His venue is the Hezbollah newspaper Al Mayadeen.
As with everything else Jewish, Miller sees nothing but conspiracies - dark, sinister conspiracies by the evil Hasbarists, controlled by Israel, working in concert for nefarious aims.
The Zionist entity has a myriad of ways to target audiences outside occupied Palestine. One time-honored approach is to send settler colonists from Palestine to spread the word as “Schlichim” or “emissaries” in what is referred to incorrectly as the “diaspora”, a term which implies, falsely, that all Jews have some connection to Palestine.Yeah, why should daily prayers yearning to return to Zion indicate that Jews have a connection to Israel?
Miller gives lots of bogus examples of this Israeli-controlled Hasbara Central, including Digitell, conferences in Israel for pro-Israel activists that I attended. No, I never followed any instructions from Digitell; we shared ideas and data. How awful!
If you read his screed closely, you can see how most Israeli hasbara initiatives fell apart after a short time. If they were so all powerful, why don't most of them exist anymore?
In reality, every pro-Israel activist does their own thing. We are not instructed by anyone what to write about. There is no Hasbara Central.
When analysis turns into conspiracy theory, you know that the accusation is simple Jew hatred.
But Miller's final paragraph is most amusing:
There is no point in engaging with Zionist trolls. They are not interested in rational or good-faith debates.
Translated, this means, "You cannot win arguments with Zionists. They have proven that I am an antisemite many times and I cannot defend myself. So I want to make sure that the modern antisemites like me don't try to engage in public debate, because invariably it makes us look like idiots."