to these crimes or is otherwise bound to compliance.

Genocide

The definition of genocide — as well as the crimes that are associated with genocide — in the 1948 UN Genocide Convention is: “In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:

(a) Killing members of the group; (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

Article III continues:

“The following acts shall be punishable: (a) Genocide; (b) Conspiracy to commit genocide; (c) Direct and public incitement to commit genocide; (d) Attempt to commit genocide; (e) Complicity in genocide.

These are clear-cut definitions backed by ample evidence, such as testimony, video testimony, international observer testimony, and forensic evidence. Given the vast amounts of evidence available on the Israeli regime’s extermination of the Palestinian people, doubting Israeli actions and intentions toward the civilian population in Gaza increasingly indicates complicity rather than ignorance. Some argue that while genocidal intent is certainly present due to the continuous hateful rhetoric from several high-ranking Israeli state officials on public platforms — wherein the intent to ‘flatten’ Gaza has been made — this alone cannot legally prove genocide. However, conspiracy or incitement to commit genocide is a crime in itself, and the Genocide Conventions include the obligation of signatories also to prevent genocide. The events unfolding on an hourly basis are testimony to both the lack of prevention and, indeed, the act of genocide itself.

From the recorded videos of Israeli Occupation Forces in Gaza bombing civilian infrastructure in an attempt to kill as many Palestinians as possible while crippling the societal function, from the soldiers shamelessly inviting Israeli journalists to participate in violence through remotely-triggered explosions, or through the widespread publicity of looting Palestinian property and torturing Palestinian prisoners on social media, this is perhaps the first livestreamed genocide. The Israeli regime and its allies claim to be attempting to minimize civilian casualties. Still, footage from all parties — settlers, Occupation Forces, and Palestinians — exposes this to be a farce, a talking point intended to justify war crimes to the international community.

This Israeli propaganda is not only considered to be incitement (an indictable crime of its own) but also punishable under Article III(c) of the Genocide Convention above. With over 21,000 civilian casualties — the vast majority of which are children, women, the disabled, and the elderly — and tens of thousands maimed, it cannot be denied that the prohibited acts listed under Article II(a) and (d) are present. The deliberate targeting of medical facilities and forcibly displaced individuals seeking shelter at these facilities — as well as the deliberate bombardment of schools, holy spaces, refugee camps, and residential towers — cannot be overlooked. Under this convention, Israel has violated both of these articles. These violations — added to the clear genocidal intent proclaimed by Israeli leadership, as well as the targeting of a particular racial group — constitute the punishable crime of genocide. Experts — such as the former Chief Prosecutor for the ICC — are now emphasizing that the 17-year-long siege of Gaza can also be considered genocide under Article II(c).

Under this umbrella, a number of different offenses can be cited; adding to the conspiracy to commit genocide, there is evidence of Israeli propaganda, considered to be incitement, by political and media figures. The premise of the disproportionate attacks has been based on lies — including the beheading of babies — all of which have been debunked by not only international human rights groups but even by Israeli sources, such as Ha’aretz.

Intentional Harm of Protected Persons

As mentioned, the death toll in Gaza — without considering persons still under the rubble — has surpassed 21,000 people. Civilians are considered Protected Persons under all four Geneva Conventions and through customary law. Specifically, the following persons are protected by international humanitarian law: “wounded, sick and shipwrecked members of the armed forces who have ceased to take part in the hostilities; prisoners of war; civilian persons who because of a conflict or occupation are in the power of a Party whose nationality they do not possess; medical and religious personnel; Parlementaires; civil defense personnel; personnel assigned to the protection of cultural property.” These categories are all specified amongst GC I, Art. 13, GC II, Art. 13, GC III, Art. 4, and GC IV, Art. 4.

The onslaught on Gaza has resulted in one of the highest civilian casualties in modern warfare; despite laughable claims by U.S. Foreign Secretary Blinken that Israel is doing its best to minimize civilian casualties. While Israel attempts to frame this as a war against Hamas, they have not listed any clear military objectives. If the targeting of resistance leadership is the military aim, they must ensure to exhaust all possible options before an assault, let alone indiscriminate bombardment. Indeed, the customary principles of proportionality and distinction (Rules 1 and 14 of Customary IHL) between military and non-military fighters apply in this context, particularly Israeli claims of targeting resistance fighters. As we have seen in real-time, the use of disproportionate force on civilians and civilian infrastructure is rampant. Failure to comply with these principles by disproportionally attacking nonmilitary targets can amount to war crimes.

While journalists are not listed as protected persons, they are technically considered civilians, the modern world has come to understand it as a protected profession. Israel has killed at least 106 Palestinian journalists and employed collective punishment in the targeting and killing of their families. It has also killed at least 300 health workers136 UN employees, and 40 civil defense members.

Not only have they breached the Geneva Conventions but a series of customary laws, for example, ‘Rule 11. Indiscriminate Attacks‘ and ‘Rule 16. Target Verification.’

Furthermore, medical, religious, and civil defense personnel have not been simply part of these casualties but were actively targeted. Evidence of testimony from staff at different medical facilities highlights massacres on both human life and medical facilities, including al-Shifa Medical Complex, the Indonesian Hospital, and al-Ahli Hospital. Human Rights Watch and other organizations have called for this to be investigated as a war crime.

Violation of Treaties Regarding Vulnerable Individuals

In addition to the disregard for the GC on the protection of civilians, by all means necessary, the war on Gaza continues to be what many cite as a war on children.

More than 8,663 children have been killed in Gaza. Among these, at least 33 were babies under the age of 1, and at least 444 were babies under three years old.

Moreover, there are instances, the most notable and well-documented being at the al-Shifa Hospital, where NICU babies were forcibly abandoned and left to the stage of decomposition due to the ground assault on the hospital complex.

This assault on children, either killing or fundamentally traumatizing them, is also a violation of treaty law; the CRC Ratified by Israel in 1991 is binding within Israel’s jurisdiction, including in their military operations in Gaza. Among other violations, Israel has infringed upon children’s right to life, as recognized by Art. 6 of CRC, the right to the highest standard of health (Art. 24), the right to family (Art. 16), and the right to education (Art. 39). Furthermore, as an occupying power, Israel violates Article 50 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which pertains to preserving institutions dedicated to children through the targeting of schools.

Additionally, persons with disabilities have special protections during conflict both in customary international law and in treaty law. It is also important to note that, through generations of assaults on the Gaza strip, there are a substantial number of amputees, hence disabled persons, as a result of Israel’s wanton violence. This is in violation of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (which Israel ratified in 2012) through failing to take any measure to safeguard and address the particular needs of disabled individuals. It further violates a UN Security Council Resolution 2475 that reinforces the rights of persons with disabilities and the obligations of UN member states to address the disproportionate impact of conflict on persons with disabilities.

Disproportionate Response

There are four fundamental principles of international humanitarian law based on the Hague and Geneva Conventions: “the principle of humanity, the principle of distinction between civilians and combatants, and between civilian objects and military objectives; the principle of proportionality, the principle of military necessity (from which flows the prohibition of superfluous injury and unnecessary suffering (ICRC Casebook, 2023).” The evidence presented in this essay — as well as the availability of countless other forms of testimony and other sources of evidence — highlights that, in the accelerated ethnic cleansing of Gaza, Israeli forces have violated all these principles.

While continuously citing the right to self-defense, the impudent regime bypasses all other rules of armed conflict. There is overwhelming evidence of the targeting of homes, eradicating entire families from the local population registry, and the targeting and occupying of hospitals, schools, universities, mosques, and churches. A notable example is the assault on the al-Shifa Medical Complex, where treatment of the most severe injuries was underway. This included individuals in critical condition and babies on life support. The assault on the resources and people of this hospital was under the guise of locating a “Hamas Command Center.” This shows absolutely no regard for Rule 16, Target Verification, whereby the party must do everything in its power to confirm the civilian space as a military target. Israeli forces destroyed the hospital, allowing the babies to decompose, and yet they still have no evidence to support this claim. A series of CNN reports have emphasized this, wherein a military commander offered evidence of a “schedule with the names of the guards protecting the tunnel entrance.” This was, in fact, a document with the days of the week written in Arabic.

Forced Displacement and Land Annexation

In addition to the testimony, video images, and satellite images that have shown the destruction of whole areas in Gaza City, such as Tal al-Hawa, Sabra, and al-Shatti, amongst others, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have been forcibly displaced. Many of these individuals have already been displaced by the Occupation at various points in their lifetimes. Journalist Ahmad Hijazi — amongst numerous other reporters — has witnessed and been subjected to this mass displacement of over one million people, with directives from the Israeli authorities to evacuate the north to the south and from the center to the south, displacing multigenerational refugees once again. The Occupation Forces use these movements as an opportunity to place Palestinians in areas that are more convenient for bombing. Israeli officials, generals, and legislators have not shied away from using the term “second Nakba” as a menacing promise to the people of Gaza.

Adel Maged, a Senior Judge in Egypt specializing in International Law, writes: “Forcible Transfer, under international law, the deportation or forcible transfer of a civilian is a serious international crime. According to international jurisprudence, deportation is the relocation of a population outside the borders of a state, while forcible transfer is the displacement of a population from the area they reside to another area or areas within the geographical boundaries of the state in question using coercive means, be they military actions or preventing access to food and other necessities. The international legal prohibition of these criminal acts aims to uphold the right of all peoples and groups to live in their homes and communities and enjoy their property in safety.”

In the case of Gazan civilians, herding the population through ‘evacuation orders’ while targeting the entire Gaza strip — under a premise of concern for civilian life — is a strategy to continue attacks on communities. The exemption to displacement is “legitimate displacement” under security arguments and is allowed under Rule 129 A of customary IHL. Citizens of the Gaza strip have received multiple evacuation orders and are being displaced to different areas. However, the fact that the bombardment is indiscriminate and that ground forces are invading “safe” areas in the southern part of the Strip indicates that there are no safe or livable places to be displaced to. Thus, this cannot be considered legitimate, particularly considering that a 17-year-long siege that has been severely bolstered since Oct. 7.

In the West Bank (for example, Masafer Yatta), land-grab and forced expulsion — to continue to expand illegal settlements — is a violation of GC IV. Art. 49, and the 1907 Hague Regulations. It is also considered a war crime under the Rome Statute, and while Israel has not ratified it, Palestine has, meaning legal recourse is still possible. Adding to this, the annexation of territory is a separate violation of Art. 2(4) of the UN Charter, and is considered a prohibited act of aggression in the Rome Statute. Israel violates its position as an occupying power whereby the Occupier is obligated to protect civilians rather than indiscriminately targeting them. Israel is also forbidden from moving its citizens into occupied territory, according to Rule 130 of IHL.

Forced expulsion is present in all parts of Palestinian territories; one notable case among thousands is that of the Imam of Al-Aqsa Mosque. His Jerusalem home is scheduled to be demolished by the IOF, which constitutes a violation against a religious figure, as well as forced displacement. It is also in breach of Rule 130.

Perfidy

“Perfidy” is a term used to generally mean a deceitful manner of gaining the trust of the “adversary” and subsequently betraying that trust. Additional Protocol 1 (Article 37/1) defines it as “acts inviting the confidence of an adversary to lead him to believe that he is entitled to, or obliged to accord, protection under the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict, with intent to betray that confidence.”

The ICRC Database notes that “the Hague Regulations prohibit ‘to kill or wound treacherously.’” Additionally, Protocol I prohibits the killing, injuring, or capturing “an adversary by resort to perfidy.” The Statute of the International Criminal Court uses the language of the Hague Regulations. While Israel did not ratify the Additional Protocols, it is a long-standing rule of customary international law outlined in some of the oldest international laws, including the Lieber Code (1863) and the Brussels Declaration (1874). It is also standard practice for national military manuals to prohibit perfidy. The Hague Convention is the basis of other bodies of international (humanitarian law). Perfidy has historically been considered a violation of customary law.

“We have seen perfidy in action in Gaza when the Israeli occupation forces ordered the civilian population in the northern part of the Strip to flee southward to avoid the bombing, only to subject the people who had just been displaced to the south to further bombardment,” declares Maged in his Al-Ahram article.

The Occupation forces are conducting the same act of perfidy in areas such as Khan Younis. The instance in which Israel guaranteed a so-called “safe corridor” for Gazans moving North to South and vice versa and proceeded to shoot civilians can be considered another act of perfidy.

Maged continues, “Moreover, the shelling has targeted the places international relief agencies had set up to shelter the displaced civilians, displacing them again to other parts of Gaza. Additionally, the mental health trauma suffered by the civilian population, especially women and children, caused by the knowledge that nowhere in Gaza is safe, is unimaginable, and a method of forcible deportation and transfer.”

Desecration and Mutilation of Corpses

Under Customary Law Rule 113, all parties in conflict “must take all possible measures to prevent the dead from being [allowed to spoil].” The “mutilation of dead bodies” is explicitly prohibited. Additionally, under Geneva Convention (I) for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the Field, Article 15, signatories have to take “all possible measures” to “search for the dead and prevent [them from] being despoiled.”

There is absolute and clear evidence to support the fact that, in Gaza, in the vicinity of the al-Shifa hospital, Israeli Occupation Forces dug up a mass grave, and corpses were removed. The general manager for the Palestinian Ministry of Health, Munir al-Barsh, reported on Nov. 18 that Israeli forces removed over 100 bodies from this grave in al-Shifa Hospital Complex. Euro-Med monitor has also documented Israeli military confiscation of dead bodies in the Indonesian Hospital, as well as from Salah al-Din Road. Some corpses were released to the International Committee of the Red Cross, but dozens of bodies are still being held.

Further to this, Euro-Med Monitor also raised concerns about organ theft, citing medical professionals who examined a number of corpses following their release. These professionals found the bodies missing corneas and cochleae, in addition to hearts, livers, and kidneys.

As a form of mutilation, Rule 113 specifically forbids harvesting organs from the dead during times of conflict. The Lieber Institute highlights: “One of the core components of the prohibition of organ harvesting is the regulation of medical procedures by the Additional Protocols (AP) to the Geneva Conventions. These expressly prohibit the removal of tissues or organs for transplantation in international armed conflicts (IACs) (AP I, art. 11) and any medical procedure that is not justified by the protected person’s state of health in noninternational armed conflicts (NIACs) (AP II, art. 5(2)(e)), which inevitably leads to prohibiting organ harvesting. Importantly, save for the exception of Article 11(3) of AP I, organ harvesting cannot be consented to during an armed conflict. Only persons who are excluded from the scope of Article 11 of AP I and Article 5(2)(e)) of AP II (i.e., those who are not considered enemy nationals or detained in relation to the armed conflict) may still donate organs within the context of an armed conflict.”

While Israel has not ratified all of the Additional Protocols, Palestine has. These articles are of essential utility to understand and develop the prohibition of organ thefts under customary IHL.

Destruction of Cultural Property

In 1957, Israel ratified the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the event of an Armed conflict becoming a State Party. The State of Palestine is also a State Party since 2012. The 1954 Convention was the first international treaty to protect cultural institutions and heritage. The Convention addresses artistic or historical monuments, archives, museums, and libraries, among other buildings housing cultural property. Under Article 4 of the Convention, all ratifying states must refrain from any acts of hostility against cultural property. Furthermore, Article 5 regulates the case of occupation and mandates the occupying power to cooperate with the legitimate occupied authorities to safeguard and preserve cultural property. Effectively, this intends to prevent cultural genocide.

On Nov. 29, Israel destroyed the Gazan Central Archives, which held thousands of important historical documents dating back over 150 years, relating to the city’s structure and history of its urban development. Yahya al-Sarraj, the head of Gaza Municipality, stated that Occupation Forces targeted numerous cultural centers, including the Rashad al-Shawwa Historical Cultural Centre, which houses a theater and central library, as well as a monument in the Memorial Park for the Unknown Soldiers.

Food, Medical Supplies, and Humanitarian Aid

The Geneva Convention (IV) relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, Article 55, stipulates that the Occupying Power “has the duty of ensuring the food and medical supplies of the population” and “may not requisition foodstuffs, articles or medical supplies available in the occupied territory.” Article 47 also stipulates, “Protected persons who are in occupied territory shall not be deprived, […] of the benefits of the present Convention.” Failure to ensure food in the occupied territory may amount to the violation of Rule 53 of customary IHL, which explicitly forbids the starvation of the civilian population as a method of warfare.

Israel’s attacks over the last two months have been recognized as a “War of Starvation” by Euro-Med Monitor. The group’s report cited the cutting off all food supplies to Northern Gaza, along with the deliberate targeting of bakeries and water stores throughout the Strip. Israeli attacks also targeted flour shops, bakeries, agricultural zones, fishing boats, and storage centers belonging to relief organizations. As of Nov. 5, 11 bakeries in Gaza had been targeted and destroyed. The distribution of food to displaced families also became severely limited due to Israel’s ground invasion, further increasing the threat of widespread starvation and famine. It is painfully evident that Israel is deliberately targeting food supplies to Gazan citizens to further their genocidal objectives.

In addition to this blatant violation, Israel has also violated Geneva Convention (IV) Article 56, which states that the Occupying Power has the duty of ensuring and maintaining “the medical and hospital establishments and services, public health and hygiene in the occupied territory, with particular reference to the adoption and application of the prophylactic and preventive measures necessary to combat the spread of contagious diseases and epidemics.” In this sense, Rules 25 and 28 establish that it is customarily forbidden to target medical personnel and medical units, including hospitals and other medical infrastructure.

Israel has relentlessly attacked and deliberately targeted hospitals and medical infrastructure throughout the last two months. Israeli forces attacked the Indonesian Hospital, al-Quds Hospital, al-Shifa Hospital, the Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital, and the International Eye Hospital. As a result of the destruction of this essential infrastructure, a UN report has stated that many more people could die of disease than bombings if the health system is not quickly repaired. They cited a lack of medicines, vaccination, safe water, and sanitation services as leading to a surge in gastrointestinal and infectious diseases, including cholera and gastroenteritis.

Defaulting on Obligations as an Occupying Power

As the International Court of Justice confirmed in 2005 (Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (Advisory Opinion) (9 July 2004) 2004 ICJ 136 para. 78), the oPt is an occupied territory under international law, regardless of Israeli efforts to deny or annex parts of it.

Article 42 of the Hague Convention IV explains that the definition of occupation “takes into account the effective control of the territory by a hostile authority and seeks to regulate the responsibility of such an authority. International humanitarian law stipulates that the definition of occupation only extends to territories where such authority has been established and can be exercised.” The conscious and active land-grabbing and forced expulsion and displacement of Indigenous Palestinians — which is a technique expanded all over Palestinian territory — evidences one of the ways in which Israel exercises its effective control over the territory. The siege and blockade of the Gaza Strip —where the Israelis control everything from water to food, travel, or energy — makes the Occupation even more stark.

Occupying powers are unconditionally accountable for the well-being and the provisions of basic necessities to civilian populations, as established by the relevant articles in the IV Hague Convention (Arts. 42-56) and Geneva Conventions. Furthermore, “contemporary international humanitarian law has clarified and added to the rights and duties of occupying forces, the rights of the populations of occupied territory, and the rules for administering such territory (GIV Arts. 47—78; API Arts. 63, 69, 72—79).” Some of these articles — including Art. 50 — deal explicitly with educational institutions and the general safety of children, particularly: “The Occupying Power shall not hinder the application of any preferential measures in regard to food, medical care and protection against the effects of war, which may have been adopted prior to the occupation in favour (sic.) of children under fifteen years, expectant mothers, and mothers of children under seven years.” Previously cited Rules 25, 28, and 53 of customary IHL are also relevant here.

In the West Bank, as a result of international attention being focused on Gaza, the occupation prisons have increased violence, sexual assault, mistreatment, and torture of prisoners, including against children. These are all violations of international law, including human rights law and humanitarian law, both treaty-based and customary. Testimonies from released prisoners from the West Bank as a result of the hostage exchange are abundant, including from Ahed TamimiIsra’a Jaabis, and child prisoner Muhammad Nezzal, who left occupation jails with a broken arm due to the violence of prison officers.

In addition, other released prisoners cite increasing violence in the prisons, including the deprivation of basic necessities such as food and sunlight, an increase in physical violence, rape, threats of rape, and other criminal intimidation practices. These testimonials also emphasize that the Occupation Forces are specifying that they are doing so as a result of events in Gaza. Therefore in addition to many other crimes, this can be considered collective punishment.

Not only is Israel defaulting on their obligations as an occupying power, with respect to “internees.” The regime also violates several articles in the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, and the Convention on the Protection of the Child. The violations against the “prisoners” in the Occupied Palestinian Territories require immediate investigation and action, as the testimonies of the released prisoners strongly indicate a series of indictable offenses.

There are other atrocities committed by Israel that have yet to be written into legal code but may set a precedent in future warfare. The phenomenon of “battle-testing” new weapons to increase the value/stock value of the weapons manufacturer on civilian populations, the use of white phosphorus as a means to target civilian populations and inflict ecoterrorism in both Gaza and Southern Lebanon, the use of AI or “lethal autonomous weapons systems,” disabling internet communications from the entire population, among others atrocities, should, without any doubt, be illegal and punishable offenses. It is also worth mentioning that the individuals leading this attack on Gaza can be tried as individuals at an international level, including Netanyahu, his cabinet ministers, and all members of the General Staff, all of whom have orchestrated crimes against humanity in full public view.

Given the overwhelming evidence that the international community has access to, there are grounds to call for an immediate cessation of violence and the Israeli-led genocide based on these grave violations through both legal and political means. It is also urgent to quickly and heavily sanction the Israel regime, suspend all weapons transfers with Israel, and demand an end to both the siege and occupation of Gaza and the West Bank.

There are some fundamental schools of thought when considering the inaction of the international community through political and legislative frameworks regarding the Israeli attack on Gaza. Firstly, international legislative bodies are inept and incapable of holding individuals or states accountable for their actions… something that cannot be the case, as we have seen via the quick action against the Russian invasion of Ukraine. That these systems are discriminatory against people of color also cannot be the case due to the prosecution of individuals from different ethnic backgrounds. Hence, we conclude that the Israeli regime, once again, is allowed to be the exception to the rule.

The inability of most of the world’s major political leaders to call for something as basic as a ceasefire is both problematic and questionable, highlighting the notion of Israeli exceptionalism. A flawed international legal framework partly causes this. The conditional basis of the ratification of treaty law — which should be mandatory legislation — highlights a fundamental fault in the international legal frameworks: it further exempts states, through the states’ own vocation, of fundamental human rights. It discourages international bodies and individuals from using the resources of the ICC and ICJ, as selective ratification tends to be difficult to apply. This, coupled with the essential inutility of these frameworks to stop current, ongoing, devastating violence, only highlights its need for total reform in order to have any lasting relevance in the future.

Death to Trump and Company/Minyan

Oglala Sioux Tribe President Frank Star Comes Out declared an extended state of emergency last December for the Pine Ridge Reservation.

The emergency called for funding for at least 50 officers, more aggressive enforcement of alcohol and drug laws by the Department of Justice and Bureau of Indian Affairs, as well as more jails.

Now, the reservation still finds itself in a state of emergency.

The tribal leader said not much progress has been made since December, as the U.S. government came to the reservation with a task force and conducted a sweep.

He added, he doesn’t know if it was a publicity stunt, but says a lot more needs to be done.

“By treaty, we should have 130 police officers; we’re missing 100,” said Star Comes Out. “Now, the funding, where did it go? We believe that Congress letting these grants die out and not reinstating them, this is the result.”

The reservation is approximately 2 million acres, and Star Comes Out said it’s been challenging for officers as they are overworked and underpaid.

Death to Musk and the Millers and a few tens of millions of Americans, for sure. A start.

xAI usually doesn’t talk to the media. Musk ended all PR teams at his companies years ago, and they now only post on social media. Even when reporters ask questions, like from Fortune, xAI usually ignores them, as per the report by Fortune.

Katie Miller now works with Elon Musk

This time, the email came from Katie Miller, wife of Stephen Miller, who was Trump’s deputy chief of staff. Katie Miller worked as a communications manager and political adviser in the Trump White House and Department of Government Efficiency.

Trump and Musk now disagree

Since then, Musk said he might create a new political party, and Trump hinted he might go after Musk’s companies or even deport him. Katie is now clearly working with xAI. The email came from her xAI address, and her X account now shares xAI updates, plus Tesla news and media criticism, as per the report by Fortune.

Death to Trump and Company NOW. “Staffing Crisis at National Parks Reaches Breaking Point, New Data Shows 24% Decline in Permanent Workforce”

“National parks cannot properly function at the staffing levels this administration has reduced them to. And it’s only getting worse.” – Theresa Pierno, NPCA’s President and CEO

Death to these fucking people. “In recent years, the world has witnessed groundbreaking advancements in animal farming, but none have sparked as much controversy as the world’s first commercial octopus farm. Proposed by Spanish seafood giant Nueva Pescanova, this venture aims to address the declining wild octopus populations by transitioning to aquaculture. However, the methods and ethical implications of farming such intelligent creatures have ignited a fiery debate among scientists, lawmakers, and the general public.”

Gabrielle Yap / EyeEm octopus swimming at night

Elena Lara from CiWF called on the Canary Islands authorities to block construction of the farm, which she said would “inflict unnecessary suffering on these intelligent, sentient and fascinating creatures”.

Reineke Hameleers, CEO at Eurogroup for Animals added that the European Commission was currently reviewing its animal welfare legislation and had a “real opportunity” to “avoid terrible suffering”.

DOGE my ass. This fucking Rapist in Chief Trump is a thief, out and out. Death to his administration and all MAGA muts.

Trump’s signing of ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ includes $85 million to move space shuttle Discovery from Smithsonian to Texas

Odd times when I cite the DOJ here since Trump and Bondi are pimps for crime and criminals:

One of three career federal prosecutors fired by Attorney General Pam Bondi last week has written a passionate goodbye to his colleagues, praising them for their willingness to “enter the arena” and encouraging them to not be timid amid ongoing threats to their work.

Andrew Floyd had been a leader in the Capitol Siege Section and stayed with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, now headed by interim U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro. In an email sent Thursday, he expressed pride in seeking justice for “despicable and illegal acts against our brothers and sisters in uniform” who were victimized during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack.

“They entered the arena and were assaulted. Later, they were re-victimized. Called crisis actors, vilified, threatened, and told that what they experienced did not happen,” Floyd wrote in the email seen by NBC News.

Floyd’s email cited a quote from a 1910 Theodore Roosevelt’s speech commonly known as “The Man in the Arena,” which he said senior federal prosecutors would send to assistant U.S. attorneys who lost a case. Officially titled “Citizenship in a Republic,” Roosevelt said it is “not the critic who counts,” but those who are “actually in the arena,” noting that their place “shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”

Receiving that message, Floyd wrote, “made new prosecutors feel seen as they toiled, for long hours and often unsuccessfully, on difficult cases while trying to uphold the rule of law in this city.”

“I lost a few trials and each time I received that email I was reminded why I went into court in the first place. It was not winning that mattered, but the fight for justice. My days of entering the arena with you are over. I also have no regrets.

I know from my communications with you over the years that the people in this building do not keep quiet and are not timid. You pursue justice. You enter the arena. Win or losee. From now on, although I can no longer join you, I’ll be on the sidelines cheering ou on.”

Death to Israeli settlers, squatters, IOF, DEATH TO the lot of them!!!

An entire Bedouin community fled their village north of Jericho on Thursday night, succumbing to repeated attacks by Israeli settlers from surrounding illegal outposts, Peace Now reports.

Hundreds of Mu’arjat residents are now looking for a home elsewhere, the settlement watchdog says.

In recent months, settlers from nearby outposts routinely harassed Mu’arjat residents, blocking grazing, issuing threats, attacking people and stealing livestock, according to Peace Now.

“In recent weeks, harassment intensified, with settlers walking between homes, threatening residents and demanding that they leave,” Peace Now says.

On Wednesday, settlers established a new outpost several feet outside the community school. The family living nearby was forced to flee, and their property was looted, according to the watchdog.

“Israeli security forces ignored repeated calls from residents to remove the invading settlers. Soldiers and Border Police officers were even documented sitting with them in the new outpost adjacent to the community,” Peace Now says.

Duh:

“Autocratic regimes have recently been gaining power around the world, often via democratic elections and the mobilization of popular support. Autocracy, it appears, appeals to many people. The psychology of this appeal—explaining what drives those people who support such regimes around the world—is thus of urgent interest to social scientists.

One such psychological explanation resides in the concept of authoritarianism, described initially in the 1950s by German philosopher Theodor Adorno and his colleagues, psychologists Else Frenkel-Brunswik, Daniel Levinson, and Nevitt Sanford, in an effort to explain the popular appeal of fascism.

Authoritarianism is defined as a personality disposition marked by unquestioning obedience and respect for authority at the expense of personal autonomy, a preference for order and tradition, hostility toward out-groups, and a desire to punish those who violate cherished in-group norms and values.

Authoritarianism carries heavy implications in the life of individuals and nations. Research has linked authoritarianism to heightened nationalistic, religious, militaristic, and conservative attitudes. Authoritarian individuals are less likely to support democratic rule. Psychologists have therefore been interested in the factors that may undergird this disposition, as well as other questions such as whether its origins reside in childhood experiences, and whether it is inherently maladaptive.”

Subsidizing the true authoritarians —”Tech Mafia and Chip and AI Continuing Criminal Enterprises: U.S. Senate Reportedly Eyes 35% Tax Credit for New Chip Fabs, Boosting TSMC, Intel and Samsung”

Matt Cohler in 2012

Death to these people: Historic Belvedere mansion sells for record-smashing $47.5 million

Better known locally as the Blanding House, the three-story, 9,235-square-foot home sits atop the southern peak of Belvedere Island and features sweeping 270-degree views of the San Francisco skyline and Golden Gate and Bay bridges. The buyer is reportedly Matt Cohler, a 38-year-old San Francisco-based venture capitalist and Forbes Midas-lister, according to a source with knowledge of the deal who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the confidential matter of the sale.

Cohler, who got engaged to his girlfriend in May, helped launch LinkedIn but left the company in 2005 to become one of Facebook’s five original employees as its vice president of product sales. He is now a general partner at the venture capital firm Benchmark, backing projects such as Dropbox and Instagram, and with other tech leaders is a co-founder of FWD.us, an immigration-reform lobbying group. He sits on the boards of Tinder and the San Francisco Symphony, among others.

+—+

Some riveting headlines above, but the bottom line is this — Death to the countries supporting genocide: Note,

This article exposes BCG’s involvement in Israeli plans to ethnically cleanse Palestinians and “tokenise” Gaza’s land, revealing a troubling blend of forced displacement and techno-capitalism.

“The Financial Times on Friday published an exposé of Boston Consulting Group’s (BCG) involvement in the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a Mossad-funded operation, which the Israelis have tried to sell to the world as an organisation that brings aid into Gaza but has actually served as a trap to lure Palestinians inside tightly-monitored enclosures where the Israelis and American mercenaries shoot to kill unarmed Palestinians for fun.

The FT reports that BCG created a detailed model under a $4 million contract to support the GHF and its private security firm Safe Reach Solutions (SRS) — part of a project codenamed “Aurora” — and backed by Israel and the US. BCG’s involvement in this part of the Israeli scheme was fairly well known, if not the minutiae regarding the personnel involved that the FT article goes on to detail.

However, the piece shed light for the first time on a particularly deplorable Israeli plan. BCG built financial models for different post-war reconstruction outcomes in Gaza. One included “voluntary relocation” of over 500,000 Gazans, offering packages of around $9,000 per person (amounting to $5 billion in total), assuming 25 percent of the Palestinians would leave their homes in the besieged enclave permanently:

Gazans would have been given a package to leave the enclave including $5,000, subsidised rent for four years and subsidised food for a year. It assumed a quarter of Gazans would leave, and that three-quarters of those relocated would never return.

An unnamed official helpfully told the FT, “The people of Gaza will decide. It is not a plan to empty Gaza.”

Why not leave the Palestinians in their ancestral homes and fund their post-war reconstruction instead? This is because the BCG model calculated ethnic cleansing as a cheaper alternative:

The model calculated relocation outside Gaza to be $23,000 cheaper, per Palestinian, than the costs of providing support to them in Gaza during reconstruction.

Fucking bloody hell, folks . . . a billion robots of the Semen Drip Musk Variety and Total Awareness, i.e. US Trump Alligator Alcatraz Digital Gulag GITMO in every country in the 14 Eyes Net

A decent man, a friend, in Wisconsin, was upset yesterday, man at that big-bountiful-for- the- rich- cunt- Trump bill that “passed” yesterday, in the White Man’s Mad “house.”

Hating the people, man: Goes back to FDR*, man, and then Reagan on steroids, and then, Brandies Memo, and then Reagan, the soulless death ray, and then Gore and Billy Boy and then Bush and his 1,000 points of light from bullet holes in common sense safety nets, and then the Jewish Mossad Operation of the Century, the past century, even though it was 2001. The W Room Temp IQ Bush, and then Bomb them/Deport Them Obama, then Trump Trump Trump trumping that, Biden with his Genocide, and then Trump trumping again. *(see Alan Nasser’s How Franklin D. Roosevelt Botched Social Security — 2013 article)

Shanking a few republican congressmen would be a start. While they are pissing their Viagra fucking urine somewhere, anywhere, weeks before, in their home states, in their fucking beer and rib joints, well well, now that would be a trillion more heroic than Mitch Snyder or Aaron Bushnell.

“Anyone who thinks anyone is on the streets by choice is saying that out of a bed; a warm, comfortable home with a roof over their heads, money in their pocket and food in their stomachs.” – Mitch Snyder

Here, I will give the Snyder historical perspective via long article. If you don’t time for the read, then move on down to the Alligator pens.

1981 saw Ronald Reagan take residency in the White House after defeating incumbent Jimmy Carter. On the streets of Washington, D.C., a persistent issue became increasingly more strident. Reflecting on the period, WAMU host Kojo Nnamdi remarked, “We began to see large numbers of panhandlers appearing on the streets of Washington.”[1] According to U.S. General Accounting Office, rising unemployment, a decrease in services for those suffering from mental illness, and “cuts in public assistance and the decline in the number of low-income housing units” had increased the homeless population.[2] The Department of Housing and Urban Development estimated between 250,000 and 350,000 persons were homeless nationwide. D.C.’s Community for Creative Non-Violence (CCNV), a homeless advocacy organization, put forth a more startling figure: between two and three million.[3] In comparison to what would come later, these diverging statistics would be one of the more minor disagreements between the Federal government and CCNV.

CCNV was founded in 1970 by a chaplain and students at the George Washington University for grassroots organizing and direct action in Washington, D.C. Initially, the collective’s attention was directed at protesting the Vietnam War.[4] Following the War’s end, the CCNV turned its attention to homelessness.[5]

By the close of the decade, a dynamic leader would bring international attention to the group. Mitch Snyder was the product of working-class Brooklyn, New York. After going to prison for car theft, he began studying under Daniel and Philip Berrigan, priests imprisoned for destroying draft records.[6] Influenced by the Berrigan brothers’ activism, Snyder found his life’s purpose in Catholicism steeped in social justice. Upon his 1972 release, Snyder brought his anti-war idealism to Washington, D.C., what he believed to be the best place to “try and create a more political center.”[7] After the withdrawal of U.S. forces, Snyder’s moralistic energy was perfect for the CCNV.[8] He quickly rose to become the face of the organization by the early 1980s.

Faced with a growing homeless crisis, the Reagan administration made a surprising policy decision in 1983. Vacant federal buildings became available to “local governments and charitable organizations” for use as emergency shelters at a “cost basis.” The properties included thousands of HUD and Department of Defense owned structures across the country, including 425 D Street NW, a federal building last used by the University of the District of Columbia.[9]

As Susan Fennelly, Mitch Snyder’s companion and fellow CCNV activist later related, “One of our community members, Justin Brown, found an old UDC building at Second and E, Northwest, that the General Services Administration had up for auction.[10] Homeless advocate Susan Baker, wife of Reagan’s Chief-of-Staff James Baker, had previously helped CCNV secure surplus food from military commissaries for the homeless.[11] So, with Baker’s help, CCNV signed a $1 dollar lease on the building in January 1984, for use as a temporary shelter.[12] With this agreement, CCNV and the Government entered into a unique arrangement, to say the least. Aside from being a federally-owned building, the neglected structure sat on prime real estate. A short walk from Union Station and the U.S. Capitol, 425 D Street NW provided CCNV with a Metro-accessible location, close to services and within earshot of Congress.

While securing the lease was a huge step, conflict soon emerged. Having sat vacant for some time, the building was in dire need of repair so Snyder and CCNV pushed the government to renovate. The building did not have a sprinkler system and falling plaster exposed pipes. There were only four showers serving between 600 and 800 persons a night according to Snyder’s estimates.[13] Government officials argued that they were not responsible for upgrades under the terms of the 1983 policy decision, and dug in.[14]

In September 1984 Snyder began a hunger strike to try to force the government’s hand to make repairs before the winter. Snyder told reporters, “People’s lives are at stake, many more than mine. I don’t want to die but there is no better way than this that I could serve the people out on the streets.”[15] As his body began to falter, Snyder held tight to his demands: $5 million in federal money to renovate the shelter. Federal officials reiterated that “they did not intend to respond to Snyder’s demands.”[16] Both publicly and privately, officials urged him to end the strike. But as the strike languished, Mitch Snyder was becoming more of a political controversy. Reagan officials desperately wanted to end the strike before the November 6 election, and avoid Snyder’s death.[17]

On November 4, just two days before the election, 60 Minutes was set to air a report on Snyder’s hunger strike. With public opinion leaning towards Snyder, and pressure from House Speaker Tip O’Neill, negotiations resumed. Snyder and Fennelly along with Susan Baker worked out a deal with Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret M. Heckler and Harvey Vieth, chairman of the HHS’s Task Force on Food and Shelter for the Homeless.[18]

That same day, an emaciated Mitch Snyder was rushed to Howard Hospital. While hospitalized, HHS Secretary Hecker called to inform Snyder that President Reagan had personally approved the agreement while en route to a campaign stop aboard Air Force One.[19] With the strike over after 51 days, Heckler announced that “the administration pledges to turn the decaying, vermin-infested facility into a ‘model physical shelter structure to house the homeless . . . to be used as long as a critical need exists.'”[20] It was curiously open-ended language.

Following the strike’s end, CCNV set about to create the model shelter. Architect Conrad Levenson was hired to draft plans with an emergency grant of $17,500 from the National Endowment for the Arts. Levenson and his team developed a plan that would cost between the original $5 and $10 million.[21] In addition to services like an infirmary and welcoming aesthetics, the proposed design would make the building ADA compliant.[22]

Once again, however, the Federal government had different ideas. In May 1985, the General Services Administration and the Task Force on Food and Shelter for the Homelessness countered with an offer of just under $3 million for a bare bones, barracks-style overhaul of the building. CCNV rejected what Snyder deemed a “patch job.”[23] With the Government and CCNV at an impasse, all bets were off and the General Services Administration announced that the building would be demolished.[24]

With negotiations stalled, it looked as though CCNV had been given the Federal styled, bureaucratic runaround. Even more ominous for CCNV, HHS Secretary Margaret M. Heckler, who had brokered the November 1984 deal, was on her way out. She would begrudgingly accept the position of Ambassador to Ireland in October of 1985.[25] Heckler’s Chief-of-Staff, C. McClain Haddow became the new point-person on negotiations with CCNV and his contempt for Snyder and CCNV was clear.[26] “We call him ‘Hollywood Mitch’ because all he really cares about is the attention he gets.’“[27] The comment was made in reference to a deal that Snyder had signed for a TV movie about his hunger strike, starring Martin Sheen. The proceeds from the film were to benefit CCNV.[28]

Time seemed to be running out on CCNV’s model shelter. With July 10, 1985 announced as the day the “squalid” shelter would close, CCNV was informed it would have to vacate so that demolition proceedings could move forward. In response, CCNV turned to the courts. “We have lots of lawyers, and I don’t think we’ll have any difficulty finding a judge who can slow this process down so that it will take six months or a year,” threatened Snyder.[29] His words turned out to be prophetic.

Speaking before a House panel on August 1, 1985, Snyder stated the obvious, that if the 800 bed shelter were to close “its residents will be forced to sleep in parks and abandoned cars because there are not enough beds in other District shelters.”[30] Empathetic yet impartial, U.S. District Judge, Charles Richey ruled that the shelter could close, if an alternate site could be provided. In his ruling he stated, “No less than the President of the United States should treat this as a national emergency . . . in order that the full impact of the nation’s resources can be brought to bear to eliminate this national disgrace.”[31] In line with the ruling, the federal Department of Health and Human Services announced that funds promised by President Reagan allocated to renovate the CCNV shelter would be given to the “District government for alternative housing.”[32]

The alternative the Feds identified was the former Department of Defense War College in Anacostia Park.[33] To run the facility, the Federal officials selected the D.C. Coalition for the Homeless. CCNV was quick to shine light through the gaping holes in this proposal to move the homeless away from vital services to isolated National Park Service land in Southeast, Washington, D.C. As one shelter resident explained, there were obvious benefits to the 425 D St. NW location: “A lot of the churches around here give away clothes and food. They don’t do it like that in Anacostia.”[34] Similarly, Ward 8 citizens criticized the new plan as “just another attempt to dump unwanted facilities on an area of the District that has been dumped on too much.”[35]

On Kojo Nnamdi’s Evening Exchange, Mitch Snyder participated in a roundtable which included Lawrence Guyot of the D.C. Coalition for the Homeless. Guyot compared Snyder to Jim Jones and called for him to release the residents of the CCNV shelter to the Anacostia facility. Snyder deftly responded “You are being used—as a wedge between us and the administration. You’re gonna have to move out of the way and when you do, we’re gonna face the administration head on and…we’re gonna push ‘em right out of this damn city ‘cause they are the most vile, vulgar, insensitive, inhumane, human beings we’ve ever seen and you shouldn’t let them use ya.”[36]

When the Coalition vans arrived at the CCNV shelter to transport residents to Anacostia they were met with opposition and left with fewer than ten people.[37] In December 1985, U.S. Marshals posted eviction notices, but Snyder and residents vowed to remain. C. McClain Haddow warned the standoff could end violently citing the number of CCNV shelter residents who were Vietnam War vets—men who, in his words, “specialized at doing one thing: killing people.”[38]

Thankfully, the eviction and violence never came. Mayor Marion Barry stepped in and announced that D.C. police would not assist Federal Marshals in pushing out the shelter residents. On December 28, 1985 President Reagan halted the evictions paving the way for renovations to finally begin. It would take another two years, two more hunger strikes and the publicity from the movie starring Martin Sheen, but a $6.5 million renovation was unveiled at a ribbon cutting in February 1987.[39] The revamped facility had 600 beds, a new kitchen, a new dining area and additional showers.

It was a victory, but for Snyder, only a partial one. He worried that the renovated shelter would not suffice to meet Washington’s needs. “We still have to come up with another $5 million in the next 60 to 90 days if we’re going to have the rest of the building renovated by winter.”[40] The battle to shelter the homeless in the nation’s capital would continue.

Epilogue

The story of Mitch Snyder and CCNV was brilliantly preserved in Ginny Durrin’s Oscar-nominated 1988 documentary, Promises to Keep. The film shows Snyder and CCNV engaged in an unrelenting struggle with the U.S. government. After the numerous emotionally-taxing scenes, the story ends on an uplifting note—a completed model homeless shelter. The looks of joy and relief on the faces of CCNV personnel are powerful.[41]

Sadly, however, for Mitch Snyder the creation of the model shelter did not bring personal happiness. On July 5, 1990, he was found hanged in his room, two days after he was last seen alive. Notes lamented his failed romantic relationship with Carol Fennelly and the D.C. Council’s recent moves to weak emergency shelter laws.[42] Councilman John A. Wilson spoke of the extreme burnout Snyder may have felt, eerily before his own suicide by hanging, “I think America is hard on sensitive people, and I think Mitch was an extremely sensitive person who took his successes and failures personally.”[43]

Learn more

In 1987, a Fort Wayne, Indiana television station did a special report on homelessness in America. Reporter Ken Owen traveled from Fort Wayne to Washington, D.C. to interview Mitch Snyder along with Indiana politicians, including then-Senator Dan Quayle.

REMEMBER THOSE DAYS, man? Now, the reality was that in 1980s money, fucking food, went a long long way. You had semi-shitty Greyhound buses and mass transit in urban areas. Compared to now, no matter how hateful that fucking war criminal-validated fucking Contra Freedom Terrorist Reagan was, we had his goons and the web of crack cocaine also to thank.

That hero, Webb:

“Dark Alliance” was originally published in three parts from August 18 to 20, 1996, in the San Jose Mercury News and carried on its hightech Mercury Center website.9 This was significant because it marked the first time for a US newspaper to make use of the new technology known as the Internet as part of a major news investigation.

Webb had wanted to use the newspaper’s website particularly to show the hard evidence and detailed documentation he had amassed as a way to counterbalance what he called the “high unbelievability factor” of his investigation—a true story that the public would literally find too hard to believe unless it was documented in great detail.

And that is where the next significant aspect of “Dark Alliance” comes in: it was the first news media investigation to expose the links between the CIA, the contras, and the rise of crack cocaine use in the United States.

Other journalists, most notably Associated Press (AP) reporters Brian Barger and Robert Parry in the mid-1980s, had reported on the ties between the CIA and large-scale cocaine trafficking by the anticommunist paramilitary forces in Nicaragua known as the “contras.”

In his “Dark Alliance” investigation a decade later in the summer of 1996, Webb provided the crucial missing piece of the puzzle: what happened to the powdered cocaine once it had been smuggled into the United States by Nicaraguan contra supporters and turned into dried “crack” cocaine, and how the money made from such crack sales on American streets made its way back to the contras in their

CIA-sponsored campaign to overturn the new socialist government of Nicaragua. While “Dark Alliance” did not implicate the CIA in specific incidents of drug smuggling into and within the United States—a point Webb was always clear in publicly emphasizing—his series did present strong circumstantial evidence that the CIA at least knew of the cocaine smuggling into the US by the Nicaraguans and did not act to stop it. As Webb also demonstrated in “Dark Alliance,” some US government agencies went as far as offering bureaucratic cover and legal protection to some of the most infamous cocaine traffickers in the Western hemisphere.

Webb had specifically documented in his series how the crossing of paths of three main characters—Nicaraguan wholesale drug traffickers Norwin Meneses and Danilo Blandón, along with a young African-American street-level drug dealer named “Freeway” Rick Ross—had eventually led to an outbreak of crack cocaine use and abuse in Los Angeles that then spread to other US cities, hitting African-American communities the hardest.

Webb’s “Dark Alliance” series was also significant in the way it was treated by the influential Big Three newspapers. Instead of building on Webb’s groundbreaking investigation and moving the story forward, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and the New York Times attacked the “Dark Alliance” series for often self-serving reasons and sought to tarnish both Webb’s credibility as a journalist and his investigation. This was unprecedented, certainly in contemporary US press history. (source)

+—+

And what did all that crack and coke do to poor communities? To the rich cocksuckers?

“It was originally 100-to-1, meaning that you got essentially 100 times the amount of [prison] time for crack than you would for the same substance in powder form. That was reduced to 18-to-1 around 2010. But it still exists. With all that we know about crack, with all the compassion that we have now for addicts, we still haven’t moved far enough to eliminate that disparity entirely.”

On how the crack epidemic came to an end

let’s celebrate the fact that the crack epidemic is over. Let’s celebrate the fact that we survived it without a whole lot of intervention from the government and that it was young people who made the decision to not continue the trend.

Dominic X. Ramsey

The crack epidemic ended not because the drug warriors rode in on white horses or because Nancy Reagan said, “Just Say No.” The crack epidemic ended because the next cohort of young people who would have used crack looked around at their communities and saw the devastation and said, “Not for me.” And I think a really important thing to underline, is that .. we didn’t celebrate that. So let’s celebrate the fact that the crack epidemic is over. Let’s celebrate the fact that we survived it without a whole lot of intervention from the government and that it was young people who made the decision to not continue the trend. And that’s not according to me. That’s according to research by the Department of Justice, where they surveyed the hardest hit cities around the country and interviewed young people and said essentially “Why? Why aren’t you doing crack?” And they said, “That whole world is too scary.”

On the difficulty of telling this story

In covering Black America, I’ve also had to cover a lot of tragedy and hear a lot of traumatic things from people. And I had always prided myself on being able to kind take it in and to process it and turn it into something beautiful and meaningful and not be affected. But after five years of putting together this book, I was completely wrecked. I lost 40 pounds. I had a heart tremor where I was getting palpitations and had to wear a heart monitor. Every loud noise scared me. My nerves were completely shot. …

I had to take seriously what had happened and what had happened to the people that I talked to, and how seriously impactful those events were in their lives and how the stuff that I went through impacted me. I was a kid having to get down on the ground when I heard gunshots. And that was just a normal thing: You’re in the middle of play, you hear gunshots, you get on the ground, you get back up and you keep playing. Having my first bike stolen by a crack addict and the fear of having to go home and explain that to my mom, that I had given somebody my bike to fix and he never came back with it. That stuff lived in me and it needed to be excavated.

I want to say that that I’m doing much better now, including having gained the weight back, unfortunately. But I think the message from that for me is that lots of us that lived through that period, we still have some stuff that we have to deal with. We need to ask our family about that aunt or uncle who kind of disappeared and nobody talks about. We need to first learn their stories, then lift their stories up as a part of our stories. … We won’t heal until we make sense of the crack epidemic — not as this aside, but as a part of who we’ve been and what we’ve been through.

Book cover for Censored 1999

An award-winning investigative reporter, Gary Webb (1955–2004) is best known for his Dark Alliance series that linked a Northern California drug ring with the CIA and the United States’ burgeoning crack epidemic. When the story first appeared in 1996 on the website of the San Jose Mercury News, it became an unprecedented internet sensation, receiving up to 1.3 million hits daily. The report was the target of a famously vicious media backlash that ended his career as a mainstream journalist. When Webb told the whole story in the book Dark Alliance, some of the same publications that had vilified him retracted their criticism and praised his courage in telling the truth about one of the worst official abuses in our nation’s history. Others, including his own former newspaper and the New York Times, continued to treat him as an outlaw. Before joining the Mercury News, Webb cut his journalism teeth at the Kentucky Post and Cleveland Plain Dealer. He is the co-recipient of an Investigative Reporters and Editors Award (for a story at the Post about links between the Kentucky coal mining industry and organized crime) and a Pulitzer Prize (as part of a team at the Mercury News covering the 1988 San Francisco Earthquake). Dark Alliance won the 1999 Firecracker Alternative Book Award in the Politics category, and was a finalist for the PEN/Newman’s Own First Amendment Award. In 2014 Webb’s story was adapted into the major motion picture Kill the Messenger. His death in 2004 was ruled a suicide.

What went wrong, Cool Hand Luke? Family? Mother? Community? The fucking Cunt-tree?

Cool Hand Luke and the Captain (Stephen Bibi Trump IDF et al), Failure to communicate?

Denaturalize . . . MAGA people all need to be shanked if they can’t get into the food and fun at socialist re-education/ new education/ real education camps.

They all should be shanked, MAGA and Demon-crats. SHANKED.

Get your fucking mind right, cunt deplorables, all of you still apologizing for Trump, all of you motherfuckers yesterday in my town of Waldport all lined up 6 am for July 3 10 pm mother fucking fireworks, dudes.

I took a client to my house, BBQ, watched Ford v. Ferrari movie and ate homemade stuff, and luckily, we have a balcony that looks out to the sea, so we watched the motherfucking bombs bursting in air.

When I drove him home north, 15 miles, the fucking roads were packed and the little town of 2,300 was crowded.

Fucking patriotism? Fucking tourists out for some fucking House Negro fun? The bill had just passed, and this is how the world of Consumer and Costco and Crocodile Tears US Mercenary A celebrates?

Get your mind right, Captain Trump. Let’s shank any and all people who are part of the death and gulag machine:

And so the educated ones are working in the fields, man, and how many motherfuckers are happy, gleeful that the egg heads and smart ones and the college boys and girls in the sciences have to be belly up like crack users or meth users or Purdue Pharmacy users or fentynal users?

QUOTING: The grant funding I receive from various sources covers part of my salary, which is guaranteed by the state because of my tenured position. But many states, including Hawaii, Texas and Ohio, are now considering bans and limits on tenure. If this were to happen in California, I would be particularly at risk given that my work focuses on health-disparity topics that are being targeted for cancellation: HIV, global research ethics and supporting emerging faculty members who are conducting research into the challenges faced by aging adults in minority groups.

It would be naive to think that this won’t affect the job market: I expect many researchers to lose their salaries, jobs and health-care insurance as grants and funding dry up. This is already starting to happen. Frankly, it’s time for many scientists to start thinking about a career change, or at least how they might diversify their income streams to protect themselves against a loss of funding or a period of unemployment.

Many think that the current challenges will be reversed after a few years, but that is a long time to be without an income. And even if most scientists were able or willing to move abroad, it’s unlikely that there would be enough overseas funding to make up for cuts to science here in the United States.

One way to protect against these cuts might be to develop other streams of income while still pursuing a scientific career. Each of us has things we are good at apart outside scientific area of expertise. For example, my family and I have planted fruit trees and grown tomato plants, and we keep chickens that lay eggs, and my network allows me to sell those products. Other colleagues are generating cash from pet sitting and copyediting, working as a paid nanny or a personal chef, picking up paid teaching opportunities in schools and consulting for community-based organizations.

If you’re a US researcher, now is the time to establish a plan B — The scale of funding cuts in the United States means that countless scientists will lose their jobs. It would be naive not to start thinking about alternative career paths.

DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY MAGA’s are so happy with the reality of the headline above? 99.999 Percent of them. So, start shanking the politicians and the fucking MAGA. One deplorable pol and voter at a time.

Tesla’s Optimus prototype, still tele-operated in demos such as a laundry-folding video, lags Boston Dynamics’ Atlas but could sell for under $20,000 once mass-produced, Musk says.

The Congressional Budget Office pegs Trump’s bill as a $2.4 trillion deficit add-on, largely via tax cuts favoring higher earners. Musk insists only “radical productivity gains” will bridge that gap.

Read your fucking Fuck You Book and see how many millions of moms and pops, aunts and uncles, grannies and gramps are posting this cunt’s fucking Cool Hand Luke on Steroids Prison Camp?

[The first group of migrants has been sent to Guantánamo, but legal challenges loom]

Shank a uniformed ANYONE?

[Sailors and Coast Guardsmen erect tents for a migrant holding facility in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. President Trump has directed the Pentagon and the Department of Homeland Security to prepare for 30,000 detained migrants.]

Yeah, David Swanson is a winner: But non-violent what against these cocksuckers who are in the process of making Soylent Green 6.0?

The Impeachment Problem by David Swanson /

I wish U.S. academics would spend less time fantasizing choices between various murders with trollies, or playing games with theories about how greedy robots might do diplomacy, and more time on the impeachment problem.

The United States has an impeachment problem. Impeachment was put into a Constitution that made no mention of, allowance for, or plans to survive the existence of political parties. Presidents are now generally not impeached for any abuse or outrage unless there is one party that doesn’t itself engage in that same abuse or outrage and that party is in the majority in the House. The use of a sex scandal for the impeachment of Bill Clinton was part of the process of destroying the impeachment power, but we’re now probably past sex scandals, for better or worse. We’re reduced to obscure or even fictional offenses, or physical attacks on Congress Members. And even those can be impeachable only when the non-presidential party has a House majority. And even then, the same party would have to have a two-thirds majority in the Senate to get a conviction, since a president’s party’s members will do virtually anything a president commands.

This impeachment problem, unless it is solved, effectively means that a popular nonviolent movement to oust a lawless dictator from the throne on Pennsylvania Avenue must turn out the entire government and start over. The reason the proper course is not the one everyone has been conditioned to mindlessly follow, namely waiting for a distant election, is the same reason impeachment was put into the Constitution: some abuses and outrages should never be tolerated. They do too much massive damage, and they set precedents that are very hard to undo. When Bush-Cheney and then Obama were allowed to finish out and not be removed, warmaking became more acceptable than ever, as did warrantless spying, lawless imprisonment, torture, murder by missile, etc. Criminal thuggery became firmly a policy choice, not an impeachable or prosecutable offense — unless of course you’re not the president. The top impeachable offenses by Bush are in this list of 35. Partway into the Obama presidency, I documented his continuation of 27 of those 35.

The Trump-Biden-Trump era has iced the cake of acceptable and legalistic monstrosities. In 2019, RootsAction put together a list of 25 articles of impeachment for Trump:

Violation of Constitution on Domestic Emoluments
Violation of Constitution on Foreign Emoluments
Incitement of Violence
Interference With Voting Rights
Discrimination Based On Religion
Illegal War
Illegal Threat of Nuclear War
Abuse of Pardon Power
Obstruction of Justice
Politicizing Prosecutions
Collusion Against the United States with a Foreign Government
Failure to Reasonably Prepare for or Respond to Hurricanes Harvey and Maria
Separating Children and Infants from Families
Illegally Attempting to Influence an Election
Tax Fraud and Public Misrepresentation
Assaulting Freedom of the Press
Supporting a Coup in Venezuela
Unconstitutional Declaration of Emergency
Instructing Border Patrol to Violate the Law
Refusal to Comply With Subpoenas
Declaration of Emergency Without Basis In Order to Violate the Will of Congress
Illegal Proliferation of Nuclear Technology
Illegally Removing the United States from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty
Seeking to Use Foreign Governments’ Resources Against Political Rivals
Refusal to Comply with Impeachment Inquiry

One could go on piling up the articles of impeachment or documenting their continuation and expansion. But what’s missing is not the documentation. Here’s a guy who incited violence at his campaign events prior to his first stint on the throne. RootsAction proposed his impeachment for open financial corruption on his first inauguration day. The case was beyond solid, and has been built up ever since. Every weapons shipment for genocide by Biden, Trump, or a harmoniously bipartisan Congress violates numerous U.S. laws. The corruption is gradiose, fantastic, megalithic. The wars, the lies, the kidnappings by masked thugs, the environmental destruction, the promotion of bigotry and hatred — it’s a festival of flagrantly overly justified grounds for removal from office. But what’s missing is the will to make removal happen. On June 24, a huge, happy, bipartisan majority voted not to impeach Trump for making himself a king, just 10 days after huge demonstrations all across the country denouncing Trump for having made himself a king.

I’m afraid of what will happen instead of impeachment. President Kennedy said that those who make peaceful revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable. And there is nobility in that idea. But there is no such thing as making nonviolent revolution impossible. And the powers of nonviolent action are virtually unknown in U.S. culture. Mildly objecting to mass murdering foreign people is a lot for us. The notion that we might actually learn from the successes of foreign people could be asking too much. And so the vast panoply of options between demanding impeachment and hitting Capitol Police officers with flag poles may be lost on too many of us. It may be lost on us beyond our ability to recognize the absurd insufficiency of choosing between two disastrous candidates every four years. We may realize what a scam this so-called democracy is, but not realize our latent power to take it over without counterproductive violence. That does not bode well.

The white plague man, the plague:

Shank whomever you can, dudes:

ANd so the literal cunts of the White Man Rapist in Chief’s White Man’s House are on duty: Shank ‘em.

Spy chief Tulsi Gabbard is on the hunt for “deep state” leakers — prompted at least in part by damaging reporting that undermined the White House’s case for an immigration crackdown.

Her leak investigation, however, may already be running afoul of the law, a Senate Intelligence Committee member said this week.

Gabbard failed to notify Congress about her search for leakers despite a law requiring her to do so for “significant” disclosures, Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said at a Wednesday hearing.

King, who caucuses with the Democrats, said he thought there was no question the law had been triggered.

“If it was important enough to tweet it, it would seem to me it was important enough to notify this committee,” King said.

“If it was important enough to tweet it, it would seem to me it was important enough to notify this committee.”

King’s comments underscored how Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, has managed to alienate committee Democrats at the same time as she has drawn public criticism from President Donald Trump.

Under the disclosure law, Gabbard is also supposed to provide the committee with an initial damage assessment of significant leaks, laying out what kind of harm they have supposedly caused the government. She also has yet to do that, King said.

Attorney General Pam Bondi distributed plans inside the Justice Department last week to scrap rules protecting journalists and their sources from surveillance and subpoenas over unflattering coverage and leaks. Bondi’s memo leaked to the press immediately.

“This Justice Department will not tolerate unauthorized disclosures that undermine President Trump’s policies, victimize government agencies, and cause harm to the American people,” reads the memo, citing recent leaks to the New York Times, Washington Post, and Reuters as examples of the kind of reporting that would no longer be tolerated. “I have concluded that it is necessary to rescind [former attorney general] Merrick Garland’s policies precluding the Department of Justice from seeking records and compelling testimony from members of the news media in order to identify and punish the source of improper leaks.”

Eliminating these rules is the latest signal of a looming threat to reporters, who could face subpoenas and search warrants for daring to publish information that President Donald Trump would prefer kept secret. Journalists who resist legal demands to disclose their sources could face fines or even jail time.

But it didn’t have to be this way.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has repeatedly claimed that the U.S. government deported a cannibal that “ate other people” and then, while on a flight from the U.S., became so “deranged” that he began to “eat himself.”

Noem first shared the dubious tale late last week during an interview with Fox News’s Jesse Watters. The Cabinet secretary said that a U.S. marshal “off-handedly” told her about a cannibal on a “planeload of illegals.” When Noem asked, “What do you mean he was a cannibal?” the marshal replied: “He started to eat his own arms.”

Watters probed further. “Was this bad hombre handcuffed to something and he was trying to chew his arm off so he could escape, or was he just hungry?” he asked. “You know, what bothered me the most is that this U.S. Marshal just said it like it was normal,” Noem replied, adding, “He said he was literally eating his own arms. That is what he did. He called himself a cannibal and ate other people and ate himself that day.”

+—+

Sorry, I am dusting off phrenology books. These fucking Onservatives and Republicans and Trumpies and female rabid rats all have many things in common with their looks, their eyes, their brows, their cheek and jawbones.

SHANK them ALL.

Bad characters, for sure, and those death star of David’s and Crusades crosses on their fucking chests.

Well, Phrenology for Our Times — MAGA, Cool Hand Luke’s Captains, and cunts like this:

Bound to hate, kill, and stir the Room Temperature head of TRUMP and Comp.

Key Takeaways

  • Phrenology, or craniology, is a now-discredited system for analyzing a person’s strengths and weaknesses based on the size and shape of regions on the skull.
  • The Viennese physiologist Franz Joseph Gall invented phrenology in the late 18th century. His student, Spurzheim, and Spurzheim’s student, Combe, would alter and popularize phrenology throughout Europe and the United States.
  • According to phrenology, there are anywhere between 26 and 40 distinct regions, or “organs,” in the brain associated with mental facilities. The bigger the region relative to the rest of the skull, the more Gall believed it was used.
  • Phrenology, even at the peak of its popularity, was controversial and garnered immense criticism for reasons ranging from the methods of Gall’s experiments to its supposed promotion of materialism and atheism. Modern MRI studies have provided a rigorous argument against phrenology.
  • Although Gall believed that the phrenological structure of brains was fixed, his successors contended that these traits were malleable. This provided justification for phrenology as an early biological theory of crime as well as in educating those of lower classes about their position in society by 19th-century advocates.
  • Despite its defunct status, phrenology has greatly influenced the development of neuroscience, notably the idea that certain functions are controlled by certain regions of the brain and the existence of white matter.

SHANK them ALL: VD spreads his Vance seed:

Archaeologists have uncovered evidence that Neanderthals rendered fat from bones 125,000 years ago — 100,000 years earlier than oldest known fat rendering by modern humans. Thousands of bone fragments and other remains from Neumark-Nord in Germany suggest a large-scale operation in which animals were purposely transported to the area. “The social organization might be different, the technology might be different, but how you have to live in such a landscape to make your living and to survive and prosper is absolutely comparable to modern hunter-gatherers,” says zooarchaeologist and study co-author Lutz Kindler.

The Jewish-Israeli-Talmudist-Zionist Devil’s Bargain

“For you are the children of your father the devil, and you love to do the evil things he does…. When [the devil] lies, it is consistent with his character for he is a liar and the father of lies.”

Above, referring to Jews as Satan or the devil stems from the interpretation of John 8:41-44

The satan, meaning the prosecutor or the adversary, does of course have a name, just as all angels do. In this case, סמאל. Many traditionally observant Jews refer to this angel, colloquially, as the “samekh-mem” (the first two letters of the angel’s Hebrew name). The satan in Judaism is not a fallen angel, but a functionary or spiritual force with a very unpleasant job. He was created as a very nasty sparring partner, an opponent whose job is to strengthen people through mobilizing us to resist him. His ultimate function is, ultimately, to be defeated.

The Sages identify the human propensity to do wrong (יצר הרע), the adversary (השטן), and the angel of death (מלאך המות) as a single concept. Although angels cannot sin, they can overplay their role (this happened, for example, with Gavriel when he spoke to Lot and took a tad too much credit for “his” own job of destroying Sodom). The Ba’al Shem Tov says that the satan is slaughtered eventually because, although he was created as our opponent, he disguises himself just a bit too effectively and enthusiastically as our best friend.

Angels can be thought of as Divine commands, messages, or Divinely-created and -established spiritual forces in the universe (think of gravitational attraction for a more physical example). The satan is a force of illusion which we free-willing human beings ourselves activate, especially through our faculties of speech and imagination. In Liqqutei Sichoth, Rebbe Nachman identifies all the wars and strife in the world as a single war against this power of illusion.

The United Nations special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) has released a new report mapping the corporations aiding Israel in the displacement of Palestinians and its genocidal war on Gaza, in breach of international law.

Francesca Albanese’s latest report, which is scheduled to be presented at a news conference in Geneva on Thursday, names 48 corporate actors, including United States tech giants Microsoft, Alphabet Inc. – Google’s parent company – and Amazon. A database of more than 1000 corporate entities was also put together as part of the investigation.

“[Israel’s] forever-occupation has become the ideal testing ground for arms manufacturers and Big Tech – providing significant supply and demand, little oversight, and zero accountability – while investors and private and public institutions profit freely,” the report said.

“Companies are no longer merely implicated in occupation – they may be embedded in an economy of genocide,” it said, in a reference to Israel’s ongoing assault on the Gaza Strip. In an expert opinion last year, Albanese said there were “reasonable grounds” to believe Israel was committing genocide in the besieged Palestinian enclave.

The report stated that its findings illustrate “why Israel’s genocide continues”.

“Because it is lucrative for many,” it said.

Report: The Economy of Genocide — Report: The Economy of Genocide

Posted by Internationalist 360° on July 1, 2025

Some of Israel’s top exports include:

  • Electrical machinery, electronics and mechanical appliances worth some $18bn.
  • Chemical products including pharmaceuticals worth $10bn.
  • Gems and jewellery including polished diamonds worth $9bn.
  • Optical, technical and medical apparatus worth $7bn.
  • Mineral products worth $5bn.

Israel’s electronics sector is a key engine of its export economy, led by significant players like Intel, which runs large-scale chip fabrication facilities, as well as companies such as Elbit Systems and Orbotech, known for their expertise in military electronics and advanced manufacturing.

Israel is a major exporter of pharmaceuticals, driven by companies such as Teva Pharmaceuticals, one of the world’s largest generic drug manufacturers.

Israel is also a global leader in the diamond trade, importing billions of dollars worth of rough diamonds which are then cut, polished and processed domestically before being exported.

Editorial Comment: The following link lists countries engaged in trade with Israel, which explains why not one has taken any appropriate or meaningful action to stop the genocide. For example, from Latin America, we see that Venezuela, Brazil, Nicaragua, Honduras and Colombia are among those on the continent that continue actively trading with the genocidal entity. This raises questions of integrity, morality, and exposes abject hypocrisy and deceit.

Armed struggle, the only way:

But then, we in Costco Walmartized Disneyfied AmeriKKKa, it’s all about the celebrity criminals —

“Is Oprah friends with Jeff Bezos? Really? How is that possible? He treats his employees with disdain. By any metric he is not a nice man. And his fake fem bot wife who looks like that… Why would he choose her after the salt of the earth Mackenzie [Scott]? Sold his soul is what it looks like from here. The devil is smiling at all his conquests.”

Oprah attended the Bezos wedding with longtime friend Gayle King, who is well-acquainted with Sanchez after their space flight together earlier this year courtesy of Bezos’ Blue Origin company. O’Donnell expanded on her anti-Bezos thoughts in a post on her Substack page.

Other celebrities who criticized the Bezos wedding include Oscar winner Charlize Theron, who made a quip about Bezos’ wedding guests while hosting her annual party for the Africa Outreach Project. She told attendees: “I think we might be the only people who did not get an invite to the Bezos wedding. But that’s ok because they suck and we’re cool.”

O’Donnell made headlines earlier this year for revealing she fled America after the re-election of Donald Trump. She currently lives in Ireland and told Variety she has no plans on returning to the U.S. until Trump is out of office.

“With the current political climate, when would it be safe to come back with my child?” she asked. “I’m not going to push it before this administration is completely finished, and hopefully held accountable for their crimes.”

And then more insanity of EuroTrashLandia while open mass murder is occurring on their watch:

This will become the second largest defense sale ever by Israel, after the sale of Israel Aerospace Industries Arrow 3 air defense system to Germany for $3.5 billion.

EuroTrashLandia is rife with fucking Devils.

That fucking Dead Empire conjoined with the Empire of the Living Dead: The top American general in Japan touted a sweeping command reorganization and highlighted growing regional threats from China in a weekend op-ed published by one of Japan’s most-read newspapers. Air Force Lt. Gen. Stephen Jost outlined the transformation of U.S. Forces Japan and its evolving partnership with the Japan Self-Defense Forces in a Saturday opinion piece in the Asahi Shimbun headlined “Advancing the Alliance: USFJ, JSDF transform future of Indo-Pacific Security.

Devils: Revolving Door Devils!!!! Boeing names former Lockheed CFO as new finance chief

Flag of Genocide:

Jets of Massacres:

China China China and its Jewish stance:

Homo Pesticipethicus: Common farm fungicide may be contributing to ‘insect apocalypse’

We ARE fucked:

New Macquarie University-led research published in Royal Society Open Science, shows chlorothalonil, one of the world’s most widely used agricultural fungicides, deeply impacts the reproduction and survival of insects, even at the lowest levels routinely found on food from cranberries to wine grapes.

“Even the very lowest concentration has a huge impact on the reproduction of the flies that we tested,” says lead author, Ph.D. candidate Darshika Dissawa, from Macquarie’s School of Natural Sciences.

“This can have a big knock-on population impact over time because it affects both male and female fertility.”

Jews: Imagine this, no?

DEVILS:

America's Top 25 Companies by Revenue 💵

Empire of Hate, Disease, Dirt, Perversion: U$A is the Home of the Living Dead.

Just to remind you all, Capitalism won the War against Vietnam:

And in March, the city recorded levels of hazardous small particles known as PM2.5 that were more than 24 times the World Health Organization’s recommended limits. Schools closed, work slowed and N95 masks were the norm.

“I struggled a few weeks ago. The air was so bad, and the nature of my work means that I have to be outside,” Mã Thị Dung, 50, a peanut seller in Hanoi’s Old Town, said in an interview this month. “I cannot hide indoors in the air-conditioning. I had a cough for two weeks that I couldn’t cure, and cycling on my bicycle is particularly difficult when breathing is tough.”

The WHO estimates that more than 60,000 deaths per year in Vietnam are linked to air pollution.

So fucking true and sad.

Jews: Austin tech company announces new cloud deal worth $30 billion a year

Oracle’s new cloud service agreement is expected to contribute hefty revenue starting in fiscal year 2028.