LEE CAMP dissects a number of still open questions in US history, including the conspiracy behind the MLK murder, and the curtain of lies protecting Israel from world opinion.
May 2018
LEE CAMP—The young radical comedian examined American police’s tendency to shoot first and ask questions later, an attitude that victimises Blacks disproportionally.
Bill Maher’s defense of Israeli massacres of Gaza demonstrators hits new low. (Video)
1 minutes readTHE HUMANIST REPORT’s Mike Figueredo dissects Bill Maher’s devious endorsement of Israeli massacres in Gaza. An unrepentant Clintonite and Russiagater, Bill Maher has lost much of his once commanding claim to follow in the steps of genuine iconoclasts like George Carlin since embracing the establishment’s criminal anglozionist line.
HIROYUKI HAMADA IMMIGRATING FROM JAPAN TO THE BELLY OF EMPIRE
36 minutes readHIROYUKI HAMADA—And getting back to American people being nice and generous, they just can’t express those feelings of caring and love in constructive ways, as long as they are embracing imperialism. I mean, that’s like saying someone is a great guy, although he owns a few slaves and shoots Indians occasionally. We need to change our mode of thinking so that imperialism and wealth accumulation as guiding principles are as shameful as slavery or colonialism. The thing is that when you throw anything into the hierarchical system shaped by money and violence, the good will always turns into something else–like, people wanting to stop violence and drugs would end up supporting police violence, mass incarceration and gentrification, or people longing for peace and democracy would end up supporting colonial wars, regime change operations and so on.
SACRED COWS DEPT.—Malcolm Gladwell Unmasked: A Look Into the Life & Work of America’s Most Successful Propagandist
YASHA LEVINE—Malcolm Gladwell says that he got into journalism by accident, that his real dream was to work for an ad agency. “I decided I wanted to be in advertising. I applied to eighteen advertising agencies in the city of Toronto and received eighteen rejection letters, which I taped in a row on my wall,” he wrote in his What the Dog Saw. If true, then Gladwell didn’t fail at all. Rather, he has achieved his dream of becoming an ad man beyond all expectation. His position as a public intellectual and respected New Yorker makes him infinitely more effective and useful as an ad man than he would ever be if he were sitting and writing ad copy in the office of some big-name advertising conglomerate.

