DARK SIDE OF THE SWOON
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Southern Lebanon has been choked with Palestinian refugees for more than 75 years. It has been choked with them ever since the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948. As a result, the traditional Lebanese system of government - which actually mandates proportional representation in its parliament according to the populations of each religion in the nation - effectively no longer controls South Lebanon.
Many Zionists will no doubt take issue with the phrase “ethnic cleansing” in regard to the 1948 expulsions of the Palestinians. I have no plans to stop using it. lf the forcible seizure of the homes of over a half a million humans is not ethnic cleansing - those humans kicked to the streets, and forced to stagger dozens of miles across borders to other nations in what often became death marches - the words cease to have meaning.
Hezbоllah now controls South Lebanon, and Hezbоllah has no more plans to stop shooting at the lsraelis they see as invaders than Israel itself plans to honor the ceasefires the U.S. is constantly demanding of it.
And that is because, in their eyes - foreign Israeli soldiers have boots on their soil, and Lebanon has the right to defend itself.
“I REPRESENT THE RОTHSCHILDS” - JEFFREY EPSTEIN
While Binyamin Netanyаhu leads Israel in public, few who understand the power structure of Israel would fail to note that there is a larger power behind Bibi and the coalition of far-right, genocidal maniacs he has assembled, which has, in the last three years since the October 7 attacks on Israel, managed to keep such a furor of war, invasion, and general calamity stirred up so fervently that Bibi’s own public trial for deep-seated corruption has been postponed over and over.
That is the Rоthschilds themselves - a family of billionaires so notoriously secretive that for many, many years, just about any allegation against them in major Western media was spiked as “anti-Semitism”. The main thoroughfare in Tel Aviv is named after them. And if you believe they do not wield immense global power, consider this photo of King Charles III of Windsor, “monarch”, being poked in the chest by Lord Evelyn Rоthschild, “subject”. (To be fair, at the time Charles was “only” the crown prince.)
The Rоthschilds, centuries ago, became unimaginably wealthy banking for the Vatican.
Today they are all over the Epstein files, with the name mentioned no less than 12,000 times.
Lynn Forester de Rоthschild - a friend of Hillary Clintоn’s for decades - has been described as “connecting every thread of the Epstein network”. Ariane de Rothschild - current CEO of the Edmond de Rоthschild Group - exchanged e-mails with Epstein dozens of times per month. Several other Rоthschilds are prominent in the files as well.
Given that it is well-known, at least by the observant, that Epstein’s true purpose in recording thousands of tapes of illegal child pоrnography was to collect as much kompromat - compromising material - on as many of the world’s powerful politicians and celebrities as possible, to be then given to Israeli intelligence and used to ensure compliance to a Zionist agenda - well, quite frankly, why would any nation put up with this?
Why isn’t the United States defending itself and its children from this family of sex-trafficking billionaires?
III: A WEB OF ASTONISHINGLY VIOLENT COINCIDENCES
By a curious coincidence, five dancing, laughing lsraeli men were caught filming the 9/11 attacks and cheering, with their camera set up on a nearby rooftop to record the carnage. These men would go on to take selfies holding a lit cigarette lighter in front of the smoking carnage at the Towers before they finally collapsed.
How did they know how to be there?
Why did they cheer an attack on their “allies”?
The answer to all of this would need its own article.
But, for now, let’s talk about another astonishing “coincidence”: the way President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was brutally murdered after coming out against the nuclear program of Israel and what he perceived as associated corruption at the Federal Reserve.
A man named James “Files” Sutton has been trying to confess to being JFK’s real assassin for years. Lee Harvey Oswald couldn’t hit the broadside of a barn, or so Sutton claims - so when it became clear that Oswald would continue to miss, Sutton himself, who it seems may have been quite an excellent shot, took the kill shot himself from the infamous grassy knoll. This would do a lot to explain why the official ballistics on Kennedy’s killing have always been called out as wrong.
More to the point, however - when it comes to why Kennedy was killed, and who was ultimately behind it, there are four words in the JFK files that have been redacted for 58 years. This March, they were unredacted.
Those words are “the Israeli lntelligence Service”.
Then, of course, there is the “coincidence” that President Donald Trump himself happens to have been on the board of directors for a company called Resorts International in the late 1980s. His fellow leaders in this venture included a Rоthschild - Edmond, the head of the group Ariane ran - U.S. billionaire David Rоckefeller - and the aged Meyer Lansky, former head of the Jewish-American mafia in the United States, and the leader of hitmen-for-hire group Murder Inc.
Lansky is of course a curious figure - because during World War II, rather than prosecuting him, the U.S. government decided to hire him and his mafia to fight the Nazis, and to “protect” New York Harbor in a nosebleed-level espionage operation called Operation Underworld. Lansky’s gang would then go on to bomb the harbor themselves, coming back to their handlers to cite how dangerous it was, and that they would need a whole lot more money to “defend” it.
By another curious coincidence, Casey Wasserman, Olympic chair and the grandson of another suspected head of the Jewish-American mafia - one who has more or less escaped scrutiny to this day because he was so beloved in Hollywood, former Universal Pictures head Lew Wasserman - has now been tied to Epstein as well. It appears the FBl wanted to investigate the Wasserman family’s mob ties back in the 1980’s - but that President Reagan himself shut them down.
There are more “coincidences” than just this, going back an astonishing amount of time in U.S. history. Indeed, the brutal burning of the Whіte House in 1812 by Canada - then a nation still subject to the British Crown - happened just after the United States revoked the mandate for the Rоthschilds’ First Bank of the United States.
I am not a big believer in coincidences, suffice it to say.
Instead, what would be indicated by any sane planet is an international criminal investigation to investigate all these “coincidences” to see if a family of billionaires quite provably linked to the rape and trafficking of children has been plotting hideous violence against the United States for centuries, any time the U.S. is bold enough to defy it.
IV: A PRESENT OF BRUTALLY HORRIFIC WAR CRIMES
I’d like to keep this article short. People have short attention spans these days.
The simplest too-long-didn’t-read reason nations have the right to protect themselves from the Rоthschild cartel and its violence is that it is alleged that lsrael’s army is now deliberately targeting children. It is doing this by dropping cluster bombs shaped like sports balls.
This is, of course, a hideous war crime under every known interpretation of international law. The use of bombs disguised as children’s toys is reprehensible.
Were this violence taking place against a Western civilization, it would be all over the news. It could not be ignored. The nation that did it would shortly thereafter be overthrown.
But because it is taking place against an Arab population, it seems to vanish behind a haze of prejudice: “Kill them. Kill the children before they grow up to be lslamists.”
This is movie villain behavior. It is indefensible. Every nation has the right to defend itself against a regime that not only appears to be sex trafficking children, but actively engaged in their wholesale slaughter as well.
The fact that an astonishing amount of evidence also points to lsrael - and indeed the United States under Trump - as being run by the remnants of Meyer Lansky’s mafia provides yet another reason that every nation on Earth has the right to self-defense against this garbage.
To summarize, at this point the evidence is nearly indisputable that there is a transnational criminal cartel of war criminals and sex traffickers running lsrael.
And this criminal cartel has no right to exist.
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Written By Andrew Hall, see comments for sources and more.

The
Supreme Court paved the way for the Trump administration to deport more
than 350,000 Haitian and Syrian nationals in the United States who were
previously protected by
Temporary Protected Status designations. In doing so, the court
effectively blessed Trump’s bigotry toward Haitians and dealt
potentially catastrophic damage to federal civil rights laws.
The court’s ruling in Mullin v. Doe dealt with two separate issues. One was whether Congress had barred the plaintiffs from seeking judicial review of the secretary of homeland security’s decision to revoke the TPS designation for both Haiti and Syria. The other was whether the Haiti TPS revocation was illegal because it was made with a racially discriminatory purpose.
Both countries at issue experienced tremendous upheaval in the 2010s. Haiti experienced a devastating earthquake in 2010 that killed as many as 160,000 people and destroyed large swaths of the country and especially the capital, Port-au-Prince. The ensuing social and economic crisis fueled political unrest and ubiquitous gang violence. Gunmen stormed the presidential compound and killed Haitian President Jovenel Moïse in 2021, and the country has yet to elect a constitutional successor.
Syria also saw massive civilian displacements during its 13-year civil war, which began in 2011 as a protest movement against the regime of President Bashar Al Assad. More than 650,000 people died in the ensuing conflict. Assad fled the country in 2024 as rebel forces captured Damascus. While the new government has built ties with major powers to end economic sanctions and rebuild the country, much of Syria’s economy and infrastructure remains in ruins.
Federal law allows the secretary of homeland security to grant Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, to foreign nationals inside the United States when they are unable to return to their home countries due to extraordinary circumstances, like natural disasters or civil wars. While the law does not create a pathway to permanent residency or citizenship, it does generally protect TPS recipients from deportation without some other cause.
The Obama administration invoked TPS for Haitian and Syrian nationals in 2010 and 2012, respectively. Under federal law, the secretary of homeland security must conduct a review every 18 months to determine if the country in question “no longer continues to meet the conditions for designation.” The law requires the secretary to “consult with appropriate agencies of the government” before reaching that determination.
Since TPS status can hinge entirely on an executive branch official’s determination, those protected from removal by it became a logical target for Trump officials after they retook power last year. The second Trump administration has dedicated itself to ethnically cleansing the U.S., both by shutting down legal pathways for immigration and by removing as many nonwhite people from the country as possible through deportation.
To that end, the Trump administration has constructed a vast network of deportation warehouses to pressure people to leave by holding them in unsanitary and unsafe conditions. It has dismantled the nation’s refugee-resettlement program with the sole exception of white Afrikaners from South Africa. It has even claimed the power to abolish birthright citizenship by executive order; the Supreme Court will rule upon the legality of that step later this month.
In keeping with that goal, Trump also issued an executive order last year that instructed executive branch officials to take a more “limited” approach to TPS designations. Then-Secretary Kristi Noem announced soon thereafter that she would be terminating the TPS designations for Haiti and Syria. A group of TPS recipients responded by suing her and the department to challenge her decision on multiple grounds. (Markwayne Mullin, who replaced Noem as secretary earlier this spring, is now the lead defendant.)
Congress, using its jurisdiction-stripping powers, had included a provision in the statute to forbid courts from exercising “judicial review of any determination of the [secretary] with respect to the designation, or termination or extension of a designation, of a foreign state.” As a result, the TPS recipients had no ability to challenge the designation itself—for example, to argue that it was not yet safe to return to their home country.
Instead, the TPS recipients argued that they weren’t challenging Noem’s determination itself. They argued that she had illegally reached that determination by improperly following the law’s consultation requirement with other federal agencies. Alito, writing for the majority on Thursday, argued that the judicial-review bar applied to the entire deliberative process. “If the final agency action is unreviewable, then so too are subsidiary determinations,” he concluded. “This important principle ensures that challengers cannot avoid a judicial-review bar by creative pleading or clever lawyering.”
In the Haiti case, a federal district court in D.C. also found that the TPS designation was illegal on equal protection clause grounds because race was a motivating factor. It applied the Supreme Court’s test from the 1977 case Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corporation, which requires courts to evaluate whether race was a “motivating factor” by, among other things, looking into “evidence of intent” that can include “contemporary statements” by key officials.
It is not surprising that the district court ruled against the administration because Trump is vehemently and publicly racist toward Haitians. Accordingly, the court concluded that Trump had acted, “at least in part, with racial animus” because the president “repeatedly invoked racist tropes of national purity.” Findings like this are typically subject to clear-error review by appeals courts. In other words, they aren’t supposed to be overturned as long as they are “plausible,” Kagan noted in her dissent.
With Trump, that should be an easy threshold. “The evidence [the plaintiffs] have offered includes statements by the President so repellent and racially inflected that the majority declines to put them in print,” Kagan noted. “Indeed, one measure of the President’s way of speaking about Haitians is to compare it with the majority’s, which is unfailingly respectful.”
She cited Alito’s assertion that “poverty and deprivation are no reflection on character, and there is no justification for denigrating the character of Haitians who suffer from and bear no responsibility for their country’s ills.” At the same time, Kagan also quoted from Trump’s public comments about Haitians at length:
Haitians are “eating the dogs.… They’re eating the cats. They’re eating—they’re eating the pets of the people that live [in Springfield, Ohio].” And: Haitians are also eating “other things too that they’re not supposed to be.” And: Haitians in the United States “probably have AIDS.” And: Haiti is a “shithole country,” which is “filthy, dirty, [and] disgusting.” And: Haitian immigration is “like a death wish for our country.” And: Haitians, along with some others, are “poisoning the blood” of our country. And: “Why is it we only take people from shithole countries” like “Haiti [and] Somalia”? “Why cannot we have some people from Norway [and] Sweden?” The majority briefly replies that those remarks are not “overtly racial,” but it is hard to know what that means. Haitians are Black. (Norwegians and Swedes not so much.)
Alito, along with his five colleagues, divided up Trump’s statements into four categories. Some “express strong objections to the immigration that this country has experienced in recent decades” and to “many of the immigrants who have come here, particularly those who have come […] illegally,” which Trump “associate[s] with crime and other social ills.” Alito could have hardly sanitized them more than if he had used Clorox.
Other statements, Alito claimed, “express great displeasure with TPS” in general or “broadly denigrate the countries for which TPS designations have been granted—including Haiti—portraying them as hellish places to live.” Finally, Alito noted, some of Trump’s comments “malign Haitians who have come to the United States.” If only there were a shorter word to describe that.
After completing this act of transmutation, Alito then insisted that “none of the cited statements by either the president or the secretary was overtly racial, and in substance all expressed policy views that could rest on race-neutral justifications.”
This is a deeply disturbing assessment on two levels. First, it is historically and linguistically illiterate. “The references—of filth, disease, and primitiveness—are shot through with racial stereotypes and tropes,” Kagan continued, quoting from precedent. “It is hard to imagine the statements being made today of any White community.” A Martian who arrived on Earth yesterday might be forgiven for not hearing echoes of Nazi Germany when the president says that a minority group is “poisoning the blood” of our country. Six Supreme Court justices have no excuse.
Alito and the court’s other conservative justices are more than capable of discerning discriminatory intent from public officials’ remarks in other contexts. In 2012, he and his conservative colleagues joined an opinion by then-Justice Anthony Kennedy that inferred anti-religious bigotry from a member of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission for using the word “despicable” to describe a Christian baker’s refusal to sell wedding cakes to a same-sex couple. Trump’s language toward Haitians was considerably stronger than that. Indeed, the court’s conservatives routinely ascribe discriminatory intent in other religious freedom cases where legitimate policy rationales are given.
Second, and perhaps more ominously, Alito’s opinion completely butchers the Arlington Heights test, which is commonly used in civil rights cases. Under that test, the plaintiffs should prevail so long as they can prove race was a “motivating factor,” even if it wasn’t the sole or primary factor. Alito flipped the rule around by claiming that Trump’s remarks “expressed policy views that could rest on race-neutral justifications.” In short, any pretextual explanation for Trump’s comments could overcome the interpretation that they were racist.
Arlington Heights did not anticipate that a president would be as openly racist as Trump. It anticipated a more subtle search, which is why the court in 1977 urged judges to take into account the “historical background” of a policy, as well as a “specific sequence of events leading up to a challenged decision” and “departures from the normal procedural sequence.” The court’s decision came in a case involving zoning policy, just over a decade after the Civil Rights Act of 1964’s passage. It envisioned applying to subtle forms of racial discrimination after the demise of overt ones.
Alito, once again, got it backward. The search for context as described by Arlington Heights was meant to identify racist rationales that might be otherwise cloaked by officials. To Alito, however, that search is actually meant to find pretexts to exonerate Trump. “Because application of that standard calls for consideration of the context in which a challenged statement was made, the immigration context is an important factor,” he wrote.
Kagan and her fellow dissenting justices thought this to be ridiculous. “No very ‘sensitive inquiry,’ of the kind Arlington Heights compels, is needed to see them for what [Trump’s statements] are; judges, as we often say, are ‘not required to exhibit a naiveté from which ordinary citizens are free,’” she explained.
This is hardly new territory for Alito: He performed the same pretzel-twisting to make it impossible to bring racial gerrymandering claims in Louisiana v. Callais earlier this term. At the same time, rewriting Arlington Heights in this fashion is arguably worse because, unlike Callais, it applies in a much wider range of legal contexts. If the court’s reworked test applies outside of the immigration context, it could excuse a much greater range of bigotry by public officials, veiled or otherwise, than the current status quo.
Alito further excuses Trump’s remarks by claiming the plaintiffs themselves had given Trump a race-neutral reason by citing “the present administration’s general stance on immigration.” (As I’ve noted before, Alito has a hobby of sorts of making disfavored litigants act against their own interest.) He noted, puckishly, that the Trump administration had ended TPS for a wide range of countries from Asia, Africa, and South America and took this as evidence of a lack of racist intent.
“Most would regard this as a racially diverse group of countries, but [the plaintiffs] see them all as ‘non-white’ nations,” Alito claimed. “They claim that TPS has not been terminated for any predominantly white nation, and they therefore infer that the reason for the termination of the TPS designation for Haiti was having a predominantly nonwhite population.”
But, Alito noted, the reason that the administration hasn’t done so is that no European country, except for war-torn former parts of Yugoslavia, had ever fallen under TPS and lost it. (Ukraine currently has one, he noted, but it won’t be up for review until later this year.) “The great majority of countries granted TPS have ranked among the poorest nations of the world, and no European nation falls into that category,” Alito coyly observed.
In the end, it comes as no real surprise that the Supreme Court’s conservative majority takes no issue with Trump’s description of Haiti as a “shithole country,” nor that it finds no racist motivation in describing Haitians as eating people’s pets or poisoning the blood of the American Volk. They don’t see Trump’s remarks or actions as racist because they apparently agree with him.
Matt Ford is a staff writer at The New Republic.
Friday, June 26, 2026
Thursday, June 25, 2026
SECRECY OR ACCOUNTABILITY?
This quote reflects debates surrounding intelligence agencies, covert operations, and democratic oversight. During the Cold War, intelligence institutions expanded their global influence, leading critics to question whether secrecy can eventually outgrow public accountability.
The second quote also echoes long-standing conspiracy theories surrounding the assassination of John F. Kennedy, which remain unproven and heavily debated.
Can a democracy remain democratic if parts of the state operate beyond meaningful public scrutiny?
History repeatedly shows that intelligence agencies can gather information, prevent threats, and protect national interests…
…but critics have also argued that secrecy can weaken transparency and concentrate enormous power in institutions that citizens rarely see.
And perhaps the lasting lesson is this:
The strength of a democracy is not measured by how powerful its secret institutions become…
…but by whether those institutions remain accountable to the people they are meant to serve.
Because secrecy may protect a state…
…but accountability protects a democracy.
#AllenDulles #JohnFKennedy #PoliticalPhilosophy #Democracy #StatePower





