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If This Isn’t Anti-semitic Terror, What Is?

Melbourne’s anti-Semitic terrorists promise more of the same.

The cowardly face of anti-Semitic terror in Australia. The Good Oil. Photoshop by Lushington Brady.

The shadow of Melbourne’s recent ‘Kristallnacht-on-the-Yarra’ grows ever more ominous. As if firebombing synagogues on Jewish holy days and storming Jewish restaurants wasn’t alarming enough – still care to deny it’s textbook anti-Semitism, anyone? – an unambiguous anti-Jewish terror attack on the same night suggests a co-ordinated reign of anti-Semitic terror.

The far-left terrorists responsible are not just promising more anti-Jewish violence, but trying to incite others to join in.

A video circulating online shows a masked figure taking responsibility for the firebombing of a Victorian-owned weapons manufacturer, and threatening to target its workers with further violence.

Victoria Police has launched an investigation into the July 5 incident.

Except that they’re not a ‘weapons manufacturer’, they’re a manufacturer of components for the aerospace industry. For both civilian and military use. But calling them a ‘weapons manufacturer’ is like calling Louisville Slugger a ‘blunt weapons manufacturer’.

With their standard bravery, the terrorists hide behind masks.

In the four-minute video that began circulating on Sunday night, a black-clad man wearing a balaclava in front of a Palestinian flag uses voice-altering software to tell viewers “This is an anonymous communique by the cell that torched three cars at Lovitt Technologies.”

In classic lying-by-omission, the media neglect to report the two other prominent flags in the video: the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags.

No Australian flag, though.

The figure then threatens further “consequences” if the company continues to manufacture weapons, and instructs viewers how to conduct firebombings of their own, adding that workers should “consider this as a warning” […]

The video then shows the figure demonstrating how to firebomb a car using paper bags and fire starters.

Alarmingly, the arson attack seems to be part of a co-ordinated campaign of anti-Jewish terror, appropriately dubbed ‘Melbourne’s Kristallnacht’, referring to the infamous night in 1938 when Nazi stormtroopers ran amok smashing Jewish businesses and burning synagogues.

Victoria Police said the July 5 attack on Lovitt Technologies was being investigated by the Victorian Joint Counter Terrorism Team, which also includes the Australian Federal Police (AFP) and the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO).

The JCTT is also investigating the arson at the Adass Israel Synagogue of Melbourne in December last year [...]

The attack at Lovitt Technologies occurred shortly after an incident where the door to a synagogue in East Melbourne was set alight and protesters swarmed Israeli-owned restaurant Miznon in the city’s CBD.

And such lovely, ‘fiery but mostly peaceful’ ‘protesters’ they are, too.

The man charged over the violent storming of Melbourne’s Israeli restaurant Miznon will remain in custody after the court heard he was on bail at the time for threatening to kill someone at an earlier protest.

On Tuesday afternoon, police charged three people over the attack […]

Prosecutors alleged he was one of several protesters who threw food at patrons while chanting pro-Palestine slogans. It’s alleged he then “knocked over a table and threw a pair of chairs at the restaurant”.

The prosecutor claimed [Arnold Antwany] “had a verbal confrontation with a patron and threw a chair in their direction”.

Mr Antwany’s bail was denied by the magistrate after the court heard he had violated bail conditions by being in the city on the night of the protest.

Mr Antwany was already on bail for an incident in April in which he allegedly threatened to kill and assault a member of the public who asked him to cease playing chants through a loudspeaker at an earlier protest.

But remember: they’re marching for ‘peace’.


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