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A Winnipeg cafe owner and her family were believed to have been attacked, with the café trashed and anti-Semitic graffiti, sparking community shock and an outpouring of support. Police, however, say the incident was staged and have charged Oksana Behrendt, Maxim Behrendt, and Alexander Behrendt with public mischief. The family maintains their story, insisting they were victims of hate, and speaking on CBC Radio after the charges were filed. They described themselves as targets and said they did not stage anything, with statements like “In this moment, somebody grabbed me” and “They can find any evidence against anybody.” They also expressed that their business and home were under threat and emphasized their belief that the attack was real. Police maintained that the incident in Winnipeg was staged and that there was evidence of a crime, though not a hate crime. The cafe’s interior still bore signs of investigation as officers worked the scene. The backlash was swift: a Jewish LGBTQ advocacy group moved out of the building, and there was broad concern that the alleged stunt could undermine support for legitimate hate crimes. Community leaders and residents described feelings of betrayal and worry about future incidents, with comments such as “This is a betrayal of the community and a betrayal of also the police” and concerns that people might doubt genuine cases in the future. Court records show the Behrendts faced lawsuits over debts, and the family denied staging the incident for financial gain. They insisted they did not deserve judgment based on what they say is their truth, stating, “I don’t want people to judge us wrongly because we didn’t do it.” The charges were upheld by the court, and the broader community expressed disappointment and anger about the situation. Meanwhile, excerpts noted that hate-crime cases in Canada had risen to an all-time high in 2017, with nearly 2,100 incidents—a 47% increase from the previous year. Attacks on Jewish people accounted for 18% of all hate crimes, with attacks on Muslims a close second. Other items mentioned included international incidents: in Israel, police announced the arrest of an 18-year-old American-Israeli behind a series of bomb threats targeting Jewish communities worldwide; authorities said he used the Internet to mask his location, and the suspect faced a medical examination and legal scrutiny. In North York, a 67-year-old man, Avram Babrovsky, faced arson charges for allegedly setting a fire inside a synagogue, with a history of using his own access card to gain entry. In Schenectady, a man was accused of spray-painting swastikas on his own home, later charged with falsely reporting an incident and harassment. In West Bloomfield, Michigan, police credited technology for solving a case in which Sean Sammett allegedly fabricated an attack on leaving a synagogue; investigators found inconsistencies in his account, including elevated heart rate on an Apple Watch prior to the claimed assault, and evidence suggested he stabbed himself with a knife and used bloody tissues. Sammett was charged with filing a false police report, with authorities noting the impact on real victims and the community’s sense of safety. In Brooklyn and Manhattan, authorities reported 56-year-old David Haddad, who is Jewish, as the suspect in a string of antisemitic messages and swastika incidents, with additional phone threats to kill Jews. In Vancouver, a defamation suit was filed against HillelBC by UBC’s Social Justice Center over “iHeartHammas” stickers on campus; the stickers had circulated during a walkout for Palestine and a contractor who helped distribute them had been terminated. UBC stated it would not comment on the suit, and RCMP said no charges were laid after investigation. Additionally, Amsterdam’s mayor walked back the use of the term pogrom after violence following a match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv, amid political fallout from comments by a government official blaming Moroccans for the unrest. A separate report discussed viral video miscaptioning of footage from Amsterdam, showing Maccabi Tel Aviv fans fighting in a way that media outlets had miscaptioned as Jews being attacked; fact-checkers confirmed the video actually showed Maccabi fans chasing a Dutch man, and several outlets issued corrections.

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Pro-Palestinian protesters at City College of New York attacked a man waving an American flag, resulting in violence. The man was punched, choked, and thrown down stairs. The incident highlights a hatred for America rather than just Israel or Jews. The protesters are seen as thugs and outside agitators. This violence occurred on a campus funded by American taxpayers.

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A narrative of alleged Israeli false flag operations is laid out, beginning with 1949 when Meyer Max Bennett, described as a Zionist Jew of German descent, was sent to Iraq by Mossad. There he connected with Mossad agent Youssef Basri and planned a series of attacks on Iraqi Jews, providing maps, instructions, and specific orders to terrorize the Jewish population. From 1950 to 1951 a wave of bombings struck the Jewish community in Iraq, targeting cafes, mechanic shops, and synagogues with grenades and TNT. These attacks coincided with underground Zionist groups urging Iraqi Jews to leave for Israel, resulting in the exodus of about 130,000 Iraqi Jews within two years and aiding Israel’s early demographic needs. The account states these Iraqi attacks are part of a long list of Israel’s false flag operations. Basri was arrested by Iraqi police and executed for involvement. Bennett escaped and later helped organize an even larger false flag operation in Egypt, known as Operation Susanna, beginning in 1952 after Bennett returned under the pretense of a German businessman producing equipment for the disabled. The operation planned Jews to plant bombs inside Egyptian, American, and British civilian targets to blame the Muslim Brotherhood and Egyptian Communists, with the aim of influencing the British to retain troops along the Suez Canal. Bombings occurred in Alexandria and Cairo, but the scheme failed when one agent betrayed the plot and Egyptian authorities arrested undercover Jewish operatives, including Bennett. Bennett committed suicide when facing execution. The operation became known as the Lavon affair. Israel denied involvement at the time, but exposure followed later in 2005 when the Israeli president awarded surviving Lavon-affair agents certificates, and again in 2023 when British-Israeli historian Abi Shlaim spoke to a Jewish agent involved in Baghdad, who provided evidence of Israeli culpability. The text asserts numerous reports of false flag operations across decades serving Israel’s interests, including alleged involvement or influence in terrorist acts, and uses these cases to justify speculative claims about more recent or modern attacks being Israeli false flags. It references a connection to nine-eleven, and notes an incident on 10/10/2001 when two Israelis with Pakistani passports, grenades, explosives, and guns were stopped in the Mexican parliament while intending to blame Muslims; Mexican authorities purportedly faced pressure from Israel to suppress reporting. The narrative continues with a 2025 explosion destroying three buses in Bat Yam and Occupied Palestine, with Israeli authorities claiming Palestinian terrorists while asserting it was actually two Jewish Israelis; a media blackout followed. It mentions thousands of bomb threats during Trump’s presidency purportedly made by a Jewish American Israeli, initially used as evidence of rising antisemitism but later alleged to be perpetrated by the same group. It cites a Jewish American Israeli teen accused of making 2,000 threats and attempting to extort a Republican senator, with some calls directed to Australian Jewish centers. In Australia, cases are described as false flag attempts: a Zionist wearing a Star of David cap in a Muslim-owned cafe as part of a staged sting by The Daily Telegraph; two crackheads recruited to spray “kill the Jews” on a car and perform arson against synagogues and restaurants, later revealed to involve dark web recruitment and cryptocurrency payments. Australia is said to have been pressured to blame Iran, though no evidence is provided. The text also references Bondi Beach attacks and online speculation of false flags, arguing that Zionists’ long history of orchestration undermines public trust. A closing note echoes a maxim about deception, followed by a call for viewers to engage critically in the comments and to consider becoming a channel member to support continued production.

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Jewish students on college campuses are facing anti-Semitic protests, including being spit on, physically assaulted, harassed, and blocked from attending class. People are chanting genocidal slogans. The speaker questions where Jewish students are assaulting Palestinian students, emphasizing the lack of evidence.

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Harvard University and MIT are now being criticized for tolerating and possibly encouraging antisemitism. There is little outcry in America about this issue, with conservative media being the only ones discussing it. The media's focus on a fake news story about a noose in Bubba Wallace's garage overshadowed the seriousness of the antisemitic attacks. The speaker emphasizes the need for more attention and sensitivity towards the attacks on Jewish people.

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They faced backlash after being expelled from their 110th country, with claims of a looming holocaust being made. The Israeli government stated that Jews are under brutal attack, describing it as a modern-day pogrom. Critics argue that this narrative is hypocritical, pointing out that similar claims have been made about Palestine for years. The ongoing wars in the Middle East have led to a migration crisis, with millions of migrants entering Europe and North America, which some blame on Israeli actions. This situation has fueled tensions and protests, as the narrative of victimhood is used to justify aggressive actions. In a recent incident in Amsterdam, those who instigated violence faced consequences, highlighting the complexities of these conflicts.

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Speaker 0: In February and March 2026, I'll be back on the road in Hull, Gateshead, Derby, and Colchester. 2026 is when they want to cross the line as fast as they can into an AI controlled humanity. We stand up now or we regret it forever. That's four dates. Speaker 0: I recorded an edition of a show for iconic.com called Legacy, relating the content of my books to today. A central concept is what I labeled in the 1990s as problem reaction solution, also known as a false flag. The idea is to create a situation—war, terrorist attack, banking collapse, or something similar—then present the version of the problem you want the public to believe to provoke outrage and urgency. Then you covertly create the problem, evoke a public reaction, and openly offer the solutions you’ve already prepared. Speaker 0: Nine-Eleven is given as a classic example: attack on New York and Washington, blame Arab terrorists, claim Osama bin Laden and the Taliban orchestrated it. The reaction is “do something,” followed by the invasions of Afghanistan and other Middle Eastern countries. In response to Bondi Beach, the point is made that representatives may not truly represent the people, and a global network I call the global cult drives dystopia through digital AI means, operating through governments, intelligence agencies, and militaries worldwide. Even leaders such as presidents or prime ministers may not serve their nations’ people but the global cult’s interests. Speaker 0: One center of this global cult’s operations is Israel, established in 1948 for that purpose. The claim is that leadership claiming to represent Jewish people operates for the global cult rather than Jewish communities, and may even sacrifice Jewish lives to advance its aims through problem reaction solution. The Gaza crisis since October 7 is described as the world’s large-scale trauma, with statements about the Israeli government’s psychopathy and a super psychopathology characterized by a complete lack of empathy and deletion of compassion. The question is whether such leaders can truly have compassion for fellow Jews if they are driven by a broader agenda. Speaker 0: Regarding October 7, the Gaza border fence is described as the world’s most defended border, with sensors so sensitive that even a small animal would be detected. Yet Hamas breached the fence in multiple places, and there were reports of a stand-down by the Israeli defense forces, allowing the cross-border assault and hostage-taking. The outcome, it’s claimed, was used by Netanyahu to justify mass slaughter and destruction in Gaza, with talk of plans to take over land and expel Palestinians. The narrative then shifts to global perception, with some Christian Zionists wavering in support due to Gaza atrocities, and Israel allegedly funding influence campaigns to restore its global image, including money to American politicians and media interests. Speaker 0: When a new attack—Bondi Beach in Australia—occurs, Netanyahu publicly notes a Jewish man disarmed one of the attackers (though a Muslim did so), before retracting. This is presented as part of a pattern: calls to crack down on anti-Semitism, equating anti-Semitism with criticism of Israel and Zionism. The claim is that the only beneficiary is those who use such events to justify censorship and control of information, while the victims, including Jewish people who died or were injured, gain nothing. Speaker 0: The discussion reiterates that mind-control techniques exist and could drive individuals to commit mass violence without full awareness, referencing mind-control concepts like Manchurian candidates. The speaker urges asking “who benefits?” and considering elements of problem reaction solution and false flags in analyzing events, recognizing that appearances of representation do not guarantee genuine representation. For readers interested in more, the speaker directs to their books and content.

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A group of boys threatened a police officer, promising harm to a dog. Later, they marched through London streets, shouting anti-Semitic remarks, while the police took no action. This incident highlights the rise of anti-Jewish sentiment. Shortly after, we were violently attacked while leaving a kosher restaurant, making us question the future for Jews in this country. Extremists target us on the streets, and the police remain inactive. In another incident, a pro-Palestinian convoy threatened to rape Jewish women and children in a Jewish neighborhood. The perpetrators then drove through the same neighborhood, spreading inflammatory messages.

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Earlier this year, there was Nazi imagery in our nation's capital, which was disturbing for the Jewish community and Canadians. Antisemitism is increasing online and in person, and must be addressed.

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Police reports and broadcasts describe a wave of anti-Semitic vandalism and threats, with several surprising reversals and hoaxes emerging over time. In New Orleans area coverage, police say 54-year-old Andrew King spray painted swastikas on his own Chillswell Street home, and the student who appeared to be the victim admitted, through interviews conducted with hidden cameras and increased patrols, that she was responsible for the incident. Authorities indicated Haddad, a person associated with a separate case, is the prime suspect in a rash of swastika incidents in a nearby area, and police sources say he is Jewish. Separately, Israeli police arrested a 19-year-old Israeli Jewish man as the primary suspect in hundreds of bomb threats against Jewish community centers in the United States. Elsewhere, a Winnipeg cafe owner—described as Jewish—faced allegations of anti-Semitic vandalism and threats after a video or report suggested that her family’s business had been battered and daubed with hate graffiti. Community members were shocked and offered support, but authorities later stated the cafe owners had staged the incident and were charged with a crime. The reporting emphasizes that signs of hate reappeared in Brooklyn, with swastikas found on houses and a chilling call reported to someone in the area describing a message that All Jews are going to die—all Jews must die one by one. Further, a sequence of threats was reportedly the work of a Jewish man who had a business dispute with family members; the exchange included denials that the vandalism was staged by the victims themselves, and mention that “We didn’t. We didn’t.” The family asserted they were victims of hate. Oksana Barron and her son Max Ham spoke on CBC Radio after being charged along with Oksana’s husband for public misjudgment or prejudice, insisting their actions contradicted their religious laws. They argued, “It’s against our Jewish law” and emphasized they do not joke about smiles and were not “woke.” A notable development centers on George Washington University, where a student initially believed to be the victim of vandalism was later identified as the person who painted the swastikas herself. The narrative shifted to indicate that “In the end, we found evidence of a crime. It just wasn’t a hate crime.” Media coverage notes the broader pattern of anti-Semitic threats and vandalism, including the claim that a Jewish man was arrested in connection with a spree of anti-Semitic vandalism, described as “strange but true.” Finally, reporters discuss the broader social context: “The Holocaust was just seventy years ago,” and voices recount personal memory and the historical danger of white supremacist violence, including references to Auschwitz and the gas chamber, underscoring the seriousness of hate crimes in the community.

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Harvard and MIT have faced disturbing incidents targeting Jewish students. After the attacks in Israel, 35 student groups at Harvard blamed Israel entirely for the violence by Hamas terrorists. At MIT, anti-Israel protesters physically prevented Jewish students from attending classes, but the university refused to expel them, citing their student visas. Jewish students expressed concerns about their safety on campus. Additionally, at the University of Maryland, anti-Israel protesters allegedly chanted "holocaust 2.0." These incidents are deeply troubling and reflect a disturbing trend of anti-Semitism.

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Three college students claimed they were racially attacked on a bus, but an Instagram video emerged showing them approaching the men first. The university and city launched an investigation, and surveillance footage from the bus was released. Witnesses on board said the women were the aggressors, contradicting the girls' claims. The girls pleaded not guilty to assault charges in court, and civil rights activists are concerned about the implications of this case for future racial crimes.

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The speaker discusses being accused of horrible things due to being Jewish and receiving messages questioning their trustworthiness as a dual Canadian-Israeli citizen. Another speaker asks if they work for an Israeli intelligence firm called Black Cube, to which the speaker denies. The conversation shifts to a specific point that the speaker didn't fully answer before abruptly ending.

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The speaker discusses being accused of horrible things due to being Jewish and receiving messages questioning their trustworthiness as a dual Canadian-Israeli citizen. Another speaker asks if they work for an Israeli intelligence firm called Black Cube, to which the speaker denies. The conversation shifts to a specific point that the speaker didn't fully answer before abruptly ending.

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Three college students claimed they were attacked on a bus for being black, but a video showed them approaching the men first. The girls pleaded not guilty to assault charges. Civil rights activists worry about the implications for future racial crimes.

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A Winnipeg cafe owned by a Jewish family was reportedly vandalized with anti-Semitic graffiti, and the owner was allegedly attacked. The incident led to community support, but police now claim the owners staged the event and have charged them with public mischief. The family denies the allegations, maintaining they were victims of a hate crime. Police say they found evidence of a crime, but not a hate crime, expressing disappointment that the family used hate and racism in a disingenuous way. Members of Winnipeg's Jewish community initially considered it a brazen anti-Semitic attack. Now, they worry that if the allegations are true, it damages the community, wastes police time, and may cause skepticism towards future incidents. The cafe and the owner's home were up for sale. An interfaith vigil was canceled, and a crowdfunding campaign was taken down.

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A Jewish student at Yale claimed she was stabbed in the eye with a flag, but video evidence showed otherwise. The incident was exaggerated in a news article, leading to widespread coverage. The video clearly showed that the flag only grazed her, contradicting her dramatic claims. The situation was blown out of proportion, with no actual eye stabbing occurring.

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From the outset, one of the speakers says there was a sense that the official narrative about the day didn’t add up, expressing that many Americans feel they were being lied to. The major problem they identify with the assassination narrative includes inconsistencies and unanswered questions rather than acceptance of the official story. Speaker 1 recalls being told Charlie Kirk was shot and initially in critical condition, but notes that the video shows an exit wound and movement of Kirk’s shirt that suggests an impact nearby. With extensive experience around gunshot wounds, they say what they saw didn’t make sense. They reference the FBI’s announcement of a shooter and describe a separate incident involving a person on the roof who allegedly disassembled and reassembled a firearm, aligned a scope, fired a cold bore shot, moved to the roof, and then wrapped the rifle up. They mention texts from the shooter that didn’t sound like a typical 22-year-old and state that these observations raise questions. They say asking questions leads to being torn down or accused of holding conspiracy views, and they specify they aren’t claiming “Israel did it,” but insisting the questions about the event “don’t look good.” They raise specific questions: did the security team remove Charlie Kirk’s lapel mic after the incident and give it to someone else; what happened to the SIM card; did someone take the camera behind him; why was the crime scene contaminated and rebuilt. They admit they don’t know what is true but insist the questions deserve answers. They note that once they question, they’re labeled antisemitic, and they say they didn’t even bring up Israel. They emphasize the personal and national significance of the incident. Speaker 0 mentions a claim that Charlie Kirk was portrayed as Superman, with his body supposedly stopping the 30-odd-six bullet, and asks what would have happened if a 30-06 round hit him. Speaker 1 says it would likely blow his head off and leave remnants of the bullet, arguing that they don’t think such remnants have been found yet. They question why the chair and desk were moved and contend that a forensic expert could determine the shot’s origin, insisting they are simply asking questions. If those questions can be refuted, they would stop asking; but they claim they’re not getting any answers beyond “this is what happened” and being told to “shut up.” Speaker 0 adds that telling someone to be quiet amounts to labeling them antisemitic, and that when the trial comes, they will look like a fool. Speaker 1 says that’s a tactic of the left—when you call them out, they label you a name—and that the right is now doing the same to them.

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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.

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A Winnipeg cafe owner and her family were initially described as victims of a hate-driven attack after the cafe was trashed, robbed, and covered with anti-Semitic graffiti, and the owners alleged they were assaulted. Police later said the incident was staged and charged Oksana Behrendt, Maxim Behrendt, and Alexander Behrendt with public mischief. The family maintains their story, insisting they were attacked and targeted, while the community expresses shock and concern about the implications for real hate crimes. The cafe is still up for sale, and planned interfaith events and crowdfunding for the family were canceled or removed amid backlash and confusion. Police say evidence pointed to a crime, but not a hate crime, and court records show lawsuits against the family for debts; the family denies staging the incident for financial gain. Community responses included fear of undermining genuine anti-Semitic incidents and anger at what some call a betrayal of the community and police. In Canada, hate-crime data for 2017 showed police-recorded hate incidents reaching an all-time high, with nearly 2,100 incidents (up 47% from the previous year). Attacks against Jewish people accounted for about 18% of hate crimes, with Muslim-targeted incidents close behind. International updates included a suspect in bomb threats against Jewish communities worldwide: an 18-year-old American-Israeli was identified by Israeli police as the main suspect, with threats spanning New Zealand, Australia, and the United States. Authorities noted the suspect used Internet-based calling to mask location, and a medical condition was mentioned by the suspect’s lawyer; the suspect was to undergo a medical exam. Separate reporting indicated Israeli police suspected the teen also behind a 2015 threat that led Delta Airlines to divert a flight, and searches included seizures of computer equipment. In North York, a 67-year-old man, Avram Babrovsky, was arrested on arson charges after allegedly setting fire to a synagogue, with investigations ongoing and police seeking more information from the public. In Schenectady, New York, a homeowner, Andrew King, was charged with falsely reporting an incident after painting swastikas on his own home, claiming it was targeted due to his yarmulke. West Bloomfield, Michigan, reported a case where a man, Terren Samit, allegedly fabricated a stabbing at a synagogue. Police credited technology, including Apple Watch data, with helping expose the hoax; Samit faced charges for filing a false police report. Community leaders emphasized not tolerating antisemitism or exploiting police resources, while acknowledging concerns about any impact on genuine victims. In Brooklyn and Manhattan, 56-year-old David Haddad—who is Jewish—was arrested for harassment as a hate crime after distributing antisemitic messages in Brooklyn and Manhattan, and being implicated in related swastika incidents and threats. At George Washington University, a student was found to have painted swastikas on her door herself. The university used hidden cameras and interviews, concluding the student was the apparent victim-dresser, leading to student judicial action and potential criminal charges, with a noted aim of providing help rather than punishment. On Vancouver campuses, a defamation suit was filed by UBC Social Justice Centre against HillelBC over iHeartHammas stickers distributed during a Palestine walkout. HillelBC stated it had terminated its contract with the distributor; UBC and the SJC described harm and a broader concern for safe spaces on campus. The RCMP concluded the Vancouver incident with no charges. In Amsterdam, the mayor walked back her use of the word pogrom after backlash over its political usage, as broader tensions rose with Mor occan-born finance minister resignation following controversial remarks by a right-wing leader. Separately, a viral claim circulated claiming Muslims hunted Jews in Amsterdam; fact-checkers confirmed the video actually showed Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters attacking a Dutch man, not a Jews-hunting mob. Miscaptioned footage prompted corrections from outlets including CNN, BBC, The Guardian, and The New York Times, with the photographer clarifying the true context.

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The report centers on the Bermax Cafe vandalism case in Winnipeg, once described as one of the city’s worst acts of anti-Semitism, which later appeared to be a hoax. Oksana Behrendt, Alexander Behrendt, and their son Maxim, the owners, were charged with public mischief after the graffiti incident. In January, they moved to Los Angeles. Bernie Bellen, who knew the Barrents and surveyed the damage, says he has not been in touch with them for over a year and a half. He recalls his initial thought that they would flee, noting they had discussed opening a restaurant in Los Angeles for some time, but he never believed they had the means to do so. Their trial was scheduled for next week. The family filed a motion to appear by video, which was denied. When it became clear they would not attend, a provincial court judge issued an endorsed warrant for all three, meaning that if they return, they would turn themselves in and be out on bail until the trial. One of their lawyers stated they could not afford to come back at that time. The trouble, as explained, is that the COVID-19 pandemic required anyone attending from California to quarantine for at least two weeks before the trial. They would also need somewhere to stay and could not afford hotel quarantines. As a result, they had no choice but to leave. In addition, the negative publicity and financial difficulties had already cost them their business and their home, with no community support remaining in Winnipeg. Michael Lazar notes that the family intends to return when the pandemic is under control. He emphasizes that this is not a case of simply absconding from the court system; if that were the case, there would likely be no communication, and a warrant would have been issued and left unresolved. Instead, they have remained engaged in the process. The Burrents continue to deny staging the crime and maintain their innocence. The situation has stirred reflections within the Jewish community, with ongoing questions and memories provoked by the affair. Erin Bromin of CBC News, Winnipeg, reports.

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Disturbing reports and footage from Amsterdam show violent attacks on Jewish fans during a match involving Israel's soccer team, Akabate El Aviv. Pro Hamas mobs are seen beating, kicking, and even running over fans. In one incident, a fan was reportedly held until he declared, "free Palestine." These actions reflect the global call to "globalize the intifada." Each of these incidents is a clear anti-Jewish hate crime.

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There are two separate issues: antisemitism exists in the city and is a growing problem. Rhetoric about Israel has inflamed antisemitism.

Breaking Points

Glenn Greenwald DESTROYS ADL 'Anti-Semitism' Report
Guests: Glenn Greenwald
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The episode centers on the ADL’s annual report of anti-Semitic incidents in 2025, with Glenn Greenwald challenging the report’s methodology and definitions. The hosts and Greenwald discuss how incidents are categorized, noting that the ADL’s criteria can conflate criticism of Israel or pro-Palestinian activism with anti-Semitism. Greenwald argues that, when data is examined closely, the number of assaults and other anti-Semitic acts is small relative to the broad political discourse surrounding Israel. He contends that the narrative of an epidemic is driven by an institutional impulse to label dissent as bigotry. He emphasizes a distinction between anti-Jewish animus and opposition to state policies, arguing that the politicization of anti-Semitism serves to suppress criticism of Israel and shape public policy and speech on campuses and in media. The discussion also covers real-world examples, including a campus incident in Florida and how certain legal actions have been used to police expressions of political views about Israel. Overall, the conversation probes the balance between safeguarding communities and protecting free speech in a charged political landscape.

Breaking Points

TikTok Installs IDF CENSOR Over Platform
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TikTok has appointed Erica Mandel, a former IDF reservist, to address anti-Semitism on the platform amid rising concerns over online hate. Her role involves developing policies on hate speech and aligning with global regulations. The hosts discuss the implications of her appointment, questioning the loyalty of American Jews who serve in the IDF and suggesting they should relinquish U.S. citizenship. They express skepticism about TikTok's ability to regulate content effectively, noting that criticism of Israel is often labeled as anti-Semitic. The conversation shifts to an incident at Florida State University involving a student wearing an IDF shirt, which led to a physical altercation and federal investigations into potential hate crimes. The hosts argue that the federal response is disproportionate and reflects a broader trend of weaponizing government resources against perceived anti-Semitism on campuses. They highlight the troubling nature of anti-Semitism training in universities, equating criticism of Israeli policies with hate speech. The discussion concludes with concerns about the chilling effect on free speech and the government's increasing involvement in regulating campus discourse.
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