The Yes Men replied to your comment on WTF are the ICE men doing?. “FUCK YOU. Antisemitic shit like this is why I need to limit this to subscribers only. Goodbye, shithead.”

Hmm, those fucking fools.
Extra credit — which one is the Jew? Pranksters on a Mission: An Interview With the Yes Men
“I just accidentally created a media firestorm around something really, really stupid. Maybe there’s a way that this can actually be meaningful in a bigger way?”

So, I basically said:
“ICE is a Stephen Jewish Miller wet dream. Nothing happening in the Pedophile and Rapist in CHief’s Minyan is not prior approved by his Minyan.
ICE is a proving ground for the Israel work tied to the Gazafication of the WOrld, but first, America.
ICE in this next iteration would not exist without those Jewish tools of Silicon — Little Tel Aviv Valley (that’s actually San Fernando Valley/LA), Unit 8200, Pegasus, Google, Altman, Ackman, Adelson, Zuckerberg, Karp, Eillison.”
Literally: “Hmm, this is the brainchild of Jewish Stephen Miller, and the AI dogs? Mossad and Unit 8200 and Brin of Google with the cloud by Larry Ellison and of course, Ackman, Altman, Zuckerberg .
No need to discuss how deeply entwined the Jewish Products like Pegasus and, well, Jesus, these ICE UnMen Cometh are Just Pitbulls of Israel, in that Gazafication of U$A.”
I put in the link to one of my Substacks: https://paulokirk.substack.com/p/for-most-jews-the-entire-non-jew
FUCK YOU. Antisemitic shitheaded garbage like this is why we might need to limit this to subscribers only. But we won’t, so that others can see what we’re dealing with.
Again, FUCK YOU.
Now, a Goy like me pointing this out would be in the eyes of Andy Bichlbaum, Yes Man Leader, Antisemtic.
- Largest Israeli Diaspora Population: Los Angeles is home to the largest population of Israeli Americans outside of Israel, with over 250,000 Israeli Americans residing in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area.
- Concentrated Communities: The Israeli community in Los Angeles is largely concentrated in the San Fernando Valley and the Westside, specifically areas like Encino and Tarzana, which are known for their significant Israeli populations.
- Israeli-American Influence: This community has contributed significantly to local business, government, and culture, and Los Angeles is home to the world’s first Israeli Community Center (ICC).
- Cultural and Economic Ties: The city’s Mediterranean climate and economic characteristics, coupled with its role as a media center and a diverse Jewish community, have fostered a thriving Israeli presence and facilitated strong ties with Israel.
I am sure that Yes Man eats here:
LA’s swanky new Carmel eatery serves upscale Tel Aviv market fare, no added politics
Four friends focus on their love of the White City’s Carmel Market by bringing Angelenos gourmet spins on local classics despite anti-Israel spike after Oct. 7 Hamas atrocities

[From left to right: Carmel restaurant partners Liron Hazan, Ronnie Benarie, Asaf Moaz, Yoav Schverd, in their Los Angeles, California eatery, May 2024.]

[Interior of Carmel restaurant in Los Angeles,]
[All of the friends’ eyes lit up when they spoke about the food on offer.
“We serve knafeh,” Maoz said, aware that many non-Israelis have never tried the traditional Arabic dessert made of needle-thin pastry threads and melted cheese soaked in sweet syrup.
“And everyone says it’s the best,” Hazon added.]

[“The Moroccan cigars are my favorite. I could eat them all day,” Hazan said. Called “My Grandma’s Mushroom Cigars” on the menu, the restaurant’s version of Morocco’s answer to spring rolls is vegetarian and wickedly spicy. Light as a feather and punched up with the Middle Eastern baharat spice mix, pine nuts, and chuma pepper, they are served alongside a creamy dip. The smoked eggplant musabbaha, made with chickpeas and sheep’s milk yogurt, is also a rare treat.
While Chef Maoz includes kosher meat on the menu, including a hanger steak kebab and ribeye, there are also decidedly non-kosher dishes, such as grilled Mexican prawns and Peruvian sea scallops — a nod to the religious diversity in Israel, where tradition is often held dear, even if the letter of the Jewish law is not.]

Read this cunt’s piece below. He has the Audacity to ask, “Where are their pastors?”
Hmm.
Rabbis anyone? They speaking out in mass? Jew York Times news (sic) paper one page statement of solidarity for Palestine and decrying the genocide supported by, hmm, 90 Percent of Jews in Israel, and in the Diaspora? a
I came here as a Jew, Zyklon Blinken!
I come before you as a Jew,’ Blinken tells Israel after Hamas attack | The Jerusalem Post

Oh, the funny Jews at the Yes Men!


Well, it’s Andy’s version of War, this GENOCIDE, this MOWING of the Lawn, this country that was doing this way before fucking Adolph Bibi Mileikowsky pried his perversion into Palestine.
Israel, as seen by the Jews, calling it the Jewish State of Israel, is a womb of terrorism, the Judaic dirt of those Jews, we like to call ZIONISTS. I don’t see that word in his piece? Andy’s? Genocide? Holocaust?
Besides the extremist, annexationist vision of an apartheid Jewish state with less and less room for Palestinians, the only other option we’re hearing about is what the US and Europe are pressuring Netanyahu to accept: a carceral “two-state solution” in which Jews and Palestinians are restricted to their own bunkered territories by an increasingly reinforced border wall — like today, but with “autonomy” for the Palestinians. And they don’t seem to have any vision beyond that.
A carceral Palestinian state may be better than nothing, but it won’t stop either Jews or Palestinians from considering the land beyond the wall as their home too.
From the Jordan River in the East to the Mediterranean Sea in the West, from the forests of the Galilee in the North to the Red Sea resorts in the South, there is only one homeland for both peoples. Many Palestinians yearn not only for Nablus, Hebron, Gaza and Ramallah, but for Haifa and Jaffa and Acra and the many other places they were mostly kicked out of in the Nakba, the Palestinian catastrophe of 1948. At the same time, many Jews want to live in the West Bank, either because Biblical events took place there, in what some of them call Judea and Samaria, or because it’s been the only home they’ve known for the past three generations.
Solidly dividing the Jews’ and Palestinians’ mutual homeland will only lead to further displacement, and will provide ample fuel for extremists to escalate conflict. — AB

Unfortunately, neither Palestinians nor Jews want that.
Palestinians, for their part, really don’t want (p. 15) to share a joint state, perhaps because they rightly don’t trust Israeli Jews to share power equally — and perhaps partly because Palestine’s indigenous Arab communities haven’t yet, in three quarters of a millennium, ever been ruled by Arabs, let alone had their own state.
As for Jewish Israelis — secular and religious, Left and Right — it’s unthinkable to not have recourse to a Jewish state in the event of a sudden loss of cabin pressure. You can call that paranoia, historical memory, “Jewish supremacism,” “settler-colonialism,” or whatever you like — it doesn’t change the fact that very few Jewish Israelis would willingly give up a country that’s fully theirs. — AB
–
Final Solution, and this is it for Andy?
“Donald Trump and Stephen Miller are on the wrong side of public opinion on this, and they’re losing badly in the court of public opinion,” says Chris Hayes. “The more they lean into the cruelty, the less popular it all is.” — Chris Hayes

President Donald Trump and deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller set a goal of deporting 1 million undocumented immigrants each year — a staggering number that would require a massive expansion of immigration enforcement. Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” delivered just that, throwing roughly $170 billion to the administration’s immigration restriction program, including $45 billion for new detention centers and $30 billion to hire 10,000 new ICE officers. ICE will now become the largest law enforcement agency in the country.

How the US and Israel exchange tactics in violence and control
Two decades of Israeli-US police cooperation include training in racial profiling and violent suppression of protests.
Leila, a campaign organiser at JVP who asked that only her first name be used, told Al Jazeera the exchange programme is just one aspect of violent policing in the United States that has existed for decades.
“The violence that we’re seeing today in the US is 100 percent the result of white supremacy and anti-blackness and institutionalised racism in the US,” Leila said.
“The exchange programmes create the opportunity for US armed forces and Israeli armed forces to come together and swap tactics, and deepen the harmful practices and policies that already exist in both countries.”

Deputy Director of ICE was sent by the ADL for training with the Israeli military

Fuck these fucking Jewish “comics”! Bill, Jon, Seinfeld, Sandler.
“Certain police practices and policies that all happen time and time again, when you look back and try to pull back on the thread to see where they got this from, it always comes back to somebody went to Israel.” — Steven H., an organizer with the Black Alliance for Peace.

Andy B — For most Jewish Americans, whatever their political persuasion, support for Israel has been a bedrock principle. Thus, it’s notable that a broad swath of U.S. Jews — reacting to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza — have been urging the Israeli government to do more to ensure the delivery of food and medicine.
There is no overwhelming consensus. On the left, some U.S. Jews contend that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is guilty of genocide. On the right, some conservative Jewish news outlets have suggested that the widely verified food crisis in Gaza is a hoax.
WTF are the ICE men doing?
And where TF are their pastors?
Aug 11, 2025
By Andy Bichlbaum
Last week I went to NYC immigration court with a coalition of groups (among others, JFREJ) that’s trying to mitigate the harm ICE does to immigrants showing up for their scheduled immigration-court hearings. The immigrants imagine they have a right to due process (which, as it happens, they do), and never imagine they’re going to be kidnapped—and yet they often are, regardless of the outcome of their hearing or any other factors.
My grandfather having been taken away from my father by the Gestapo, forever, I don’t feel the right to stay silent when something analogous is happening here in my country.
The ICE agents I saw last week at the downtown courts seemed entirely different from everyone else—from security guards, immigration court “judges” (actually lawyers), even police. And then I realized why: they’re thinking extremely hard, and that changes the way they look.
What strenuous mental effort it must take for an ICE man (they’re almost always men) to see what he’s doing not as thuggery, not as pointless and cruel attacks on obviously vulnerable human beings, but as patriotism, valor, and helping other “good citizens” like themselves.
They’re not stupid, or no stupider than the rest of us. But they’re marshaling their intelligence to support some incredibly stupid conclusions against the evidence of their eyes.
If I were to speak to an ICE agent (and I won’t) because I thought there were a chance in hell they would listen (there isn’t), I would say:
“So sorry, Mr./Ms. ICE, that you feel so unmoored, invalidated, worthless. So sorry there’s a big ICEy void at your core that can’t be left empty. Your emptiness isn’t unusual, but thinking you can possibly fill it with cruelty and violence takes a special kind of intelligence, maybe a whole second brain hovering feet from the first à la Mr. Duffy. Give it a rest, you fucker. Relax and let yourself see what’s glaringly obvious to everyone else. Then use that intelligence to actually help yourself and your people instead.”
But again, they wouldn’t listen, not to those words. I’d have to translate them first into something they could actually hear, the way only their own trusted pastor or other community member could.
So where are their pastors?
To do the really important (and not just symbolic) work, get inside and see for yourself, with one of the groups (like JFREJ) trying to resist this horrible thing.
Just for fun, for printable versions of the below (and variants), visit www.theyesmen.org/project/ICE/posters. Additional non-secret projects will be posted at www.theyesmen.org/project/ICE as they materialize.


2009 — Two Jewish activists have withdrawn their documentary from the Jerusalem Film Festival in hopes of making the Israeli public think critically about state policies toward the Palestinians. Jacques Servin and Igor Vamos pulled their film in compliance with the Boycott, Divestment and Sanction campaign, aimed at pressing Israel to recognize the Palestinians’ right to self-determination and end alleged violations of international law through international pressure and economic sanctions.
“It’s embarrassing as Jews to hear constantly what’s going on [in Israel] and to hear the policies of the state described as fascist,” Servin told The Jerusalem Post. “This is one way to communicate that there is something really wrong going on.”
Servin and Vamos are the founders of the organization “The Yes Men,” which produces documentaries and presentations that spoof large corporations to expose their unjust practices. Their newly-released documentary, The Yes Men Fix the World, which draws attention to corporations’ role in climate change, was scheduled to appear at the film festival until last week, when Servin and Vamos announced the withdrawal in a letter to the organizers. The organizers did not respond to their letter, nor could they be reached for comment. However, a curator with the festival told Servin privately that the decision to withdraw was the right decision. Servin, known by the stage name Andy Bichlbaum, and Vamos, known as Mike Bonanno, mulled over joining the boycott campaign for about two months before making the final decision to withdraw.
“It didn’t even occur to us at first,” Vamos said. “At first, we just thought ‘business as usual,’ but it really shouldn’t be, and we should be thinking twice [about showing support for Israel’s actions].” They will instead distribute the documentary in Israel through activist organizations, Servin said. In their letter to the festival organizers, Servin and Vamos cited the impact that a boycott campaign had on ending apartheid in South Africa, but Vamos stressed that they were not drawing parallels between South African and Israeli policies and that they weren’t showing support for terrorist actions against Israel. “A lot of people would hear us make these comparisons and think we’re saying the situations are the same, which they are not. It’s a situation where the attention of the world focused on something and economic sanctions made a difference,” Vamos said. “What we’re supporting is the nonviolent groups who are calling for a boycott of all activity that could be seen as supporting state policies.”
Servin and Vamos stressed that they still felt a deep connection to the Jewish people and to Israel. The decision was not meant to be a “slap in the face” to either the film festival or Israel, Servin said. Instead, it’s a push that he hoped would make Israelis register the change in public opinion toward their country and respond accordingly. “We just care a lot. We think things have to change,” he said. “I don’t want Israel to be an embarrassment.”

KISS that Wall!

Is that Andy down there?




