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Joel Berry also promotes Zionist, NAR-affiliated group One For Israel:
The Jews are God's chosen people, and there is something uniquely beautiful about a Jewish person encountering the Messiah. These are my absolute favorite testimonies. I watch them often. https://t.co/HXLby9BOxH
— Joel Berry (@JoelWBerry) November 30, 2022
One For Israel features the messianic Jews Dr. Michael Brown, Sid Roth, and Jonathan Cahn in their videos:
Listen you unintelligent pig yourself with pants hangin low if your people have figured that out then why is there no change?
Rick Steve’s Travel journal on Iran is well worth watching–fun, informative, and propaganda-diffusing:

There is also the well known phenomenon that many people (especially the prudent) prefer lives with an upward sloping trajectory. Contrary to naive economic theory, they would rather have increasing lifetime consumption with a “risk” (in these simple models) of NOT consuming their assets before death, as opposed to timing things so that no cent was left unspent or experience untaken at the last minute. They would rather always feel that things are getting better and don’t want to suffer utility declines. In the micro, micro sense this leads to postponing gratification (e.g. eating the best dish at the end of the meal or holding off drinking that great bottle of wine). So better to risk wasting the gift card, than spending it early and having no gift card to buy stuff with if the urge arises later.
Since you’re concerned about the distributional consequences of trade, not just econ history, you might want to read Russ Roberts’ The Choice. It’s a didactic novel/parable about the benefits of free trade. Although unabashedly pro-globalization, Roberts goes over many of the problematic issues you discuss — especially with regards to distribution.
But as others have noted, it is impossible to tell the difference between the dislocations due to trade or to technology.
The example I heard is the following: I open a factory and tell you that I have a wonder machine that produces cars for 40% less than US made cars without requiring US labor. Does it really matter for the competing US workers if that machine really exists or if I’m bringing in the cars at night on special submarines from Asia? Either way, they lose their jobs or have to retool.