That article doesn’t say at all what you’re implying? Someone being reprimanded for saying a synagogue attack could have been a false flag is far, far from an example of a false flag.
There’s opposing Israels actions in Gaza, opposing their treatment of Palestinians in general, disagreeing with the concept of an apartheid ethnostate or the actions taken to create Israel in the first place, and then there’s unfounded claims that specific events are secret Zionist false flags to create the appearance of antisemitism and create an excuse to crack down on protestors.
What government needs an excuse to crack down on protestors? Why leave explosives somewhere when you can just say it’s antisemitism and do your crackdown that way?
Why not read the referenced article where they discuss the, honestly interesting, case where people are building plots to then have information to trade for favorable sentencing if they get caught later?
Believing Israel to be commiting atrocities, or disagreeing with Zionism does not obligate one to start entertaining tropes and conspiracies about Jewish people pulling the strings of the world and manipulating events to get their way.
So your response to “don’t do an antisemitic conspiracy theory” is… “But there actually is an orchestrated Zionist cabal doing these things”?
You’re comparing information warfare by Israel trying to drive support for their actions to a nebulous Zionist conspiracy performing false flag attacks in order to provide a pretext for cracking down on protestors.
Your evidence is a man who is clearly unwell, who tried and failed to convert to Judaism, was kicked out of a synagogue for behavioral problems and vandalized his own house. In 2017.
A mentally unwell man behaving erratically and defacing his home isn’t much of a conspiracy, and certainly not one to discredit a protest movement that would start six years later. Or are you just arguing that “the Jewish people are notorious for making up antisemitism”?
You’re part of the reason it’s so easy to paint legitimate criticism of Israel as antisemitic. Anytime anyone criticizes them there’re people like you who chime in to add notes about how the zionists secretly control all the governments and media, how insidious they are or about how they’re one of the biggest threats.
Or to just weakly echo some false flag lines while ignoring that the article has the police giving an entirely different motivation based on who they caught.
Eventually people start to believe that you actually can’t criticize Israel without succumbing to antisemitism.
I can’t wait for your next link that’s the top result for “Zionist false flag” or some such that share without actually reading it.
So your response to faked terror attacks is that it is antisemitic to point out that Zionists constantly stage false antisemtism?
Lets keep going then
I can do like 20 more. You clearly have been paying absolutely no attention over the last year. The amount of staged fake claims of antisemitism which turn out the be done by hardcore pro-Israel Zionists are staggeringly high.
Go read up on the expulsion of Jews from Morrocco to Israel and who was behind that if you want some understanding of Zionism.
No, my response to a terroristic hoax that wasn’t a Zionist false flag is that maybe we don’t need antisemitic conspiracy theories to criticize Israel.
Law enforcement agencies investigating January’s discovery of the trailer on the outskirts of Sydney divulged in a news conference that its placement was concocted by criminals who meant to derive personal gain from tipping off authorities to its presence — a bizarre twist in a saga that followed a monthslong wave of antisemitic crimes in Australia.
Your next screenshot seems to be from the daily mail, which… Is it’s own flavor of untrustworthy.
Setting that aside though… It goes on in the article to pretty clearly state that it wasn’t a case of someone pretending. Customers at her cafe were perturbed by her manner of support for Palestine. It turns out that you don’t need to be a Zionist or even Jewish to own a kosher cafe, even in a Jewish hospital. So I don’t think that article makes the case you’re going for.
Next you have news corp Australia acting very strangely and definitely seeming to hope to catch some antisemitic behavior that doesn’t materialize.
This is not, however, a “Zionist false flag”. First, I’m not sure news corp is what I would call Zionist, secondly nothing actually happened, and thirdly no one was pretending to be antisemitic to blame it on others. While it’s weird to go antisemitism fishing, and racist to assume you’d find it at a middle eastern restaurant, this is a case of someone ordered tea, got it, and then stood around for a bit. Pretty far from false flag terrorism.
Absolutely nothing in it even comes close to “zionist false flag attacks”. The only flag of note isn’t zionist, isn’t false, and isn’t an attack. At best a slight eyesore. (🥁)
You’re deadset on convincing me there’s a zionist conspiracy behind antisemitism reports, and I’m not sure why. I just said you shouldn’t succumb to antisemitic conspiracy theories while talking about actual injustices.
You might try actually reading that last article. I think you’ll find there’s a lot more cases of mislabeled or exaggerated antisemitism than false flag conspiracy nonsense. Although, you’re most likely too far down the hole to actually be able to get back out. Say hi to the elders for me, and let me know how their protocols are going.
The cluster of attacks targeting places where Jewish people live, work and study, including a firebombing of a synagogue and a daycare center and several instances of antisemitic vandalism, were committed by “a very small group, and potentially one individual behind all those matters,” Deputy Police Commissioner for the state of New South Wales David Hudson told reporters on Monday.
State-sponsored anti-Semitism would prove most helpful to Zionism. Indeed, Zionist leaders consciously recognised that state anti-Semitism was essential to their colonial project. Herzl did not mince words about this. He would declare in his foundational pamphlet that “the Governments of all countries scourged by Anti-Semitism will be keenly interested in assisting us to obtain [the] sovereignty we want”; and indeed that not “only poor Jews” would contribute to an immigration fund for European Jews, “but also Christians who wanted to get rid of them”.
Israel is openly alligning with the European far right (and of course the guy who did a Nazi salute in America)
You really don’t need to keep posting screenshots of articles. I’m not even bothering to read them anymore because it takes too long to find the article and figure out how you’re taking the headline out of context.
Consistently posting screenshots of bullshit kinda ruins the assumption of good faith.
Here’s my rebuttal:
The bit you highlighted from the article doesn’t make any indication about the identity of anyone. It’s really only a smoking gun if you already accept your conclusion.
A historical quote about Jewish people being driven to Israel aligning with Zionist goals isn’t really evidence of a conspiracy.
Neither is Israels political allies.
You’re not going to convince me there’s a zionist conspiracy to stage antisemitism. There have certainly been cases where people staged antisemitism. That doesn’t mean there’s some grand conspiracy by the zionists.
Seeing that someone did something antisemitic and concluding “oh, it must have been those tricksy Jews faking it” is antisemitic, just like making assumptions about the race of a criminal is racist. Data points that align with your prejudice don’t validate making assumptions without evidence, and data points don’t provide evidence of an ornate structure linking them.
If anything, it weakens their argument. To try to support their claim that supposed examples of antisemitism are frequently false flags, they show an example of someone making a roundabout claim that an arson attack on a mosque was a zionist false flag. And then that person was forced to withdraw their accusation from the backlash with an admission that it was “intended to be an academic exercise” and not substantiated by evidence.
That article doesn’t say at all what you’re implying? Someone being reprimanded for saying a synagogue attack could have been a false flag is far, far from an example of a false flag.
There’s opposing Israels actions in Gaza, opposing their treatment of Palestinians in general, disagreeing with the concept of an apartheid ethnostate or the actions taken to create Israel in the first place, and then there’s unfounded claims that specific events are secret Zionist false flags to create the appearance of antisemitism and create an excuse to crack down on protestors.
What government needs an excuse to crack down on protestors? Why leave explosives somewhere when you can just say it’s antisemitism and do your crackdown that way?
Why not read the referenced article where they discuss the, honestly interesting, case where people are building plots to then have information to trade for favorable sentencing if they get caught later?
Believing Israel to be commiting atrocities, or disagreeing with Zionism does not obligate one to start entertaining tropes and conspiracies about Jewish people pulling the strings of the world and manipulating events to get their way.
Have you missed the 40 beheaded babies and babies in ovens and mass rapes and every other lie under the sun by Zionists the last years?
Here have some more
Jewish man accused of spray-painting swastikas on own home
So your response to “don’t do an antisemitic conspiracy theory” is… “But there actually is an orchestrated Zionist cabal doing these things”?
You’re comparing information warfare by Israel trying to drive support for their actions to a nebulous Zionist conspiracy performing false flag attacks in order to provide a pretext for cracking down on protestors.
Your evidence is a man who is clearly unwell, who tried and failed to convert to Judaism, was kicked out of a synagogue for behavioral problems and vandalized his own house. In 2017.
A mentally unwell man behaving erratically and defacing his home isn’t much of a conspiracy, and certainly not one to discredit a protest movement that would start six years later. Or are you just arguing that “the Jewish people are notorious for making up antisemitism”?
You’re part of the reason it’s so easy to paint legitimate criticism of Israel as antisemitic. Anytime anyone criticizes them there’re people like you who chime in to add notes about how the zionists secretly control all the governments and media, how insidious they are or about how they’re one of the biggest threats.
Or to just weakly echo some false flag lines while ignoring that the article has the police giving an entirely different motivation based on who they caught.
Eventually people start to believe that you actually can’t criticize Israel without succumbing to antisemitism.
I can’t wait for your next link that’s the top result for “Zionist false flag” or some such that share without actually reading it.
So your response to faked terror attacks is that it is antisemitic to point out that Zionists constantly stage false antisemtism?
Lets keep going then
I can do like 20 more. You clearly have been paying absolutely no attention over the last year. The amount of staged fake claims of antisemitism which turn out the be done by hardcore pro-Israel Zionists are staggeringly high.
Go read up on the expulsion of Jews from Morrocco to Israel and who was behind that if you want some understanding of Zionism.
No, my response to a terroristic hoax that wasn’t a Zionist false flag is that maybe we don’t need antisemitic conspiracy theories to criticize Israel.
Your first screenshot is what this headline is the update to. https://apnews.com/article/australia-terrorism-antisemitism-hoax-546a36d066f651888ae7e460c07f9080
Your next screenshot seems to be from the daily mail, which… Is it’s own flavor of untrustworthy.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14123417/Woman-Nazi-salute-protest-owner-kosher-cafe-Jewish-hospital.html
Setting that aside though… It goes on in the article to pretty clearly state that it wasn’t a case of someone pretending. Customers at her cafe were perturbed by her manner of support for Palestine. It turns out that you don’t need to be a Zionist or even Jewish to own a kosher cafe, even in a Jewish hospital. So I don’t think that article makes the case you’re going for.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/feb/14/news-corp-team-confronted-after-alleged-attempt-to-provoke-staff-at-sydney-middle-eastern-restaurant-ntwnfb
Next you have news corp Australia acting very strangely and definitely seeming to hope to catch some antisemitic behavior that doesn’t materialize.
This is not, however, a “Zionist false flag”. First, I’m not sure news corp is what I would call Zionist, secondly nothing actually happened, and thirdly no one was pretending to be antisemitic to blame it on others. While it’s weird to go antisemitism fishing, and racist to assume you’d find it at a middle eastern restaurant, this is a case of someone ordered tea, got it, and then stood around for a bit. Pretty far from false flag terrorism.
Finally you post three screenshots from a perfectly reasonable article: https://forward.com/opinion/608230/jews-have-to-stop-believing-conspiracy-theories-yale-columbia-antisemitism/
Absolutely nothing in it even comes close to “zionist false flag attacks”. The only flag of note isn’t zionist, isn’t false, and isn’t an attack. At best a slight eyesore. (🥁)
You’re deadset on convincing me there’s a zionist conspiracy behind antisemitism reports, and I’m not sure why. I just said you shouldn’t succumb to antisemitic conspiracy theories while talking about actual injustices.
You might try actually reading that last article. I think you’ll find there’s a lot more cases of mislabeled or exaggerated antisemitism than false flag conspiracy nonsense. Although, you’re most likely too far down the hole to actually be able to get back out. Say hi to the elders for me, and let me know how their protocols are going.
I recognize it because staging antisemitism is core Zionist doctrine. From the founder of Zionism himself:
Israel is openly alligning with the European far right (and of course the guy who did a Nazi salute in America)
But lets keep going.
Also here is a fun video of a Zionist at a pro Palestine protest. https://i.imgur.com/YJs3PrA.mp4
You really don’t need to keep posting screenshots of articles. I’m not even bothering to read them anymore because it takes too long to find the article and figure out how you’re taking the headline out of context.
Consistently posting screenshots of bullshit kinda ruins the assumption of good faith.
Here’s my rebuttal:

The bit you highlighted from the article doesn’t make any indication about the identity of anyone. It’s really only a smoking gun if you already accept your conclusion.
A historical quote about Jewish people being driven to Israel aligning with Zionist goals isn’t really evidence of a conspiracy.
Neither is Israels political allies.
You’re not going to convince me there’s a zionist conspiracy to stage antisemitism. There have certainly been cases where people staged antisemitism. That doesn’t mean there’s some grand conspiracy by the zionists.
Seeing that someone did something antisemitic and concluding “oh, it must have been those tricksy Jews faking it” is antisemitic, just like making assumptions about the race of a criminal is racist. Data points that align with your prejudice don’t validate making assumptions without evidence, and data points don’t provide evidence of an ornate structure linking them.
Let’s not.
You did not respond to the video it is the best part.
If anything, it weakens their argument. To try to support their claim that supposed examples of antisemitism are frequently false flags, they show an example of someone making a roundabout claim that an arson attack on a mosque was a zionist false flag. And then that person was forced to withdraw their accusation from the backlash with an admission that it was “intended to be an academic exercise” and not substantiated by evidence.