Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

IRISH IMMIGRANTS TO AMERICA: from famine to factory, from bottom to top

The Irish Took the Blow and Carried the Fire The Irish rose from a land that England treated as expendable—a field to harvest, a people to grind down, a spirit to break. From the Boyne to the Penal Codes, from Cromwell’s burnings to the Great Hunger, each generation carried scars that were meant to silence …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

DOMINATION VS. PARTNERSHIP: TRUMP, MAGA & THE RETURN OF KINGSHIP

  by Janet Lessin, CEO, Aquarian Media AN OLD ARCHETYPE RETURNS Every so often, a political figure steps onto the stage, and the atmosphere around them thickens. The usual categories—left and right, conservative and liberal, hawk and dove—start to feel inadequate. Something older and deeper stirs beneath the day-to-day noise, and people experience that person less …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

IRISH TIMELINE: From Netherland Protestant King William’s 1690 defeat of Deposed Catholic King James to the 1998 Good Friday Peace

By Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. (Anthropology, UCLA) England tore itself apart again. James II—Catholic, stubborn, authoritarian—had frightened Protestant elites into imagining he might create a French-style absolutist monarchy on English soil. When his Catholic son was born in 1688, they panicked. Whispers swept elite salons and military camps alike: A Stuart dynasty raised as Catholics—never. …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

THE WILLIAMITE WARS: MARDUK’S SHADOW OVER IRELAND (1689–1691)

1688–1689: JAMES II RAN WHEN WILLIAM OF ORANGE INVADED England tore itself apart again. James II—Catholic, stubborn, authoritarian—had frightened Protestant elites into imagining he might create a French-style absolutist monarchy on English soil. When his Catholic son was born in 1688, they panicked. Whispers swept elite salons and military camps alike: A Stuart dynasty raised …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

1641-1649: IRISH CONFEDERATE WARS: DOMINATION, PARTNERSHIP & THE SHADOW OF THE GODS

1641-1649: IRISH CONFEDERATE WARS: DOMINATION, PARTNERSHIP & THE SHADOW OF THE GODS By Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. (Anthropology, UCLA)  1641: IRELAND IGNITED Ireland in 1641 trembled like a harp string stretched too tight—land seizures, sectarian humiliation, and centuries of English domination pressed the Gaelic and Old English Catholic population into desperation. When the Catholic gentry …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

CROMWELL, KING CHARLES I, AND THE ANUNNAKI SHADOW

By Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. (Anthropology, UCLA) 1600–1640: ENGLAND BEFORE THE STORM  England in the early 1600s seemed stable, but the land itself whispered discontent. Wealthy landlords enclosed common fields; peasant families were pushed into hunger. Docks roared with commerce while the poor saw none of its promise. Women in markets murmured that God’s order felt …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

SHAYS–an unpaid ex-Revolutionary Vet–LED VETS IN FAILED 1786 ATTEMPT TO BLOCK FORECLOSURES

By Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. (Anthropology, UCLA) Shays’ Rebellion (August 1786–February 1787) was never just a footnote between the Revolution and the Constitution. It was the first significant test of whether the new American republic would choose partnership—care, cooperative survival, basic human dignity—or domination, where the powerful use state violence, courts, sheriffs, and debt to …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

CLASS, RACE & SLAVERY–the Anunnaki domination pattern—in JAMESTOWN (1607–1676), ENGLAND’S 1st permanent foothold in America

1607: ENGLISH DESPERADOS SOUGHT QUICK RICHES IN VIRGINIA SWAMPS JAMESTOWN rose in the spring of 1607, when the ships Susan Constant, Godspeed, and Discovery pressed up the James River and anchored near a malarial swamp. One hundred and four settlers disembarked—gentlemen, soldiers, laborers, a few artisans, and several boys indentured for service. They hacked logs, …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

KING PHILIP’S 1675–1676 WAR: Oligarch Fear, Native Resistance & America’s Caste System

Domination Consciousness, Partnership Possibilities, and the Birth of America’s Racial-Class System By Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D., Anthropology (UCLA) New England’s bloodiest colonial war was more than a conflict of muskets and villages: it was a spiritual confrontation between domination consciousness and partnership consciousness, between fear-based hierarchy and relational balance. Wampanoag, Nipmuc, and Narragansett nations fought …

Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

THE FIRST THANKSGIVING: A BRIEF PEACE IN A BROKEN WORLD*

by Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. (Anthropology, UCLA) At the opening of the seventeenth century, southern New England thrived with Native towns, councils, and regional confederations. These were the People of the First Light, living in the homeland they called Dawn Land. Their societies were complex, agricultural, diplomatic, and centuries deep. For generations, they traded with …