Hitler was right. It’s the Jews

(American Christians, ignore your urge to immediately discredit this piece by its title and give it a read. If you cannot, at least research dispensationalism vs Covenant ideology and the Schofield reference bible and when it was published because that is the reason you are Zionist and believe that jews are God’s Chosen people.)

Conservative thinkers equivocate when they blame the controlled demolition of the U.S. on meaningless terms like globalists, the establishment, or simply they. While these terms, especially the first two, are not incorrect, they fail to precisely identify who controls our world leaders, institutions, world affairs, and general political direction. Spoiler alert: It is the jews, and it always has been. Jews own or control our government, banks, corporations, media, entertainment, porn companies, and are the thought leaders behind social justice.

Historically

109 countries throughout history have expelled jews for a reason. They take over the governments and finical institutions of their hosts countries and subvert their values and cultures. Besides what is currently happening in the West, the most recent and horrifying example of jewish subversion occurred in is the early 20th Century.

Bolshevik Revolution

Foreseeing the future conflict, Germany developed a plan to fight a two front war in the years preceding WW1. The plan was to quickly crush France before the Russians had time to mobilize. As usual, the plan quickly fell apart after first contact with the enemy. France was stronger than expected and Russia weaker. To end the war on its Eastern front, Germany transported, by closely guarded, isolated, and locked railcar, Vladimar Lenin (jew), 19 members of his Bolshevik party, several of his allies among the Mensheviks, and six jewish members of the Jewish Labor Bund. Almost half the passengers on the train were Jewish. The goal was to start a communists revolution. It worked. Russia bowed out of the war, and millions of lives later, the Soviet Union was born. Bolshevism and communism are judaism.

Weimar Republic

Unfortunately for the Germans, their ideological warfare weapon, Bolshevism, was not contained and spilled inside its borders. German soldiers did not lose World War 1 in the trenches. It was lost at home after Kurt Liebknecht (jew) and his communists took over the government and signed an embarrassingly harsh peace treaty that was largely responsible for World War 2. The new Government was called the Weimar Republic, and jews held most of its government offices. Inflation was rampant because the banks continuously printed money to pay war reparations. Government leaders facilitated mass-immigration of non-Germanic peoples. Degeneracy was widespread, popularized, and admired. Prostitution was legalized. Abortion and gay marriage were legalized. Jewish doctors began performing sex changes. Transgender and homosexual theories were printed and taught in German schools.

The United States mirrors the Weimar Republic because we allowed the jews to take control. This soft-revolution goes mostly ignored because half our population blindly supports jews because of a unique denomination of Christianity and the other half is too scared to utter anything controversial, particularly anything considered antisemitic.

Government

Biden’s Administration

Jews make up 2% of the U.S. population but hold a disproportionately high amount of our top public offices.

Secretary of State: Anthony Blinken-Jew
Secretary of Treasury: Janet Yellen-Jew
Attorney General: Merrick Garland-Jew
Deputy Secretary of State: Wendy Sherman-Jew
Secretary of Homeland Security: Alejandro Mayorkas-Jew
Director of National Intelligence: Avril Haines-Jew/ Jeff Zients-Jew
Director of CIA: David S. Cohen-Jew
Secretary for Political Affairs: Victoria Nuland-Jew
Office of Science and Technology Policy: Eric Lander-Jew
US Assistant Secretary of Health: Four-Star Admiral Racheal Levine-Transgender Jew

World Economic Forum (WEF)

WEF Founder: Klaus Schwab-Jew

According to the WEF, their forum “engages the foremost political, business and other leaders of society to shape global, regional, and industry agendas.” If this sounds dystopian, that is because it is. The WEF is what people are referring to when they use the term globalists. These are the “you’ll eat bugs, own nothing, and be happy” people.

I included the WEF in the government section because most Western world leaders are, unfortunately, members of the WEF. These elites control the philosophical direction and political policies of Western countries.

WEF’s Young Global Leaders Program

Each year, the WEF selects ‘innovative’ and ‘socially minded’ people for the Young Global Leader award. Alarmingly, most Western leaders are among this group. Schwab once boasted of “penetrat[ing]” governments with Young Global Leaders. He added that as of 2017, “more than half” of Justin Trudeau’s Cabinet had been members.

Notable American members include:

Gavin Newsom, Governor of CaliforniaJeff Bezos, founder of Amazon
Dan Crenshaw, Congressman from TexasChad Hurtley, co-founder of Youtube
Pete Buttigieg, Secretary of TransportationPeter Thiel, co-founder of Paypal
Ivanka Trump, Daughter of former President Donald TrumpSergey Brin, co-founder of Google-Jew
Tom Cotton, Senator from ArkansasLarry Page, co-founder of Google-Jew
Nikki Haley, Presidential CandidateJosh Silverman, CEO of Skype-Jew
Adam Kinzinger, former Illinois U.S. RepresentativeRajiv Shah, President of the Rockefeller Foundation
Elon Musk, Dogecoin DictatorSusan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, formally Facebook-JewLeonardo DiCaprio, Actor and Liberal activist
Bill Gates, founder and CEO of MicrosoftMegan Rapinoe, Soccer player

Notable international Members include:

Rishi Sunak, Prime Minister of the United KingdomSebastian Kurz, Chancellor of Austria
Justin Trudeau, Canadian Prime MinisterMagdalena Andersson, Prime minister of Sweden
Emmanuel Macron, President of FranceMette Frederiksen, Prime Minister of Denmark
Volodymyr Zelensky, President of UkraineSanna Marin, prime minister of Finland
Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European CommissionKaja Kallas, prime minister of Estonia
Haakon, Crown Prince of NorwayJacinda Ardern, Prime Minister of New Zealand
Victoria, Crown Princess of SwedenMauricio Macri, former President of Argentina
Crown Prince Fredrik of DenmarkCarlos Alvarado Quesada, President of Costa Rica
Mark Rutte, prime minister of the NetherlandsJulia Gillard, former Prime Minister of Australia
Alexander De Croo, prime minister of BelgiumJack Ma, Chinese businessman and co-founder of Alibaba Group

Most people on the list have proven to be cogs in Schwab’s global takeover and dystopian vision. A few, like Elon Musk, appear to be against it, at least for now.

Jewish Lobbyist

AIPAC (The American Israel Public Affairs Committee)

Our politicians, on both sides, are bough and paid for, and jews own both. One of America’s largest lobby is the AIPAC, and it advocates for pro-Israel policies. It dominates the Republican party. Conservative Christians, that does not mean jews are on your side.

Largest Private Liberal Donors in 2021-2022 (And their disclosed donation amounts.)

I will continue until I hit a non-jew.

  1. George Soros (jew)-Infamous liberal billionaire that funds white replacement. ($178,820,550)
  2. Michael R. Bloomberg (jew)-Yankee banker & politician. ($50,278,825)
  3. Sam Bankman-Fried (jew)-CEO of FTX, the fraud-ridden Cryptocurrency company. ($40,734,790)
  4. Fred Eychaner (jew)-Newspaper mogul. ($35,804,800)
  5. Karla Jurvetson, born Tinklenberg (jew)-Physician. ($25,108,476)
  6. James H. & Marilyn Simons (jews)-Hedge fund manager, mathematician; computer scientist ($21,809,700)
  7. Deborah J. Simon (jew)- Heir to the largest shopping mall company in the United States($20,006,173)
  8. Stephen & Susan Mandel (both jews)-Hedge fund managers ($18,499,750)
  9. Reid Hoffman (jew)-Co-founder and executive chairman of LinkedIn ($15,678,134)
  10. Joshua Bekenstein (jew)-Co-chairman of Bain, the global finance company ($10,277,770)
  11. Mark & Elizabeth Heising (jews)-Private market investment firm. ($9,950,607)
  12. Wayne D. Jordan (Non-jew) Finally!

Center for Disease Control

These jews advocated forcing millions of Americans to take Fauci’s vaccine.

CDC Director: Rochelle Walensky-Jew
CDC Deputy Director: Anne Schuchat-Jew
CDC Chief of Staff: Sherri Berger-Jew
CDC Chief Medical Officer: Mithcell Wolfe-Jew
CDC Director, Washington Office: Jeff Reczek-Jew

(While we are close to the subject, below are some noteworthy positions during the Covid pandemic. I am sure these are just coincidences too.)

Covid Czar: Jeff Sientsz-Jew
Covid Senior Advisor: Andy Slavitt-Jew
Head of Pfizer: Albert Bourla-Jew
Pfizer Chief Scientist: Mikael Dolsten-Jew
Moderna Chief Scientist: Tal Zaks-Jew

Banks & Investment Firms

An honest title would be The Jewish Octopus-It Feeds On Nothing But Gold.

Usury is a jewish virtue. Jews own or control the central banks of most countries and, thus, their entire fiscal policy and the people and organizations that owe them money, which is everyone. Jews also own the largest and most powerful private banks and investment firms in the United States.

Federal Reserve

In 1910, six men – Nelson Aldrich (maternal grandfather of Nelson & David Rockefeller), A. Piatt Andrew, Henry Davison (the front man for financier J.P. Morgan), Arthur Shelton, Frank Vanderlip and Paul Warburg (Rothchild associate and jew) – secretly met at the Jekyll Island Club to write a plan to reform the nation’s banking system in what would eventually become the Federal reserve. The meeting and its purpose were closely guarded secrets, and participants did not admit that the meeting occurred until the 1930s.

However, an obstacle stood in their way. Three of the richest men on earth – John Aster, Isador Strauss & Benjamin Guggenheim – were against the creation of a central bank. Coincidentally, in 1912, Aster, Strauss, and Guggenheim all just happened to be aboard the Titanic, and all died in the frigid waters of the North Atlantic.

Suspiciously, the man who funded the building of the Titanic and vocal central bank supporter, J. P. Morgan, cancelled his long-awaited journey just hours before its departure.

In 1913, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act into law. Wilson later regretted the decision, but by then it was too late.

“I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of credit is concentrated. The growth of the nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men. We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated Governments in the civilized world no longer a Government by free opinion, no longer a Government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a Government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men.”

-Woodrow Wilson

So who owns the federal reserve and countless other central banks like it? The Rothchilds.

Rothschilds’ Jewish banking dynasty

The Rothchilds are worth an estimated $500 trillion! The Rothchilds began their usuary empire in the 18th century in Frankfurt, Germany. It rapidly expanded during the French Revolution once they began facilitating the payments from Britain to hire Hessian mercenary soldiers. Their business model stuck, and they have been funding wars and growing rich from them ever since.

In the early 1800s, Rothschild sent his sons to live in Naples, Vienna, Paris, and London, in addition to keeping a son in Frankfurt. With Mayer Rothschild’s children spread across Europe, the five linked branches became, in effect, the first bank to transcend borders and the start of a global bank.

To keep their wealth, the Rothschilds practiced incest. Between 1824 and 1877, there were 36 marriages of Mayer Rothschild’s male descendants. Of these, 30 married within the family, most marrying first or second cousins. The Rothchilds own and control the central bank of almost every country and, as such, own the world.

Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs is one of the largest multinational investment banks and financial services companies in the world and a recipient of a federal government bailout during the Great Recession.

Founders:
Marcus Goldman-Jew
Samuel Sachs-Jew

Current Executives:
CEO: David Solomon-Jew

BlackRock

Founded in 1988, BlackRock is an American multinational investment company and the world’s largest asset manager, with $9.42 trillion in assets as of June 2023.

BlackRock is why you cannot afford a house because they are currently buying around 50% of single-family housing in cash. BlackRock is also the largest investor in weapon manufacturers and the pioneer of environmental, social, and corporate governance score (ESG). Essentially, ESG is a pervasive strategy that rewards companies with access to capital for following Marxist policies and refusing that access to those that do not. (Think the usual suspects like climate change and diversity.)

Founder & CEO: Larry Fink, Jew
President: Rob Kapito, Jew

Lehman Brothers Inc.

Lehman Brothers Inc. was an American global financial services firm founded in 1850.[2] Before filing for bankruptcy in 2008, Lehman was the fourth-largest investment bank in the United States. Their collapse was largely due to Lehman’s involvement in the subprime mortgage crisis and its exposure to less liquid assets. Lehman’s bankruptcy filing was the largest in U.S. history and played a central role in the financial crisis of 2007–2008.

Founders: Henry, Emanuel and Mayer Lehman-Jews

Kuhn, Loeb & Co.

Founded in 1867, Kuhn, Loeb & Co. grew to be one of the most influential investment banks in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, financing America’s expanding railways and growth companies, including Western Union and Westinghouse, and thereby becoming the principal rival of J.P. Morgan & Co. Kuhn, Loeb & Co. eventually merged with Lehman Brothers Inc. The combined firm was itself acquired in 1984 by American Express, forming Shearson Lehman/American Express.

Founders: Abraham Kuhn & Solomon Loeb-Jews

The above list is merely jews in finance that I thought deserved special attention, but it barely scratches the surface. These lists were so long I had to make them a dropdown lists to make this piece digestible.

Here is a more comprehensive but still incomplete list.
  • Leonard L. Abess (born 1948), owner and CEO of City National Bank of Florida
  • Bill Ackman (born 1966), hedge fund manager and investor, founder of Pershing Square Capital Management and co-founder of investment firm Gotham Partners
  • Les Alexander (born 1944), investor, founder of the Alexander Group, former owner of NBA’s Houston Rockets
  • Sergey Aleynikov (born 1969/1970), Russian-American founder of financial consulting firm Omnibius
  • Bill (born 1949), Peter (1952–2017), Susan (born 1946) and Ted Alfond (born 1945), investors; members of the Alfond family
  • James Altucher (born 1968), hedge fund manager and tech investor, founder of StockPickr
  • Shari Arison (born 1957), American-Israeli investor, owner of Bank Hapoalim; member of the Arison family
  • Jeff Aronson (born 1958), co-founder of Centerbridge Partners, former partner at Angelo Gordon
  • Cliff Asness (born 1966), hedge fund manager, co-founder of AQR Capital
  • Jules Bache (1861–1944), founder of J. S. Bache & Co.
  • Ronald S. Baron (born 1943), investor, founder of Baron Capital Management
  • Joseph Ainslie Bear (1878–1955), co-founder of investment bank Bear Stearns
  • Jordan Belfort (born 1962), former stock broker, founder of Stratton Oakmont
  • Rebecka Belldegrun (born 1950), Finnish-born investor, CEO of BellCo Capital; wife of Arie Belldegrun
  • Bob Benmosche (1944–2015), investment banker, former president and CEO of the American International Group (AIG)
  • Roger Berlind (1930–2020), co-founder of Carter, Berlind, Potoma & Weill
  • David Bergstein (born 1962), founder of private equity firm Cyrano Group
  • Bruce R. Berkowitz (born 1957/1958), founder of Fairholme Capital Management
  • Paul P. (born 1934) and Zalman Bernstein (1926–1999), co-founders of investment-management firm Sanford C. Bernstein & Company (now AllianceBernstein)
  • Leon Black (born 1951), co-founder of Apollo Global Management
  • Lloyd C. Blankfein (born 1954), former CEO of Goldman Sachs
  • Leonard Blavatnik (born 1957), Ukraine-born British-American investor, founder of Access Industries
  • David Blitzer (born 1969), senior Blackstone Inc. executive and owner of several sports teams
  • Michael Bloomberg (born 1942), co-founder of global financial services, software and mass media company Bloomberg
  • Alfred S. Bloomingdale (1916–1982), co-founder of Diners Club International
  • Richard C. Blum (born 1935), founder of Blum Capital
  • Ivan Boesky (born 1937), former financier and insider trader, founder of Ivan F. Boesky & Company
  • David Bonderman (born 1942), co-founder of TPG Capital
  • Bill Browder (born 1964), American-British financier, co-founder of Hermitage Capital Management
  • B. Gerald Cantor (1916–1996), founder of Cantor Fitzgerald
  • Arthur L. Carter (born 1931), investment banker, co-founder of Carter, Berlind, & Weill
  • Stanley Chais (1926–2010), former investment advisor and money manager
  • Marshall Cogan (born 1937), former partner at Cogan, Berlind, Weill & Levitt and founder of the United Automotive Group
  • Abby Joseph Cohen (born 1953), advisory director at Goldman Sachs
  • Peter A. Cohen (born 1946/1947), chairman and CEO of Cowen Group
  • Steven A. Cohen (born 1956), hedge fund manager, founder of Point72 Asset Management and SAC Capital Advisors
  • Gary Cohn (born 1960), former COO of Goldman Sachs; Chief Economic Advisor to President Trump (until March 2018)
  • Leon Cooperman (born 1943), investor and hedge fund manager, chairman of Omega Advisors
  • Mark Cuban (born 1958), start-up investor, owner of NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, co-founder of 2929 Entertainment
  • Arthur Dantchik, co-founder of Susquehanna International Group
  • Jon P. Diamond (born 1957), co-founder of the Safe Auto Insurance Company
  • Glenn Dubin (born 1957), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Highbridge Capital Management, co-owner of global merchant firm CCI
  • Asher Edelman (born 1939), Corporate raider
  • Joseph Edelman (born 1955), founder of hedge fund Perceptive Advisors
  • David Einhorn (born 1968), investor, hedge fund manager, founder of Greenlight Capital
  • Lewis Eisenberg (born 1942), co-founder of private equity firm Granite Capital International Group
  • Thomas George Stemberg (1949–2015), He was a pioneer of the office supplies superstore industry
  • Michael R. Eisenson, co-founder of Charlesbank Capital Partners
  • Steve Eisman (born 1962), investor, co-founder of Emrys Partners, managing director at Neuberger Berman
  • Israel “Izzy” Englander (born 1948), investor, founder of Millennium Management
  • Boris Epshteyn (born 1982), Russian-born investment banker
  • Jeffrey Epstein (1953–2019), financier, founder of Intercontinental Assets Group and J. Epstein Co.
  • Andrew Fastow (born 1961), former CFO of Enron
  • Irwin Federman (born 1936), General Partner of U.S. Venture Partners (USVP)
  • Steve Feinberg (born 1960), co-founder of Cerberus Capital Management
  • Karen Finerman (born 1965), co-founder of hedge fund Metropolitan Capital Advisors
  • Laurence D. Fink (born 1952), financial executive, co-founder of BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager.
  • William S. Fisher (born 1958), investor, hedge fund manager, founder of Manzanita Capital; Gap heir
  • Lee Fixel (born 1980), investor, partner at Tiger Management
  • John Frankel (born 1961), British-American founder of ff Venture Capital
  • Martin Frankel (born 1954), investor, founder of Winthrop Capital; known for using astrology to make financial trading decisions
  • Jacob A. Frenkel (born 1943), Israeli-American chairman of JPMorgan Chase International
  • Tully Friedman (born 1942), co-founder of Hellman & Friedman (H&F), Friedman Fleischer & Lowe (FFL)
  • Jeremy Frommer, hedge fund manager, former co-CEO of RBC Capital Markets
  • Richard S. Fuld Jr. (born 1946), former (and last) CEO of Lehman Brothers
  • Lewis Glucksman (1925–2006), CEO and chairman of Lehman Brothers, Kuhn, Loeb
  • Stanley Gold (born 1942), former president and CEO of Shamrock Holdings (Roy E. Disney’s family investment firm)
  • Stanley Golder (1929–2000), co-founder of private equity firm GTCR
  • Marcus Goldman (1821–1904), German-born co-founder of Goldman Sachs; member of the Goldman-Sachs family
  • David Gottesman (1926–2022), founder of First Manhattan Co.; member of the Gottesman family
  • Noam Gottesman (born 1961), Israeli-born British-American hedge fund manager and investor, co-founder of GLG Partners, CEO of TOMS
  • Jonathan D. Gray (born 1970), president and COO of the Blackstone Group, chairman of Hilton Worldwide Holdings
  • Leonard I. Green (1934–2002), founder of Leonard Green & Partners, West Coast’s largest LBO firm
  • Pincus Green (born 1934), oil and gas commodities trader
  • Alan Greenspan (born 1926), former Chair of the Federal Reserve, (co-)founder of Townsend-Greenspan & Co. and Greenspan Associates
  • John Gutfreund (1929–2016), former CEO of Salomon Brothers
  • Rich Handler (born 1961), banker, chairman and CEO of Jefferies Group
  • Josh Harris (born 1964), co-founder of Apollo Global Management
  • Adrian (born 1966) and Nick Hanauer (born 1959), venture capitalists
  • Alfred S. Hart (1904–1979), Hungarian-born founder of City National Bank
  • Andrew Hauptman (born 1969), founder of investment firm Andell Holdings
  • Isaias W. Hellman (1842–1920), German-born banker, co-founder of the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Los Angeles (F&M), president of Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank
  • Samuel J. Heyman (1939–2009), hedge fund manager and chairman of the GAF Materials Corporation
  • Ben Horowitz (born 1966), start-up investor, co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz
  • Carl Icahn (born 1936), Corporate raider, founder of Icahn Enterprises
  • Justin Ishbia (born 1976/1977), founding partner of Shore Capital Partners
  • Mat Ishbia (born 1979/1980), CEO and chairman of mortgage lender United Wholesale Mortgage
  • Samuel Israel III (born 1959), former hedge fund manager, founder of the Bayou Hedge Fund Group
  • Kenneth M. Jacobs (born 1957/1958), chairman and CEO of Lazard Ltd
  • Mitchell R. Julis (born 1955), co-founder of the Canyon Capital Advisors hedge fund
  • David Kabiller (born 1964), co-founder of investment management firm AQR Capital
  • Neil Kadisha (born 1955), Iranian-born co-founder of investment firm Omninet Capital
  • Irving Kahn (1905–2015), investor, co-founder of Kahn Brothers Group
  • Otto Hermann Kahn (1867–1934), German-born investment banker, partner at Kuhn, Loeb & Co.; known for the reorganization of American railroad systems[
  • George Kaiser (born 1942), chairman of BOK Financial Corporation
  • Robert S. Kapito (born 1957), investor, co-founder of BlackRock, chair of the board of UJA-Federation of New York
  • Steven Kaplan, co-founder of Oaktree Capital Management, co-owner of MLS’ D.C. United and EFL Championship’s Swansea City A.F.C.
  • George Karfunkel (born 1948/1949), Hungarian-born co-founder of AmTrust Financial Services and American Stock Transfer & Trust
  • Bruce Karsh (born 1955), investor, co-founder of Oaktree Capital Management, chairman of the Tribune Media Company
  • Richard A. Kayne (born 1945/1946), co-founder of Kayne Anderson Capital Advisers
  • Tal Keinan (born 1969), American-Israeli investor, co-founder of Clarity Capital
  • Barry Klarberg (born 1961), founder of Monarch Business & Wealth Management
  • Seth Klarman (born 1957), investor and hedge fund manager, founder of the Baupost Group
  • Eugene Kleiner (1923–2003), Austrian-born venture capitalist who co-founded KPCB and is considered a pioneer of Silicon Valley
  • Jerome Kohlberg Jr. (1925–2015), co-founder of KKR, founder of Kohlberg & Company
  • Sonja Kohn (born 1948), Austrian-American banker
  • Bruce Kovner (born 1945), investor, hedge fund manager, chairman of CAM Capital
  • Orin Kramer (born 1945), hedge fund manager, founder of Boston Provident
  • Peter S. Kraus, CEO of AllianceBernstein (AB)
  • Henry R. Kravis (born 1944), co-founder of KKR
  • Rodger Krouse (born 1961), co-founder of Sun Capital Partners
  • Joe Lacob (born 1956), Silicon Valley investor, partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB),
  • Andrew A. Lanyi (1925–2009), Hungarian-born investor, founder of the Lanyi Group
  • Marc Lasry (born 1959), Moroccan-born hedge fund manager, co-founder (along with his sister Sonia (born 1962)) of the Avenue Capital
  • Henry Laufer (born 1945), investor, former VP of Research at Renaissance Technologies, co-founder of the Medallion Fund
  • Jonathan Lavine (born 1966), co-managing partner of investment firm Bain Capital and CIO of Bain Capital Credit
  • Solomon Lazard (1827–1916), French-born founder of Lazard Frères and Company; member of the Lazard family
  • Sayra (1898–1994), Jim (1928–2014) and Alexandra Lebenthal (born 1964), Lebenthal & Company
  • Bennett S. LeBow (born 1937), chairman of the Board of the Vector Group, former owner of the Liggett Group
  • Marc J. Leder (born 1962), co-founder of Sun Capital Partners, co-owner of the Philadelphia 76ers
  • Thomas H. Lee (born 1944), founder of the private equity firms THL and Lee Equity Partners
  • Al Lerner (1933–2002), former chairman of the Board of credit card company MBNA and owner of NFL’s Cleveland Browns
  • Randy Lerner (born 1962), investor, former owner of the MBNA Corporation; former owner of EPL’s Aston Villa F.C.
  • Dennis Levine (born 1952), former managing director at Drexel Burnham Lambert
  • Leon Levy (1925–2003), investor, former partner at Oppenheimer & Co.
  • Peter B. Lewis (1933–2013), former chairman and owner of the Progressive Insurance Company
  • Cy Lewis (1908–1978), long-time managing partner of Bear, Stearns & Company
  • Josh Linkner (born 1970), former CEO of Detroit Venture Partners
  • Greg Lippmann (born 1968/1969), hedge fund manager, co-founder of LibreMax Partners
  • Daniel S. Loeb (born 1961), hedge fund manager, founder of Third Point Management
  • Solomon Loeb (1828–1903), German-born co-founder of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
  • Howard Lorber (born 1948), CEO of New Valley LLC (formerly Western Union), chairman of Douglas Elliman and Nathan’s Famous
  • Howard Lutnick (born 1961), chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald & BGC Partners
  • Bernie Madoff (1938–2021), financier and chairman of the Nasdaq, founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities; Ponzi schemer
  • Stephen Mandel Jr. (born 1956), hedge fund manager, investor, founder of Lone Pine Capital, former managing director at the Tiger Fund
  • Leo Melamed (born 1932), Polish-born financial futures pioneer, chairman emeritus of the CME Group
  • James Melcher (born 1939), hedge fund manager, founder of Balestra Capital Management; former Olympic fencer
  • J. Ezra Merkin (born 1953), investor, hedge fund manager, former president of the Fifth Avenue Synagogue; Madoff Ponzi scheme victim
  • André Meyer (1898–1979), French-American investment banker, former senior partner at Lazard Frères & Co.
  • Marc Eugene Meyer (1842–1925), French-American former president of Lazard Frères & Co.
  • Marc Mezvinsky (born 1977), investment banker, co-founder of Eaglevale Partners; husband of Chelsea Clinton
  • Michael Milken (born 1946), financier, junk-bond specialist, founder of the Milken Institute
  • Eric Mindich, hedge fund manager, founder of Eton Park Capital Management
  • Steven Mnuchin (born 1962), former hedge fund manager; 77th United States Secretary of the Treasury
  • Ken Moelis (born 1958), is an investment banker. He is also the founder, chairman and CEO of Moelis & Company
  • David Morgenthaler (1919–2016), founder of Morgenthaler, one of the oldest private equity investment firms in the U.S.
  • Sir Michael Moritz (born 1954), British-American Silicon Valley venture capitalist, partner at Sequoia Capital
  • Alfred Huger Moses (1840–1918), banker and investor who founded the city of Sheffield, Alabama[
  • Andrew M. Murstein (born 1964), founder of investment company Medallion Financial Corp., former taxi medallion lending executive,
  • Arthur Nadel (1933–2012), former hedge fund manager, founder of Scoop Management Co.
  • Ezri Namvar (born 1951/1952), Iranian-born founder of the Namco Capital Group and former owner of the Security Pacific Bank
  • Jack Nash (1929–2008), German-born hedge fund pioneer, former chairman of Oppenheimer & Company, co-founder of the New York Sun
  • Elkan Naumburg (1835–1924), German-born banker, founder of E. Naumburg & Co.
  • Izak Parviz Nazarian (1929–2017), Iranian-American investor, managing partner at Omninet Capital; member of the Nazarian family
  • Roy Neuberger (1903–2010), financier, co-founder of Neuberger Berman
  • Aviv Nevo (born 1965), Romanian-born Israeli-American venture capitalist, founder of NV Investments; major shareholder in Time Warner
  • Roy (born 1966) and Victor Niederhoffer (born 1943), hedge fund managers
  • Mark Nordlicht (born 1968), American-Israeli hedge fund manager, founder of Platinum Partners
  • Nelson Obus (born 1947), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Wynnefield Capital
  • Daniel Och (born 1961), investor and hedge fund manager, founder of the Och-Ziff Capital Management Group
  • Bernard Osher (born 1927), a founding director of World Savings Bank[189]
  • Jacob Ostreicher (born 1959), investor
  • Alan Patricof (born 1934), venture capital and private equity pioneer; co-founder of Apax Partners and Greycroft
  • David L. Paul (1939–2022), banker, founder of Miami-based CenTrust Bank
  • John Paulson (born 1955), investor, founder of Paulson & Co.
  • Stephen M. Peck (1935–2004), co-founder of asset management firm Weiss, Peck & Greer
  • Nelson Peltz (born 1942), investor, co-founder of Trian Fund Management
  • Jeffrey, Raymond (1917–2019) and Ron Perelman (born 1943), investors
  • Richard C. Perry (born 1955), hedge fund manager, founder of Perry Capital
  • Carl Pforzheimer (1879–1957), banker, co-founder of the American Stock Exchange, founder of Carl H. Pforzheimer & Co.
  • Lionel Pincus (1931–2009), co-founder of private equity firm Warburg Pincus
  • Gabe Plotkin (born 1978/1979), founder of Melvin Capital Management and minority owner of the Charlotte Hornets
  • Danny Porush (born 1957), former stock broker and chairman of Stratton Oakmont
  • Victor Posner (1918–2002), LBO pioneer
  • Michael F. Price (born 1951), hedge fund manager, founder of MFP Investors
  • Nicholas (born 1945), Karen (born 1958), Jennifer (born 1950) and John Pritzker (19&3–), investors; members of the Pritzker family
  • Dan Rapoport (1970–2022), Latvian-born investor, founder of Rapoport Capital
  • Ira Rennert (born 1934), industrial investor, founder of the Renco Group
  • Tony Ressler (born 1960), private equity tycoon and venture capitalist, co-founder of Ares Management and Apollo Global Management;
  • Marc Rich (1934–2013), Belgian-American former oil trader, hedge fund manager and founder of Glencore plc
  • Larry Robbins (born 1969), hedge fund manager, founder of Glenview Capital Management[
  • Stephen Robert (born 1940), former chairman and CEO of Oppenheimer & Co. and Renaissance Institutional Management
  • George R. Roberts (born 1944), co-founder of KKR
  • Arthur Rock (born 1926), early Silicon Valley venture capitalist, co-founder of Davis & Rock and Fairchild Semiconductor
  • George Rohr (born 1954), Colombian-born co-founder of private equity firm NCH Capital
  • David S. Rose (born 1957), start-up investor, founder of New York Angels
  • Barry Rosenstein (born 1960), hedge fund manager, founder of JANA Partners
  • Mack Rossoff, founder of independent investment bank Rossoff & Co.
  • David René de Rothschild (born 1942), banker; current chairman of Rothschild & Co; member of the Rothschild family
  • Marc Rowan (born 1962), co-founder of Apollo Global Management
  • David M. Rubenstein (born 1949), financier, co-founder of global private equity investment company The Carlyle Group
  • Robert Rubin (born 1938), former Treasury Secretary, director of National Economic Council, and chairman of Citigroup
  • Samuel Sachs (1851–1935), co-founder of Goldman Sachs
  • William Salomon (1914–2014), former managing partner of Salomon Brothers
  • Arthur J. Samberg (1941–2020), founder of Pequot Capital Management
  • Joe Sanberg (1979–), co-founder of online banking and investing firm Aspiration, Inc.
  • Morris Schapiro (1903–1996), Lithuanian-born investment banker, founder of M. A. Schapiro & Co.
  • Jacob H. Schiff (1847–1920), German-born banker; former leader of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
  • Peter Schiff (born 1963), CEO and chief global strategist of Euro Pacific Capital.
  • Rick Schnall (born 1970), partner at private equity firm Clayton Dubilier & Rice and minority owner of NBA’s Atlanta Hawks
  • Alan Schwartz (born 1950/1951), Executive Chairman of Guggenheim Partners, former (and last) CEO of Bear, Stearns & Company
  • Stephen A. Schwarzman (born 1947), co-founder of the Blackstone Group
  • Joseph Seligman (1819–1880), German-born co-founder of investment bank J. & W. Seligman & Co.
  • David E. Shaw (born 1951), founder of D. E. Shaw & Co.
  • Bruce Sherman (born 1948), co-founder of wealth-management firm Private Capital Management (PCM) and owner Miami Marlins
  • Eugene Shvidler (born 1964), Russian-American oil tycoon, chairman of Millhouse Capital
  • Jim Simons (born 1938), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Renaissance Technologies
  • Nat Simons (born 1966), hedge fund manager and investor, (co-)founder of the Meritage Group and Prelude Ventures
  • Paul Singer (born 1944), hedge fund manager, founder of the Elliott Management Corporation
  • David M. Solomon (born 1962), disc jockey and investment banker, CEO of Goldman Sachs
  • George Soros (born 1930), Hungarian-American investor and business magnate, founder of Soros Fund Management
  • James Speyer (1861–1941), former head of the banking firm Speyer & Co.; member of the Speyer family
  • Robert B. Stearns (1888–1954), financier, co-founder of Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc
  • Amanda Steinberg (born 1977/1978), founder of DailyWorth
  • Saul Steinberg (1939–2012), Corporate raider
  • Michael Steinhardt (born 1940), investor and hedge fund manager, co-founder of Steinhardt Partners, chairman of WisdomTree
  • Lee Stern (born 1926), futures and options trader; founder of Lee B. Stern & Company; co-owner of MLB’s Chicago White Sox
  • Leonard N. Stern (born 1938), investor, chairman and CEO of the Hartz Group and Hartz Mountain Industries
  • Marc Stern, chairman of the TCW Group, co-owner of NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks and MLB’s Milwaukee Brewers
  • Stuart Sternberg (born 1959), Wall Street investor, owner of MLB’s Tampa Bay Rays
  • Barry Sternlicht (born 1960), co-founder of investment firm Starwood Capital Group, former chairman of Starwood
  • Donald Sussman (born 1946), financier, hedge fund manager, founder of Paloma Funds and New China Capital Management
  • Leonard M. Tannenbaum (born 1971), founder of Fifth Street Asset Management[
  • David Tepper (born 1957), investor, hedge fund manager, founder of Appaloosa Management
  • David Tisch (born 1981), start-up investor, co-founder of BoxGroup; member of the Tisch family
  • Igor Tulchinsky (born 1966), Belarus-born hedge fund manager, founder of WorldQuant
  • Cliff Viner (born 1948), hedge fund manager, co-founder of III Capital Management and AVM, former co-owner of the Florida Panthers
  • Jeffrey Vinik (born 1959), former hedge fund manager, owner of NHL’s Tampa Bay Lightning
  • Paul Wachter (born 1956), founder of Main Street Advisors, a VIP-focused financial and asset management advisory firm
  • Eric M. Warburg (1900–1990), German-American co-founder of Warburg Pincus; member of the Warburg family
  • James Warburg (1896–1969), German-born banker and financial adviser to Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Paul Warburg (1868–1932), former chairman of the Bank of the Manhattan Company and director of the Federal Reserve Bank
  • Bruce Wasserstein (1947–2009), investment banker, former CEO of Lazard and co-founder of Wasserstein Perella & Co.
  • Sanford I. Weill (born 1933), banker and financier, former chairman and CEO of Citigroup, co-founder of Carter, Berlind, Potoma & Weill
  • Peter Weinberg (born 1957), co-founder of Perella Weinberg Partners
  • Boaz Weinstein (born 1973), hedge fund manager, founder of Saba Capital Management
  • Sholam Weiss (born 1954), bankruptcy specialist
  • Allen Weisselberg (born 1947), CFO of the Trump Organization
  • Maurice Wertheim (1886–1950), founder of Wertheim & Co.
  • Jeff Yass (born 1956), co-founder of Susquehanna International Group
  • Oren Zeev (born 1964), Israeli-American start-up investor, founder of Zeev Ventures, co-founder of Tipalti
  • Nancy Zimmerman (born 1963/1964), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Bracebridge Capital
  • Eric Zinterhofer (born 1971), private equity financier, founding partner of Searchlight Capital; member of the Lauder family
  • Barry Zubrow (born 1953), founder of private investment firm ITB, former CRO of JPMorgan Chase

Media

Six companies own most of the media Americans consume. Jews own three of them and a Christian Zionist, Rupert Murdoch, owns one. The facade of competition is not unique to media. One or two companies dominate most American industries but disguise themselves as competitive through subsidiaries and brand acquisitions. However, that is an analysis for another time. Through their overwhelming influence in media, Jews sway public opinion, undermine their hosts’ culture, subvert their values, and promote and accelerate our moral, social, and political decay.

Here are the jewish owners of everything you and your family consume regarding media.

National Amusements

Owner: Sumner Redstone (born Rothstein)-Jew

This jew in disguise has a net worth of $4.6 billion and owns the following.

Disney

These jews targets children with their subversion.

CEO: Bob Iger-Jew
Co-chairs of Disney Entertainment: Alan Bergman & Dana Walden-Jews

Executive VP: Brent Woodford-Jew

Executive VPL: Jennifer Cohen-Jew

Comcast

CEO: Brian L. Roberts-Jew

All major news companies, even those that are supposedly ideological opponents, are controlled and dominated by jews. The sole outlier is 21st Century Fox owner, Rupert Murdoch. While Murdoch is not a jew, he is a Christian Zionist, which is just as destructive because they fervently facilitate jewish perversion.

News & Information Companies

While under the umbrella of media, news companies are particularly crucial to examine because of their ability to deceive the American public and establish the narrative for the public to regurgitate.

If the list ended strictly with the men at the top, the overrepresentation of jews in media could be insufficiently argued as jews are ambitious and entrepreneurial. However, as you probably guessed, from top to bottom, jews dominate U.S. media companies. Again, this list was seemingly never-ending. Keep in mind that jews comprise only 2% of the American population.

Here are more notable jews in the newspaper and publishing industry.
  • Tom Allon, publisher of City & State, former co-owner of Manhattan Media LLC
  • Walter Annenberg (1908–2002), founder of Triangle Publications, Inc. (the Philadelphia Inquirer, TV Guide)
  • Herbert R. Axelrod (1927–2017), founder of TFH Publications
  • Jason Binn (1968–), founder of Niche Media (Hamptons, Aspen Peak, Gotham) and DuJour Media
  • Paul Block (1875–1941), president of Block Communications and publisher of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and the Toledo Blade
  • Bennett Cerf (1898–1971), co-founder of Random House[
  • Jerry Finkelstein (1916–2012), former publisher of the New York Law Journal and the Hill
  • Bart Fles (1902–1989), Dutch-American former literary agent and publisher
  • Jane Friedman, co-founder of Open Road Integrated Media, former president and CEO of HarperCollins Publishers LLC
  • Hugo Gernsback (1884–1967), Luxembourgish-born inventor and magazine publisher, founder of Experimenter Publishing (Amazing Stories, Electrical Experimenter, Radio News); Hugo Award eponym
  • Milton Glaser (1929–2020), co-founder of the New York Magazine, creator of the “I Love New York” logo
  • Al Goldstein (1936–2013), co-founder of Screw
  • Martin Goodman (1908–1992), founder of Timely Publications (later Marvel Comics)
  • Jonathan Greenblatt (1970–), former CEO of GOOD Worldwide, Inc.
  • Hank Greenspun (1909–1989), publisher of the Las Vegas Sun
  • Alfred Harvey (1913–1994), comic book publisher, founder of Harvey Comics, Inc. (Richie Rich, Casper the Friendly Ghost)
  • Ruth Sulzberger Holmberg (1921–2017), publisher of the Chattanooga Times
  • Morton L. Janklow (1930–2022), co-founder of Janklow & Nesbit Associates, the largest literary agency in the world
  • Bruce Judson (1958–), former General Manager at Time Inc. New Media, co-founder of Time Warner’s banner ad website Pathfinder
  • Jonathan Karp (1963/1964–), publisher of Simon & Schuster
  • Don Katz (1952–), founder of Audible
  • Larry Kirshbaum (1944–), former chief of publishing for Amazon Publishing and CEO of the Time Warner Book Group
  • Donald S. Klopfer (1902–1986), co-founder of Random House[
  • Alfred (1892–1984) and Blanche Knopf (1894–1966), founders of publishing house Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
  • Meredith Kopit Levien (born 1970/1971), CEO of The New York Times Company
  • Harvey Kurtzman (1924–1993), Mad
  • Bruce Levenson, (1949–) co-founder of the United Communications Group (UCG), former co-owner of NBA’s Atlanta Hawks
  • Jay Levin, founder of LA Weekly
  • Ross Levinsohn, former publisher of the Los Angeles Times, CEO of Tribune Interactive; former president of Fox Interactive
  • Jack Liebowitz (1900–2000), Russian-born former co-owner of National Allied Publications (later DC Comics)
  • Peter Mayer (1936–2018), British-born co-founder of the Overlook Press, and former CEO of Penguin Books
  • Eugene Meyer (1875–1959), publisher of The Washington Post
  • Donald Newhouse (1929–), owner of Advance Publications, Inc.
  • S. I. Newhouse Sr. (1895–1979), founder of Advance Publications, Inc., the parent company of Condé Nast (GQ, Pitchfork, the New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Vogue, W, Wired) and American City Business Journals (ACBJ)
  • Adolph Ochs (1985–1935), Arthur Hays Sulzberger (1891–1968), Arthur Ochs Sulzberger (1926–2012), The New York Times
  • Norman Pearlstine (1942–), media executive, CCO at Bloomberg L.P. and Time Inc., former executive editor of the Wall Street Journal
  • David J. Pecker (1951–), chairman and CEO of American Media, Inc. (National Enquirer, Us Weekly, Star, Flex, Globe, Men’s Fitness)
  • Marty Peretz (1938–), The New Republic
  • Warren H. Phillips (1926–2019), former long-time CEO of Dow Jones & Company
  • Joseph Pulitzer (1847–1911), Hungarian-born former publisher of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the New York World; known for pioneering yellow journalism and establishing the Pulitzer Prizes
  • Axel Rosin (1907–2007), German-born president of the Book of the Month Club
  • Arthur M. Sackler (1913–1987), former publisher of the Medical Tribune and chairman of Medical Press, Inc.; member of the Sackler family
  • M. Lincoln Schuster (1897–1970), Austrian-born co-founder of Simon & Schuster
  • Leon Shimkin (1907–1988), former executive and partner at Simon & Schuster
  • Sime (1873–1933), Sidne (1898–1950), Syd Silverman (1932–2017), former owners and publishers of Variety
  • Richard L. Simon (1899–1960), co-founder of Simon & Schuster; member of the Simon family
  • Roger Williams Straus Jr. (1917–2004), co-founder of book publishing company Farrar, Straus and Giroux (FSG); Guggenheim family
  • Reuben Sturman (1924–1997), former adult magazine publisher and co-founder of Doc Johnson Enterprises
  • Joshua Topolsky (1977–), co-founder of Vox Media, Inc. (the Verge, SB Nation, Polygon, Curbed), founder of The Outline
  • Helen Valentine (1893–1986), founder of Seventeen magazine
  • Jann Wenner (1946–), co-founder of the Rolling Stone
  • Richard Saul Wurman (1935–), co-founder of TED
  • William Bernard Ziff Sr. (1898–1953), co-founder of Ziff Davis
  • Mortimer Zuckerman (1937–), Canadian-American publisher of U.S. News & World Report, former owner of the New York Daily News, The Atlantic and Fast Company, co-founder of Boston Properties, Inc.

Entertainment-(Television, film and video)

Virtually every major production company, talent agency, and broadcasting firm was founded or is under the leadership of jews.

Here are jews that own, control, or founded prominent companies in media.
  • Merv Adelson (1929–2015), co-founder of Lorimar Television
  • Edmund Ansin (1936–2020), co-founder of Sunbeam Television Corporation
  • Avi Arad (1948–), Israeli-American founder of Marvel Studios, LLC, former CEO of Toy Biz
  • Samuel Z. Arkoff (1918–2001), co-founder of American International Pictures; inventor of the “ARKOFF formula”
  • Adam Aron (1954–), president and CEO of movie theater chain AMC Entertainment Holdings, Inc. and co-owner of NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers
  • Ted Ashley (1922–2002), chairman of Warner Bros. and VC of Warner Communications Inc., founder of the Ashley-Famous talent agency
  • Barney Balaban (1887–1971), co-founder of the Balaban and Katz Theater Corporation and former long-time president of Paramount Pictures
  • Gary Barber (1957–), CEO of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), co-founder of the Spyglass Media Group
  • Chuck Barris (1929–2017), founder of game show production company Barris Industries (the Gong Show, the Dating Game)
  • Phil Berg (1902–1983), co-founder of the Berg-Allenberg talent agency
  • Bruce Berman (1952–), chairman and CEO of Village Roadshow Pictures
  • Gail Berman (1956–), founding partner of the Jackal Group, co-founder Whalerock Industries
  • Jason Blum (1969–), founder of Blumhouse Productions
  • Lloyd Braun (1958–), owner of Whalerock Industries, former chairman of the ABC Entertainment
  • Alan N. Braverman (1947/1948–), senior EVP, secretary and general counsel of the Walt Disney
  • Bernie Brillstein (1931–2008), founder of the Brillstein Company
  • Norman Brokaw (1927–2016), chairman of the William Morris Agency
  • Jerry Bruckheimer (1943–), founder of Jerry Bruckheimer Inc.
  • Peter Chernin (1951–), media executive & investor, founder of the Chernin Group; former president and COO of News Corp
  • Joel and Ethan Coen (1954–, 1957–), founders of Mike Zoss Productions
  • Harry Cohn (1891–1958), co-founder of Columbia Pictures
  • Warren Cowan (1921–2008), co-founder of Rogers & Cowan
  • Barry Diller (1942–), media executive, chairman of IAC, former CEO of Paramount Pictures and Fox
  • Eddie Einhorn (1936–2016), (co-)founder of the TVS Television Network and pay-TV channel SportsVision, former head of CBS Sports, and co-owner of MLB’s Chicago White Sox
  • Michael Eisner (1942–), founder of the Hollywood Pictures Company and the Tornante Company, former long-time CEO of the Walt Disney Company
  • Ari Emanuel (1961–), co-CEO of William Morris Endeavor Entertainment, LLC (WME) and the International Management Group (IMG)
  • Robert Evans (1930–2019), media executive, president of Paramount Pictures
  • Barbara Fedida (1964/1965–), ABC News executive
  • Erik Feig, former co-president of Lions Gate Entertainment Corp., founder of Picturestart
  • Charles K. Feldman (1905–1968), founder of the Famous Artists talent agency
  • Jon Feltheimer (1951–), CEO of Lions Gate Entertainment Corp
  • Dave (1894–1979) and Max Fleischer (1883–1972), founders of Fleischer Studios (later Paramount Cartoon Studios)
  • William Fox (1879–1952), Hungarian-born founder of the Fox Film Corporation and De Luxe
  • Reuven Frank (1920–2006), Canadian-born broadcast executive, former president of NBC News
  • Rob Friedman (1950–), co-chairman of Lionsgate Films, Summit Entertainment
  • Fred W. Friendly (1915–1998), former president of CBS News
  • Jeff Gaspin (1960–), former chairman of NBC Universal Television Entertainment
  • Alan Gerry (1929–), founder of Cablevision Industries
  • Gary Gilbert (1965–), founder of Gilbert Films, co-owner of NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers
  • Adam Glasser (1964–), founder of Seymore, Inc.
  • Yoram Globus (1943–), Israeli-American former co-owner of the Cannon Group, Inc., founder of Rebel Way Entertainment
  • William Goetz (1903–1969), co-founder of 20th Century Fox
  • Leonard Goldenson (1905–1999), founder of ABC
  • Samuel Goldwyn (1879–1974), Polish-born founder of the Goldwyn Pictures Corporation
  • Steve Golin (1955–2019), founder of Anonymous Content LLP, co-founder of Propaganda Films
  • Brian Grazer (1951–), co-founder of Imagine Entertainment
  • Bob Greenblatt (1959/1960–), former chairman of NBC Entertainment and WarnerMedia
  • Brad Grey (1957–2017), co-founder of Brillstein Entertainment Partners, former chairman of Paramount Pictures
  • Mindy Grossman (1957–), former CEO of Home Shopping Network
  • Sandy Grushow (1960–), CEO of Phase 2 Media, former chairman of the Fox Television Entertainment
  • Peter Guber (1942–), chairman and CEO of the Mandalay Entertainment Group, former CEO of PolyGram Films, co-owner of NBA’s Golden State Warriors and MLB’s Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Bonnie Hammer (1950–), chairman of NBCUniversal Content Studios
  • Albie Hecht, Chief content officer of digital media studio Pocket.watch, former executive vice president of HLN, founder of Spike TV
  • Doug Herzog (1959– ), former president of the Viacom Music and Entertainment Group and USA Network
  • Andy Heyward (1949–), former chairman and CEO of DIC Entertainment, founder of Genius Brands
  • Steven Hirsch (1961–), founder of Vivid Entertainment
  • Alan F. Horn (1943–), chairman of The Walt Disney Studios, former president and COO of Warner Bros., co-founder of Castle Rock Entertainment
  • Bob Iger (1951–), Executive Chairman of the Walt Disney Company
  • Jeffrey Katzenberg (1950–), co-founder of DreamWorks, former chairman of Walt Disney
  • Ryan Kavanaugh (1974–), co-founder of Relativity Media
  • Jon Klein, former president of CNN
  • John Kohn (1925–2002), former head of production for EMI
  • Steve Koonin (1957–), former president of Turner Broadcasting System
  • Kay Koplovitz (1945–), co-founder of USA Network
  • David Kramer (1968/1969–), co-president of United Talent Agency
  • Ynon Kreiz, American-Israeli media executive, co-founder of Fox Kids Europe, former chairman and CEO of Endemol, and Maker Studios, Inc.
  • Alex Kurtzman (1973–), (co-)founder of film and television production companies K/O Paper Products and Secret Hideout
  • Jeff Kwatinetz (1965–), COO of Cube Vision, founder of the Firm, Inc.
  • Andrew Lack, chairman of the NBCUniversal News Group, former chairman and CEO of Bloomberg News and Sony Music Entertainment
  • Carl Laemmle (1867–1939), German-born co-founder of Universal Pictures
  • Greg Lansky (1982–), French-American co-founder of adult film company Vixen
  • Abe Lastfogel (1898–1984), former long-time president of WMA
  • Norman Lear (1922–), co-founder of ELP Communications and Tandem Productions
  • Avi Lerner (1947–), Israeli-American co-founder of Nu Image and Millennium Films
  • Gerald M. Levin (1939–), former executive at Time Warner, Inc. and HBO
  • Harvey Levin (1950–), founder of TMZ
  • Marcus Loew (1870–1927), founder of Loew’s theater chain, co-founder of MGM
  • Michael Lynton (1960–), British-American former chairman and CEO of Sony Pictures Entertainment, chairman of SnapChat
  • Ted Mann (1916–2001), founder of Mann Theatres
  • Louis B. Mayer (1884–1957), Belarus-born co-founder of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • Mike Medavoy (1941–), Chinese-born co-founder of Orion Pictures and Phoenix Pictures
  • Barry Meyer (1946–), former chairman of Warner Bros.
  • Ronald Meyer (1944–), Vice chairman of NBCUniversal, former CEO of Universal Studios, co-founder of the Creative Artists Agency (CAA)
  • Lorne Michaels (1944–), founder of multimedia entertainment studio Broadway Video, creator of Saturday Night Live
  • Arnon Milchan (1944–), Israeli-American Hollywood mogul, founder of Regency Enterprises, co-founder of Summit Entertainment LLC; former Israeli spy
  • Harold (1907–1968), Marvin (1918–2002) and Walter Mirisch (1921–), founders of the Mirisch Company
  • Les Moonves (1949–), president and CEO of the CBS Corporation, former co-COO of Viacom, Inc.
  • Leslie Morgenstein, CEO of Alloy Entertainment
  • Neal H. Moritz (1959–), founder of Original Film
  • Larry Namer, co-founder of E!
  • Marc Nathanson (1945–), cable television pioneer, founder of Falcon Cable
  • David Nevins (1966–), chairman of Showtime Networks (SNI) and CCO of the CBS Corporation
  • Mosheh Oinounou (1982–), executive producer of CBS Evening News
  • Noah Oppenheim (1977/1978–), president of NBC News
  • Tom Ortenberg (1960–), former CEO of Open Road Films, founder of distribution company Briarcliff Entertainment
  • Michael Ovitz (1946–), former president of Disney, co-founder of the Creative Artists Agency
  • Amy Pascal (1958–), former co-chairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment (stepped down due to 2014’s Sony Pictures hack)
  • Richard Plepler (1960–), former chairman and CEO of HBO
  • Eric Pleskow (1924–2019), Austrian-born media executive, president of United Artists, and co-founder of Orion Pictures
  • Henry G. Plitt (1918–1993), founder of the Plitt Theatres chain
  • Tom Pollock (1943–2020), co-founder of the Montecito Picture Company, former chairman of Universal Pictures
  • Steven Price (1962–), co-founder of Townsquare Media and minority owner of NBA’s Atlanta Hawks
  • Gigi Pritzker (1962–), co-founder of MWM Studios (formerly known as OddLot Entertainment)
  • Mark Rachesky (1960–), chairman of Lions Gate Entertainment Corp
  • Brett Ratner (1969–), co-founder of RatPac Entertainment
  • Shari Redstone (1954–), chairman of ViacomCBS
  • Rob Reiner (1947–), co-founder of Castle Rock Entertainment
  • Burt Reinhardt (1920–2011), former president of CNN and co-founder of United Press International
  • Charles Rivkin (1962–), CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), former CEO of the Jim Henson Company (a.k.a. Muppets, Inc.)
  • Henry C. Rogers (1914–1995), co-founder of Rogers & Cowan
  • Tom Rosenberg (1947/1948–), co-founder of the Lakeshore Entertainment Group
  • Michael S. Rosenfeld (1934–2010), co-founder of Creative Artists Agency
  • David Rhodes (1973–), former president of CBS News, former head of Bloomberg Television
  • Rich Ross, former executive at Discovery Channel and CEO of Shine USA
  • Steve Ross (1927–1992), founder of Time Warner
  • Joe Roth, former chairman of 20th Century Fox, Caravan Pictures and the Walt Disney Studios, founder of Revolution Studios, co-founder of Morgan Creek Productions
  • Tom Rothman (1954–), chairman of the Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group
  • Haim Saban (1944–), Egypt-born Israeli-American media mogul, founder of Saban Entertainment and the Saban Capital Group, co-creator of Power Rangers
  • Josh Sapan (1951–), president and CEO of AMC Networks Inc.
  • David Sarnoff (1891–1971), Belarus-born founder of RKO Pictures and former general manager of RCA
  • James Schamus (1959–), co-founder of Good Machine (acquired by Universal in 2002), former CEO of Focus Features
  • Lou Scheimer (1928–2013), co-founder of Filmation
  • Joseph M. Schenck (1876–1961), co-founder of Twentieth Century Pictures and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (a.k.a. the Academy)
  • Leon Schlesinger (1884–1949), founder of Leon Schlesinger Productions (later Warner Bros. Cartoons
  • Reese Schonfeld (1931–2020), co-founder of CNN and pay-TV channel The Food Network[336]
  • Josh Schwartz (1976–), co-founder of Fake Empire Productions
  • Teddy Schwarzman (1979–), founder of Black Bear Pictures
  • Joseph Segel (1931–2019), founder of home shopping channel QVC and the Franklin Mint
  • David O. Selznick (1902–1965), founder of Selznick International Pictures
  • Neal Shapiro (1958–), president and CEO of WNET, former president of NBC News
  • Robert Shaye (1939–), founder of New Line Cinema
  • Sidney Sheinberg (1935–2019), former long-time executive at MCA Inc. and Universal Studios, founder of the Bubble Factory
  • Ben Sherwood (1964–), former co-chairman of Disney Media Networks and president of the Disney-ABC Television Group and ABC News
  • Alon Shtruzman, Israeli-American CEO of Keshet International
  • George Sidney (1916–2002), co-founder of Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc.
  • Joel Silver (1952–), founder of Silver Pictures and co-founder of Dark Castle Entertainment
  • Ben Silverman (1970–), founder of Electus, former co-chairman of NBC Entertainment and Universal Media Studios, chairman of entertainment production company Propagate
  • Fred Silverman (1937–2020), former president and CEO of NBC, founder of the Fred Silverman Company[
  • Bryan Singer (1965–), founder of Bad Hat Harry Productions
  • Harry E. Sloan (1950–), former chairman of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the SBS Broadcasting Group
  • Jeff Smulyan (1947–), founder of Emmis Communications
  • Stacey Snider (1961–), former chairman of Universal Pictures, CEO of 20th Century Fox
  • Aaron Spelling (1923–2006), founder of Spelling Television Inc. (Beverly Hills, 90210) and co-founder of Spelling-Goldberg Productions
  • Mark Spiegler (1958/1959–), founder of Spiegler Girls, Inc.
  • Steven Spielberg (1946–), co-founder of DreamWorks and Amblin Entertainment
  • Ray Stark (1915–2004), founder of film production company Rastar (acquired by Columbia Pictures in 1974), co-founder of Seven Arts Productions
  • David Steiner, founder of Brooklyn-based Steiner Studios
  • Jay Sures (1966–), co-president of United Talent Agency
  • Larry Tanz, VP of Global Television at Netflix, former president and CEO of Vuguru and LivePlanet, co-founder of Agility Studios
  • Laurence Tisch (1923–2003), former CEO of CBS
  • Jeff Wachtel, president of Universal Cable Productions
  • Albert (1884–1967), Harry (1881–1951), Jack (1892–1978) and Sam Warner (1887–1927), founders of Warner Bros. (WB)
  • Lew Wasserman (1913–2002), former executive at MCA Inc.
  • Bob (1954–) and Harvey Weinstein (1952–), founders of Miramax Films (acquired by Disney in 1993) and the Weinstein Company (now Lantern Entertainment)
  • Jerry Weintraub (1937–2015), founder of the Weintraub Entertainment Group (WEG)
  • Tom Werner (1950–), co-founder of the Carsey-Werner Company and the Fenway Sports Group
  • Patrick Whitesell (1965–), media executive, co-CEO of William Morris Endeavor and the International Management Group (IMG)
  • Irwin Winkler (1931–), co-founder of Chartoff-Winkler Productions and Winkler Films
  • Mitchell Wolfson (1900–1983), co-founder of the Wolfson-Meyer Theater Company, and former Mayor of Miami Beach, Florida
  • Frank Yablans (1935–2014), president of Paramount Pictures
  • David Zaslav (1960–), president and CEO of Discovery, Inc., former executive at NBCUniversal
  • Strauss Zelnick (1957–), former chairman of CBS Corporation
  • Mike Zimring (1916–2011), senior agent at the William Morris Agency
  • Susan Zirinsky (1952–), president of CBS News
  • Jeff Zucker (1965–), chairman of WarnerMedia News & Sports, former CEO of NBCUniversal
  • Adolph Zukor (1873–1976), Austro-Hungarian-born film mogul, co-founder of Paramount Pictures

Well Known Jewish Directors

  • J.J. Abrams: (Mission: Impossible III, Star Trek Into Darkness, Super 8, Star Trek, Anatomy of Hope)
  • Darren Aronofsky: (Black Swan, Mother!,)
  • Woody Allen: (Broadway Danny Rose, Crimes and Misdemeanors, Hollywood Ending, Husbands and Wives, Midnight in Paris)
  • Judd Apatow: (Funny People, The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up, This Is 40, I Am Harry Potter)
  • Mel Brooks: (Robin Hood: Men in Tights, The Twelve Chairs, History of the World, Part I, Blazing Saddles)
  • Ethan & Joel Coen: (The Hudsucker Proxy, Burn After Reading, True Grit, Raising Arizona, Suburbicon)
  • Milos Forman: (The People Vs. Larry Flint, Ragtime)
  • Stanley Kramer: (Judgment: The Court Martial of Lt. William Calley, Judgment at Nuremberg, The Secret of Santa Vittoria, The Defiant Ones, Inherit the Wind)
  • Stanley Kubrick: (Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, Spartacus, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Barry Lyndon, The Seafarers)
  • Sidney Lumet: (Guilty As Sin, Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead, Find Me Guilty.)
  • Michael Mann: (Collateral, The Keep, The Jericho Mile, The Last of the Mohicans, Ali)
  • Sam Mendes: (American Beauty, Jarhead, 1917)
  • Mike Nichols: (What Planet Are You From?, Primary Colors, Postcards from the Edge, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Biloxi Blues)
  • Leonard Nimoy: (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Star Trek III: The Search for Spock)
  • Roman Polanski: (The Pianist, Repulsion)
  • Steven Spielberg: (Munich, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, War of the Worlds, The Color Purple)
  • Oliver Stone: (U Turn, Born on the Fourth of July, Castro in Winter, Seizure, Heaven & Earth)
  • Harold Ramis: (Year One, Analyze That, Bedazzled, Stuart Saves His Family, Vacation)
  • Rob Reiner: (Stand by Me, Misery, Rumor Has It…, Ghosts of Mississippi, The Princess Bride)
  • Robert Wise: (A Game of Death, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Body Snatcher, Mystery in Mexico, The Sound of Music)

Popular Jewish Actors and Actresses:

Elizabeth Banks
Zach Braff
Adrien Brody
Sacha Baron Cohen
Jennifer Connelly
Jesse Eisenberg
Harrison Ford
Dave Franco
James Franco
Gal Gadot
Andrew Garfield
Jeff Goldblum
Seth Green
Jake Gyllenhaal
Jonah Hill
Dustin Hoffman
Kate Hudson
Scarlett Johansson
Rashida Jones
Lisa Kudrow
Mila Kunis
Shia LaBeouf
Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Daniel Day-Lewis
B.J. Novak
Amanda Peet
Chris Pine
Joaquin Phoenix
Natalie Portman
Daniel Radcliffe
Seth Rogen
Paul Rudd
Andy Samberg
Adam Sandler
David Schwimmer
Sarah Silverman
Jerry Seinfeld
Ben Stiller
Barbra Streisand
Henry Winkler

Pornography

Porn is another jewish virtue. When asked why jews are so overrepresented in porn, an American pornographer known for normalizing hardcore porn, Alvin Goldstein, said, “The only reason that Jews are in pornography is that we think that Christ sucks. Catholicism sucks. We don’t believe in authoritarianism. Pornography thus becomes a way of defiling Christian culture and, as it penetrates to the very heart of the American mainstream (and is no doubt consumed by those very same WASPs), its subversive character becomes more charged.”

Aylo, formally Mindgeek, is the world’s largest porn conglomerate and owned by rabbi, Solomon Friedman. Under the Aylo umbrella is:

  • Brazzers
  • Pornhub
  • RedTube
  • YouPorn
  • Xtube
  • Digital Playground
  • Men.com
  • Mofos
  • Nutaku
  • Reality Kings
  • Sean Cody
  • Twistys
  • WhyNotBi.com

Aylo founders: Stephane Manos, Ouissam Youssef, and Fabian Thylmann-All Jews

The 12 top porn companies in the world (as of August 2023) are listed below: 

  1. Aylo, (formally MindGeek)-See above-Jews
  2. WGCZ Holdings-Founders and executives unknown
  3. Larry Flynt Publications
  4. Playboy Enterprises– CEO Ben Kohn-Jew; Senior VP Brian Hoar-Jew; CFO David Israel-Jew
  5. Hammy Media Limited-Unknown. Operated on the island of Cyprus, of the coast of Israel.
  6. Core Magazine
  7. AVN Media Network-Founders Paul Fishbein-Jew; Irv Slifkin-Jew; Barry Rosenblatt-Jew.
  8. Hokuto Corporation
  9. Vivid Entertainment-Founders Steven Hirsch-Jew; Bill Asher-Jew; David James-Non Jew.
  10. Gamma Entertainment-Founder Karl Bernard-Jew
  11. Evil Angel
  12. Beate Uhse UG

Social Media & Tech

  • Open AI CEO: Sam Altman-Jew
  • Meta, Instagram, Threads, and WhatsApp Co-founder, executive chairman and CEO: Mark Zuckerberg-Jew
  • Google Founders: Larry Page & Sergey Brin-Jews
  • WhatsApp Co-founder: Jan Koum-Jew
  • Wiz Co-founder & CEO: Assaf Rappaport-Jew
  • AI21 Labs  founders: Yoav Shoham, Amnon Shashua-Jew
  • Paypal Founder and CEO: Dan Schulman

Advertising and public relations

Have you ever noticed how modern advertisements are Bolshevik propaganda tools? That is because jews own most advertising and PR firms.

Jews in advertising
  • Alvin Achenbaum (1925–2016), advertising executive, co-founder of Achenbaum and Associates, founder of the Achenbaum Institute of Marketing
  • David R. Altman (1915–2000), co-founder of the Altman, Stoller, Weiss advertising agency
  • Edward Bernays (1891–1995), Austrian-born pioneer in the field of public relations and propaganda. Called “the father of public relations”
  • William Bernbach (1911–1982), co-founder of international advertising agency Doyle Dane Bernbach (now DDB Worldwide Communications Group Inc.)
  • Milton H. Biow (1892–1976), advertising executive, founder of the Biow Company
  • Maxwell Dane (1906–2004), co-founder of international advertising agency Doyle Dane Bernbach (now DDB Worldwide Communications Group Inc.)
  • David Deutsch (1929–2013), founder of Deutsch, Inc.[3] (later led by his son, Donny (1957–); sold to IPG in 2000)
  • David Droga, CEO & Founder of Accenture Interactive, the world’s largest agency.
  • Daniel Edelman (1920–2013), founder of PR firm Edelman, Inc. (now led by his son, Richard (1954–) of the World Economic Forum)
  • Alvin Eicoff (1921–2002), founder of A. Eicoff & Company, inventor of direct response television (DRTV) advertising
  • Arthur C. Fatt (1905–1999), advertising executive at the Grey Advertising Agency
  • Lee Garfinkel (1955–), advertising executive, founder of the Garfinkel Group
  • Al Fleishman (1905–2002), co-founder of PR and marketing agency FleishmanHillard Inc.
  • Monroe Green (1904–1996), advertising director of The New York Times
  • Michael Kempner (1958–), founder of PR firm MWWPR
  • Julian Koenig (1921–2014), co-founder of advertising agency Papert Koenig Lois
  • Albert Lasker (1880–1952), Prussian-born advertising pioneer, owner of the Lord & Thomas advertising agency (now Foote, Cone & Belding)
  • Norman B. Norman (1914–1991), advertising executive, co-founder of the Norman, Craig & Kummel agency (later renamed to NCK Organization)
  • Shirley Polykoff (1908–1998), early female advertising executive
  • Randall Rothenberg, CEO of iab
  • Howard J. Rubenstein (1932–2020), founder of public relations firm Rubenstein Associates
  • Marian Salzman (1959–), advertising and PR executive, CEO of Havas PR North America, co-founder of Cyberdialogue
  • Rich Silverstein (1949–), co-founder of advertising agency Goodby, Silverstein & Partners (GSP)
  • Joseph Spiegel (1840–1914), German-born founder of direct marketing and catalog company Spiegel
  • Carl Spielvogel (1928–2021), founder of marketing and advertising communications company Backer & Spielvogel
  • Herbert D. Strauss (1909–1973), advertising executive at the Grey Advertising Agency
  • Ken Sunshine (1948–), founder of Sunshine Sachs Consultants
  • Linda Kaplan Thaler (1951–), advertiser, founder of the Kaplan Thaler Group (now Publicis New York) and Kaplan Thaler Productions
  • Ronn Torossian (1974–), founder of 5W Public Relations (5WPR)
  • Lawrence Valenstein (1899–1982), co-founder of the Grey Group
  • Lester Wunderman (1920–2019), founder of Wunderman, Inc., creator of modern-day direct marketing and inventor of the toll-free 1-800 number
  • Jordan Zimmerman (1955/56–), founder of Zimmerman Advertising
  • Sergio Zyman (1945–), Mexican-American marketing executive, founder of the Zyman Group

Music industry

Our culture and values are also undermined through our music, which is typically targeted at our youth.

Here’s the prominent jews in the music industry
  • Herb Abramson (1916–1999), founder of Atlantic Records
  • Berle Adams (1917–2009), co-founder of Mercury Records and senior executive at MCA
  • Lou Adler (1933–), co-founder of Dunhill Records
  • Moses Asch (1905–1986), founder of Folkways Records
  • Irving Azoff (1947–), chairman and CEO of Azoff MSG Entertainment, founder of Giant Records, co-founder of the Oak View Group
  • Marty Bandier (1941–), CEO of Sony/ATV, former chairman and CEO of EMI Music Publishing
  • Emile Berliner (1851–1929), co-founder of RCA Records
  • Miriam Bienstock (1923–2015), former senior executive at Atlantic Records
  • Jerry Blaine (1910–1973), co-founder of Jubilee Records
  • Scott Samuel “Scooter” Braun (1981–), founder of School Boy Records, RBMG Records; manager of Justin Bieber, Ariana Grande
  • Edgar Bronfman Jr. (1955–), former CEO of Warner Music Group (WMG); member of the Bronfman family
  • Leonard (1917–1969) and Phil Chess (1921–2016), Polish-born founders of Chess Records; members of the Chess family
  • Lew Chudd (1911–1998), founder of Imperial Records
  • Alan N. Cohen (1930–2004), former VP of Warner Communications (now WarnerMedia)
  • Lyor Cohen (1959–), Israeli-American co-founder of 300 Entertainment, former president of Def Jam Recordings
  • Clive Davis (1932–), former president of Columbia Records, founder of Arista Records, Inc. and J Records
  • Ron Fair, former president of record labels A&M, Geffen, Virgin and senior artists and repertoire executive at RCA, Chrysalis, EMI
  • Leo Feist (1869–1930), founder of music publishing firm Leo Feist, Inc.
  • Jason Flom (1961–), founder of Lava Music, LLC, former chairman and CEO of Atlantic Records
  • Milt Gabler (1911–2001), founder of Commodore Records
  • David Geffen (1943–), founder of Geffen Records and DGC Records, co-founder of Asylum Records
  • Jody Gerson (1961–), chairman of the Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG)
  • Joe Glaser (1896–1969), founder of the Associated Booking Corporation, manager of Louis Armstrong and Billie Holiday
  • Daniel Glass, founder of Glassnote Records
  • George Goldner (1918–1970), co-founder of record labels Tico, Gee, Rama, End, Gone, Roulette, Red Bird and Blue Cat
  • Richard Gottehrer (1940–), co-founder of music and entertainment company The Orchard
  • Norman Granz (1918–2001), founder of Clef Records, Norgran Records, Verve Records and Pablo Records
  • Al Green, founder of National Records
  • Irving Green (1916–2006), co-founder of Mercury Records
  • Florence Greenberg (1913–1995), founder of record labels Tiara, Scepter, Hob, and Wand
  • Jerry Heller (1940–2016), co-founder of Ruthless Records; known for launching West Coast’s gangsta rap movement
  • Jac Holzman (1931–), founder of Elektra Records and Nonesuch Records
  • Orrin Keepnews (1923–2015), co-founder of Riverside Records and Milestone Records
  • Don Kirshner (1934–2011), music publisher and promoter who co-founded Aldon Music
  • Allen Klein (1931–2009), founder of ABKCO Music & Records, Inc., former manager of the Rolling Stones
  • Lester Koenig (1917–1977), founder of Contemporary Records
  • Michael Lang (1944–), music promoter, founder of Just Sunshine Records, and co-creator of the Woodstock Music & Art Festival
  • Morris Levy (1927–1990), co-founder of Roulette Records
  • Goddard Lieberson (1911–1977), British-born former president of Columbia Records and the RIAA
  • Alfred Lion (1908–1987), German-born co-founder of Blue Note Records
  • Avery and Monte Lipman, founders of Republic Records (owns Young Money Entertainment, Cash Money Records)
  • Herman Lubinsky (1896–1974), founder of Savoy Records
  • Lee Magid (1926–2007), record producer
  • Fred Mendelsohn (1917–2000), former president of Savoy Records
  • Lewis Merenstein (1934–2016), record producer
  • Doug Morris (1938–), chairman of Sony Music, former chairman and CEO of the Universal Music Group, founder of Big Tree Records
  • Jerry Moss (1935–), co-founder of A&M Records
  • Syd Nathan (1904–1968), founder of King Records
  • Guy Oseary (1972–), Israeli-American CEO of Maverick, co-founder of Maverick Management; manager of Madonna, U2
  • Mo Ostin (1927–2022), record executive at Verve, Reprise Records, Warner Bros. Records, and DreamWorks
  • Lou Pearlman (1954–2016), record producer, founder of Trans Continental Records; manager/creator of the Backstreet Boys and NSYNC
  • Randy Phillips (1954/1955–), former president of the Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) and current president and CEO of LiveStyle
  • Milton Rackmil (1906–1992), co-founder of Decca Records and former head of Universal Pictures
  • Teddy Reig (1918–1984), founder of Roost Records
  • Gary Richards (1970–), president of LiveStyle, North America
  • Steve Rifkind (1962–), founder of Loud Records and SRC Records, former vice president of Universal Motown Records
  • Elliot Roberts (1943–2019), co-founder of Asylum Records; manager of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell
  • Samuel Roxy Rothafel (1882–1936), theatrical impresario
  • Rick Rubin (1963–), co-founder of Def Jam Recordings, former co-president of Columbia Records
  • Larry Rudolph (1963–), founder of Reign Deer Entertainment, co-founder of Maverick Management; manager of Britney Spears
  • Art Rupe (1917–2022), founder of Specialty Records
  • Bob Shad (1920–1985), founder of Time Records and Mainstream Records
  • Cary Sherman, chairman and CEO of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)
  • Robert F. X. Sillerman (1948–2019), founder of LiveStyle, Inc. and CKX, Inc. (now Industrial Media); owned majority rights to Graceland
  • Robert Ellis Silberstein (1946–), music industry executive; former manager and husband of Diana Ross
  • Tom Silverman, founder of Tommy Boy Records, former vice president of Warner Bros. Records
  • Phil Spector (1939–2021), co-founder of record labels Philles and Warner-Spector; developer of the Wall of Sound formula
  • Jules C. Stein (1896–1981), co-founder of the Music Corporation of America; member of the Stein family
  • Seymour Stein (1942–), former VP of Warner Bros. Records Inc., co-founder of Sire Records
  • Bernard Stollman (1929–2015), founder of the ESP-Disk record label
  • Nat Tarnopol (1931–1987), record producer, president of Brunswick Records; manager of Jackie Wilson
  • Lenny Waronker (1941–), former president of Warner Bros. Records and co-chairman of DreamWorks Records
  • George Wein (1925–2021), music producer, impresario, and founder of the Newport Jazz Festival
  • Bob Weinstock (1928–2006), former owner of Prestige Records
  • Barry Weiss (1959–), co-founder of RECORDS, former chairman and CEO of the Island Def Jam Music Group and the RCA/Jive Label Group
  • Hy Weiss (1923–2007), founder of Old Town Records
  • Jerry Wexler (1917–2008), former co-owner of Atlantic Records; coined the term “rhythm and blues” (R&B)
  • Walter Yetnikoff (1933–2021), former president of CBS Records International and former CEO of CBS Records[
  • Hans Zimmer (1957–), head of the film music division at DreamWorks, co-founder of Remote Control Productions, Inc.

Social Justice Born From the Frankfurt School

The Frankfurt School, known more appropriately as Critical Theory, is a philosophical and sociological movement that is responsible for the depravity we see in the West. The school was originally located at the Institute for Social Research, an attached institute at the Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany. The Institute was founded in 1923 thanks to a donation by Felix Weil (jew) with the aim of developing Marxist studies in Germany.

First generation of Critical Theorists included:

  • Max Horkheimer (1895-1973)-Jew
  • Theodor Adorno (1903-1969)-Jew
  • Herbert Marcuse (1898-1979)-Jew
  • Walter Benjamin (1892-1940)-Jew
  • Friedrich Pollock (1894-1970)-Jew
  • Leo Lowenthal (1900-1993)- Jew
  • Eric Fromm (1900-1980)- Jew

After 1933, the Nazis forced its closure, and the Institute was moved to the United States where it found a home at Columbia University in New York City. Critical theory is the philosophical bedrock for the social justice movements we see today, and manifests itself many ways, including critical race theory, feminism, our immigration policy, gender studies, and queer studies.

Abortion

Critical theory maintains that “oppressed groups should be liberated from their oppressors.” In feminism, that liberation comes in the form of abortion.

According to a 2011 study conducted by Wiley and published by KFF Health News, 40.2% of Jewish doctors say yes when asked if they would provide abortions, compared with 1.2% of Evangelical Protestants. Their support for abortion likely stems from their desire for to abolish the white race.

White Genocide

This screenshot of an Aljazeer headline articulates the Bolsheviks’ ultimate goal. “Abolishing whiteness has never been more urgent,” writes rabid, genocidal justifying jew Mark LeVine, American-born professor, writer, and Aljazeera contributor.

LaVine goes onto applaud fellow white-hating jew, Noel Ignatiev, for creating the blueprint for “Abolishing the white race” and says “there may be no better time to engage with – and embrace – his ideas.”

LeVine also promotes a journal Ignatiev and other white-hating jews contributed to that, in its first words in its first issue, urged readers to “Abolish the white race – by any means necessary.”

Unfortunately, it is not only effeminate professors advocating white genocide. The jewish desire to end the white race is not restricted to a handful of radical Bolsheviks.

“It is in the Jewish interest, it is in humanity’s interest that whites experience a genocide. Until white children are burned alive, white women raped, mutilated, murdered and all white men who have not been slaughtered watch powerlessly as their people are terrorized; only then will mankind be on a more equal footing, ready to discuss white privilege and the apparent chip on the shoulder that minorities have.” -Rabbi Ishmael Levitts

Since they cannot out right kill us yet, they try to breed us out of existence.

Mass Immigration

The desire for power and the elimination of the white race are motivations for white replacement, justified by false morality and historical vengeance. Jews are the ones replacing us by storming our Southern border with hordes of third-world immigrants.

Attempting to replace the native population is not a new jewish goal. They have done it everywhere they have been. The term Melting pot, which is often used to proudly boast of America’s diversity, was coined in 1908 with the premiere of the play titled the same, written by Israel Zangwill (jew).

Decades later, President Johnson signed the 1965 Immigration Act, which formally opened immigration to non-western European countries, effectively ending America’s homogeneity. Representative Emanuel Celler (D-NY & jew) introduced the Immigration and Nationality bill, H.R. 2580.

Interracial Marriage

Behind every advertisement, movie, TV show, novel, and porn, there’s a jew encouraging interracial marriage. It is everywhere in American media and people are finally beginning to notice. They parade it as virtue,

LGBTQ+ & Pedophilia

Biden recently said that “jews helped gay people”. That is one of the few times that Joe has been right. Jews have influenced American opinion of homosexuality through their control over media. But jews did not stop there! Once that battle was won, jews immediately turned their attention to pushing transgenderism and pedophilia. Pedophiles and their sympathizers are trying to weasel themselves in the alphabet club. Which makes sense because in the Judaism’s the central text, the Talmud, there are 8 different genders and permits jews to have sex with girls over the age of three years and a day.

Jeffery Epstein (jew) was an Israeli Mossad agent tasked with filming American politicians and elites engage in pedophilia in order to control them. As I write, Epstein’s list is slowly being publicly released, but I doubt any pedophile will see justice.

Jewish pedophiles in America also use their dual citizenship with Israel to flee justice. Once caught, they flee to Israel where they have immunity.

As discussed, Jews also own the media and the theories that are attempting to normalize pedophilia and groom America’s children.

Anit-Christian

In 1909, Henry Frowde (suspected jew & Zionist), Publisher at the Oxford University Press, published and popularized the Schofield Bible in the U.S., which began American dispensationalism. Essentially, dispensationalism maintains that history is divided into multiple ages or “dispensations” in which God acts with his ‘chosen people’ in different ways. It is the only Bible to do so.

Schofield, the writer of the Bible that bares his name, was a recently ‘born again’ Christian and member of an exclusive New York men’s club, the Lotos Club.

The revised Bible was highly criticized. For example, in his 1920 biography, The Incredible Scofield and His Book, Joseph M. Canfield suggests, “The admission of Scofield to the Lotus Club, which could not have been sought by Scofield, strengthens the suspicion that has cropped up before, that someone was directing the career of C.I. Scofield.”

That someone, Canfield suspects, was associated with one of the club’s committee members, the Wall Street lawyer Samuel Untermeyer (jew). Canfield said that Scofield’s theology was “most helpful in getting Fundamentalist Christians to back the international interest in one of Untermeyer’s pet projects—the Zionist Movement.”

Starting in the 60s, Christianity, even the Zionist type that helps the jews, has been systematically removed from our government, entertainment, and schools, mainly by media swaying public opinion. Jews betrayed and killed Jesus and believe He is boiling in excrement in hell. In Israel, Christian pilgrims visiting the Holy Land are routinely harassed, spit on, or otherwise assaulted. They are not our allies, and they never have been.

Black Lives Matter

In the wake of George Floyd’s death, that was now proven to be an overdose, but the public insanely ignores this fact because the media tells them to, riots ignited across the U.S. in the summer of 2020. Jewish owned media irresponsibly fanned the flames, companies led by jewish execs donated millions to BLM to earn DEI points with jewish owned BlackRock.

From clipping coins in 17th-century Britain to pioneering sex change operations in Weimar, Germany, jewish subversion of their host countries is nothing new. It is what they always do, and that subversion should be expected at this point. What is new is the total lack of pushback.

Refusing to confront or even acknowledge jewish control over our media, banks, government, and policies is insane, cowardly, negligent, and suicidal. If we do not wake up and do it fast, the Weimar Republic version of the modern U.S. will turn into Soviet Russia.

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