March 26, 2026

The Correspondence Between Teddy Roosevelt And Lord Rothschild + The Immigration of East European Jews Into America

 



An excerpt from, "Presidential 'Thank you' note, 1904" The Rothschild Archive:

Lord Rothschild and Roosevelt shared similar political views; a muscular conservatism. Natty would have approved of Roosevelt’s accomplishments which included a commitment to conservation and the environment, and his expansion of the United States Navy. Roosevelt’s successful efforts to end the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 won him the 1906 Nobel Peace Prize, and the approbation of the Rothschilds, who were only prepared to enter into business with Japan after the war had ended, issuing a major loan in Paris as well as London and the United States on behalf of the Japanese government in 1905.

Roosevelt was the first President to appoint a Jewish cabinet member, Secretary of Commerce and Labor, Oscar Solomon Straus (1850-1926), who served from 1906 to 1909. Concerned with the plight of European Jews, Natty warmly supported this appointment. On 2 July 1906, Natty wrote to his French cousins “Mr Oscar Strauss lunched with me: I have known him for many years, not personally, but we have corresponded together; he is a strong American, a great Hebrew by race, religion & feeling, and he is an intimate friend of Roosevelt, & although he does not wish it known, will probably soon be a member of Roosevelt's Government: at any rate he hopes and thinks so … it is very important that Mr Strauss should get the office Roosevelt wants to give him; because not only would it be a sign to Russia, but it would facilitate a great deal many questions connected with the immigration of Russians & Poles into America.”

An excerpt from, "Under Four Administrations: From Cleveland to Taft" by Oscar S. Straus, The Riverside Press, 1922, Chapter 9:

After luncheon, the President asked me to wait for him in the Red Room, as he wanted to have a talk with me. When the other guests had departed, he came back to me and with his face beaming with geniality he said: "I don't know whether you know it or not, but I want you to become a member of my Cabinet. I have a very high estimate of your character, your judgment, and your ability, and I want you for personal reasons. There is still a further reason: I want to show Russia and some other countries what we think of the Jews in this country."

Of course I was gratified, very much gratified. I told him I had heard from several persons that he had spoken of this intention, but that I had meant to take no notice of it until he should speak to me about it; that I should certainly esteem it the very highest honor to become a member of the Cabinet, and especially to have the privilege of working alongside of him.

"I knew you would feel just that way; therefore I was anxious to let you know of my intention as long in advance as possible," replied the President. He said all this in such a cordial and affectionate manner that I was profoundly touched with this manifestation of close friendship for me.

He then added that he could not see that it would do any good, and might do harm, to make further protests or utterances regarding the massacres in Russia under the disorganized conditions there; and he did not want to do anything that might sound well here and have just the opposite effect there. He thought it would be much more pointed evidence of our Government's interest if he put a man like me into his Cabinet, and that such a course would doubtless have a greater influence than any words with the countries in which unreasonable discrimination and prejudice prevailed.

. . .

The Department of Commerce and Labor was the youngest of the nine departments of the Government, the bill creating it having been approved by President Roosevelt on February 14, 1903. Roosevelt had done much to establish the department and took great pride in it. The first Secretary of Commerce and Labor was George B. Cortelyou, who had been secretary to the President, and by reason of his intimate relations with the officials of the Government was admirably equipped to organize this department, which he did with great skill and administrative ability. After holding the office for about a year and a half, Secretary Cortelyou became Postmaster-General, and Victor H. Metcalf, Congressman from California, was appointed, thereby becoming the next Secretary of the Department on July 1, 1904; I was therefore the third.

The scope of the Department as constituted then was probably the largest of the nine branches of the Government. It was charged with the work of promoting the commerce, mining, manufacturing, shipping, and fishery industries of the country, as well as its transportation facilities and its labor interests; in addition it had jurisdiction over the entire subject of immigration. It had twelve bureaus: corporations; manufactures; labor; lighthouses; census; coast and geodetic survey; statistics, including foreign commerce; steamboat inspection; immigration and naturalization; and standards.

Wikipedia:  

Oscar Solomon Straus (December 23, 1850 – May 3, 1926) was an American politician and diplomat. He served as United States Secretary of Commerce and Labor under President Theodore Roosevelt from 1906 to 1909. He was the first Jewish United States Cabinet Secretary.

. . .He first served as United States Minister to the Ottoman Empire from 1887 to 1889 and again from 1898 to 1899. Upon his arrival to Constantinople, he was said to have been given a "cordial welcome".

At the outbreak of the Philippine–American War in 1899, Secretary of State John Hay asked Straus to approach Sultan Abdul Hamid II to request that the Sultan write a letter to the Moro Sulu Muslims of the Sulu Sultanate telling them to submit to American suzerainty and American military rule. The Sulu sultanate agreed, with Straus writing that the "Sulu Mohammedans ... refused to join the insurrectionists and had placed themselves under the control of our army, thereby recognizing American sovereignty."

President McKinley sent a personal letter of thanks to Straus and said that its accomplishment had saved the United States at least twenty thousand troops in the field."

An excerpt from, "Sites of European Antisemitism in the Age of Mass Politics, 1880–1918" by Robert Nemes and Daniel Unowsky, Brandeis University Press, 2014, Introduction:

By the late nineteenth century, many European states had emancipated Jews, expanded suffrage, raised literacy rates, and begun to industrialize, urbanize, and colonize the globe. Yet the early 1880s also brought pogroms in Russia, a sensational blood libel case in Hungary, an Antisemitic League in Germany, and growing Jewish emigration to western Europe and beyond. The uneasy coexistence in Europe of a liberal modernity with antisemitic agitation would last through the First World War, which, to many observers, brought the liberal era to a close and opened the door to unprecedented levels of anti-­Jewish violence and discrimination. This is a book about European antisemitism, but it does not cover all of Europe. Important regions, including Scandinavia, Iberia, and the Low Countries, are not addressed here. Nor does Germany have a chapter, in part because the historiography on antisemitism in Imperial Germany is so rich. Readers familiar with German scholarship will see its influence on this book in many areas, not least in our emphasis on local studies, attention to the ritual dimensions of violence, and insistence that study of the nineteenth century can provide insight into the violence of the twentieth century. With this volume, we have tried to bring together essays on places less often featured in surveys of European antisemitism. We also have tried to span the continent. By including essays ranging from Great Britain to Greece and from France to Lithuania, this book makes clear that antisemitism and anti-­Jewish violence did not distinguish the “backward” regions of Europe. The authors read antisemitism and anti-­Jewish violence as evidence that modern mass politics arrived in rural eastern Europe with little if any time lag compared to the more “advanced” central and western European states. We have chosen not to organize the book’s essays by geographic region or to follow a west-­east gradient, as is often the case in volumes on European history. Rather, we have grouped the essays around common themes and questions, although, as the reader will recognize, the chapters are often in conversation with each other across these section divisions. The aim is to suggest connections, both historical and historiographical, between regions rarely viewed alongside one another.

Catholicism and modern politics link the first three essays, which cover Habsburg Galicia, France, and Italy. Daniel Unowsky’s close study of the 1898 anti-­Jewish riots in Galicia shows that antisemitism ran deep in the new mass politics in the Polish-­speaking countryside. Catholic institutions, journalists, and politicians posited anti-­Jewish action as the key to modernizing the rural economy. The monarchy’s commitment to political reform and press freedom also contributed to the outbreak, course, and legacy of the 1898 events. Still, as Unowsky argues, local contexts and the mixed motivations of participants on the ground shaped the 1898 violence, which contributed to the increased isolation of Jews in Galician society. The events in Galicia were influenced by Catholic antisemitic activity in other regions of Europe. As chapters by Vicki Caron and Ulrich Wyrwa reveal, French and Italian Catholic publicists played a key role in legitimizing a wide range of antisemitic arguments and antisemitic politics. Through newspapers, pamphlets, essay contests, and books, Catholic activists made antisemitism the centerpiece of the case they built against liberal regimes, which they blamed for the emancipation of Jews, rampant secularism, and deadening materialism.How this new Catholic antisemitism related to the era’s racial theories of antisemitism is a matter of some dispute. But the importance of Catholic writers to the development and dissemination of antisemitic rhetoric, images, and arguments is not. In all three case studies, the authors expose deep anxieties held by many Catholic thinkers and activists about modern politics and society. In late nineteenth-­century Europe, anti-­Jewish violence (and efforts to understand that violence) was deeply intertwined with questions of national belonging and nationalist politics. 

The second set of essays usefully reminds us that local episodes of anti-­Jewish violence took place within the framework of nation-­states and multinational empires. Both political structures posed risks and rewards for Jews, and they also influenced how antisemitism functioned. In culturally cohesive states such as Romania—or France or Italy—where one ethnoreligious group dominated public life, Jews were often seen as “foreigners,” no matter what level of integration they had attained. This emerges clearly from Iulia Onac’s study of anti-­Jewish violence in Romania. Peasants and parliamentarians agreed that Jews (even if native born) were foreigners who did not deserve human rights; indeed, expulsion was the frequent consequence of this antisemitic logic. Things were more complicated in the Habsburg Monarchy. Throughout central and eastern Europe, Jews often found themselves caught between competing national movements. Michal Frankl demonstrates that Czech activists in Moravia stirred antisemitism into the cauldron of national tensions. Here Jews were increasingly seen as an “internal” enemy, in many ways more threatening and insidious than the Czechs’ traditional (and “external”) antagonist, the Germans. 

In Marija Vulesica’s account of antisemitism in Croatia, the Croatian press explained away local attacks on Jewish shops, homes, and synagogues as justifiable responses to Hungarian oppression. Like other case studies in this volume, Vulesica’s work serves as a reminder that neither a large Jewish population nor the sanction of state authorities was required for widespread antisemitic activity. Like a virus, antisemitism continued to mutate and spread in the years around 1900. The third section demonstrates the wide geographic reach of antisemitism, as well as the many forms it could take. In Sam Johnson’s chapter on London’s East End, the immigration of East European Jews into Great Britain triggered an antisemitic reaction. Her analysis of the British Brothers League shows how readily antisemitic agitators adopted liberal forms of political organization (voluntary associations, mass meetings, and marches) and media (newspapers, posters, and manifestos). Alison Rose’s chapter on the bigamy trial of a Jewish woman in rural Austria offers a similar lesson. Here antisemitic prosecutors, journalists, and spectators turned what should have been unremarkable legal proceedings into an antisemitic spectacle, in which the defendant’s Jewishness and gender took on outsized roles. 

Mary Margaroni’s study of Greek antisemitism examines the infamous Corfu blood libel case of 1891 and adds other, lesser-­known incidents to the list of anti-­Jewish ritual murder charges. The posture of the state and its officials mattered greatly, as many of these essays demonstrate. Shaken by frequent riots and revolutions, nineteenth-­ century European governments placed a high premium on public order. With this in mind, scholars have shown that even in Russia, where antisemitism had a wide following, the regime did not incite the pogroms of the early 1880s, as had long been believed. Across Europe, state officials kept their distance from antisemitic activities. This did not prevent rioters from acting in the name of the state, nor were all state and regional authorities removed from local acts against Jews. As the final group of essays makes evident, the revolutions and wars of the early twentieth century not only raised the level of antisemitic violence, but often complicated relations between authorities and agitators. Klaus Richter’s study of Lithuania analyzes how the revolution of 1905 provided new opportunities for peasants in one village to exact their “revenge” on local Jews, whom they viewed as allies of the Tsarist regime. 

Approaching the same events from a different perspective, Gerald Surh shows how army units, committed to the defense of the regime, were just as likely to attack as to defend Jews. The First World War put similar pressure on officials and officers in all European states, even as it revealed the resilience of Jewish communities across the continent. In Robert Nemes’s chapter on Hungary, the insistence of many state and local officials that wartime Jewish refugees were “foreigners” opened the door to attacks on all Hungarian Jews. 

Taken together, the essays reveal how antisemitism mobilized surprising numbers of men and women across the continent. Antisemitism could be tacked onto a wide range of grievances, from peasant anger about land to nationalists’ worries about jobs and schools. Antisemitic accusations echoed from pulpits and the streets, as they had in the past, but they also appeared in newspapers, parliaments, town halls, and election campaigns. If antisemitism added something new to European political culture, it was the aggression that so frequently accompanied antisemitism: the heated words, broken windows, and angry boycotts. What the contemporary Austrian writer Stefan Zweig called the “invasion of brutality into politics” had many causes, but antisemitism was prominent among them. The constellation of antisemitism and local violence would characterize many of the political movements that would help shape the first half of Europe’s twentieth century.

From Kennedy To Khamenei: The Decapitation of State Leaders And The Remaking of World History

 

Texas. Tehran. Kennedy. Khamenei. Same assassins. 63 years apart.


For a leader to be killed in power is a badge of honour. That is why I was so mad at Assad for running to Moscow after telling his people to fight for over a decade. He had only two honourable choices before him, and be chose neither. He abandoned the game when he saw his fortunes change instead of admitting defeat.

There's no shame in defeat if you play the game right. Most of us will die in our sleep or for some random medical reason. JFK knew the risk of his political choices and the wrath of the bastards he was up against. He made them anyway. He was not killed by some lone gunman in a random act of violence. His death should be remembered as a great sacrifice because that was his aim. He knew he'd be killed for opposing the forces of war and tyranny.

After his untimely death the war in Vietnam and the wars in the Middle East entered new phases. 

The Rothschild Empire in control of America and Israel needed sacrifices. It needed war. And every president who wanted to see the end of his term alive delivered.

Trump has been the biggest voice in this war but he's not conducting the orchestra. He's playing the trombone in the back and he's carrying notes out of tune because the conductor is presumably dead.

Netanyahu hasn't been seen in the White House for almost two weeks now. He normally visits every other week. I thought he would make the Situation Room his temporary residence when he started this war. 

That should have been the play. He would've been safer state side. Instead he went to play war hero in Israel, pretending to be the great leader during wartime, and most likely got himself blasted to pieces.

Trump is stuck now, facing an anxious audience without a conductor or a music sheet. 

When the tribe killed Kennedy, LBJ was waiting in the wings to immediately take over, and a ready-made narrative was prepared to quell the American public's suspicion. It was an easy regime change operation.

They assumed a similar scenario would play out in Iran after killing Khamenei. And that was not a totally crazy assumption, considering half the country hated his guts. But what Israel failed to realize is that nations don't like seeing their leaders killed by foreigners, even if they're unpopular. It was an act of war and that's what they got.

That's what they've wanted for decades. A total and regional war.

They aim to change the map of the region, bring Iran to its knees, kill the Dollar, and remake world history. Let them try. If they succeed, good on them. But don't go crying when events don't go your way. No more of the "Holocaust" and "anti-Semitism" bullshit. Enough with all that.

March 25, 2026

The Rise of The Demonic Is Real

 

The CIA Insider Who Tried to Stop A.Q. Khan’s Nuclear Empire | Richard Barlow

 



Pakistan does not have the right to exist. I say this as someone who had great friends from Pakistan. The country is full of great people with generous spirits.

But the geopolitical project that is Pakistan was a crime perpetuated by the British and later the Americans against South Asia and West Asia. And that crime has to be rectified. 

Pakistan must come to grips with the harsh reality that it is an international orphan, not some great warrior nation at the vanguard of Islam. Churchill was its father, not Jinnah. America is its step daddy, and it doesn't love it. 

Since its inception Pakistan has been nothing but a mercenary for hire. It was Ukraine before Ukraine. Its criminal army is less corrupt than the one occupying Kiev but not by much. And its nuclear program was gifted to it. 

China, India, and Iran have a historic responsibility and a civilizational obligation to Asia to commandeer Pakistan's nukes and destroy them.

Wikipedia:

Richard Barlow is an American intelligence analyst and a former expert in nuclear non-proliferation for the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Department of Defense. He lost his job and was subjected to a campaign of persecution and intimidation after he expressed concern to his managers in the US Department of Defense over testimony to congress that he believed to be false about Pakistan's nuclear weapon program during the presidency of George H. W. Bush. Since then, he has had occasional contract work for various federal agencies including the CIA, the State Department, the FBI and Sandia National Laboratories. In 2013 he had been unemployed since 2004 when his job at Sandia had been eliminated. "If they had busted those [Pakistani] networks," he told journalist Jeff Stein, "Iran would have no nuclear program, North Korea wouldn't have a uranium bomb, and Pakistan wouldn't have over a hundred nuclear weapons they are driving around in vans to hide from us."

. . .Barlow is not a whistleblower in the traditional sense, because he did not release classified information to the public. Instead, he lawfully disclosed in a classified briefing to a committee of the US Congress information that his management did not want shared with Congress. Because of his lawful and protected disclosures, he was fired for asking his managers to correct the record when blatantly false statements had been made to Congress.

. . .Following congressionally ordered investigations, the inspector general at the State Department concluded that Barlow had been fired as a reprisal. However, the inspectors general at the CIA and the Defense Department stated that the Pentagon was within its rights to fire Barlow. A final investigation by Congress' own Government Accountability Office was completed in 1997 and "largely vindicated" Barlow, who had his security clearance restored. During the investigation, the State department inspector-general, Sherman Funk, described Barlow as "one of the most brilliant analysts I've ever seen".

. . .The activities of the Defense Department officials, however, including Cheney, Libby, Wolfowitz and Hadley, were never investigated. Rep. Stephen Solarz, a major player in counter-proliferation, told Seymour Hersh for the latter's famous exposé of the Pakistani nuclear program that "If what Barlow says is true, this would have been a major scandal of Iran-Contra proportions, and the officials involved would have had to resign. We're not dealing with minor matters. Stopping the spread of nuclear weapons is one of the major foreign-policy issues of the nation—not to mention the law of the land."

Barlow, however, was unable to find employment after his clearance was removed and marriage broke up. "They viciously tried to destroy my life, personally and professionally" he is quoted as saying. "Not just my career, but they went after my marriage, my livelihood, and smeared my name in truly extraordinary ways that no one had ever seen before or since—at least not until the Wilsons were victims of the same people years later." According to Barlow the allegations included the "fabrication" that he "was an 'intended' Congressional spy", that he was an alcoholic, had not paid his taxes, and was an adulterer. "Then they accused me of being psychotic and used that to invade my marital privacy, including that of my now ex-wife who also worked at the CIA, and sought to destroy my marriage as punishment."

Video Title: The CIA Insider Who Tried to Stop A.Q. Khan’s Nuclear Empire | Richard Barlow. Source: ANI News. Date Published: November 7, 2025.

Crows At Dawn Over Israel


"The Magic of Crows and Ravens in Mythology" by Patti Wigington, Learn Religions, July 19, 2024:

"In Celtic mythology, the warrior goddess known as the Morrighan often appears in the form of a crow or raven or is seen accompanied by a group of them. Typically, these birds appear in groups of three, and they are seen as a sign that the Morrighan is watching—or possibly getting ready to pay someone a visit.

In some tales of the Welsh myth cycle, the Mabinogion, the raven is a harbinger of death. Witches and sorcerers were believed to have the ability to transform themselves into ravens and fly away, thus enabling them to evade capture.

The Native Americans often saw the raven as a trickster, much like a coyote. There are a number of tales regarding the mischief of ravens, who are sometimes seen as a symbol of transformation. In the legends of various tribes, the raven is typically associated with everything from the creation of the world to the gift of sunlight to mankind. Some tribes knew the raven as a stealer of souls.

Some of the tribes with Crow clans include the Chippewa, the Hopi, the Tlingit, and the Pueblo tribes of the American Southwest.

For those who follow the Norse pantheon, Odin is often represented by the raven—usually a pair of them. Early artwork depicts him as being accompanied by two black birds, who are described in the Eddas as Huginn and Munnin. Their names translate to “thought” and “memory,” and their job is to serve as Odin’s spies, bringing him news each night from the land of men.

Crows sometimes appear as a method of divination. For the ancient Greeks, the crow was a symbol of Apollo in his role as god of prophecy. Augury—divination using birds—was popular among both the Greeks and the Romans, and augurs interpreted messages based on not only the color of a bird but the direction from which it flew. A crow flying in from the east or south was considered favorable.

In parts of the Appalachian mountains, a low-flying group of crows means that illness is coming—but if a crow flies over a house and calls three times, that means an impending death in the family. If the crows call in the morning before the other birds get a chance to sing, it’s going to rain. Despite their role as messengers of doom and gloom, it’s bad luck to kill a crow. If you accidentally do so, you’re supposed to bury it—and be sure to wear black when you do!

In some places, it's not the sighting of a crow or raven itself, but the number that you see which is important. Mike Cahill at Creepy Basement says,

"Seeing just a single crow is considered an omen of bad luck. Finding two crows, however, means good luck. Three crows mean health, and four crows mean wealth. Yet spotting five crows means sickness is coming, and witnessing six crows means death is nearby."

Even within the Christian religion, ravens hold a special significance. While they are referred to as “unclean” within the Bible, Genesis tells us that after the flood waters receded, the raven was the first bird Noah sent out from the ark to find land. Also, in the Hebrew Talmud, ravens are credited with teaching mankind how to deal with death; when Cain slew Abel, a raven showed Adam and Eve how to bury the body because they had never done so before."