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Saved - June 14, 2026 at 11:01 PM

@TaroWheel - Taro Wheel

Lucas Gage participates in a humiliation ritual with two Zionist Jewish Rabbis where they debunk the "Dancing Israelis" together. This is right after Nick Fuentes and Lucas Gage came together to attack Dan Bilzerian for being a fed. https://t.co/w6BsLxCHS6

Video Transcript AI Summary
The discussion centers on how events escalated and a perceived parallel to the alleged “Dancing Israelis” on a moving truck during 9/11. Speaker 0 suggests that the alleged dancers may have viewed the outcome as America finally understanding what they had been suffering from over the prior 60 years, and as a way to end it. Speaker 0 also describes a “relief” feeling that the war might be over, but Speaker 1 shifts to a different point. Speaker 1 says an article was sent that debunked the Dancing Israelis claim as a “nothing burger.” Speaker 1 adds that a prominent figure who promotes the 9/11 narrative “crushes it.” Speaker 1 describes an alternative explanation: the individuals were Israelis who worked for a scam moving company, had gotten out of the IDF, were making money, and were there to document the event. In this account, anyone who saw the planes would take a picture, so the claim of foreknowledge used by others is rejected. Speaker 1 also addresses a claim that a video asserts foreknowledge, noting multiple vans. Speaker 0 responds by questioning why Mossad would send agents in a fake moving truck to watch what was already visible on the news, arguing that they could have seen it that way. Speaker 0 further claims that the story depends on timing and coincidence: the “exact three Mossad agents” in a city of about 8 million would have precisely run into law enforcement and been arrested. Speaker 1 reiterates that it is a “nothing burger” and says this was learned the previous week. Speaker 1 notes that people might object to their position, while also stating that they posted it on Twitter and pointed others to a broader “whole thing.” Speaker 1 then broadens the context by saying that there are many theories about major events, including October 7th, where some Israelis think it was an inside job, and that the larger issue is the rise of influencers and monetization, mentioning “audience captured” and referencing their own departure in connection with monetization and destructive/ideological actions they were prompted about.
Full Transcript
Speaker 1: It's like, this is going to escalate. And it did escalate. Speaker 0: I think that maybe could be a parallel between how those alleged dancers on the moving truck on 9-11, that not that they were happy that Americans were dying, but that they saw this as finally America understands what we've been suffering from the last 60 years, and they're going to put an end to it. Speaker 1: Well, you know what's funny? Speaker 0: It's like the relief, like, okay, surely now the war is over. Speaker 1: But you know what's crazy, Jake? The other day, someone sent me an article debunking the Dancing Israelis as a nothing burger. And one of this really prominent figure who promotes the 9-11 narrative, it just crushes it. Speaker 0: And I never thought of this. Is it even real? I don't even know. I just read about it. Speaker 1: They were basically Israelis who worked for this scam moving company. It was a scam company. These were a bunch of Israelis. They got out of the IDF. They're just making cash money. They were just guys there. to document the event. Anyone who saw the planes, they were going to take a picture. So they didn't have the foreknowledge people use it as. And then this guy's putting out a video like they had foreknowledge, there's multiple vans. Speaker 0: Why wouldn't Mossad send a couple of guys with a fake moving truck to watch what's happening? They could have seen it on the news. And then they go on the news and go, we were there. Those exact three Mossad agents in a city of like 8 million, precisely those three ran into law enforcement and were arrested. Speaker 1: The thing is, it's a nothing burger. And that's me saying, I learned this last week. Now people are going to say, you're saying, no, I actually posted it on Twitter. Hey, go look at this. Look at this whole thing. People are like, oh my God. Because it's just another thing we take for granted. You know, like even like October 7th, there's different theories about what happened. Some Israelis think it was an inside job. I mean, what was, but the point I'm trying to say is there are so many influencers now that going back to, I want to say why I left too, but part of it is because there's monetization now. There's like, remember I said I got audience captured. Lucas, when I got the Talmud, when I got the burn it, destroy it. I think someone told me to do it.
Saved - December 29, 2025 at 5:19 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
A user posted a 35-minute compilation alleging antisemitic hate-crime fakes from various outlets, sharing links to each story. The other participant responded with the list of linked articles in order. Later, another link was added about a Paris antisemitic-tag case where the victim allegedly invented the incident, with a note that this one was missed.

@TaroWheel - Taro Wheel

35-minute compilation of Jews faking antisemitic hate crimes worldwide from mainstream media sources, all verified.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The report centers on a series of antisemitism-related incidents and contested claims across North America and Europe, highlighting how initial reactions to alleged acts of antisemitic violence were later questioned or contradicted. In Winnipeg, Manitoba, the CBC reports that Oksana Behrendt (also spelled Barrent) and her son Maxim, along with her husband Alexander, initially described an attack on Behrendt’s cafe, a break-in, robbery, and antisemitic graffiti. They later faced public mischief charges after police said the incident was staged. Behrendt and her family deny staging it, insisting they were victims of hate. Police say the evidence shows a crime occurred, but not a hate crime. The community reacted with shock and support before the charges, with some Jewish community leaders calling the alleged deception damaging to the broader community and police credibility. The cafe remained under investigation, with the couple maintaining their story as the court process proceeds. A planned interfaith vigil at the cafe was canceled, and a crowdfunding drive to assist the family was taken down amid confusion and anger. Court records show the family also faces lawsuits over debts, which they deny relate to staging the incident. Nationally, the broadcast notes that hate crime reports in Canada reached an all-time high in 2017, with nearly 2,100 incidents—a 47% increase from the prior year. Attacks on Jewish people comprised about 18% of these hate crimes, with attacks on Muslims close behind. In Israel and North America, authorities described a string of bomb threats targeting Jewish communities worldwide, including in the United States and Canada. An eighteen-year-old American-Israeli was identified as a primary suspect behind threats to multiple Jewish centers, schools, and synagogues, including bomb threats that led to evacuations. Israeli police reported that the suspect used online technology to mask his location, and that he had not served in the army due to medical issues; a medical examination was ordered. The suspect was also linked to a 2015 Delta Airlines threat case. The broader implication noted was the ongoing concern over threats to Jewish institutions globally. In North America, other cases included a synagogue arson in North York, and a man in Schenectady who spray-painted his own home with swastikas and was charged with falsely reporting an incident. In West Bloomfield, Michigan, a stabbing reported at a local temple was later determined to be fabricated by Sean Samit; investigators cited the Apple Watch data showing normal heart rates around the time of the alleged attack, and bloody tissues and a knife found at the scene. Samit faced charges for filing a false police report, with officials emphasizing the potential harm to real victims. The transcript also covers campus and local incidents: at George Washington University, swastikas appeared on a student’s door, but hidden-camera footage confirmed the student herself to be the apparent perpetrator; she will face student discipline and possibly criminal charges. In Vancouver, a defamation lawsuit was filed by UBC’s Social Justice Centre against HillelBC over iHeartHammas stickers distributed on campus, which the SJC says were defamatory. UBC stated that the investigation and RCMP involvement had concluded with no charges. Lastly, in Amsterdam, the mayor backtracked on using the word pogrom to describe violence after Ajax vs. Maccabi Tel Aviv football related clashes and ensuing political fallout. The discussion included miscaptioned footage of clashes in Amsterdam, where social media claims that Muslims were hunting Jews circulated, but fact-checkers confirmed the video actually depicted Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters engaging in a fight in front of Amsterdam Central Station. Major outlets were criticized for miscaptioning the footage, and some issued corrections or removals.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: When the attack was reported last week, it seemed believable. The Jewish owner of a Winnipeg cafe physically attacked her family's business trashed and painted in anti Semitic graffiti. It shocked the community and led to an outpouring of support, exactly the way you'd expect. But then today, it all got turned upside down. Police say the cafe owners staged the whole thing and have charged them with a crime. As Cameron McIntosh tells us, even as the family sticks by its story, the community is in shock once again. Speaker 1: Did you fake the vandalism around Speaker 2: the didn't. Didn't because we don't joke about swastika on our walls. Speaker 1: They flatly deny it, insisting they are in fact victims of hate. Oksana Barrent and her son Maxim explaining themselves on CBC Radio just after being charged along with Oksana's husband hours before for public mischief. Speaker 2: In this moment, somebody grabbed me. Speaker 1: She insists on last Thursday night, she was alone inside her Winnipeg cafe when she was attacked. The cafe was also robbed and vandalized with anti Semitic graffiti. The story caused an outpouring of sympathy and defiant denouncements of hate until today. Speaker 3: In the end, we found evidence of a crime. It just wasn't a hate crime. I am hugely disappointed and frankly angry that this family has used hate and racism in such a disingenuous way. Speaker 4: It's not something that we do. It's against our Jewish law. It's against our our our our beliefs. Speaker 2: They can find any evidence against anybody. Speaker 1: At first, some members of Winnipeg's Jewish community deemed it the most brazen local anti Semitic attack in memory. Now Bene Bryth says if these allegations are true, it damages the entire community. Speaker 5: This is a betrayal of the community and a betrayal of also the police. It's a waste of time. And, of course, people might roll their eyes at incidents in the future and think, oh, is it true or is it not? Speaker 1: Oksana Behrendt, her husband Alexander, and son Maxim are charged with public mischief after reporting she was assaulted in an attack that left her cafe trashed and vandalized with anti Semitic graffiti. They say it wasn't them. Speaker 4: Can you imagine how I feel when my place is destroyed like that? What did I do to you? I built this place. Okay? Speaker 1: Police say otherwise. Speaker 3: The incident here in Winnipeg this past weekend was staged. Speaker 1: The evidence, police say, will come out in court. Inside the cafe, you can still see signs of their investigation. Backlash against the family has been swift. A Jewish gay and lesbian advocacy group moved out of the building they shared. Speaker 6: We were shocked. We were beside ourselves. We were completely floored. Speaker 1: The concern is held widely. Speaker 6: There's a tremendous concern that this will actually cause more antisemitism. Speaker 1: Court records show the family is facing lawsuits over debts. They deny staging this for financial gain. Speaker 4: I I don't want people to judge us, okay, wrongly because we didn't do it. We had no reason to do it. Okay? Speaker 1: The charges are upheld by court. Speaker 7: They're it's it's it's it's disgusting. Speaker 1: The cafe had been up for sale as is Oksana's home. Bernie Bellen writes for Winnipeg's Jewish Post in News. He says hate attacks involving assault are rare. Speaker 8: My first instinct was that this is terrible, but it doesn't have the normal hallmarks of an anti Semitic incident. Speaker 1: But the Barons insist they were targeted and say they're scared. Speaker 2: It's completely broke our family, our business, everything. Speaker 1: Meanwhile, an interfaith vigil that was planned for tomorrow night here at the cafe has been canceled, and a crowdfunding campaign that was set up to help support the family has been taken down amid a lot of disappointment, confusion, and anger. Cameron Macintosh, CBC News, Winnipeg. Speaker 0: Now as you heard from Cam, one big worry is that if this was a stunt, it could undermine support for real incidents, and the numbers show there are lots of those. Hate crimes reported to police in Canada reached an all time high in 2017. That's the latest year for which there's data. In total, there were nearly 2,100 incidents, up a staggering 47% from the year before. The two biggest motivators for that hate, race, and religion. Attacks on Jewish people, top the list, accounting for 18% of all hate crimes. Attacks on Muslims, a close second. Speaker 9: Police in Israel say this eighteen year old American Israeli is behind a series of bomb threats that terrorize Jewish communities around the world. Speaker 10: We managed to get to that suspect after having concrete intelligence from different security agencies around the world. He is the main suspect behind threatening different communities both in New Zealand, Australia, across America. Speaker 9: The bomb threats often detailed and vitriolic were made over the past few months against dozens of Jewish community centers, day schools, and synagogues. While most, over 150, were in The United States, some Canadian Jewish organizations also had to evacuate after bomb threats. Today, there were mixed feelings about the arrest. Speaker 11: We're relieved that police have apprehended the suspects. At the same time, our community is shocked and outraged that the suspect is Jewish. The idea that someone from our own community would launch a campaign to terrorize our community institutions is appalling. Speaker 9: Police seized computer equipment when they arrested the teenager. They say he used sophisticated technology to make the calls over the Internet, masking his location. Authorities have not released the suspect's name, but media reports in Israel suggest he may have a brain tumor that affects his behavior. His lawyer hinted at that. Speaker 12: This is a young person that because of his very, very serious medical condition, didn't serve in the army, didn't go to high school, didn't go to elementary school. So that's why the the medical condition can actually affect the investigation. Speaker 9: Israeli police also suspect the teen was behind a 2015 bomb threat that forced a Delta Airlines flight to return to New York's JFK Airport. The judge ordered that the teen should undergo a medical examination. Ron Charles, CBC News, Toronto. Speaker 13: Been arrested after a synagogue was damaged by a fire in North York last week. It happened Thursday morning on Wilson Avenue just south of Bathurst Street. Police say 67 year old Avram Babrovsky is now facing arson in connection with the incident. According to the investigation, the man gained access by using his own card and then deliberately setting a fire inside the synagogue. Police say he's a member of that synagogue. The investigation is ongoing, and police are asking for anyone with information to come forward. Speaker 14: To the man for spray painting swastikas on a Schenectady house last month, and now they say their suspect is the homeowner himself. Authorities say Andrew King spray painted his own home. He's charged with falsely reporting an incident. Last month, King called CBS six saying he found swastikas on his home. He said he thought he was targeted because he wears a yarmulke everywhere he goes. Police were not giving a motive for the crime. We're told King was also charged for harassment after a warrant was out for his arrest. Police say days after the swastikas were reported, he threatened to harm someone during an argument. He'll be arraigned tomorrow morning. Speaker 15: New details tonight on a Speaker 16: Well, Terren, as you can imagine, the Jewish community in West Bloomfield is understandably shaken up because all this. Police say Sean Sammett fabricated an attack on December 15 as he left the synagogue. Now police are crediting their investment in technology as one way that helped them crack the case. Attacks at places of worship are seemingly more common. The most recent at a Texas church earlier this week. Now people like Neil Crewman are always on alert going into temple. Speaker 17: I'm at the point where when I go to services, sometimes I don't feel comfortable, but I'm at a point where I I want people to know that we still have to do what we have to do. Speaker 16: That's why Kruman is upset after learning Sean Sammett, a former employee at Temple Colommi, is accused of making up a violent stabbing as he work. Speaker 17: They're not doing any justice to themselves. I think I think it's a crime, and that that it's it's just so like somebody calling the school and saying there's a bomb there when there's not. Speaker 16: West Bloomfield police say Samit claimed a man shouted antisemitic comments then stabbed him. Samit told police he fought the attacker off and drove himself to Henry Ford, but police say his story didn't add up. And a thorough search of the parking lot found no evidence. That's when they analyzed Samit's Apple Watch and looked at his heart rate when Samit claimed the attack happened. Investigators say it was normal and should have been higher. But the watch showed before the attack, Samet's heart rate was elevated, leading police into the synagogue where they say they found bloody tissues and a knife Samet used to stab himself. Speaker 7: We all have to think about the actions that we do, and so these little imprints whether on his phone or with his watch or a camera, it just really shows that we every action we do is not going to go unnoticed. Speaker 16: Is now charged with filing a false police report. Exactly why he allegedly made up the attack is still unknown, but what leaders in the Jewish community do know. Speaker 7: Society has to come together, and we have to just let people know that we don't tolerate this. We don't tolerate exploiting the police. We don't tolerate exploiting antisemitism, and we don't tolerate antisemitism and hate. Speaker 16: Going back to the stab wounds that police say Samit committed on himself, they actually say they didn't need stitches. Taryn? Well, great work by police. It was very interesting about that Apple Watch as well, but they take these hate crimes, the allegations very seriously. But the problem is it can also impact other future victims who were attacked and are seeking justice. You know, that's one thing that people we spoke to at the temple really brought up tonight. They hope that what happened here doesn't take away from everything that the real victims are going through. But meanwhile, West Bloomfield police say it was all hands on deck to find out exactly what happened and to get that investigation wrapped up as quickly as they did. Speaker 14: Alright. Thank you, Veronica, for that report. Speaker 18: Crime detectives have arrested 56 year old David Haddad for a string of anti Semitic messages here in Brooklyn and in Manhattan. Now my police sources are telling me that he's also the prime suspect in a rash of swastika incidents and a phone threat made here in Midwood over the weekend. And what's surprising here, police say Haddad is Jewish. Speaker 19: I was shocked. You never expect it to be you. Speaker 18: A police officer now stands guard over schoolchildren at an Ocean Parkway Yeshiva defaced by hurtful and offensive symbols of hate. And a couple of blocks away, another swastika spray painted on the wall of this apartment building, a third symbol defaced the garage door on the Mills family property. Speaker 19: Fear, and you have to be careful and and be more aware and, you know, not look behind you. Speaker 18: The disturbing discoveries were made Saturday night. Then Sunday evening, a couple in this neighborhood returned home to find a message on their voice mail threatening repeatedly to kill all Jews. Assemblyman Dov Heikkin lives on the block. He says his neighbors and constituents are all on edge. Speaker 20: Whoever it is, you know, Jew, Muslim, whatever, we need to get those people off the streets. That is the most important thing because people now are like, what's going on? Speaker 19: It's scary. It's scary. And your children are afraid, and, you know, I hope they catch the people that do it. Speaker 18: Police have made an arrest in four previous antisemitic phone threat messages. Under arrest is 56 year old David Haddad. He is Jewish according to police. He's charged with harassment as a hate crime. Now also police say that he's a relative of one of the victims and knows another. My sources say he's also the prime suspect in these most recent Midwood incident. Speaker 21: We begin with a surprising development in the story of those swastikas painted on the door of a student at George Washington University. Good evening, I'm Doreen Gensler. Speaker 15: And I'm Jim Bents. Turns out the student was painting the hateful symbols herself. Jackie is at the university now with more on this. Jackie? Speaker 14: Jim, these incidents, and there were several of them, caused a lot of concern here on the GW campus. Now the FBI was called in to assist after swastikas kept appearing on a message board, similar to a dry erase board, on the door of a female student who lived in Mitchell Hall. Now the university confirms that a hidden camera placed in the hallway confirmed the student who was the apparent victim did it herself. News four spoke to that woman who asked not to be identified shortly after the hate filled symbols began appearing on her door. Here's what she had to say at that time. Speaker 15: Who does such a thing? Speaker 22: I wish I knew. I wish I had any clue who this was. University police, my house doctor, administrators, nobody can think of a motive of somebody who hates me that much. Speaker 23: Through the use of hidden cameras, interviews and increased police patrols, we have concluded and through a final interview today, investigators have concluded that the student who reported the incidents is responsible for the incidents. Speaker 14: Now the university has confirmed that the student, who is a freshman, has admitted responsibility for the swastikas in Mitchell Hall. She faces student judicial action, and she could face possible criminal charges. But I get the feeling here at this point that the university just wants to see her get some help. This has been a very troubling incident for everyone here. Jim, back to you. Speaker 15: Jackie Benson. Speaker 24: A lawsuit has been filed against a Jewish student organization over iHeartHammas stickers posted around UBC. Harassed. Speaker 25: We have been defamed. Speaker 24: The stickers, which also had UBC Social Justice Center printed on them, were spotted around campus last November. They had been put on posters advertising a student walkout for Palestine. At the time, HillelBC said that unbeknownst to them, an independent contractor had participated in the distribution of the stickers, which it called offensive, adding it terminated its relationship with that contractor. On Thursday, a lawyer for UBC Social Justice Center announced the group had filed a defamation claim against HillelBC. Speaker 26: The information in the stickers was untrue, hurtful, and harmful to the SJC and its members. This case is about the harm the stickers caused to our clients and is also about protecting the rights of students to express their views on campus without fearing that they will become the target of untrue defamitive defamatory smears. Speaker 25: The last couple months have been incredibly stressful and challenging for myself and my colleagues at the SJC. Speaker 24: In a Thursday statement Instagram page, HillelBC says in part, we cannot comment on the specifics as the matter is currently before the courts, and we have not yet been served with court documents. It adds at a time when anti Semitic hate crimes in British Columbia have surged, including on our campuses, we are deeply concerned that this lawsuit will result in a further reduction of safe spaces for Jewish students. While it doesn't name UBC in its suit, UBC Social Justice Center says it's also disappointed with how the school handled the incident. Speaker 25: The university has done nothing about it. They have not helped us set the record straight, and they have not helped us hold those responsible accountable. Speaker 24: City News reached out to UBC, which said it won't comment on the suit as it's not named in it. But it said campus security notified university RCMP about the stickers and that UBC provided information to the Mounties. City News reached out to the RCMP, which said the investigation has since concluded and no charges were laid. In Vancouver, Monica Gould, City News. Speaker 6: The mayor of Amsterdam has backtracked on her use of the word pogrom to describe the violence which erupted following the Ajax Maccabee Tel Aviv football match in the Dutch capital. Speaking to Dutch state media on Sunday, Femke Halsema expressed her dismay that the town had subsequently been manipulated to serve political agendas. It comes as Moroccan born Dutch finance secretary Nora Aqaba announced her resignation following comments made by the government's hard right leader, Girt Wilders. Last Wednesday, Wilders blamed Moroccans for attacks on the Israeli football fans, claiming that we saw Muslims hunting Jews and adding that it was fueled by Moroccans who want to destroy Jews. He also said those convicted of involvement should be deported if they have dual nationality. Speaker 27: Time now for truth or fake? And Catalina Marchande De Bruy is with us today, in today's, edition. A viral, miss captioned video circulating on social media, and it claims that Muslims are hunting Jews. Tell us more about this, Catalina, if you can. Speaker 28: That's right. Here we're going to show some examples of this viral post that's going around where users are sharing this video in Amsterdam claiming that it shows hundreds of Middle Eastern migrants are out hunting Jews on the streets of Amsterdam tonight. A post by Vizgard24 known for spreading misinformation on X while other users who are sharing the same video also claim for instance in this post seen over 7,000,000 times on X. This user claims Muslim mobs in Amsterdam are hunting Jews tonight. I wish this was fiction. It's not a post from November 8 and this viral post as we said seen 7,000,000 times. So very viral. Let's take a look at this video where you see the streets of Amsterdam, mobs of men were attacking other men indeed. These are riots between soccer fans following the soccer match between Ajax Amsterdam and Maccabee, Tel Aviv that users claim this video shows clashes between Muslims and Jews Jews soccer fans following this Europa League soccer match that resulted in attacks categorized as anti Semitic by authorities local authorities in Amsterdam, Israel, across Europe, and The US internationally. Speaker 27: So what do the images really show then? Speaker 28: Well, Angela, according to our analysis, these claims are fake. We'll explain in reply to a tweet spreading these false claims. The actual photographer who recorded this video said and I quote that this video actually depicts a group of Meccafee Tel Aviv supporters starting a fight and beating one Dutch man. So this is according to the photographer who filmed these this footage herself. And here's the original footage published by the photographer on X called Ionet on X. The Dutch photographer is actually called Annette De Graaf where you could see she provided an extended version of this video showing what actually happened, clearly captioning the video fight in front of Amsterdam Central Station. So an analysis conducted by our fact checking colleagues at Misbar also clearly aligns with this version given by the photographer's testimony on social media where Maccabi supporters are identified in this video by their yellow and navy colors, which are the colors of the Maccabi Tel Aviv club fans as you can see in this picture right here as they engage in a fight in the images with one Dutch man. This version of facts showing violence coming from Maccabi fans on that night also line with what's being said by the Dutch prime minister as well as the Dutch police who say that Maccabi fans also attacked a taxi and burned a Palestinian flag in Amsterdam last Wednesday and that on the day of the game, Maccabi supporters were filmed chanting anti Arab slogans in videos that were also verified by Reuters. Of course, this is does not take away from the anti Semitic acts attacks that left five people hospitalized and over dozens, over 60 people at least detained after the attacks on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam. Speaker 27: And it seems that quite a lot of media have mis captioned these videos in their reports as well. Speaker 28: That's right. Not not only is users on social media, but the same footage was also misrepresented by many major media outlets in their reporting as reported here as pointed out by the photographer herself on her account on X. The photographer demanded an apology and the removal of her mis captioned footage by major media news outlets such as CNN, BBC, The Guardian, The New York Times amongst others. Let's take a look at some examples that are still mis captioned and published online. Here for example, we have the Wall Street Journal with the caption showing the video with a caption while captioning it as Israeli soccer fans attacked by mob in Amsterdam. We have another example by CBS that captions it as Israeli soccer fans Israeli soccer fans attacked in Amsterdam while the BBC also uses this footage to show once again during an interview, Israeli soccer fans who experienced violence in Amsterdam. Wrong information since this video as we've explained actually shows Israeli soccer fans attacking a Dutch man falsely being labeled by several media outlets as we showed as Israeli soccer fans being attacked by locals or pro Palestinian soccer fans. So media such as the New York Times as well who used this video and mis captioned it either admitted a correction. For instance, the New York Times stated on the article itself that they independently confirmed that the verified footage actually shows a group of Maccabi soccer fans chasing a man on the street. While Deutsche Welle on X also says that the clip that they showed is mixed miscaptioned with the wrong context. While it seems other media just deleted the miscaptioned video online. Speaker 27: Okay. Well, thanks very much, Kathleen. Speaker 9: Instagram video. Speaker 0: Antisemitish the Invidio

@TaroWheel - Taro Wheel

Links to each story here in order of appearance: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/bermax-winnipeg-antisemitic-arrest-1.5109224 https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/prison-sentence-bomb-threats-1.4915943 https://www.ctvnews.ca/toronto/article/congregant-accused-of-deliberately-setting-north-york-synagogue-on-fire/ https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/jewish-man-andrew-king-spray-paint-swastikas-new-york-schenectady-nazi-own-home-a7643996.html https://www.fox2detroit.com/news/mans-apple-watch-proves-he-lied-about-anti-semitic-stabbing-in-west-bloomfield https://www.reuters.com/article/world/us/jewish-man-arrested-for-swastikas-anti-semitic-calls-idUSTRE80F1SM/ https://gwhatchet.com/2007/11/05/freshman-who-reported-swastikas-drew-them-as-well/ https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/hamas-stickers-students-threats-1.7038461 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/jul/27/france.jonhenley https://www.dw.com/en/fact-check-amsterdam-video-doesnt-show-attack-on-israelis/a-70763374 https://apnews.com/article/germany-jewish-singer-accusations-antisemitism-trial-apology-10750d1e2f868f4aa0d6efb19ae0ce70

Congregant accused of deliberately setting North York synagogue on fire A man has been charged for allegedly setting a North York synagogue on fire last week. ctvnews.ca
Jewish man 'spray painted swastikas on his own home' A local Rabbi said Andrew King is not welcome at his orthodox synagogue  independent.co.uk
Man's Apple watch proves he lied about anti-Semitic stabbing in West Bloomfield Police say Sean Samitt fabricated an attack on December 15 as he left a synagogue leaving the Jewish community in West Bloomfield shaken up. fox2detroit.com
Freshman who reported swastikas drew them as well Monday, Nov. 5, Updated 5:58 p.m. @import url(https://files.gwhatchet.com/i/071101/issue.css); Timeline Oct. 23 — Sarah Marshak, a Jewish freshman, reports a swastika drawn on the whiteboard mounted to her Mitchell Hall door. In the next four days, two more are drawn, each progressively larger in size. (The Hatchet, Oct. 25) Oct. 27 — Transfer student Erica Tanne,... gwhatchet.com
Woman sentenced for anti-semitism lie A mother who claimed to be the victim of an anti-semitic attack that rocked France, but later admitted making the whole thing up was yesterday given a four-month suspended prison sentence and ordered to seek therapy. theguardian.com
Fact check: Amsterdam video doesn't show attack on Israelis – DW – 11/12/2024 Violence broke out following the recent Europa League match between Ajax Amsterdam and Maccabi Tel Aviv. A video showing the riots was misrepresented by many media outlets. DW takes a closer look. dw.com
German-Israeli singer admits he lied when accusing hotel of antisemitism in a video that went viral A German-Israeli singer who claimed he had been turned away from a hotel in the eastern German city of Leipzig because he was wearing a Star of David pendant has admitted during a defamation trial against him that he made up the story. apnews.com
Saved - October 23, 2025 at 6:18 PM

@TaroWheel - Taro Wheel

35-minute compilation of Jews faking antisemitic hate crimes worldwide from mainstream media sources, all verified. https://t.co/4StUrNx1ub

Video Transcript AI Summary
A Winnipeg cafe story dominates for a stretch, with Oksana Behrendt, her husband Alexander, and son Maxim reporting a violent attack on their Jewish-owned cafe, claiming they were assaulted, the cafe robbed and vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti. Police later say the incident was staged and charge the family with public mischief. The family denies staging the event, insisting they were victims of hate. Community response swings from shock and sympathy to disbelief and anger, with some calling it a betrayal of the community and police. Court records show the family also faces lawsuits over debts. The case has led to cancellations of an interfaith vigil and the removal of a crowdfunding campaign, while police continue to present evidence to be revealed in court. Experts note hate-crime reports in Canada rose to nearly 2,100 incidents in 2017, up 47% from the prior year, with Jewish and Muslim communities among the top targets; the Winnipeg incident is cast as potentially damaging to genuine hate-crime victims if proven to be staged. In Israel and North America, authorities report a separate wave of antisemitic threats and attacks. Police in Israel say an eighteen-year-old American-Israeli is behind a string of bomb threats that terrorized Jewish communities globally, including numerous threats against Jewish centers, day schools, and synagogues, mainly in the United States, with some Canadian institutions evacuating. The suspect was identified through international security cooperation, and police seized computer equipment; the teen reportedly faced a medical condition. There is mention of a prior 2015 threat against Delta Airlines, and the suspect’s medical status is noted by a lawyer and officials. In Toronto area news, a 67-year-old man, Avram Babrovsky, is charged with arson in connection with a fire at a North York synagogue, allegedly after gaining access with his own card. Police continue the investigation and seek information from the public. In New York, a man in Schenectady, Andrew King, is charged with falsely reporting an incident after spray-painting swastikas on his own home and later harassing others; police say he claimed to be targeted due to wearing a yarmulke. In West Bloomfield, Michigan, a different case involves Sean Samet, accused of fabricating a stabbing at a synagogue. Investigators say Samet’s Apple Watch data showed a normal heartbeat during the alleged attack, contradicting his account; bloody tissues and a knife found later indicated self-inflicted harm. He faces charges for filing a false police report. Community leaders emphasize not tolerating exploitation of antisemitism, while acknowledging the impact on real victims seeking justice. In Brooklyn, New York, investigators report 56-year-old David Haddad, Jewish by background, arrested for harassment as a hate crime after a string of antisemitic messages and swastika incidents across Brooklyn and Manhattan, with connections to a local community member and potential ties to other incidents. In Vancouver, British Columbia, a defamation suit is filed by UBC Social Justice Center against HillelBC over iHeartHamas stickers associated with a campus Palestine walkout; HillelBC says an independent contractor distributed the stickers and that the organization terminated its relationship. The SJC asserts the stickers’ content was untrue and harmful, while UBC says it provided information to law enforcement and campus security. The RCMP concluded the investigation with no charges. Across Europe, Amsterdam’s mayor retracts the use of the term pogrom after violence surrounding a football match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv, with political fallout including the resignation of a Dutch finance minister amid right-wing rhetoric that linked Moroccan-origin residents to the violence. A separate segment fact-checks a viral video claiming Muslims are hunting Jews in Amsterdam, establishing that the footage actually shows Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters fighting a Dutch man, not a Muslim mob; miscaptioned coverage by multiple outlets is noted, with corrections and apologies pursued where possible. The piece closes by highlighting the broader context of antisemitic acts and the importance of accurate reporting.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: When the attack was reported last week, it seemed believable. The Jewish owner of a Winnipeg cafe physically attacked her family's business trashed and painted in anti Semitic graffiti. It shocked the community and led to an outpouring of support, exactly the way you'd expect. But then today, it all got turned upside down. Police say the cafe owners staged the whole thing and have charged them with a crime. As Cameron McIntosh tells us, even as the family sticks by its story, the community is in shock once again. Speaker 1: Did you fake the vandalism around Speaker 2: the didn't. Didn't because we don't joke about swastika on our walls. Speaker 1: They flatly deny it, insisting they are in fact victims of hate. Oksana Barrent and her son Maxim explaining themselves on CBC Radio just after being charged along with Oksana's husband hours before for public mischief. Speaker 2: In this moment, somebody grabbed me. Speaker 1: She insists on last Thursday night, she was alone inside her Winnipeg cafe when she was attacked. The cafe was also robbed and vandalized with anti Semitic graffiti. The story caused an outpouring of sympathy and defiant denouncements of hate until today. Speaker 3: In the end, we found evidence of a crime. It just wasn't a hate crime. I am hugely disappointed and frankly angry that this family has used hate and racism in such a disingenuous way. Speaker 4: It's not something that we do. It's against our Jewish law. It's against our our our our beliefs. Speaker 2: They can find any evidence against anybody. Speaker 1: At first, some members of Winnipeg's Jewish community deemed it the most brazen local anti Semitic attack in memory. Now Bene Bryth says if these allegations are true, it damages the entire community. Speaker 5: This is a betrayal of the community and a betrayal of also the police. It's a waste of time. And, of course, people might roll their eyes at incidents in the future and think, oh, is it true or is it not? Speaker 1: Oksana Behrendt, her husband Alexander, and son Maxim are charged with public mischief after reporting she was assaulted in an attack that left her cafe trashed and vandalized with anti Semitic graffiti. They say it wasn't them. Speaker 4: Can you imagine how I feel when my place is destroyed like that? What did I do to you? I built this place. Okay? Speaker 1: Police say otherwise. Speaker 3: The incident here in Winnipeg this past weekend was staged. Speaker 1: The evidence, police say, will come out in court. Inside the cafe, you can still see signs of their investigation. Backlash against the family has been swift. A Jewish gay and lesbian advocacy group moved out of the building they shared. Speaker 6: We were shocked. We were beside ourselves. We were completely floored. Speaker 1: The concern is held widely. Speaker 6: There's a tremendous concern that this will actually cause more antisemitism. Speaker 1: Court records show the family is facing lawsuits over debts. They deny staging this for financial gain. Speaker 4: I I don't want people to judge us, okay, wrongly because we didn't do it. We had no reason to do it. Okay? Speaker 1: The charges are upheld by court. They're it's it's it's it's disgusting. The cafe had been up for sale as is Oksana's home. Bernie Bellen writes for Winnipeg's Jewish Post in News. He says hate attacks involving assault are rare. Speaker 7: My first instinct was that this is terrible, but it doesn't have the normal hallmarks of an anti Semitic incident. Speaker 1: But the Barons insist they were targeted and say they're scared. Speaker 2: It's completely broke our family, our business, everything. Speaker 1: Meanwhile, an interfaith vigil that was planned for tomorrow night here at the cafe has been canceled, and a crowdfunding campaign that was set up to help support the family has been taken down amid a lot of disappointment, confusion, and anger. Cameron Macintosh, CBC News, Winnipeg. Speaker 0: Now as you heard from Cam, one big worry is that if this was a stunt, it could undermine support for real incidents, and the numbers show there are lots of those. Hate crimes reported to police in Canada reached an all time high in 2017. That's the latest year for which there's data. In total, there were nearly 2,100 incidents, up a staggering 47% from the year before. The two biggest motivators for that hate, race, and religion. Attacks on Jewish people, top the list, accounting for 18% of all hate crimes. Attacks on Muslims, a close second. Speaker 8: Police in Israel say this eighteen year old American Israeli is behind a series of bomb threats that terrorize Jewish communities around the world. Speaker 9: We managed to get to that suspect after having concrete intelligence from different security agencies around the world. He is the main suspect behind threatening different communities both in New Zealand, Australia, across America. Speaker 8: The bomb threats often detailed and vitriolic were made over the past few months against dozens of Jewish community centers, day schools, and synagogues. While most, over 150, were in The United States, some Canadian Jewish organizations also had to evacuate after bomb threats. Today, there were mixed feelings about the arrest. Speaker 10: We're relieved that police have apprehended the suspects. At the same time, our community is shocked and outraged that the suspect is Jewish. The idea that someone from our own community would launch a campaign to terrorize our community institutions is appalling. Speaker 8: Police seized computer equipment when they arrested the teenager. They say he used sophisticated technology to make the calls over the Internet, masking his location. Authorities have not released the suspect's name, but media reports in Israel suggest he may have a brain tumor that affects his behavior. His lawyer hinted at that. Speaker 11: This is a young person that because of his very, very serious medical condition, didn't serve in the army, didn't go to high school, didn't go to elementary school. So that's why the the medical condition can actually affect the investigation. Speaker 8: Israeli police also suspect the teen was behind a 2015 bomb threat that forced a Delta Airlines flight to return to New York's JFK Airport. The judge ordered that the teen should undergo a medical examination. Ron Charles, CBC News, Toronto. Speaker 12: Been arrested after a synagogue was damaged by a fire in North York last week. It happened Thursday morning on Wilson Avenue just south of Bathurst Street. Police say 67 year old Avram Babrovsky is now facing arson in connection with the incident. According to the investigation, the man gained access by using his own card and then deliberately setting a fire inside the synagogue. Police say he's a member of that synagogue. The investigation is ongoing, and police are asking for anyone with information to come forward. Speaker 13: To the man for spray painting swastikas on a Schenectady house last month, and now they say their suspect is the homeowner himself. Authorities say Andrew King spray painted his own home. He's charged with falsely reporting an incident. Last month, King called CBS six saying he found swastikas on his home. He said he thought he was targeted because he wears a yarmulke everywhere he goes. Police were not giving a motive for the crime. We're told King was also charged for harassment after a warrant was out for his arrest. Police say days after the swastikas were reported, he threatened to harm someone during an argument. He'll be arraigned tomorrow morning. Speaker 14: New details tonight on a Speaker 15: Well, Terren, as you can imagine, the Jewish community in West Bloomfield is understandably shaken up because all this. Police say Sean Sammett fabricated an attack on December 15 as he left the synagogue. Now police are crediting their investment in technology as one way that helped them crack the case. Attacks at places of worship are seemingly more common. The most recent at a Texas church earlier this week. Now people like Neil Crewman are always on alert going into temple. Speaker 16: I'm at the point where when I go to services, sometimes I don't feel but I'm at a point where I I want people to know that we still have to do what we have to do. Speaker 15: That's why Kruman is upset after learning Sean Sammett, a former employee at Temple Colommi, is accused of making up a violent stabbing as he work. Speaker 16: They're not doing any justice to themselves. I think I think it's a crime, and that that it's it's just so like somebody calling the school and saying there's a bomb there when there's not. Speaker 15: West Bloomfield police say Samit claimed a man shouted antisemitic comments then stabbed him. Samit told police he fought the attacker off and drove himself to Henry Ford, but police say his story didn't add up. And a thorough search of the parking lot found no evidence. That's when they analyzed Samit's Apple Watch and looked at his heart rate when Samit claimed the attack happened. Investigators say it was normal and should have been higher. But the watch showed before the attack, Samet's heart rate was elevated, leading police into the synagogue where they say they found bloody tissues and a knife Samet used to stab himself. Speaker 17: We all have to think about the actions that we do, and so these little imprints whether on his phone or with his watch or a camera, it just really shows that we every action we do is not going to go unnoticed. Speaker 15: Is now charged with filing a false police report. Exactly why he allegedly made up the attack is still unknown, but what leaders in the Jewish community do know. Speaker 17: Society has to come together, and we have to just let people know that we don't tolerate this. We don't tolerate exploiting the police. We don't tolerate exploiting antisemitism, and we don't tolerate antisemitism and hate. Speaker 15: Going back to the stab wounds that police say Samit committed on himself, they actually say they didn't need stitches. Taryn? Well, great work by police. It was very interesting about that Apple Watch as well, but they take these hate crimes, the allegations very seriously. But the problem is it can also impact other future victims who were attacked and are seeking justice. You know, that's one thing that people we spoke to at the temple really brought up tonight. They hope that what happened here doesn't take away from everything that the real victims are going through. But meanwhile, West Bloomfield police say it was all hands on deck to find out exactly what happened and to get that investigation wrapped up as quickly as they did. Speaker 13: Alright. Thank you, Veronica, for that report. Speaker 18: Crime detectives have arrested 56 year old David Haddad for a string of anti Semitic messages here in Brooklyn and in Manhattan. Now my police sources are telling me that he's also the prime suspect in a rash of swastika incidents and a phone threat made here in Midwood over the weekend. And what's surprising here, police say Haddad is Jewish. Speaker 19: I was shocked. You never expect it to be you. Speaker 18: A police officer now stands guard over schoolchildren at an Ocean Parkway Yeshiva defaced by hurtful and offensive symbols of hate. And a couple of blocks away, another swastika spray painted on the wall of this apartment building, a third symbol defaced the garage door on the Mills family property. Speaker 19: Fear, and you have to be careful and and be more aware and, you know, not look behind you. Speaker 18: The disturbing discoveries were made Saturday night. Then Sunday evening, a couple in this neighborhood returned home to find a message on their voice mail threatening repeatedly to kill all Jews. Assemblyman Dov Heikkin lives on the block. He says his neighbors and constituents are all on edge. Speaker 20: Whoever it is, you know, Jew, Muslim, whatever, we need to get those people off the streets. That is the most important thing because people now are like, what's going on? Speaker 19: It's scary. It's scary. And your children are afraid, and, you know, I hope they catch the people that do it. Speaker 18: Police have made an arrest in four previous antisemitic phone threat messages. Under arrest is 56 year old David Haddad. He is Jewish according to police. He's charged with harassment as a hate crime. Now also police say that he's a relative of one of the victims and knows another. My sources say he's also the prime suspect in these most recent Midwood incident. Speaker 21: We begin with a surprising development in the story of those swastikas painted on the door of a student at George Washington University. Good evening, I'm Doreen Gensler. Speaker 14: And I'm Jim Bents. Turns out the student was painting the hateful symbols herself. Jackie is at the university now with more on this. Jackie? Speaker 13: Jim, these incidents, and there were several of them, caused a lot of concern here on the GW campus. Now the FBI was called in to assist after swastikas kept appearing on a message board, similar to a dry erase board, on the door of a female student who lived in Mitchell Hall. Now the university confirms that a hidden camera placed in the hallway confirmed the student who was the apparent victim did it herself. News four spoke to that woman who asked not to be identified shortly after the hate filled symbols began appearing on her door. Here's what she had to say at that time. Speaker 14: Who does such a thing? Speaker 22: I wish I knew. I wish I had any clue who this was. University police, my house doctor, administrators, nobody can think of a motive of somebody who hates me that much. Speaker 23: Through the use of hidden cameras, interviews and increased police patrols, we have concluded and through a final interview today, investigators have concluded that the student who reported the incidents is responsible for the incidents. Speaker 13: Now the university has confirmed that the student, who is a freshman, has admitted responsibility for the swastikas in Mitchell Hall. She faces student judicial action, and she could face possible criminal charges. But I get the feeling here at this point that the university just wants to see her get some help. This has been a very troubling incident for everyone here. Jim, back to you. Speaker 14: Jackie Benson. Speaker 24: A lawsuit has been filed against a Jewish student organization over iHeartHammas stickers posted around UBC. Harassed. Speaker 25: We have been defamed. Speaker 24: The stickers, which also had UBC Social Justice Center printed on them, were spotted around campus last November. They had been put on posters advertising a student walkout for Palestine. At the time, HillelBC said that unbeknownst to them, an independent contractor had participated in the distribution of the stickers, which it called offensive, adding it terminated its relationship with that contractor. On Thursday, a lawyer for UBC Social Justice Center announced the group had filed a defamation claim against HillelBC. Speaker 26: The information in the stickers was untrue, hurtful, and harmful to the SJC and its members. This case is about the harm the stickers caused to our clients and is also about protecting the rights of students to express their views on campus without fearing that they will become the target of untrue defamitive defamatory smears. Speaker 25: The last couple months have been incredibly stressful and challenging for myself and my colleagues at the SJC. Speaker 24: In a Thursday statement Instagram page, HillelBC says in part, we cannot comment on the specifics as the matter is currently before the courts, and we have not yet been served with court documents. It adds at a time when anti Semitic hate crimes in British Columbia have surged, including on our campuses, we are deeply concerned that this lawsuit will result in a further reduction of safe spaces for Jewish students. While it doesn't name UBC in its suit, UBC Social Justice Center says it's also disappointed with how the school handled the incident. Speaker 25: The university has done nothing about it. They have not helped us set the record straight, and they have not helped us hold those responsible accountable. Speaker 24: City News reached out to UBC, which said it won't comment on the suit as it's not named in it. But it said campus security notified university RCMP about the stickers and that UBC provided information to the Mounties. City News reached out to the RCMP, which said the investigation has since concluded and no charges were laid. In Vancouver, Monica Gould, City News. Speaker 6: The mayor of Amsterdam has backtracked on her use of the word pogrom to describe the violence which erupted following the Ajax Maccabee Tel Aviv football match in the Dutch capital. Speaking to Dutch state media on Sunday, Femke Halsema expressed her dismay that the town had subsequently been manipulated to serve political agendas. It comes as Moroccan born Dutch finance secretary Nora Aqaba announced her resignation following comments made by the government's hard right leader, Girt Wilders. Last Wednesday, Wilders blamed Moroccans for attacks on the Israeli football fans, claiming that we saw Muslims hunting Jews and adding that it was fueled by Moroccans who want to destroy Jews. He also said those convicted of involvement should be deported if they have dual nationality. Speaker 27: Time now for truth or fake? And Catalina Marchande De Bruy is with us today, in today's, edition. A viral, miss captioned video circulating on social media, and it claims that Muslims are hunting Jews. Tell us more about this, Catalina, if you can. Speaker 28: That's right. Here we're going to show some examples of this viral post that's going around where users are sharing this video in Amsterdam claiming that it shows hundreds of Middle Eastern migrants are out hunting Jews on the streets of Amsterdam tonight. A post by Vizgard24 known for spreading misinformation on X while other users who are sharing the same video also claim for instance in this post seen over 7,000,000 times on X. This user claims Muslim mobs in Amsterdam are hunting Jews tonight. I wish this was fiction. It's not a post from November 8 and this viral post as we said seen 7,000,000 times. So very viral. Let's take a look at this video where you see the streets of Amsterdam, mobs of men were attacking other men indeed. These are riots between soccer fans following the soccer match between Ajax Amsterdam and Maccabee, Tel Aviv that users claim this video shows clashes between Muslims and Jews Jews soccer fans following this Europa League soccer match that resulted in attacks categorized as anti Semitic by authorities local authorities in Amsterdam, Israel, across Europe, and The US internationally. Speaker 27: So what do the images really show then? Speaker 28: Well, Angela, according to our analysis, these claims are fake. We'll explain in reply to a tweet spreading these false claims. The actual photographer who recorded this video said and I quote that this video actually depicts a group of Meccafee Tel Aviv supporters starting a fight and beating one Dutch man. So this is according to the photographer who filmed these this footage herself. And here's the original footage published by the photographer on X called Ionet on X. The Dutch photographer is actually called Annette De Graaf where you could see she provided an extended version of this video showing what actually happened, clearly captioning the video fight in front of Amsterdam Central Station. So an analysis conducted by our fact checking colleagues at Misbar also clearly aligns with this version given by the photographer's testimony on social media where Maccabi supporters are identified in this video by their yellow and navy colors, which are the colors of the Maccabi Tel Aviv club fans as you can see in this picture right here as they engage in a fight in the images with one Dutch man. This version of facts showing violence coming from Maccabi fans on that night also line with what's being said by the Dutch prime minister as well as the Dutch police who say that Maccabi fans also attacked a taxi and burned a Palestinian flag in Amsterdam last Wednesday and that on the day of the game, Maccabi supporters were filmed chanting anti Arab slogans in videos that were also verified by Reuters. Of course, this is does not take away from the anti Semitic acts attacks that left five people hospitalized and over dozens, over 60 people at least detained after the attacks on Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam. Speaker 27: And it seems that quite a lot of media have mis captioned these videos in their reports as well. Speaker 28: That's right. Not not only is users on social media, but the same footage was also misrepresented by many major media outlets in their reporting as reported here as pointed out by the photographer herself on her account on X. The photographer demanded an apology and the removal of her mis captioned footage by major media news outlets such as CNN, BBC, The Guardian, The New York Times amongst others. Let's take a look at some examples that are still mis captioned and published online. Here for example, we have the Wall Street Journal with the caption showing the video with a caption while captioning it as Israeli soccer fans attacked by mob in Amsterdam. We have another example by CBS that captions it as Israeli soccer fans Israeli soccer fans attacked in Amsterdam while the BBC also uses this footage to show once again during an interview, Israeli soccer fans who experienced violence in Amsterdam. Wrong information since this video as we've explained actually shows Israeli soccer fans attacking a Dutch man falsely being labeled by several media outlets as we showed as Israeli soccer fans being attacked by locals or pro Palestinian soccer fans. So media such as the New York Times as well who used this video and mis captioned it either admitted a correction. For instance, the New York Times stated on the article itself that they independently confirmed that the verified footage actually shows a group of Maccabi soccer fans chasing a man on the street. While Deutsche Welle on X also says that the clip that they showed is mixed miscaptioned with the wrong context. While it seems other media just deleted the miscaptioned video online. Speaker 27: Okay. Well, thanks very much, Kathleen. Speaker 8: Instagram video. Speaker 0: Antisemitish the Invidio
Saved - September 19, 2025 at 11:24 PM

@TaroWheel - Taro Wheel

Chinese Man says "Jews are inherently Evil". https://t.co/luaMU18odg

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核心论点:声称犹太人把众人视作畜生;美国人其实被犹太人控制,最想借战争获利;一战及其他战争被指由犹太人资助和挑事,胜负由他们左右;通过操控经济来引导政权与舆论,并可腐化各国高层;西方资本先攻击中国传统文化,因其“有大智慧”,能让人省钱、过上富足生活;西方则让人痛苦以促使消费,自称带来幸福的救世主。 Core points: Jews are described as treating all people as animals; Americans are actually controlled by Jews and mainly wish to profit from war; wars in World War I and other conflicts are said to have been funded and incited by Jews, with outcomes decided by them; they purportedly control the economy to steer governments and public opinion and can corrupt the elites of various countries; Western capital is said to first attack China's traditional culture because it has great wisdom that can save people money and allow a prosperous life; by contrast, the West makes people suffer to stimulate consumption, presenting themselves as the saviors who bring happiness; these actions are described as a broader strategy to shape global events for profit.
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Speaker 0: 犹 太 人 其 实 把 所 有 人 都 是 当 作 畜 生 来 看 待 的 而 且 有 些 人 傻 到 甘 做 牛 羊 真 的 是 太 可 悲 其 实 现 在 啊 所 谓 的 中 美 矛 盾 并 不 是 中 美 矛 盾 美 国 人 其 实 是 被 犹 太 人 控 制 的 他 们 最 想 发 的 是 战 争 财 他 们 会 少 以 战 争 而 且 他 们 不 建 国 就 能 够 更 加 便 利 的 去 挣 这 个 战 争 前 在 一 战 期 间 各 个 国 家 的 打 仗 各 国 家 的 战 争 其 实 都 是 由 犹 太 人 来 资 助 的 他 会 去 挑 事 让 你 们 去 打 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 胜 还 是 战 败 其 实 都 没 钱 还 是 他 去 控 制 经 济 通 过 控 制 经 济 来 引 导 政 权 而 且 通 过 控 制 经 济 去 引 导 舆 论 他 去 腐 化 就 是 各 个 国 家 的 高 层 连 这 种 伤 天 害 理 的 事 情 都 能 做 出 来 你 想 想 情 因 为 他 们 在 之 前 已 经 入 侵 的 非 常 成 为 什 么 西 方 资 本 第 一 集 团 首 先 要 攻 击 中 国 的 优 秀 传 统 文 化 是 因 为 中 国 的 优 秀 传 统 文 化 是 有 大 智 慧 的 它 是 可 以 让 人 省 钱 的 不 需 要 花 很 多 钱 就 可 以 享 福 美 满 的 人 生 但 是 西 方 人 他 就 让 你 生 活 在 痛 苦 中 这 样 你 才 能 够 去 消 费 它 的 产 品 感 觉 他 们 才 是 给 你 带 来 幸 福 的 救 世 主
Saved - September 19, 2025 at 11:05 PM

@TaroWheel - Taro Wheel

Chinese Influencer Mu Xue: "The Jews Are Heartless, Disloyal, and Hateful" https://t.co/XwjWjNdf4F

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本段将暴力、贪婪的形象与犹太人联系,声称他先感谢上帝赐半块面包,随后要求更多,并要你再给他剩下的半块面包,甚至让你签欠条。若拒绝,他会在你背后毫不犹豫地杀死你并夺走半块面包及你所占有之物。文中称这为“最真实的犹太人”,并称一千年来他们被驱逐的根本原因不是世界人民不善,而是犹太人无情无 Speaker 0: The bread given to this Jew, he will not thank you but thank God for giving him half a loaf. After that he will demand that God give him more bread, and then this Jew will demand that you also give him the remaining half of the bread and even cause you to sign a debt note. Do you think this Jew is reasonable? He turns and walks away, but this Jew will kill you behind your back without hesitation and seize your half loaf along with all you possess. This is the most real Jew. This has been the true reason Jews have wandered for a thousand years and have been driven from various nations. Not because the peoples of the world are not kind enough, but because Jews are merciless, no mercy
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Speaker 0: 的 面 包 给 这 位 犹 太 人 他 不 会 感 谢 你 而 是 感 谢 上 帝 赐 给 他 半 块 面 包 之 后 他 会 要 求 上 帝 再 多 给 他 一 些 面 包 然 后 这 位 犹 太 人 就 会 要 求 你 把 剩 下 的 一 半 的 面 包 也 给 他 而 且 还 要 给 他 欠 一 个 欠 条 欠 你 觉 得 这 个 犹 太 人 不 可 理 喻 于 是 转 身 就 走 但 是 这 个 犹 太 人 会 在 你 的 背 后 毫 不 犹 豫 的 杀 死 你 并 且 夺 下 你 的 半 块 面 包 与 你 占 满 这 就 是 最 真 实 的 犹 太 人 这 也 是 犹 太 人 一 千 年 以 来 一 直 流 浪 一 直 被 各 国 驱 逐 的 真 正 原 因 不 是 全 世 界 人 民 不 够 善 良 而 是 犹 太 人 无 情 无
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