Tuesday, February 11, 2025

From Ian:

Seth Mandel: Progressives’ Sickening Embrace of the PFLP
At a student roundtable with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday, a Georgetown law student told the premier about an upcoming event at her school featuring a convicted terrorist with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Netanyahu was aghast. The conversation elevated concerns about the event, which Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) had already been criticizing.

By last night, the event was “postponed so that the University could conduct a thorough investigation into serious safety and security concerns that had arisen in connection with the event,” the school told Torres, according to Jewish Insider.

The PFLP is a designated terrorist organization, so that was reason enough for the raised eyebrows. PFLP officials have been all over the tentifada movement, which has thus far had the perverse effect of normalizing its presence in civilized society.

The PFLP has particular appeal to the progressive left for two reasons: One, its history of hijackings and other forms of terrorism that left-wing activists have always romanticized, and two, because it is a Marxist-Leninist—and therefore secular and recognizably leftist—version of Palestinian nationalism. An organization that aims to kill Jews while espousing revolutionary socialism is the perfect entity to a not-inconsequential portion of today’s campus activists.

Which is why students at Columbia received PFLP “resistance” training, and George Washington University protest groups used a PFLP manual for a teach-in. Even Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) spoke at a PFLP-connected conference in Detroit, the program of which was saturated with PFLP speakers.

Then there’s Samidoun, a group masquerading as a pro-Palestinian organization but which has now been banned in the U.S. and parts of Europe for being “a sham charity that serves as an international fundraiser for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,” as the U.S. government puts it. Prior to its October designation, Samidoun popped up at the campus demonstrations as well.
Jonathan Tobin: Super Bowl antisemitism ad is no way to tackle Jew-hatred
New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft is an exemplary member of the American Jewish community. Over the years, he has donated a great deal of money to Jewish causes, locally in his hometown of Boston and in the State of Israel, even building a football stadium in Jerusalem. The National Football League magnate’s philanthropy testifies to his own strong sense of Jewish peoplehood, in addition to a decent concern for others less fortunate than himself, as shown by his family’s support of a variety of educational and health-care causes.

Among the efforts he has supported is the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism (FCAS), which he founded with money he pledged as a result of his winning the Genesis Prize in 2019. The idea behind the foundation was to fight the movement to boycott, divest and sanction Israel, as well as other efforts to battle Jew-hatred. The campaign itself was marked by a bright blue square with a moniker called “The Blue Box Campaign” that urges standing up to hate.

But for all of his various efforts on behalf of that important cause, probably none gained as much attention as the FCAS advertisement that appeared during the Super Bowl this past Sunday. It featured two mega-celebrities—rapper and actor Snoop Dogg, and NFL great Tom Brady, who won seven Super Bowls, including six for Kraft’s Patriots. In it, they spout various reasons why people hate each other before concluding that “things are so bad that we have to do a commercial about it,” before the two walk off together in a gesture of amity.

A missed opportunity
That’s a colossal mistake, as well as a missed opportunity that Kraft and anyone else who cares about the issue should deeply regret.

While no one should doubt the good intentions of Kraft, the 30-second blurb sums up everything that is wrong with the mindset and the efforts of liberal American Jewish efforts to deal with the problem.

Indeed, if that’s the best that the FCAS can manage, then Kraft would be well advised to close it up and transfer the money he’s currently wasting on it to those interested in fighting antisemitism in a way that will make a difference.
The UN’s loathing of Israel is out of control
The United Nations – unlike the US, the EU, the UK and other Western states – does not consider Hamas to be a terrorist organisation. This was true before the Hamas invasion and massacre on 7 October 2023. And it has remained true in the months that have followed.

In February 2024, Martin Griffiths, a British diplomat then serving as UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, explained the UN’s position in the starkest of terms: ‘Hamas is not a terrorist group for us’, he told Sky News, ‘it is a political movement’. He gave that interview just four months after Hamas had slaughtered, raped, kidnapped and literally terrorised Jewish men and women in southern Israel.

The recent sacking of a senior UN official provides further evidence of the organisation’s warped perspective. Alice Nderitu is a longtime human-rights advocate involved in conflict resolution in many different parts of the world. In November 2020, she arrived at the UN headquarters in New York, from her native Kenya, to take up her new role as the UN special adviser on the prevention of genocide.

Her four-year career at the UN can be divided into two distinct periods – before and after Hamas’s invasion of Israel.

Before, Nderitu travelled widely, assessing evidence of genocide and genocide denial in places like Darfur, Sudan. She held press conferences, wrote op-eds and issued dozens of public statements and even wrote a helpful briefing document called ‘When to Refer to a Situation as “Genocide”’. There she explained that a determination of genocide must be carried out by ‘a competent international or national court of law with the jurisdiction to try such cases after an investigation meeting appropriate due process standards’. None of this was particularly noteworthy or controversial. She was simply outlining the strict conditions and legal processes involved in establishing whether something is or isn’t a genocide in the eyes of the UN.

But then Hamas invaded Israel and everything changed. Her world began to unravel. By early 2024, she was under intense pressure from both within and without the UN. In an exclusive interview this month with Air Mail’s Johanna Berkman, Nderitu said that she was ‘hounded, day in, day out… with protection from nobody’. ‘It’s instructive that this never happened for any other war’, she said. ‘Not for Ukraine, not for Sudan, not for DRC, not for Myanmar… The focus was always Israel.’


Architect of US law against PA ‘pay-to-slay’ skeptical of Ramallah effort to end it
The main architect behind Congressional legislation that suspended US aid to the Palestinian Authority over its payments to security prisoners and the families of slain attackers said Tuesday he is “cautiously optimistic” about Ramallah’s decision to reform the payment system that critics argued incentivized terrorism.

Sander Gerber said that the decree signed by PA President Mahmoud Abbas on Monday is a “step in the right direction,” as it moves the families of prisoners and slain attackers into the same welfare system as the rest of Palestinian society, which receives stipends strictly based on economic need.

However, he told The Times of Israel that the decree makes no mention of ending the PA’s Prisoners Club and Martyrs Fund, which support the families of those in Israeli jails and of those killed or injured carrying out attacks.

“They’re actively glorifying the prisoners and martyrs and encouraging the children of these families to do the same,” said Gerber, a chief executive of a New York-based hedge fund and a former AIPAC board member.

Prisoners Club chief Qadura Fares came out fervently against Abbas’s decree earlier Tuesday, calling on the PA president to immediately reverse it.

The PA, in its announcement of the reform, said it was moving its database containing information on the families of prisoners and slain attackers from the Social Welfare Ministry to a new independent body called the Palestinian National Foundation for Economic Empowerment, which will be allocating all social welfare payments moving forward.

Gerber questioned why this move was being taken if all families would be required to re-apply for welfare payments. “It’s because they’re still going to be designated as prisoners or martyrs,” he said.
PA has no intention of relinquishing its ‘pay for slay’ incentive, experts say
The decree by the Palestinian Authority on Monday that it has restructured its terrorist payment program has been widely misrepresented as signaling the end of its pay-for-slay program, long-time observers told JNS, noting that reports of pay-for-slay’s demise are greatly exaggerated.

The announcement, published on the P.A.’s English-language WAFA news site, said the P.A. was transferring its payment allocation system from a ministry to an “independent” foundation.

It didn’t mention ending pay for slay, or what it calls its “Martyrs’ Fund,” in which Arabs, many of whom sit in Israeli prisons, are rewarded stipends for having carried out attacks against Jews.

Itamar Marcus, founder and director of watchdog group Palestinian Media Watch (PMW), told JNS of a telling exchange between Fatah, the ruling party of the P.A., and Hamas.

Hamas, criticizing the move, said that Fatah, the ruling party of the P.A., had abandoned the “martyrs,” i.e. prisoners.

“Sons of the Homeland,” a Telegram channel used by Fatah’s Bethlehem branch took umbrage at Hamas for publishing a “truncated version of the news”—that is, mispresenting the report to suggest that the P.A. was, in fact, canceling payments to terrorists.

Marcus quoted the Fatah-aligned channel: “The full news states that the salaries of the martyrs and printers have not and will not be affected, as all families that previously benefited from the law, regulations and systems will continue to be subject to the same standards.”

“Translation: the P.A. continues to fund and reward terrorism,” Marcus said.
Visualizing Palestine: A Lebanese Organization Unlawfully Influencing American Youth?
A new investigation by Jewish Onliner—available at this link—has found that Visualizing Palestine (VP), an organization known for producing striking visual content critical of Israel, may not be the American nonprofit it purports to be. Rather, despite holding tax-deductible 501(c)(3) status under the fiscal sponsorship of Empowerment Works, evidence suggests that VP may actually operate as a Lebanese organization aiming to influence American public opinion through disinformation.

This revelation calls into question VP's transparency, agenda, and its broader influence in the United States, which is particularly pertinent given VP’s explicit efforts to infiltrate the American education system and its stated goal of influencing Western publics. The findings also highlight the potential need for the organization to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).

Ties to Lebanon & Terror-Linked Entities
While VP operates under the guise of a North American nonprofit, the investigation uncovered that its parent organization, Visualizing Impact (VI), is based in Beirut, with additional offices in Amman and Ramallah, with VP serving as its North American branch. Documents and public statements offer extensive proof of their presence in Lebanon:
VI’s job listings describe its team as “based in Beirut with additional bases in Amman, Toronto, and Dubai.”
During a 2020 panel in Dubai, a VP cofounder shared images of their Beirut office, where they said their early projects were developed.
VP has received financial support from the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture (AFAC), a Beirut-based NGO, along with other grant-making organizations in the Middle East.
Tax filings for donations made by the Soros family’s Open Society Foundations to VP—totaling over $200,000 between 2015 and 2018—list a Beirut address for the organization.
A 2014 slide deck from VI included a Lebanese bank account as part of its financial operations.

The organization’s connections extend to groups with alleged links to terrorism. VP has collaborated with Al Haq, a group designated as a terror organization by Israel, and previously collaborated with Samidoun on anti-Israel events, which the U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) recently designated a terror organization in October 2024.

Ryan Mauro, an investigative researcher for Capital Research Center and Newsmax TV Contributor, told Jewish Onliner that these findings reveal VP to be a “hostile foreign disinformation operation, likely in violation of Foreign Agent Registration Act regulations.” He further emphasized, “Let's be clear about what this is: A hostile, deliberately deceptive, foreign influence operation targeting Americans to benefit anti-American terrorist groups is a non-violent attack on the U.S.”

Closer to home, VP maintains a strong working relationship with Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), a U.S.-based group known for supporting the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel. Recent reports have also linked JVP to Lebanon, suggesting that there may be a network of Lebanese-tied groups working in collaboration to amplify anti-Israel narratives in the U.S.
Investigate universities for promoting antisemitism and violence
At the U.S. Department of Justice task force on campus antisemitism meeting last week, Trump administration official Leo Terrell announced that the government will launch comprehensive investigations into universities for their failure to address Jew-hatred over the past several years. This marks a watershed moment in the battle against the alarming rise of violence against Jewish students, Christian students and conservative voices on college campuses—and it is long overdue.

For too long, universities have operated with impunity, allowing harassment, threats of violence and outright violence to flourish under the guise of academic freedom or political activism. The past few years, in particular, have witnessed a disturbing normalization of antisemitism cloaked in anti-Israel sentiment. This has not only endangered Jewish students but also eroded the foundational values of respect and intellectual integrity that higher education is supposed to uphold.

The task force will focus on holding universities accountable for their complicity or negligence. This initiative is more than a policy shift; it is a moral imperative. The investigations will scrutinize administrative responses to pro-Hamas, antisemitic and violent incidents, including the handling of violent protests targeting students and organizations.

One of the most striking aspects of Terrell’s announcement was the new directive concerning international students on visas who have engaged in violent antisemitic activities. Until now, there has been a disturbing lack of consequences for such behavior with academic institutions often reluctant to discipline these students, fearing a backlash or accusations of discrimination. (Those students also often pay full tuition.) That era of leniency is coming to an end. Students who have participated in violent acts against individuals or institutions, without facing proper recourse from their universities, will now face deportation.

This policy shift sends a clear message: The United States will not tolerate hate-fueled violence under the pretense of academic discourse or political expression. It also underscores the principle that student visas are a privilege—not a right—and that this privilege comes with the responsibility to adhere to the laws and values of the host country.
The Free Press: The “Golden Age” for Jews Has Ended | Simon Sebag Montefiore
Did you know that Joseph Stalin could sing with perfect pitch? Or that he was so scared of his wife that he would hide from her in the bathroom? Did you know that Peter the Great liked to surround himself with naked dwarfs? Did you know that Catherine the Great—long smeared as a nymphomaniac—was actually a lovelorn monogamist? Or that King Herod’s genitals once exploded with maggots?

Most historians bore you with dry accounts of battles and treaties, and it’s hard to remember any of it. But not Simon Sebag Montefiore, who writes 900 pages that you cannot put down.

Sebag Montefiore is one of the most important historians alive today. His many books, like Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar, The Romanovs, and Catherine the Great & Potemkin are essential to understanding power, politics, revolution, dictatorships, and above all, human nature.

While most of Sebag Montefiore’s books are biographies of people, Jerusalem is a biography of a city—one that is “the house of the one God, the capital of two peoples, the temple of three religions, and she is the only city to exist twice—in heaven and on earth.” The book takes you through 3,000 years of Jerusalem’s history, from King David to Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu. It is a must-read. It has sold more than a million copies, and it has just been reissued in paperback.

With the ceasefire deal underway in Israel and with Donald Trump a few weeks into his second presidency, we could not think of a better person to talk to at this moment.


Shabbos Kestenbaum– Why Trump is the Only Option for Jews & Why He's Suing Harvard | FULL EP
Ami’s House is a weekly podcast hosted by comedian and musician Ami Kozak with co-host Michael Weber. We schmooze with our favorite artists and thinkers about comedy, politics, and all things Jewish.

00:00 ‪@mislaibeled‬ Intro
01:14 Recapping the Influencer mission to Israel
32:19 Inside the lawsuit against Harvard
52:15 Is a lawsuit really the best way to change Harvard?
01:03:58 RNC: How Douglas Murray convinced Shabbos to speak (ft. ‪@douglasmurray‬)
01:12:01 Trump's plan to take over Gaza
01:35:30 What comes next for America?
01:39:30 Will Shabbos run for office?


Yasir Arafat’s Visit to the UN and the Long, Sorry History of Legitimizing Terrorists

Trump Pledged To Deport Pro-Hamas Student Visa Holders. Who Are They?
Foreign students and professors have played a leading role in fomenting pro-terror and anti-Semitic demonstrations on U.S. college campuses. Now, many of them could face federal investigation or deportation following an executive order from President Donald Trump that calls on federal agencies to identify foreign "Hamas sympathizers on college campuses."

"To all the resident aliens who joined in the pro-jihadist protests, we put you on notice: come 2025, we will find you, and we will deport you," a fact sheet accompanying the order states.

Legal experts say foreign students and professors could now see their visas revoked for expressing support for terrorist groups or committing illegal activities as part of anti-Israel campus demonstrations. Betar USA, an anti-Semitism watchdog group, said it has identified a list of pro-Hamas student visa holders who could be subject to deportation and is assisting the Trump administration with its efforts.

"We're having people throughout the country, North America, reaching out to us, professors, administrators, and sharing with us some of their concerns with certain individuals," a representative for Betar USA told the Washington Free Beacon. "Our specific focus in this conversation is the students, and the takeover of universities throughout this country [that are] fomenting this very dangerous narrative." Here are some of the names Betar submitted to the Trump administration:

Momodou Taal
Affiliation: Cornell University
Role: Graduate student
Countries of Origin: Gambia and the United Kingdom

Taal, who disclosed his F-1 visa status in an October interview with Inside Higher Ed, has repeatedly advocated for "armed resistance" and praised the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7. While leading an anti-Israel campus demonstration last year, Taal announced that he took his "cue from the armed resistance in Palestine."

"We are in solidarity with the armed resistance in Palestine from the river to the sea," he said.

Just hours after the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre, Taal praised the Hamas attacks on social media.

"The dialect demands: That wherever you have oppression, you will find those who are fighting against it. Glory to the resistance!" he wrote on X.

Taal drew national media attention in October when he was suspended for "escalating, egregious behavior and a disregard for the university policies," including an anti-Israel demonstration that shut down a school career fair. Cornell planned to disenroll him, a move that would have brought about his deportation, but the school reversed course after pressure from anti-Israel groups.

"I don't think they anticipated the level of backlash," Taal said of Cornell. Prior to his suspension, he taught a course titled, "What Is Blackness? Race and Processes of Racialization." After Cornell ruled in his favor, allowing him to retain his F-1 visa, Taal said in a statement, "There will never come a time where I say to myself that I went too hard for Gaza."
Suspended UW student group calls Sbarro bombing terrorist a ‘heroine’
Students United for Palestinian Equality and Return (SUPER), a suspended student group at the University of Washington, called the terrorist who orchestrated the Sbarro restaurant bombing a “heroine” on their Instagram page on Wednesday.

“Ahlam [Tamimi] represents every Palestinian woman who refuses to kneel before oppression, every Palestinian journalist who refuses to be silenced, and every Palestinian fighter who knows that freedom is not given - it is taken,” SUPER posted on their social media.

The group also reposted an Instagram carousel that called out the Jordanian regime, referencing an unverified report by Araby al-Jadeed that Jordan has plans to extradite Tamimi to the United States.

“This move is not just an attack on one woman - it's an attack on the spirit of Palestinian resistance and the unwavering defiance of those who refuse to submit to colonial oppression,” the post said. “Ahlam Al-Tamimi is not just a name. She is a journalist, a warrior, and a symbol of steadfastness.”

Tamimi is known for organizing a suicide bombing in a Jerusalem restaurant in 2001, which wounded 130 people and killed 16 - including children.

The Instagram carousel, which was a collaboration between multiple pro-Palestinian accounts, features photographs of Tamimi smiling and flashing a peace sign.

The pro-Palestinian groups also mentioned the 2001 Sbarro attack, writing that “[Tamimi’s] courage was evident when she took part in the legendary “Sbarro restaurant operation, escorting the martyr fighter Izz al-Din al-Masri to his target” and added that “instead of punishing those who resist, it is time to honor and protect them.”
McGill windows smashed by anti-Israel 'mob' to 'bully' university into adopting BDS
McGill University windows were smashed at five buildings by anti-Israel activists, disrupting classes and exams in what the administration said was an attempt to pressure the institution into adopting Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) policies.

Students, faculty, and staff were panicked by the “truly terrifying experience” after around 40 vandals used stones, bricks, and hammers on Wednesday to destroy windows, according to a Friday statement by McGill University President and Vice-Chancellor Deep Saini.

The vandals left before the police could arrive, but Saini expected that arrests would occur.

Saini said extensive damage was caused by the “shouting mob,” but there were no injuries. He stated that the university would fully enforce institutional policies and pursue legal accountability.

“These acts were intended to intimidate our campus community and bully us into changing the university’s decision regarding proposals from some to Boycott, Divest, and Sanction the State of Israel,” said Saini. “The university’s position rejecting BDS remains clear and firm.”
Now Columbia's anti-Israel student protesters have the audacity to sue the school for suspending them
Columbia protesters broke the rules. Now they’re suing the school because they didn’t want to face the consequences.

Three students filed a suit against the university last week, complaining that Columbia “went to extreme lengths to quash protests after the school’s Gaza Solidarity Encampment ignited a global uprising” last spring.

Catherine Curran-Groome, Aidan Parisi and Brandon Murphy whine about being wrongly suspended and arrested during protests — even though they were brazenly defying school rules and breaking the law.

They apparently are utterly incapable of understanding that rules are rules.

“These students are learning the hard way that their actions have consequences,” Columbia Jewish alumni association president Ari Shrage told The Post. “If they really believed in what they were doing, why are they suing?”

The three are seeking undisclosed damages, alleging that Columbia “departed from its established rules and policies to unlawfully target and punish plaintiffs … to silence and de facto expel [them].”

But their argument is just flat-out nonsense.

While these students might like to think of themselves as martyrs for their cause, they weren’t actually disciplined for their political beliefs. If they were, I would defend their free speech — even though I disagree with their point of view.

Nobody hunted them down because they were pro-Palestinian. They literally plopped themselves down in the middle of the quad and had a hissy fit when the school repeatedly asked them to pack up.


Georgetown Law event with PFLP terror group member postponed
A discussion scheduled for Tuesday at Georgetown University Law Center featuring a convicted member of the U.S.-designated terrorist organization Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine is being postponed so that the university can “conduct a serious investigation,” Jewish Insider has learned.

The postponement came after both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) condemned the event, which was organized by Georgetown Law Students for Justice in Palestine. In a Monday evening email to a member of Torres’ team who reached out to the Law Center to express concern, a university official said that the administration conveyed to LSJP on Sunday that their event would “have to be postponed so that the University could conduct a thorough investigation into serious safety and security concerns that had arisen in connection with the event.”

The event was entitled “Palestinian Prisoners, an Evening with Ribhi Karajah, student activist and former political prisoner.” Karajah, a U.S. citizen, served three and a half years in an Israeli prison for his role — along with two other PFLP members — in an August 2019 roadside bombing in the West Bank in which 17-year-old Israeli Rina Shnerb was killed while on a hike with her father and brother, both of whom sustained injuries. Karajah was informed about the planned attack by several of his PFLP associates, with specific details of where it would take place, and did nothing to stop it, which he acknowledged in a plea agreement with an Israeli court.

On Friday, at a roundtable Netanyahu led with 30 Jewish college students and recent graduates in Washington, a Georgetown Law student informed the prime minister about the event.

Netanyahu “had a very visceral reaction to my speech,” Julia Wax Vanderwiel, founder and president of Georgetown Law Zionists, told JI. “He’s appalled [about the upcoming event]. He said he knows exactly who Rina Shnerb is, he’s met the family. He said that we need to stay strong. He genuinely listened, cared and wants something done.”


46 Years of tyranny: How Iran's Islamic Revolution betrayed its promises
Iranian grief is remembered today. Today, 46 years ago, Iranian armed forces capitulated to Imam Ruhollah Khomeini. In Tehran and elsewhere today, the regime's thin following will shout slogans against America and Israel. Islamists hide their intention:

Khomeini (1979): 'I want in Iran, a system that is good for all classes. May under its protection all classes be free and independent, may they think freely, may the press be free, may all parts of the nation be wealthy, may the spirituality of our nation be proper progressive spirituality, may their materiality be progressive materiality.'

The reality (2024): No freedom of the press, no prosperity and oppression of everyone. Only the regime's supporters are free to express their views. Yesterday, the dollar exchange rate reached its provisional high: for 1 dollar, Iranians pay almost 92,000 Toman. Before the Revolution, 46 years ago, 1 dollar cost 7 Toman. Now, there are more poor in Iran than in the Shah's time. Every day, groups of people demonstrate for unpaid salaries, electricity, and gas.

Khomeini: 'Islam always respects the rights of religious minorities'

The reality: the Baha'i faith is banned in Iran. Baha'is are routinely persecuted and sentenced to death or long-term imprisonment. Those who choose Christianity in Iran are apostates and persecuted. In fact, the regime wants everyone to convert to Islam.

Khomeini: 'I and other clerics will not play any role in state affairs in the near future'.

Reality: Ayatollahs have ruled by violent means for 46 years.


‘Harry Potter’ star Jason Isaacs sports hostage ribbon at TV premiere
British actor Jason Isaacs was spotted wearing a yellow hostage pin on his lapel at the season three premiere of the TV show “The White Lotus” in Los Angeles on Monday night.

Isaacs, 61, grew up in a Jewish family in Liverpool and London, and his parents later settled in Israel, where his mother died in 2014.

He has been tight-lipped about the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas, sparked by the terror group’s October 7, 2023, massacre, although he has been spotted wearing the ribbon before, including at the Britain Independent Film Awards in December 2024 as well as the premiere of the play “Barcelona” in London in October 2024.

Asked about the conflict in a November 2023 interview with The Independent, Isaacs said: “It’s just such an enormous thing to talk about that I don’t think it can be tacked onto a publicity interview.”

The actor is best known for his portrayal of Lucius Malfoy in the Harry Potter film series, and has also appeared in “Black Hawk Down,” “Peter Pan,” “The Death of Stalin,” and taken part in a wide range of television, film and theater productions.






Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 



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This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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