This vile Jew was deliberately and provocatively wearing his skullcap as he walked past a pro-Palestinian march. In his version of events, he was walking home from a synagogue and it was just a “coincidence” that he happened to come across the march.
A police officer told Gideon Falter that he risked “antagonising” the situation because he was openly Jewish. Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden suggested that Scotland Yard had been “disrespecting” Jews. There were calls for Sir Mark Rowley, Commissioner of Police of the London Metropolis, to resign from the likes of Jonathan Turner, chief executive of Lawyers for Israel, and Suella Braverman, the former Home Secretary of Indian descent, who married the Jew Rael Braverman.
Falter complains that police officers allowed pro-Palestinian (anti-genocide) protestors to call him and his friends “scum”, “disgusting” and “Nazis” as well as shouting “lock them up”, and he says of the officer who warned him of inflaming the situation, “How dare he pick me out because I’m Jewish — and tell me where I’m allowed to walk?”
Falter is the Campaign Against Antisemitism boss who had Alison Chabloz prosecuted and put on trial in 2018 for posting songs on YouTube that gently mocked the brazen lies and cheek of the most outrageous Jewish Holohoaxers, and she was eventually jailed for “antisemitism”. At her hearings at Westminster Magistrates Court there were Jews and pro-Zionist demonstrators who were happily calling Chabloz’ supporters “scum”, “Nazis”, etc.
What the hell does Falter expect when his fellow tribesmen in an occupied land are conducting a genocide, bombing hospitals, schools, mosques, churches and refugee camps, and massacring countless thousands of women and children? If he prances about in his skullcap alongside the marchers, he’s hardly likely to be praised by these activists who are not happy with the genocide that his coreligionists are perpetrating.
He whines about being advised to step away, yet is so intolerant of ‘goyim’ rights that he will pull Jewish rank and privilege to prevent the ‘wrong’ type of songs from being posted on social media.