Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
the computer.
Whatever. I don't know. I'm just
thinking or we should review it
tomorrow.
I don't know. What do you guys think?
Look
at them. They go
Hello.
So the view
video is the video. I love I love him.
[cough and clears throat]
Good thumbnail. Goyam. Goyam.
Okay.
You're not welcome here and you're not
>> in a lot of other places
in your videos.
You don't own this place. You don't
>> You're not welcome.
>> Yeah. Chman
here and you're not
>> in a lot of other places based on your
videos.
>> You don't own this place. You don't own
America. No, you should move on. Nobody
wants you here. Please move out.
>> Tyler, it seems like you discovered that
anti-semitism is lucrative. Huh?
>> I have Alberty thought that we should
pay for their money. So why don't you
move to a different country?
>> All good. Why don't you go back to
Israel? That would be my question.
Public safety.
>> I say 150 calls about your
>> What are they calling about?
>> People try to live a quiet.
[laughter]
I don't know
>> you two gentlemen. I saw a video of
[music] you walking into 136 hillside.
They asked not to come back. You come
back, you'll be a trespass.
>> You say anti-semitism. I say
anti-goyism.
>> The Jewish community is extremely
[music] racist.
>> Do you have a group of people?
Okay.
That call themselves God's people. You
are a semi-supreist.
>> Elon Musk has 12 kids. Why can't I
[music] have 12 kids?
>> He pays for them. You're arguing that I
should pay for your kids.
>> I'm arguing that the government's
>> my That's our money. I pay taxes.
>> Excuse me, sir. What are you doing? Can
I call the cops on you? [ __ ] empty.
>> We may be in a corrupt hell.
>> That's That's That's different than
Monroe video nine.
>> Um Yeah.
>> So, what what am I being pulled over
for?
>> We got a call. Keep your hands on the
steering wheel when you do so.
>> This is Lakewood, New Jersey. Home to
one of the largest and fastest growing
Orthodox Jewish communities in America,
having anywhere from 6 to 10 kids per
family, causing the community's rapid
growth to spill into the neighboring
towns of Jackson, Tom's River, Brick,
and how causing non-Jewish residents to
fear that their town will soon be turned
into little Jerusalem, just like
Lakewood. the tactics within this
community. I would liken it to organized
crime.
>> You are the vice chairman of the Israel
Advisory Committee for Donald Trump in
2016.
>> Organized crime.
>> The tactics within this community. I
would liken it to organized crime.
>> You were the vice chairman of the Israel
Advisory Committee for Donald Trump in
2016. How did you get a relationship
with the White House? Who in the White
House?
>> I don't think I want I think I don't
want to say
>> who are we messing with here right now.
Chris, this video
the the the Okay.
>> Steak, man.
>> I'm going to be honest. Uh, the powers
out here are pretty immense.
>> It's not [music] about Jackson. Jackson
is a test.
>> Ooh. And I support it. Brooklyn 10952
>> case. If it isn't squashed soon is going
to take over the entire country.
>> It's already a problem in all the
surrounding towns. You have billionaires
from Lakewood being involved. people
connected to the [music] president of
the United States
>> in New Jersey. Is there room for a
two-state solution? [laughter]
>> No. Um there's clearly not. I think it's
going to be a fight.
>> I ride around Lakewood. There there are
near Lakewood, outside of Lakewood and
all these towns around Lakewood, there
are housing developments where Guyam
lived. They don't they're no there no
Yidden there yet. But all these housing
developments, someone who they they
could turn it around. We saw what
happened to in Lakewood itself. There
are a lot of other opportunities if
people can if want to take that jump and
become a ale pioneer. as the Orthodox
Jewish community consolidated political
power in Lakewood, taking majority
control of the township committee,
planning board, zoning board, and school
board, financially depleting the public
school system for non-Jewish kids,
overwhelming local infrastructure, and
turning a
they
>> public school system for non-Jewish
kids, overwhelming local infrastructure,
turning a once quiet town into a densely
populated, overtraked Jewish enclave
prioritizing Jews over non-Jews. Before
I investigate the Jewish takeover of
Lakewood and of the nearby town of
Jackson, I first want to visit the town
where the blueprint was born, Muny, New
York.
>> Someone like David Badner saw the
opportunity a few years ago. He bought
several 50 to 100 houses in in in Muny.
I believe that he single-handedly in a
certain way turned around my
opportunities that come up every once in
a while and and someone has to step up
to the plate. Miller news, thanks for
meeting up on such short.
>> Oh, there's the local [ __ ] reporter. Um,
all right.
>> Notice, man.
>> My Mlandians
know we here. We outside. We outside.
>> When did you notice my begin to form as
a hassidic Jewish enclave?
>> I would say 20 years ago. I I saw the
first start of it and then every year it
just started to grow exponentially.
>> Go.
>> Hey,
>> different.
>> It's me.
How are you? Stop what?
>> They on Tyler.
>> Yo, they on Tyler.
>> But the Jews here were not happy to see
me after I asked how they afford 7 to 10
kids on a single income and if they were
on welfare in Curious Joelle. How many
kids do most people have out here?
>> Um 17 18.
[laughter]
>> Okay, editing is good. How do they
afford 17 18 kids? They are proud to to
do what the Torah says that you need to
multip be multiple and fruitful. How do
you afford to study the Torah though?
>> God help me.
>> Does the American taxpayer help you too?
>> Oh, so yes. How do people afford to have
such big families out here?
>> It's
not saying anything.
>> Are you Tyler?
>> I'm Tyler.
>> Are you trying to do another
anti-semitism video?
>> Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. I
spread anti-semitism. That's crazy you
said that. Life circumstance, different
culture.
[laughter]
I have 43 kids for nine bombs.
>> So, this is their way of uh
>> like listen I I know you're frustrated
about what some of the things we focused
on. Is that kind of what I'm getting at?
>> So, give me some examples of how things
were misconstrued. Yeah. What did I get
that was wrong?
>> So, it's not necessarily misconstrued.
Uh well, it is misconrue. There's a lot
of it that's uh you'll cut a lot of it,
cut out different words, make it sound a
lot worse than it is. There's a lot of
people here that are on welfare. There's
a lot of people in section 8, a lot of
people that are on a bunch of different
uh wick food stamps, stuff like that. Uh
if you go to any lowincome communities,
you're going to see that they're all
going to be on the different welfares.
>> Okay. So, they were on welfare.
>> Yeah.
So I like
community
meaning
let's say um
um
by the people was whatever
interview the people was
>> better denying that.
>> Okay.
>> But again, it's the way you say it. It's
the way you twist it. The way you twist
it twist it again. Twist is the wrong
word.
>> I understand where you're coming from.
>> Growing up on an extremely
So
the welfare of the I get it, but what
about the Albert? What about the to the
businesses the people whatever
brokerage
dude
the insufferable huh
>> I see you say I misrepresent or and then
they do that like come on
>> I'm I'm not saying they're all good
people [laughter]
like I said wherever you go there's
going to be
>> there's always going to be [ __ ]
wherever you go
>> I totally get it
>> uh you talk about the community Um,
>> it feels like you're trying to create a
narrative that you did not find. You
found people that are on welfare that
have a lot of kids, but your headline
did wrote welfare addicted Jews.
>> What is your frustration? I'm curious.
Welfare dependent, welfare reliant,
welfare addicted. What's the difference?
Tell me. They need it to survive and
without it they die. What is the
difference?
>> It's addictive to bait to bait click.
That's an addiction.
>> That's an addiction.
>> Yeah.
>> Okay. Are you addicted to being a victim
or what?
>> No. The Goyam were grateful some Goyam
>> is finally bringing up their town's
issues. [music]
>> I you take all my money.
>> You think they take the money?
>> Of course, man.
>> Aland call me amigo.
>> All right. See you, bro. How do you like
living here as a non-Jew?
>> So, well, I don't like so.
>> Huh? Because they're acidics.
>> Do they treat you as one of them? Like,
are you guys on the same page? No.
>> Because they are acidic.
How do you like living here as a
non-Jew?
>> Well, I don't like because they're aics.
>> Do they
>> treat you as one of them? You guys on
the same page?
>> No. No. No.
>> They treat mention.
They treat you. They don't treat me.
>> They don't bother me because I don't
deal with them.
>> Okay. You think there is large scale
welfare fraud out here?
>> Oh, yeah.
>> Yeah. Yeah. It's a lot. They get away
with everything. They get the section
aid. They get everything. The free
housing and you know.
>> Do you think most people work out here
in the hot city community? No.
>> No. How do they afford their bills?
>> I wish I knew I would do the same thing
too. [laughter]
>> Exactly.
>> I guess. What are your thoughts on the
driving out here? I got to ask you that.
It's the most important question.
>> I don't want to talk about it.
>> The driving is crazy. You got a stop
sign over there. They don't even stop.
They just pass, you know. That's why so
much traffic and accidents and it's
crazy.
>> You saw the Curious Joelle video. Why
was that video good?
>> That video was good because I've been in
East Rambo before for as long as I
remember. I also went to Spring Valley.
as long as I remember he's
as long as I remember
was he was
>> school I went to you know I've been in
the school system and we've definitely
seen a lot of things especially since
our school board was majority private
school owners you know mainly Jewish
white men and most of our school was
>> white men
>> not Jewish and they had control over our
public school system over like the past
10 years purposely voting no under
school budget vote so that we would fail
and we lost about 32 schools
>> basically through blocked voting
Orthodox Jews won enough seats to
control the East Ramapo school board and
went on to eliminate hundreds of public
school positions like teachers and
social workers while approving millions
of taxpayer dollars [music] to be spent
on their children's religious private
schools, ultimately gutting the public
school system for the estimated 9,000
black and brown public school students
while diverting that money to their
private religious schools. They give us
food that's rotten and it's cold and it
hurts our stomach.
>> I ask you, do not take our [screaming]
>> music program away. I love playing an
instrument. My brother would be crushed.
And
>> the budget cuts were so devastating that
in one instance, an elementary school
shut down and the majority Jewish school
board then voted to sell it to a Jewish
yeshiva for pennies on the dollar.
Basically, the poorest, most vulnerable
kids in these communities had their
schools gutted and looted, all by
majority Jewish school board whose kids
didn't even attend public school.
>> We believe that some of the decisions
that have been made by the board have
not been in the best interest of the
public school community.
>> You don't like it? Find yourself another
place to live.
>> How was your education?
>> Um, my education, it was decent, but it
definitely could have been better if we
had the resources that [music] we were
allowed to have. But again, for the past
10, 15 years or so, people have been
purposely voting no on our school budget
vote. So that way, we had no funding and
money for our school. And
>> no, that was done purposely. [music]
>> And who was voting no?
>> Majority the Jewish community. You like
drive around here, you'll literally see
signs saying vote no for a school
budget, which [music] is crazy. Luckily,
we were able to get award system to be
able to get three seats for um you know,
the wars, but if it wasn't for that, we
still would be majority white Jewish men
voting for public school students that
they don't care about. Yeah. And they
purposely go out their way to isolate
us. We're basically isolated to the
point where we feel like this isn't our
home.
>> A lot of people like to say they're
ducking taxes and all that. There's
truths and lies to that, but I could
only tell you that I've only seen the
bad part. The bad part is is I've seen
uh houses get broken down. I've seen
certain spaces, buildings get destroyed
for oh, let's just say for more kosher
customs, you feel me? So,
>> I want to thank the problem
and
this
[laughter]
okay
>> for showing our community. I don't I
don't believe in hiding. I believe we
have a tremendous amount to be proud of
and like every community we're
different. We have our goods. Other
communities have their positives.
>> Tell me about what are some of the best
things about this community.
>> Tonight at sundown, we shut our phones,
we shut our cars,
>> we go to shul the most beautiful part of
our religion. Do you understand that
Orthodox Jews can be anywhere? The sun
is coming down and it's it's the last
opportunity to pray what's called, which
is afternoon services. They could be in
the most
>> He doesn't care.
Okay, but
>> important meetings and they'll go pray
[music] and they could care less about
anything happening. The same things with
Shabas. We come home, our families are
waiting, we sing shalom. We welcome in
the Shabas and you'll say back allayikum
shalom, right?
>> Could they feed 10 kids without those
programs?
>> I am one of 10 children.
>> You're driving a G Wagon, bro.
>> My father was never on any welfare. I
used to reuse sandwich bags to save my
father a penny. That's great for you.
>> You're not welcome here and you're not
welcome in a lot of other places based
on your video.
>> What about me though?
>> I LOVE YOU, MAN. [screaming]
>> YOU ARE FUNNY.
>> You don't own this place. You don't own
America. I can do whatever I want. Get
in your G Wagon. Get to work. [music]
>> You're not trying to bring people
together. You never did. You never will.
It's who you are. Somebody hurt you
deeply and I'm sorry. [music]
>> He was right. Someone
>> Exactly. He was right. I don't know. He
was says Okay.
interview
did hurt me. Whoever told my sponsors to
pull out after making one video
exploring a community of welfare
addicted Jews.
If you want to help me avoid ending up
on welfare, too, and get access to all
of these videos early and watch
neverbeforeseen content I can't upload
on YouTube, go subscribe to my Patreon
at patreon.com/tylera
for five bucks a month. Back to the
video. One of the fastest growing
Orthodox [music]
Jewish communities in America, where a
similar Jewish takeover has taken place,
leading to the gutting of the public
school system, all while turning a
predominantly workingclass Irish and
Italian town into Little Jerusalem.
So far, I'm at 11:52 minutes. Same
thing. Same thing.
>> I'm trying to merge a gap to see if
there's anything any way that we could
actually be because, as you can tell,
it's two separate communities. Look
around. You will not see a non-Jewish
resident here.
>> We got the Yiddish bus.
>> This is really all Jewish stores.
>> Sure.
>> Now, that pizza place, it's it's going
to be kosher pizza, probably.
>> A lot of these signs are written in
Yiddish, and everything's insulated
basically. You come here to this plaza,
get everything you need. Quite
convenient, quite nice.
>> Now, everyone can shop here. Of course,
we could go in and they'll be friendly.
Um, but everything's geared towards one
community. But,
>> of course. What do you mean?
Yeah. So, so, so because so
>> is it always this way? This part here,
is this newly developed in last?
>> Oh, yeah. So, this this used to be a
concrete yard.
>> Got it.
>> So, we're almost where we're standing
used to have rows of of concrete trucks.
>> Sure. It's bustling. It's busy.
>> Now, this place was packed with Jews
buying groceries for Shabas. But keep in
mind, Goyam are fully allowed to come in
here and shop whenever they please.
>> They're very friendly. I don't think
anybody's going to be nasty [music] to
us. Is a lot of the the the fear
[ __ ] warranted? Definitely not.
Definitely not. But I do think it's they
don't feel comfortable enough to do
that.
>> But it's important to understand the
bigger picture here. As kosher stores
move in, more Jews move here, too.
Creating a positive feedback loop where
a town rapidly becomes a Jewish hub.
>> Exactly. Go to Chinatown.
ultimately changing the character and
identity of a town and in Lakewood's
case overwhelming the infrastructure.
Before we explore the many implications
of life for Goyam as towns like Lakewood
become increasingly Jewish, I want you
to understand how quickly the word
anti-semitism gets weaponized in real
time out here. You'd like to discover
that anti-semitism is lucrative. Huh?
>> Why do you think anything that you don't
like to see is anti-semitism? What have
I said? That's
>> okay.
>> Anti-semitic. Go.
>> When you talk about people accepting
government money and the overlay is a
bunch of pictures of fraud, you're
trying to twist it to make it look like
we're doing fraud.
>> There were welfare programs that were
defrauded by Jews. What did I say? That
was a lie.
>> There were welfare programs that are
defaulted by Jews.
>> Yes. And I made a Minneapolis video as
well. I've made several videos. Why are
you being so sensitive? What you're
you're trying to make it sound is like
anyone who accepts government money in
the Jewish community is doing fraud.
>> That's your interpretation.
>> What you're doing is dangerous.
>> How is this dangerous? Why should you be
treated like a protected group? You're
asking for special privileges.
>> No, we're not. We're asking just to be
fair and you're not being fair.
>> I am being fair.
>> This is going to make you a lot of money
and it's going to jump up a lot of
hatred towards a community that's that's
seeing a rise in antismism that hasn't
been seen in years. Every single day,
our lives are at risk and this is going
to lead to more.
>> My sponsor literally got pulled out of
the video once they learned the topic of
that video. I lost the sponsorship. How
is that lucrative? Tell me. Do you say
anti-semitism? I say anti-goyism.
Listen, man. You got a kid in the
ant. Goyism. All right. I just noticed.
Drive your kid home. Get your groceries.
This is
>> You're getting hot. Let's go. It was
good to meet you, though. So you're
>> sticking with the United States cuz the
obviously thought that we should pay for
their money. So why don't you move to a
different country?
>> Why don't you move back to Israel then
if there's so much anti-semitism, right?
Like that guy said, why doesn't he go to
Israel?
>> We are giving back. So
>> listen, in theory, welfare is a good
idea. It's sweet, right? At what point
is it too far? Cuz this was a program
designed to help single moms after they
get divorced and keep the kid from
starving.
>> I also disagree with you that someone
doesn't have a right to have a child.
>> I think you should have a child if you
can afford it, right?
>> Inter real quick.
>> Um, sure. Let's hear it.
>> Okay. You two gentlemen, I saw a video
of you walking into 136 Hillside. They
asked not to come back. You come back,
it'll be a trespassing charge. You're
trespassing.
>> If you don't like the laws of America
and you think that the governor welfare
is stupid or
>> I would like to change the laws, just
like you would like to create
anti-semitism protection laws that give
you guys protected classes and and
protection against anti-semitism,
whatever that means, right? Why don't
you go back to Israel? That would be my
question.
>> Because I like it here.
>> Same here. I like it here, but I like to
make some changes. We can both agree on
that, right?
>> So, keep on [music] moving.
>> God bless you.
There we go. He loves us.
>> You guys have group chats with me. You
guys say,
>> "Oh,
>> be aware of this guy like I'm like
Hitler or something." I'm like, "Come
on, dude. I'm a nice guy. I talk to
everyone."
>> Elon Musk has 12 kids.
>> He's not a nice guy. He's not a nice guy
because
I don't know meaning like
but definitely
like
the welfare instead of
the good But sen good and like on the
video.
>> How can I have 12 kids?
>> He pays for them.
>> Your story point over here is that
people can't have children if they can't
afford them. You as a society are born
from people are born from people who
started with two people. Two. Okay. Adam
and Eve. That's it. You want to go with
the big bang, but it started at some
point. There was two people and now
there's billions and there was trillions
throughout the world. So you're saying
if you cannot
>> What does that have to do with any All
of those people didn't have welfare.
Adam and Eve had Cain and Abel. They
have a government
in a government that decides that if you
have children, we're going to help you
and everyone does their part.
>> You should not have more kids than you
can afford. You're arguing that I should
pay.
>> Okay.
>> Your kids.
>> That's what you're arguing.
>> I'm not arguing that I was stupid with
kids.
>> I'm arguing that the government.
>> No, that's my That's our money. I pay
taxes. I shouldn't be funding your
elected.
>> Should not be funding your kid. You
don't pay for my kids.
>> [ __ ] I could do this all day. Why don't
you go? No, you should go because you're
you're stopping traffic, guys. Let's go.
Move on.
>> He's stopping traffic, not me.
>> Yeah, right. No, no. You should move on.
Nobody wants you here. Please move out.
>> He was saying Tyler. Tyler, he loves me.
>> So, we're not allowed here.
>> You want to come to the corner?
>> Where? Over there. Let's go. Move. Let's
go.
>> You know, I know what you did in the
video and we all saw it and we still
[music] see it. But it's like,
>> what did I get wrong?
>> Nobody can cross the government. The
government knows everything. The f
United States federal government know
everything.
>> Not if you're fraudulently found.
>> No, it's not true. that if you feel that
you live in an
>> it's not about not true it's about so so
Tyler
it's not true
in a fraud way so so the point is
Yeah.
>> Country that is corrupted. Why are you
still living here?
>> Well, not everyone has options, right?
>> The other conversation with Martin so
far
list of 1520 countries off the bat you
can live.
>> Regardless, let's say America is corrupt
as someone
>> corruption. You understand?
>> Oh, but on just because there is
corruption here, which there is.
>> There is no.
>> What are you talking about? Let's not be
silly here.
>> If there would be corruption, the FBI
would love to come here first than any
other location in the world.
>> Know about Minnesota.
>> Come on. That's not true.
>> Well, I read the numbers in Minnesota.
>> 22 people indicted for Medicaid.
>> Numbers in Minnesota. And listen, you
you can attack them as much as you want.
They what they did. That's big numbers,
man.
>> Both of your schools had had
moneyaundering. You had people people
Yes. Both
>> there's 45 schools here.
>> So BMG had people that were charged with
moneyaundering and so did the school for
special for special.
>> As of when? As of when? 2019, [music]
2018, 2017. Look it up. It's all over
Google.
>> I don't look it up. You got to show it
to me. 95% of people in this vicinity
between this four or five zip codes work
very hard.
>> So, if you want to go and dig in a place
like here, Lakewood, where the same
capital you're going to find in this
small percentage,
>> you're making me want to dig now. You're
making me want to look.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Look,
you're making me want to look and dig.
>> You're already digging, man. You're
digging already for I'm at Whole Foods.
What are you talking about? 4 months.
>> What do you mean? Go break your head.
[laughter] You can keep on breaking your
head.
>> I will break my head. Yeah,
>> no problem. Eventually, where you break
your head too much, you end up digging
water. When you dig water, there's
nothing under it.
>> You were in Jackson, which is really
like a continuation of Lakewood. By the
way, I don't know if you know how I
toppled the government there. They had
all these anti-semitic laws. It was
crazy. I had two conversations with the
White House and eventually DOJ.
>> All right.
>> Got involved. Anyway, so I don't know.
Are you are you already doing your
Lakewood thing?
>> I'm here with Dr. Richard Roberts. You
sold the pharmaceutical.
>> Okay. So, so far 1885
people was I don't know evative view in
a town. Yeah. So this is number one and
number two
instead of fraud
but
company for $800 million. You were the
vice chairman of the Israel Advisory
Committee for Donald Trump in 2016.
>> Yes.
>> And you reached out to me. Why did you
reach out to me via email?
>> Um because you posted that first of all
you did the your video curious yo in New
York and got a lot of Orthodox Jews very
very upset.
>> Um but why did you reach out to me? But
towards the end of the video, you saw
the altruism in the community and you
seem to respect that and since I could
see that you seem to meet of a sincere
desire to actually get the real facts
because you know if you were just
bigoted against
Chinatown
I don't get it.
I don't
minutes in this is the video
town. Imagine
Chinatowns
instead of I don't know. I'm curious
and they said it's it's the same thing.
>> You wouldn't be struck or commenting on
[music] um the altruism in our
community. But you casually toppled the
Jackson government. A, what does that
mean? B, how did you get a relationship
with the White House?
>> I never spoke to DOJ. I didn't speak to
to people in the White House twice to
tell them what was going on because
>> who in the White House?
>> I don't think I want I think I don't
want to say.
>> First off though, so you mentioned
Jackson's a continuation of Lakewood.
You toppled the governments. You went to
the White House willy-nilly.
>> Called.
>> Called. Okay. You're connected to the
White House,
>> by the way. I rarely leave my house.
>> Which just goes to show the scale of
your connections in my opinion. I hear
this voicemail. I'm like, "Shiver me
timbers. Who am I dealing with a little
bit here? Right? Like this guy's old me.
>> All right. [laughter] He's
>> And you might be wondering, why are
megaealthy Jewish power brokers
connected to Donald Trump trying to set
the record straight with a lowly [ __ ]
tuber [music] like myself? This all begs
the question, why are they so afraid of
me?
>> I think that they just don't want you to
betray Lakewood in a bad way. That's
really all it is.
>> Like the video. Is there any bad to see?
>> It's bad to see everywhere. It's good to
see everywhere. Exactly. Good, bad, and
the ugly everywhere, right?
>> 100%. I used to live here in Lakewood
when I was in uh 9th and 10th grade. I I
love Lakewood. There's so much Jewish
life here. It's so easy to be Jewish and
everything's cheaper. It's amazing here.
>> Why did Lakewood become such a large
Jewish hub?
>> So, I think it started with uh BMG, Base
Marage, Cavoa, and then you had a lot,
you know, BMG.
>> Yeah. Tell me more about BMG, though. I
hear it's like the Harvard of Yeshivas.
>> Yes. It's top-notch. [music] You just
sit and learn all day. You already
finished your high school phase.
>> Okay. So, so
is like the town.
Um, okay.
Right. So,
all right.
Okay.
I don't know. Anti-semitism
because anti-semitism is jealousy
basically is basically jealous. So
people went to Israel already came back
and they just sit and learn all the
time. It's amazing. I used to do it when
I was a teenager. Likewood's an amazing
place and everything and I think you're
I've seen your videos all over. I just
think that people get nervous and stuff
like that, but you're just coming here
filling filming the truth and you're
working just like we are. That's it.
We're all in the same boat.
>> What should we know about Lakewood?
>> It's a great place. You're always
welcome here.
>> Thank you. Thank you. Yeah, we've got
No, it's it's welcoming for the most
part. A few guys are fired up. Uh we we
try to give them the chance to speak,
have a conversation,
>> do a little
What whisper did we miss?
>> Nothing. I got to go now. But
>> I love it. To a tea, a guy gets a
whisper, then he goes quiet. Would you
like to say anything?
>> Exactly. because we are in a because
community. Okay. And in some of the
codes in it
community,
it's not going to work.
How you doing? Or with this guy
whispering in his brethren's ears. He
comes up when they're talkative and
sweet and he goes and then they stop
talking. It is miraculous. Tyler, good
to meet you. What's your name?
>> Guys, if I say something good, you're
going to put it on.
>> Let's go.
>> We just met up with the guy. He was like
pissed off that we'd like come around
here and explore. This guy's killing me,
dude. The This is He's treating you like
a child.
>> The whole world's going to laugh so
>> I know. I know.
>> This is pathetic. He's treating you like
a child.
>> He's not He's not a child. He's not a
child. Act like script,
but that's it.
like acting like a child. So teenage is
funny. Well,
so
I do
interviewed
acting like a child.
>> Who is this guy?
>> Why are you guys being so pathetic? Let
the man speak.
>> Let the man speak.
Okay. in Monroe.
That not look like suspicious activity.
>> Why is there so much secrecy if you have
nothing to hide?
>> Why would he do that?
>> He's the head whisperer. All right, tell
me what you're going to say.
>> How much money everyone makes in this
town? Crazy amount.
>> What?
>> The police is also going to follow us.
>> They're going to follow us.
>> There's a police response special
response unit and the cops uh had their
internal monologue that they're going to
just trail us around.
>> Amazing. So given that
>> um here's the issue. Big part of Hisha
world is
largely of social media. We live in a
world where every influencer is a gotcha
artist. And especially with the Jew
hatred, this is not we.
That's it.
>> The cops are being called so often
[music] they're just going to follow us
around all day. Land of the free, home
of the brave. And then I stumbled upon a
kosher collision. Another example of
Lakewood's infamously terrible driving.
We were just showing how densely
trafficked it is out here. How much
traffic there is. We wanted to show some
of the driving differences out here.
>> I don't I don't think you're saying a
fair statement. This has nothing to do
with dense road.
>> Oh, what does it have to do with bad
driving skills or snow?
>> Totally because of the snow.
>> Fair.
>> It was a miscommunication. But
>> that's fair.
>> I understand what you're trying to say.
>> Yeah.
>> That's not what happened. There were
actually no one on the road.
>> Totally fair. Okay. You need help
getting pushed?
>> Okay. And this isn't to the sound.
>> All right. All right.
>> Why are you making up a story? Cuz you
need a documentary. There was not one
car inside.
>> Oh, you just hit the wall.
>> That's it.
>> You didn't hit anyone?
>> No.
>> Do you need help getting pushed?
>> Okay, we're going to get out of here.
Oh, you're good.
>> Good. Anyone else?
>> Need a job?
>> I agree.
>> You need a job?
>> No, I mean I'm employed. I employ a lot
of people actually.
>> You make money for doing nothing. for
doing nothing. Do you think moving
capital and charging interest is
something more valuable than I do or
what?
>> Well, I think you should write about
>> the hundreds of thousands of people that
do favors to people every day.
>> Tell me more.
>> Open up a book. You never tell me more.
Tell me more.
Tell me more
about fraud
about
food in New Jersey in Lake in my
Desette, tell me more.
>> Saw so many charity organizations as
they have here on Lake.
>> I know there's so many 501c3s. It makes
me wonder,
>> are they all charitable? Are they
feeding for tax exemptions? You know,
would you say this is a great place to
move to for a young family? If I have a
kid or a wife, a young wife.
>> Okay.
>> Everyone,
>> not just the uh the Jews.
>> My best friends are those.
>> Okay. Respect. What do we have here? We
have a
>> Hey, it was good to meet you.
>> You see that?
>> I I saw it.
>> What is the name of that organization
once again?
>> Hot. Okay. Good to meet you, man. See
you later. And we have Hatzola um up
here to help the community.
>> Yeah. This guy doesn't even know what
the First Amendment is.
>> We're visiting with an
>> Don't be a joker, bro. Come on.
>> Yeah.
>> Tyler.
>> Yes. Come over here. Come over here.
[laughter]
Let me I need to get you like a second
number zone. What's your Instagram? You
have Facebook? No, I don't.
>> Look at these. Hundreds. Hundreds. My
phone numbers have been leaked.
>> You're a little child. Give me a number.
I promise you.
>> Why are you insulting?
>> I'm not insulting people.
>> You're just insulting.
>> Come on. I'm a little child.
>> Give me a number. I promise you I'll
make a word.
By the way, this is a
trouble in the second. Mai,
why are you insulting?
>> All right, look. Give me your email.
Give me your email. Give me your email.
>> Gave you my number.
>> All right, Hans. And what was your first
name?
>> Motion.
>> We're going to do some big stuff.
>> You're afraid. I think
>> I don't even I don't even know what's
going on. Oh man, these guys are next
level. I feel like I got off on an alien
planet. And you might be wondering
the Jews. What is Hatzola? And how are
they able to blast through red lights
like that?
>> It's like it's like like a community
watch, but they think they they think
they they are cops. If you notice, they
had their lights on and they just ran a
red light just like a police officer
would do. No, no uniform.
>> Emergency
uniform. Nine.
>> The the Jewish uniform on white pants
and and
organization.
Okay.
Yeah.
>> Yeah.
>> You [music] in a police car is what it
looked like, but he's not a police
officer. And he's blasting through the
lights like he is a cop. There's a
Hotzola um billboard right there, Mike.
What What is that for?
>> I I mean, you're asking me questions I
don't know if I have the answers to.
Why? Because once again because there's
competing has Tollola. You have
competing groups of of these
>> of a nonprofit volunteer emergency
service.
>> Yes. [music] It sounds like a business,
right?
>> But literally every organization out
here is a taxexempt 501c3. If you dig
through the filing, go on
propublica.com, you'll be surprised to
realize everything basically is a
taxexempt 501c3.
>> Yes. Cuz it's all through the religions.
What are your concerns? Why are we
interviewing you?
>> Exactly.
right
meaning.
So I think I echo the concerns of of
many non-religious people in in my area
and the the biggest concern is how one
group of people gets [music] to act that
is separate segregated from everybody
else
>> and that group being Jews.
>> Yes, Jews. Exactly. Yeah. 100%. And but
you know what it's you it's in my area
it's Jews. In other areas like you
obviously see the Somalian right in
Minnesota you have there's the things
that are happening all over the area.
But yes, in my particular area it is
Jews and it's Jews that are expanding
their territory.
>> Okay. So, my name is Jenna Galarsa. I've
lived in uh Jackson for approximately
Jenna Galarza. I've lived in uh Jackson
for approximately 23 years. I want to
say it really started affecting me when
I had my children. I have twins. They're
20 [music] now. An assimilation
perspective. you want to be able to
teach your children how to talk to other
children and, you know, be part of other
cultures. And that was when it really
started hitting me.
>> What? Sorry.
[laughter] Are you for real? I'm so
sorry.
Okay. You,
>> you know, let's say if I would go to a
store which was closer to Lakewood, you
know, I'm pushing a double stroller, I
have twins, and I noticed that nobody
would hold the door open for you.
>> Oh, no way.
Yeah, at one point by the way
to be nice.
Thank you
bricks.
literally got slammed on my twin
stroller and I was just like whoa. At
that point um there wasn't
>> at that point the midnight documentary
at that point
>> lot of Orthodox living in Jackson but
they were coming to our parks a lot and
they would come to the parks bus loads
vans full and the park would just get
turned upside down. I mean we're talking
about diapers being changed anywhere and
being thrown on the floor. We're talking
about children literally urinating in
public and absolutely not interacting
with your children.
[laughter]
All right.
Like the Jews in this
lamp. Yeah.
Got on in any any community.
Okay.
But okay.
>> At that time if it was a minion, there
was 10 men. Not a big deal. But then you
started to notice [music] that it was no
longer just 10 people. It was 20 people
and 30 people. just completely changing
the feel, the character, the comfort
that you once had in your neighborhood
is no longer there.
>> And another source of conflict is the
Jewish community using residential homes
as places of worship, often without
approval from the Jackson Planning
Board.
view the town.
Okay. Tons of outside traffic and
destroying the peaceful quality of the
neighborhood.
>> We can have the even where if you work
in an office and there's 10 Jewish men
there, you can just take a conference
room for 10 minutes. We don't need like
a a formal like church. I've prayed in
parking lots with, you know, we're we're
going somewhere and there's get other
guys together and um
>> but if you're living in a residential
neighborhood and this house becomes like
a revolving door of people,
>> he's an ex Jew coming in and praying
constantly parking their cars, I imagine
there's some quality of life concerns,
right? [music] Increase in traffic and
the streets being covered with cars and
people all over the place or what?
>> I don't think that that's what really
happened, but
>> but maybe on like the Sabbath, but
you'll have any sites that probably say
that because they they don't like us.
They don't want us.
By the way,
I don't know,
but
[music]
>> this home used to be probably about 1100
square f feet.
>> Exactly. Muk, I live near a church.
Every Sunday, all the streets are parked
with hundreds of cars causing traffic as
well.
This is church.
>> It does have a new owner. Okay.
>> Apparently, they did get uh permits to
expand on their house. Um, most of the
permits are are just, you know, kind of
just given. Nothing is really followed
through. Okay. This home will be being
used for a full out [music] temple.
>> Temple.
>> Yeah. Well, that means that they're
going to be praying in this home several
times a day. Probably staying over on
>> No. Okay.
>> Friday nights until Saturdays. As you
could see, there's no
>> by the way Facebook
service
here. This is going to affect every
person that lives [music] here. And the
other problem that I have with this and
that I think should be looked into is
there's definitely funding going to
these places.
>> [music]
>> If I was a concerned neighbor and I
said, "Hey, they're building a temple.
What the heck?
Well, what might happen next?
>> Uh, you would probably um be um called
an anti-semite. Um you know, they will
make your life miserable. Nobody wants
to live across the street life
miserable. Deepest miserable
miserable
>> synagogue. It it is a tactic of getting
people to sell their homes and they will
have buyers for them.
>> And you see this and then you watch
buildings get built before they're
approved. They build and ask permission
later. And then if they even don't get
permission, they sue and they win for
permission. So when you have all these
things where they're creating hatred,
they create the double standard. They
create the animosity between two groups.
And when I say they, I mean governments
and people that buy off politicians to
make favorable laws cuz a lot of the
[ __ ] they do is legal because they
bought the politicians to make it legal.
Do you think residents in Jackson who do
not want Jackson to be majority Jewish
or to look, feel, and sound like
Lakewood? Do you think that is
anti-Semitic? Well, people have a um
because of
>> a right to freedom of speech and freedom
[music] of their opinion, even if
they're going to be bigoted.
>> Do you think that's bigoted though,
right? Cuz I imagine you don't want this
place to be uh Islamic
>> only because the radical Islamists want
to kill us. Other than that, I have no
problem.
>> And they're radical Jews and they're
radical Christians, right?
But the radical Jews will be radical
Islam.
>> Orthodox Jews are radical Jews. They
want to hurt people.
>> Many people could argue there are
distinct [music] sects of Judaism that
are margin. I'm just saying you wouldn't
want Lakewood to become predominantly
Muslim. Radicalism aside though, right?
Right.
>> Just like Jackson residents don't want
it to be predominantly Jewish.
>> Yeah.
the Muslims in
the Muslims in Michigan
community. So if a Muslim if a Muslim
wants to buy a house here and pay way
more than what the house would sell
outside of our community because of the
fact that the prices go up when we we
come in, they're free to do it and not
>> Yeah. But I just don't think it's
bigoted for you to not want it to be
predominantly Muslim. Why why would you?
You're Jewish. So Jackson Strong is kind
of like a unofficial organization that I
had started when
>> oh Jackson you're strong Facebook
>> I saw everything turning I I just was
very uh vocal on social media and I
decided to uh organize
lump in the back
>> certain people really wanted to get
involved. There were a few of us that,
you know, we would have uh letterw
writing campaigns making a lot of calls
to county officials, local officials,
and state officials trying to find out
what ordinances could be created.
>> Thank you for liking the video. I
appreciate it.
>> What we could do to help prevent a
fullout turnover. A sign would say
Jackson Strong, don't sell. Meaning, if
a new neighbor moves in next to you,
don't run, don't sell. Why would you
move, stay strong, right?
>> Would they sell? they would sell because
it just got too much and [music] anytime
you would say anything about it, you
were anti-Semitic. I mean, there were
Facebook pages created just to slander
me. Um, you know, they would
manipulate pictures of me. Um, they
would put, you know, Russian hats on me,
a Hitler mustache. You know, these were
things that were even coming out of
Israel. At one point there was a a post
where, you know, somebody had said that,
you know, she needs to have an ice pick
in her eye, you know, and and something
like that. I did go to the prosecutor's
office and my Jackson Strong page was
taken down for no good reason at all. It
was just taken down. [music] There was a
page rise up Ocean County, which was a
pretty important part of everything that
was happening. That page was taken.
This is the news
down also. However, it was hijacked. So
when our page was taken down just for
stating the facts, when you're bringing
out the Caporus incidents, when they're
cutting the necks of the chickens and
blood is pouring through the streets and
then you're talking about
>> blood is pouring, okay,
>> and you're posting videos and all of a
sudden your Facebook page gets taken
down only to be replaced with a complete
anti-goyam harassment page and you could
report that page over and over and you
could have a campaign of people
reporting that page yet that page
remained app.
>> Do you want Lakewood to be
>> perfectly Muslim? Just you personally?
>> No.
>> And why?
>> Because it's a they don't want to kill
you.
>> I'm I'm fine with people moving in. But
to have Jewish schools, we have to have
a critical mass of Jews here to support
Jewish schools. To have kosher grocery
stores, supermarkets. We have to have a
critical mass of Orthodox Jews here to
support kosher supermarkets. By the way,
>> so using that logic, why anyone in
Jackson want Jackson to have more and
more Jews move? You're arguing there
needs to be a critical mass for
>> why. How are we infringing on their
right on their ability to do whatever
they want?
>> I'm not saying you are, but why would
they want Why would they want that? Why
would it be bigoted?
>> They don't have to want or not want if
somebody's selling their house to an
Orthodox Jew, the Orthodox Jew is
allowed to buy the house.
>> Sure, but I'm talking about the people
who are not selling their houses to
Orthodox Jews.
>> Then they have the right to do that.
>> Of course, but that doesn't make them a
bigot to not want it. It doesn't mean
they're hate.
finish the alakashes back and forth to
amo. It doesn't mean they hate you.
>> What is it their lifestyle that we're
going to change?
>> All right. So, we could start with the
traffic um infrastructure wise, [music]
they're just throwing up these
insulting. whatever
the traffic
>> ginormous structures. They tend to have
basement apartments also, so they'll
rent those out. Right now, there is
probably upwards 2 to 3,000 homes that
have been bought and are just being
rented out right now by the Orthodox
community that they will move in when
they're ready to move into them. There's
been a problem with light pollution.
Now, we're seeing just LED lights
everywhere. You know, there's a lot of
issues. And then let's just talk about
>> I don't [laughter]
>> the thing that breaks my heart more than
anything which is the school system. So
what's happening is our our music
>> board of education is going bankrupt
between the formula in the the state
giving all of the money
>> to the poor communities which has been
proven to not work. We're losing that
kind of funding but we're being depleted
from the busing. We are required by
state law to provide busing to all the p
the private school students. Why are we
paying for busing for schools that are
not teaching a standard curriculum? If
80% or 90% of their curriculum is
religious studies, why [music]
are the taxpayers paying for that
busing? And then to add insult to
injury, we have recently sold two of our
schools and they have been boughten by
the Orthodox community.
>> Who are you, Chris? I am a councilman in
Jackson, New Jersey.
>> And what are we in front of right now?
>> Uh we're in front of the former Sylvia
Rosenau school. Uh the school was
unfortunately shut down uh due to budget
issues in Jackson. Uh it was purchased
by a private school.
>> Okay. So this is a private um Jewish
only school right now.
>> Yes. As the [music] state cuts our
funding, uh we continue spending more
and more public money on private schools
and it's kind of creating the perfect
storm that's destroying our public
education system. So all of the school
systems are completely strained by the
influence of the Jewish non-
studentents. They don't even use the
public school system. But yet it costs
the public school system a lot of money.
>> Tax we pay the full school taxes to
support the public schools and for busy
and the only thing that we get to use is
busing. [music]
>> You take Jackson Township, their pass
through budget was nothing in like 2017.
What pass through laws are the federal
state laws where it says that this the
school system has to pay for the busing
of private school students. The more
people that moved into Jackson, they go
to school in Lakewood. So no
>> my be watching it.
>> Jackson has to bus their kids to
Lakewood. Now they don't bus non-Jewish
students. They have segregated busing.
So you have girls bus, boys bus. It cost
the towns millions and millions of
dollars while at the same time it
decreases the enrollment that they have.
So when the the enrollment decreased,
couple that with a really [ __ ] for
school funding formula in New Jersey,
>> the towns spend way more money and they
get way less in return.
>> And now in a modern day and time, who
thinks it's okay to separate boys and
girls, not allowing them to be together,
not allowing them to go to school
together?
[snorts]
Okay.
>> Same bus. And because of a religious
practice, you're forcing the public to
pay extra money for things like that. We
have to send
whatever children to religious schools
because of the values that are taught in
the secular schools. If there are
population changes, schools consolidate.
And we're not the first place that
that's happened, nor the last place.
>> The Jewish community is extremely
racist. Could you imagine if I said that
my children could not play with
somebody's children because they were
black? [music]
What a different conversation.
black.
>> Why is it okay?
>> We only eat kosher food. If our kids
play in a in a non non-religious [music]
Jews home, they might be given
non-cooser food to eat. Also, we
generally don't have televisions in our
home and don't want to bring the secular
values of of homosexuality,
of uh adultery, theft, of um cursing. I
can go on and on. We don't want to bring
this into our society. The Orthodox Jews
are paying full property tax, which is
how the schools are funded. And we don't
get the benefit of the school building,
the school teachers. So, we have to also
pay for private education. So, they're
getting our money and we're getting
nothing for it.
>> Your funding is going to go down. You're
going to have to make cuts. You're going
to have to keep closing schools. They
just shut down um another big
>> gender separation, LED issues, diapers
in parks.
Exactly. Real issues although
school which is going to be converted
into it might be one of the world's
largest yeshivas right here in town.
Let's be real. New Jersey state is
essentially a criminal organization
because everything they do is for some
type of special interest for somebody to
benefit somehow. They take a house. They
get that house built for a public mikvah
only for Jewish people, right? So they
say it's for the public, but it's not
>> a mikvah
>> for a a like private group of people.
The house is now a 501c religious
organization, so it doesn't pay taxes.
So the town loses the tax money.
>> And then like in this case, that mikvah
was being built before it was even
approved. So everyone sees that.
>> Uh this is going to be a mikvah, which
is a religious bath house
>> where women get purified.
>> Correct.
>> After their periods.
>> Uh yes. And it it prepares them for
their childbearing time.
>> Sex.
>> Yes.
>> Okay.
>> Yeah.
>> It's little things like this. When they
get in an area, they put what they need,
their special needs. It doesn't benefit
the community. Anything that they put,
it benefits only them.
>> So, this is a um a house of worship. A
>> This has been operating now probably for
about six or seven years. Um, this is
one of the ones that we first realized
was non-owner occupied. Now,
>> meaning
>> meaning that you have a better better
chance of not having issues if you live
in the home and you have of half prayer,
but [music] you know, nobody was living
in this home.
>> You know, generally, you should have to
get the proper permits and everything.
But, you know, our town has been very
accommodating uh for bad behavior. As
you could see, they did install a light
for them here
>> so they could safely pull in and out and
cross the street. And that's a symptom
of the increased traffic into this
location. Right. A light just for this
house.
>> Correct. Just for this is this is zone
residential.
>> As I told you, we have to be together
for schools, for [music] synagogues, for
kosher food. So, we're going to you're
going to start buying the next block
over. It happens to be Jackson or and
Tom's River. Um, now it's going into
Howell. Um because, you know, we're
having lots of children and thank God
we're having lots of children. Thank god
they're most almost all of them stay
religious get married early and having
children and community is just growing
and growing. So in Jackson they passed
regulations against
>> I'm in it
gift membership
Joseph Falawitz
that's very nice
Joseph is a fan
>> orthodox Jews and only that they were
harassing us let me give you an example
we pray three times a day morning
afternoon and evening so Jackson they
they were very unprofessional very
amateur-ish so they had their um code
enforcement department counting the
number of Jews on the street and they
left the emails on their Jackson
Township email system. So when
litigation ensued, it came out in
discovery. So they say, "I see three
men, three men wearing the garb carrying
Bibles going into this house and the
inspectors would actually go onto the
property and peer into the window to see
if we were praying."
>> Okay. So the house was zoned
residentially and it is being used as a
house of worship.
>> No, that you could just
So
whatever.
Let's talk.
The guy owns the house. He can just go
in there and pray. We do it all the
time. Just like, you know, when I have
the Super Bowl.
>> I don't have only content for members.
Nope.
because it's all about us
to donate and to subscribe, like all
that stuff
here. I have a, you know, 50 people
here.
>> In contrast to the Super Bowl, how often
does a congregation here? Is it every
week?
>> Oh, no. We we we pray we pray three
times a day. No,
>> three times a day versus once a year
though, right? That's an important
distinction.
>> Oh, I'm just saying. But every week they
could have a during football season they
people have get people over watching
football and they could have 30 people
in the house watching football, right?
Anybody in American could do that and
they're not cited for a violation?
>> You don't think they would have been
treated the same if it were a mosque or
a church.
>> There are Christian groups and that they
they were not harassed like we were.
>> So you guys were singled out in your
opinion?
>> Yeah. Oh, for sure.
>> What happened in Jackson? What
anti-semitic laws is he referring to in
his opinion? So it's it's everybody is
reacting in their own way zoning lawwise
to try to fight what what they do. And
what that is is like buying corner lots
that are unbuildable using the Arl Loopa
laws to build on them. So what happened
was there was a little bit of a rush to
stop Lakewood I would say about 2010ish
where you saw different towns making
different zoning laws. Brick did its own
little thing. Tightened up zoning laws
in certain areas and they did it in a
way where it wasn't pointing out one
religion. Jackson kind of did it in a
way where they did point out one
>> day.
But what does that mean?
>> So it's like 199
y13.
>> They tried stopping the shs in the
middle in the middle of the houses. But
what they did was they worded it and
they said things as they were doing like
the the people on the boards were saying
stupid [ __ ] during the discussion that
were anti-semitic basically to give them
fuel to come in and say you guys are
making anti-Semitic laws. Okay. It
wasn't necessarily what they were trying
to do. It was how they were trying to do
it. Now the the council president up
there Morai Bernstein who was a part of
it. You have that guy Richie Richie
Roberts. They got the DOJ to do an
investigation. They they sued under R.
Lupa and they had the DOJ do an
investigation into him. They hammered
Jackson. So now it's like Jackson is
castrated and cannot even fight it
anymore because they got told by the
federal government and the state
government they get to do whatever the
hell they want. So now that's why you're
seeing the the synagogues going up in
single family or multiple family big
houses $900,000 houses. We lost the
lawsuit on this on this property that
was too small of a property on build on
the buildable lot. The people that came
out to that meeting made this type of
comment. This was deemed anti-Semitic.
This is a family neighborhood. We like
to keep it a family neighborhood.
Anti-Semitic. Uh, this is what the judge
quote cited as anti-semitic. Are you
going to be renting this house or are
you going to be living in it?
Anti-Semitic. What type of family would
want to live on this type of lot? Anti
mi. Thank you. Thank you. I appreciate
and thank you. Thank you so much.
This heist a fan fans.
That's how petty it gets. Beginning 10
years ago, they called you an
anti-semite for outlining all of these
points. Were you wrong?
>> I was right. There are plenty of county
roads in Jackson. Nobody's saying that
you cannot put your house of worship on
those county roads where you could put a
proper parking lot and you could have
proper traffic. So, why are we dealing
with houses of worship within walking
distance that could be on main roads?
Air roofs are up. Why instead are we
putting them smack in the middle of
residential areas? Because it's a it's
another way to get people out of there.
It's another way to create a complete
religious enclave.
>> And this all begs the question, does the
Jewish community living in peace come at
a direct cost of the non-Jews also
trying to live in peace? Can the two
groups get along? I toured a mostly all
Jew neighborhood in Lakewood to
understand Jennifer's
$20.
That's $20.
Do you see that?
>> Frustration a bit more what she sees as
Jackson's seemingly unavoidable future.
Where we at, Jenna?
>> Thank you. Thank We are in uh Westgate,
aka Kosher West, aka the Little Tikes
Graveyard.
>> I'm noticing lots of toys in the lawn,
car seat that may not be getting used,
tons of minivans, many children, many
families, full trash cans, abandoned
vehicles.
>> This is so like there's no way.
There is no way they
likes us off of a video and they asked
million subscribers.
Okay.
Kick.
>> I'm noticing lots of toys in the lawn.
Car seats.
>> Tons of minivans. Many children. Many
families, full trash cans, abandoned
vehicles, a lot going on here.
>> Correct. Uh, this is on the border of
Jackson. Um, and unfortunately, I see
this as being Jackson's future if we
don't get a hold of things.
>> Let's go for a walk. How large are the
families out here?
>> Let's go for a walk.
Let's go for a walk. Let's see.
>> Um, again, you know, anywhere from 6 to
12 children.
>> This is all orthodox shoes for the most
part.
>> This is predominantly probably 99.9%
uh.9. And the Andra is the pity
>> religious.
>> Could I buy a home here?
>> I don't believe you could.
>> Obviously, legally, according to the
Fair Housing Act, it's illegal for them
to discriminate against me, but
practically speaking, could I buy a
home?
>> No. No. This community is allowed to
police themselves. You [music] know
there
>> could I buy a home here?
The New York Times, the Wall Street
Journal.
Yeah.
>> Allowed to do what they want to do. Um
rules don't apply. Yeah. The trash cans.
We have a problem now in Jackson with
rats which we've never had before. It's
definitely a concern.
>> It's a complete rel re religious
enclave. Yes.
>> And this bus right here is paid for by a
lake where the rats came up from the
open garbages taxpayer. Correct.
>> Correct.
>> We're we're walking. We're trying to
walk. You got
>> Yes. Yes. Call the cops.
>> Here it's strictly about religion.
Nothing else.
>> Like it. Perfect. Perfect. these men
going to Yeshiva until they're 35 years
old. They're not producing college
students. They're not producing people
that are going to go and benefit the
greater good of our society.
>> It's sort of an investment
>> the music in the background
>> in a insulated uh one-way economy.
>> Correct. Without anybody contributing.
>> How are you? Oh, we're filming a little
documentary.
>> Uh yeah, for YouTube. Would you like to
say hi?
>> I actually recognize your face.
>> I'm infamous. That's me.
>> Yes.
>> Yes. It's good to meet you. How are you?
>> Uh I actually can't take I'm sorry.
>> No worries. It's good to meet you. Yeah.
>> Yeah.
>> We're just walking around talking.
>> Cool. Well, I hope it's interesting.
>> Thank you so much. Yeah.
>> Like not everybody's the same.
>> This is true. I'm noticing a strong
spectrum here of uh even orthodoxy,
right?
>> Yeah. Even within orthodox.
>> So, I got to say very refreshing. Sweet
woman. Say hi. Good luck.
>> You know, that's the that's the funny
thing about it. I mean a lot of the
women are very nice and very welcoming
>> and you know you can have a conversation
with them. Um but at the end of the day
they will they can't be your friend.
>> No parking.
So friends,
friends, Facebook friends,
look at that.
They don't want to live amongst us. They
don't want to live with us. They just
want to live and exist and not have us
be part of their lives. I mean, we've
had people stand out
for the community. We love the
community.
Community, the church guy, the church
up at our council meeting in Jackson and
say, "I'm sorry. We cannot let our
children play with your children." For
the Orthodox community, the reason
>> we choose sometimes to live with
ourselves is because we are as a culture
very careful with the influences our
children have.
>> Yeah, I agree with that.
>> My children don't know about they don't
have the access to YouTube, Tik Tok,
Instagram, any of these things. And part
of that safety is that after school, all
of us as neighbors share those same
values and rules and
>> restrictions.
This is perfect
and tic because they
>> about unity. It's about assimilation.
It's about, you know, the American
culture. And that's what we're losing.
>> Can the Jews
assimilation? It's about, you know,
>> and [music] restrictions.
>> It's about unity. It's about
assimilation. It's about, you know, the
American culture. And that's what we're
losing. kept me losing
[sighs]
and the Jews and the Gentiles get along.
>> Absolutely. We We don't have
>> You're calling for unity.
>> Absolutely. I also understand.
Yeah. Unity.
A lot of unity.
Unity.
Um
unity
is unity is unity
and that this is their way of thinking.
This is how [music] they are trained
instead of
>> how they were brought up.
>> We're happy for them to stay. We don't
like push them out. We had a neighbor
Wheeler right across the street over one
house. We like we were sorry to see them
go. Um is it bad to that you have a
house that's worth $300,000 and someone
says, "I really want to live in this
neighborhood. I'll give you 600,000 for
it."
>> I think it's great if you're trying to
sell your house.
>> Okay. And if he doesn't doesn't have to
like this woman, she didn't have to sell
her house.
>> Yeah. I think there's an argument in
some instances of people who have
claimed that they've been pressured,
harassed, or intimidated to sell their
house.
>> So, it's not intimidation. It only could
be that too many people are knocking on
their door asking, "Do you want to sell
your house?"
>> Okay. So, well, there's blockbusting.
You know, that's when they approach you
to sell your house, which is a level of
harassment. There's intimidation telling
you that, you know, your decorations are
not Yiddish or approaching you and
asking you when are you moving? You
know, you could have a child who's four
or 5 years old being your neighbor and
you could be very nice to that child and
one day they will just come out and say
to you, "When are you leaving?" Well,
that's learned behavior. They're hearing
that, right?
Elba friends unity idea. There's rows of
housing. You saw it yesterday. Four,
five, six cars per per place. Tight,
super tight houses.
>> The few people that I've spoken to, a
lot of it stems from fear and their loss
of their [clears throat] way of life,
right? I don't think it stems from
hatred for what the video. Yeah.
>> So, some hated and some feared a change
in in their in [clears throat] their
neighborhood. These people are moving in
that don't look like them that you know
seem different and perfect
don't look like them that you know seem
different
people are moving in that don't look
like them that you know seem different
and um I can understand there are laws
about discrimination and you know people
bought homes legally because the
non-Jews [music] that lived there made a
lot of money off the Jews in selling the
home.
>> Well, look at, you know, Little Italy.
>> I think
>> and look at China.
>> I think um
I think uh the the the Lakewood people
would fire
the cup.
Okay.
Say whatever you want because
>> town in New York. And how come it was
okay for them to live amongst
themselves? The key there is
assimilation. Their children went to
public schools. They worked in the
public sector. They invited anybody who
wanted to come into their community.
They provided for them in their
community. Huge difference there. This
is not a welcoming community. This is
not somebody who's saying we're
>> so go.
Yes. Go.
We're going to build this sh. Come on
in. We want to teach you a little bit
about our religion and our beliefs, but
we want to involve you in it. And this
has been a topic that I have brought up
at several council meetings when
community.
Okay.
>> Um there have been times when there's
been a project or something that they
wanted to approve and we were try to
trying to kind of you know bring it to
people's attention that this project is
not going to benefit the community as a
greater good. The Jewish community is
extremely racist and I would go as far
from the video
>> to say as the Jackson government should
be ashamed of themselves.
>> Beautiful traffic in under
>> what?
>> Welcome. Welcome.
>> Is that a strategic call?
>> I think so.
>> I'm not sure what the strategy is.
Okay. Dry the cup
was
dry.
anti-semitism.
So
ambassador home
business
at the same time.
Got to say hi. Hello.
All right. So, he's just honking. I'm
not sure what [snorts] the strategy is.
How are you?
>> So, I get a five of the leasing cuz I
got the miles.
>> I came down and waved and said hi. We're
going to see how long he's just going to
remain honking.
>> How are you doing? Uh,
>> he's going to break his horn.
>> He's not going to
>> This guy uh does have a sense of humor,
which I can appreciate.
>> That honk was promised to him. Um h
they comment. Yeah.
Anyway, funny.
Um,
I think I'm going to sue his kids in
there. He's doing that. [laughter] What?
Man, I think this guy actually might be
immensely challenged. So, we're going to
give him a break. So, let's pop mentally
challenged.
subscribers. Whatever
instead of challenge
and whatever
[ __ ]
can talk all the the nicities we want.
There is hostility.
>> Oh yeah. But you know what? That's not
going to happen walking down our
streets.
>> But as we were trying to escape and Russ
bye years from the Jews honking at us
from all directions, I spotted these
dudes tracking us. Turns out I had
summoned the Shamre Police, the Jewish
community's internal police force that
receives both federal funding and
township funding. You guys want to be
interviewed?
>> No.
>> Okay, respect. Are we in the heart of
Lakewood right now?
>> What are you going for? Uh, I'm just
curious.
>> All right, but he's pushing it. What's
up? You
>> want to interview?
>> You want to do an interview?
>> Okay.
>> I don't think it was nice how you
portrayed the Jewish people. And
>> what are we talking about? What's the
context real quick? What's
I don't know. So,
thanks.
>> Are we talking about Curious Joel? Yes.
>> Don't I just don't think it was you were
trying to portray. I think you just came
in with a more of what [music] you had a
picture in your head trying.
>> What do you think I got wrong? What do
you think was mis mis uh represented?
Like what's I'm just trying to learn
what what do you actually think I got
wrong about it.
>> I just think there was agenda.
>> You got to elaborate a little bit
though. You know
>> what was what was the front of the
YouTube page posted as? What was the
>> um inside the New York town invaded by
welfare addicted Jews?
>> Thank you. You answer the question.
>> Was I wrong though?
>> I actually think it's not true. But
again, you you say whatever you want.
It's not welfare addicted. It's this is
what it is.
>> Welfare reliance, welfare dependent.
What would be a better
>> program? Don't have it. All right. What
do you
comuing
that I have an obligation as a taxpayer
to fund you and how many kids you want
to have? If you want to have 30 kids,
that's just how it is. It's it's arguing
that if the law is set up to have
certain criteria for people and it's
according to children, then people who
qualify for it, legally qualify for it
with no fraud at all, are entitled to
get it.
>> And you'll give me the credit of
acknowledging I never said that was
fraudulent.
>> Yes, that's right.
>> I think it's exploitative by nature,
though. Yeah. Why don't you throw all
your money at them and and [music] help
sustain their lifestyle? Why do I have
to take a cut of my paycheck to go
towards Curious Shoel's insulated acidic
Jewish community that has nothing to do
with me? I'll never
right
>> anything out of there's zero upside for
for them to exist for me
>> anyways we have the government makes
criteria for getting financial aid and
if someone qualifies
[sighs and gasps]
>> um
>> that criteria I'm not sure why you when
the Jew does it, you're calling it
exploitive or taking advantage, but you
don't say that to all the other people
and populouses that don't have it.
>> Well, I've never seen anything of this
scale to where the families are this
large and it's sort of baked into their
strategy of child.
>> Oh, so are you against having children,
having a lot of children?
>> I'm pro children. That's great. I think
you should be able to afford it. And I
want to make an important distinction
between the Amish, let's say, and the
Hidic Jews and Curious Joelle. You tell
me what's the difference.
>> Oh, there's tons of differences.
>> Tons of differences. Most importantly,
as it relates to finance though, the
Amish pay for themselves. They're
self-sustaining. They're not relying on
welfare programs
funded by the taxpayer.
>> I think I heard in your video there's
what 40,000 people in curious Joel.
44,000 rapidly growing
>> and you spoke to 20 people out on the
street.
>> Sure. Perhaps an insufficient size
>> and and who obviously are not the ones
working because they're working. They
wouldn't have been on the street. They'd
be working.
>> Sure. But it belies a pretty interesting
question, right? How do they afford to
raise such large families? How do they
afford [music] to study full-time?
>> First, I have to bifrocate your
question.
>> There's two groups. One is the ones who
are learning full-time, and the others
are the ones that are working. Forum,
almost all of them go out to work.
However, when they first get married,
for the first 2 or 3 years, they'll
learn Torah full-time. The wife will
work. They don't have any children yet
or maybe they have one kid or two kid
children. And and then they'll get help
from their family. And if their income
qualifies, which it probably does, for
financial aid, they'll get financial
aid.
>> Okay, we [music] got this guy following
us. We're playing games now. We got the
security van rolling on us as we roll on
them. Got one, two, three police. Surely
there's no conflict of interest we're
about to experience. I wonder what law
they're going to claim I violated. How
you doing? My name's Tyler. How are you,
>> Josh? Man,
>> good to meet you, Josh.
>> What's going on?
>> I don't know. We're just getting
stocked.
>> Yeah,
>> low key. Yeah,
>> you look familiar, bro. My name is Tyler
Olivera. We're filming a little YouTube
video. That's me. Yeah.
>> So, what are you filming on here?
>> Uh documentary on Lakewood, surrounding
towns. Am I being detained? Is there a
probable cause for this interaction?
What's going on?
>> We just got a concern saying that you're
walking up to people asking them
questions, stuff like that.
>> Luckily, this is America and that is the
First Amendment, right? It's beautiful.
And I get you're doing your job.
>> Call us. We got to come out here, right?
See what you guys doing? Like a
documentary?
>> Exactly. Just a little documentary right
now. Hey, how you guys doing?
>> We're doing good. What about you?
>> You guys want to say what's up?
>> What's up? What's up?
>> Okay. Well, it was good to meet you
guys. I know you guys got more important
things to do, but good to meet you guys.
>> Good to meet you. Thanks for keeping
everyone safe. Thank you.
>> I'm part of Lake Charmer, which is uh
>> Yeah.
>> public public uh safety.
>> Yeah.
>> And we got multiple calls. The main
reason why PD got calls.
>> Okay.
>> Um so that's it. We're just going to
follow you around. We're going to let
everybody know that they don't have to
talk to you. With the Shaman police on
our back, it felt like we were being
policed by a secondary form of law
enforcement that seemed to exclusively
defend the interest of the Jewish
community. Speaking of double standards,
let's talk about politics. I
>> violence
for the
and violence for the [ __ ]
as a mean organization as a secondary
whateverly
believe that the tactics within this
community I would liken it to organized
crime. We have an ultraorththodox person
as our council president. You know, you
can't think that there's not going to be
uh things happening and and and rules
and laws created to make his community
stronger and better.
>> When do you eventually become involved
in Jackson politics? Let's say you live
in Lakewood. You don't even live in
Jackson. Why do you even get involved?
>> What happened was this act of
discrimination against the Orthodox Jews
in Jackson [music]
was going on for about a year. And I had
people calling me from Jackson with like
anonymous numbers, Orthodox Jews. They
were afraid for their safety. Uh that,
you know, weren't generally not violent
people. If we have to defend ourselves,
we will. And I think a substantial
number of people in Lakewood now own
guns.
>> Why?
>> They became fearful.
>> Oh yes. Because the rise of
anti-semitism and the attacks on Jews.
After about a year of them calling me
and calling me, I couldn't I really
couldn't take it anymore. They're
suffering.
>> Why did you topple the government? I
told you.
>> How did you do it with ease?
>> Oh, it was not with ease. It was
tremendous amount of work. Agent [music]
in in Manhattan trying to get the
stories out to the press and then I met
with this political
>> mastermind. Thank you.
>> Like I said, we ran senatorial
campaigns. We got the we got the cell
phone numbers of all the people in
Jackson and [music] we planned a text.
We started a website called families for
forjackjustice.org.
By the way, I've since abandoned the
website. anti-semites took it over. It's
like when the Republican club, which was
vehemently anti-Semitic and run by the
by the mayor of Jackson, uh had a US
Senate candidate, Republican C there for
their meeting. I had spies inside the
organization, non-Jews, who were telling
me what was going on. So, the Republican
club, they had their their Senate
senatorial candidate uh about to speak.
We then texted to everyone in Jackson 5
minutes before he spoke. Here's this new
website exposing the religious
discrimination. I had it populated with
all kinds of information statements. The
the mayor of Jackson had been voice
recorded not by me but was sent to me
where he was asked by the chairman of
the Ocean County Republican party if
these were churches would we would we be
opposing them? He said absolutely not.
It was discrimination against Jews. They
were going crazy with all the things I
was doing, putting pressure on them.
There was fighting going on among the
elected political people. Resignations
had started and then then I put out the
the ad on Fox News. New developments in
that deadly attack in New Jersey.
Surveillance video shows they clearly
[music] targeted that Jewish market.
There's a synagogue located next door.
>> There is no question that this is a hate
crime.
>> Anti-semitism is on the rise and now
it's coming from Jackson Township's
government. Elected officials in Jackson
have passed [music] ordinances targeting
Orthodox Jewish families. Exposed
township emails show [music] officials
surveilling religious Jewish families,
praying in their homes. They even took
revenge on a decorated veteran [music]
who testified against their
anti-semitism. Jackson officials are
intimidating Jewish families and they
admit it.
>> If these were charges, would we be
fighting them? Absolutely not.
>> Shameful. This isn't America. put on the
the neighbor the cable network provider
for that area. In the meantime, I had
two different calls with the White
House. I know you want to ask me a
thousand questions. I will answer
nothing more than that.
>> Okay. So,
>> because
[laughter]
to be fair, yeah, the mayor statement
seems pretty damning, right? Him saying,
"I wouldn't do this if you heard that.
You heard that on
the commercial." By the way,
>> it seems discriminatory.
>> By the way, he's one of my best friends
now.
>> Life's long. Here's what happened. More
Orthodox Jews kept moving in because of
the financial and demographic forces I
told you about. And we started to become
a larger part of the electorate. And he
was coming up for election as
re-election as mayor. And he asked
someone if he could come here and
apologize to me. And he came here and he
said when he signed the resolution,
those resolutions, he knew it was a
wrong thing to do. But he said he was
under so much pressure from all the
political types in Jackson and the
people who have constituencies and they
were yelling at me. So he just signed it
and he wants to tell me now that he
regrets [music] doing it and he's going
to work to get rid of those um
regulations. Then that result was the
Orthodox Jewish community embraced him
and we supported him and I became the
largest donor to his re-election
campaign. Wasn't a million.
>> He becomes an ally to the Orthodox
Jewish community. It becomes not bigoted
against us. It's the Jewish vote. It's
it's this is another form of corruption.
Imagine if I said, "Hey,
I'm going to give you this amount of
money and you do this." Okay, you can't
do that. [music] But if I could say,
"Hey, I'm going to deliver you 50,000
votes that are all going to vote for
you." So take Jack Chitarelli in New
Jersey. They were bragging that all of
the Vlads got together, all the Jewish
Vlads got together and were voting for
Jack Chidarelli. And it did so with like
97%. That voting block doing that now
says like what they do is they take that
and say, "Hey, we got all these votes
and we're going to all vote for you, but
what are you going to do for us?
>> And if you don't vote with us,
[laughter]
>> okay, we're going to take all of these
votes and we're going to put our support
behind somebody else." Yeah, I like it.
The castine
community is with behind
behind the community black vote.
Okay. Well, you're being nice.
It's what they tried doing to Chris
Pollock. I know because I spoke to the
dude who basically said it. They said it
very arrogantly where it was like, "Oh,
we have 6,500 Jewish votes in Jackson.
He is not winning." That's what they
said to me.
>> Yeah, he won.
>> And he didn't just win. He went one won
by a landslide because a lot of people
showed up for him.
>> Okay.
>> And by people, we're talking non-Jewish
voters.
>> Even Jewish voters. He got over 20% of
the Jewish vote. Chris Paul. Yeah. 100%.
>> So, the tides are shifting in Jackson
perhaps.
>> I think there's a group of people that
on both sides that don't like what
certain groups are doing. Remember,
there's a lot of really good Jewish
people that look really bad by these
actions. The main comment that comes
through my feed, no matter what's what
it's about, Jackson brick, whatever,
this town is finished. It's over. I
don't know if you can stop them, and I'm
not saying you can, but that doesn't
mean you don't fight it. That doesn't
mean you don't you don't do what you can
to do it. And you had people like Chris
Pollock that he said, "I'm going to do
it the way of politics."
>> Okay, so Chris, I see these homes being
built. Why are the locals so opposed to
these houses being built? It seems still
pretty peaceful out here. What's going
on? What changes have you noticed?
>> Well, it's becoming rapid changes and
rapid development. Uh you're going to be
seeing a heavy heavy increase in the
population and I don't know if our town
is suited to handle it. Unfortunately,
I've heard from several people that some
developments focus it. Unfortunately,
the population and I don't know if our
town is suited to handle it.
Unfortunately, I've heard from several
people that some developments only
particularly want one group in there.
It's people have gone on gone in there
and asked, "Hey, you know, I'm
interested in these homes." Some of them
have been told it's not for them. What
does that mean?
>> What does that mean? It seems like it's
only for one group and one community.
And
>> who's that group?
>> Uh it seems like it's only for the
Jewish community. I'm gonna be honest.
But when you create a community, you
they have some of them that are adding
shels into it, essentially synagogues
into it. They're fitting the houses to
fit this very specific needs of one
community. Do you think anybody other
than that community is going to move
into there?
>> They technically cannot discriminate
against a non-Jew purchasing a home,
right?
>> No, you cannot discriminate against
anybody buying a home. But they could
just say, "Hey, sorry. You know, we sold
it to someone else."
>> Yes, they can. I've heard people say,
"Oh, we'll put you on the waiting list."
Cuz that's something that's going on.
>> LLC's are out bidding people trying to
buy single family homes.
>> Correct.
>> But you have a group of people that call
themselves God's people. You are a
semi-supreist. You are a white Jewish
supremacist because they're classified
white. They don't want to live as a
community with us. They
friend the blue shirt. You know why?
because it is just
it is just I don't know.
No, no. Um I think when I say they again
I don't mean all of them. I think I
think I mean but I do think I mean the
far majority of them. I think they have
their tight-knit community. I think
their community lives completely
separate than everybody else. They eat
differently. They enjoy different
things. Yes, we may drink
>> but everything is set in a different
way. As you ran for city council, did
the rabbitical order try to buy you off?
>> I don't really have any relationship
with the rabbis, but I have been taking
a meeting with people who said they were
liaons to the rabbis. Uh they went
around touting how many votes they
controlled. They told me pretty much
straight out that they control certain
politicians in town and if I cater to
their community, I might have access to
the block vote.
>> Perfect.
They say they control
>> uh they said they control our mayor and
our council president.
>> After a year I couldn't bear it anymore.
So I got involved. I hired a um a
political campaign group out of
Washington DC that does political
campaigns for Republican senators. I
think they did Ted Cruz. and I wrote a
letter to the mayor of of Jackson
telling him all the things I was going
to do if they wouldn't reverse these
discriminatory laws. In the meantime,
there's another Jewish group called the
Auda that had a lawsuit against Jackson
based on Rupa. That's a religious land
use in institutionalized persons act.
And it says that the municipality, it's
a law, federal law, municipality is not
allowed to discriminate based upon
religion. and in their lawsuit then
showed all the emails from Jackson, all
the things they were doing, conspiring
against and executing to try to make
life miserable for Orthodox Jews there.
>> But you went to work and what happened
next?
>> I went to Washington. I met with Ronald
McDaniel who was the head of the
Republican National Committee and um the
um speaker of the house at the time was
uh Kevin McCarthy. He was actually in
their conference room. So I I met with
both of them, showed them what was going
on. They were shocked. No, I think
there's a lot to learn from the
community. That's why I liked what we
did yesterday. Their tactics benefit
them. They are a solitary mess. They
actually are a community.
>> Yeah.
>> You can't deny it. They are not fighting
over Trump or Biden. They're not
fighting over left or right. They're not
fighting over masked or unmask of the
world.
>> It's it's antimatter, right? It's like
we are fight everyone in our towns.
We're fighting against antimatter. We're
not focused on what actually matters.
We're not picking each other up. We're
not one community. And I'm not talking
about communism or any of that [ __ ] I'm
just talking about caring person. They
they hitchhike. They
>> trust.
>> What other world will you see
hitchhiking in America?
>> That's that's I mean that's a testament
to how high trusting they all are.
>> So there's something to be said about
that. And there's a lot I I would love
to see our kids playing again off of,
you know, uh getting out on bikes and
getting out playing basketball and
football and all of those things. I
would love to see that. I'd love to see
us act a little bit more like that.
>> We need to fight back against the state.
H God, we've had large lawsuits against
us because they tried to keep out this
problem. We've had the Department of
Justice come down on us. Billionaires
connected to the president involved in
all this. What's happening in this
little town in Jersey?
>> People think exactly here in Jackson.
Will that become in other small towns?
>> It's already a problem in all the
surrounding towns.
>> Is the cop going to go?
Okay,
get a shot on the cop. We got the
corrupt police pulling us over for what?
We'll find out. We may be in a corrupt
hell hole.
[screaming]
>> Double cop car.
>> We're getting pulled over. We got double
police. Potentially nothing better to
do. Let's find out. We weren't speeding.
We weren't violating the law from the
best of my understanding. Do
>> you have your driver's license,
registration?
>> What am I being pulled over for?
>> I'll tell you that soon.
>> Is there a probable cause?
>> Yes, there is. We got a call. We got a
call on our phones for a suspicious
person with suspicious about me
>> with video cameras.
>> There's nothing [clears throat]
suspicious about expressing our first
amendment right now.
>> No, you're good.
>> So, what what am I being pulled over
for?
>> We got a call. Just so you know, you're
being audio and visual recorded.
>> Sure. Likewise.
>> So, we got a call from dispatch.
>> Sure.
>> Saying there's a vehicle,
>> okay,
>> with two men in it uh videotaping in
front of a school. When we get a call
for that, that's our probable cause to
stop you because they described your
vehicle. So, I'm asking you,
>> what's illegal about the fact that we're
recording?
>> There's nothing illegal about it.
>> Sure. I don't care that you're recording
cuz I'm recording too. I just don't know
who you are going up there
>> and I don't but I for my safety I want
you back in the car.
>> Okay. So, back to me talking to you.
>> My name is Tyler, by the way. I'm nice
to meet you, sir.
>> Good to meet you. Yeah.
>> I'm stopping you. Can I have your
credentials, please?
>> Do I have an obligation to selfidentify
right now?
>> Uh, I need you to identify yourself on
this stop.
>> I Yeah. No, I totally get where you're
coming from. We're filming because they
described your vehicle to a teot totally
get it. I'm just trying to figure out if
there's
>> Can I just [clears throat] ask you a
question? Yeah, I can tell you what
we're up to.
>> I I just want to know who you are.
>> Yeah, my name's Tyler.
>> Oh, very good. My name is Jonathan. I
explain that to you. Good to meet you. I
I I stopped you. Uh
>> totally get it. Yeah, we're just talking
about the changes in the town here. We
went to that school specifically because
we shut down.
>> It's very You see what I'm saying? Like
when you have a a camera in front of a
school with kids I
>> is the capo
between me and you because
It is what it is.
Yeah.
My kids go to that school. I wouldn't
want my kids to be video recorded.
>> Sure. We didn't enter the school. We're
on the sidewalk.
>> It doesn't matter if if you're in a
certain uh distance of a school.
>> Oh, yeah. Sure. You know,
>> and just do me a favor. Keep your hands
on the steering wheel when you do so.
>> Thank you.
>> Hands on the steering wheel.
>> Yeah. I just don't know what's in the
car. Like I said, I don't know who
>> I don't know who you are.
>> That seems a little extra.
>> No, that's
>> that's definitely extra, but you can
have it. There you go.
>> Thank you so much. I'm not saying I'm
giving you a ticket or anything like
that. I'm just identif. Yeah, do your
thing.
>> No, it's it has nothing to do with doing
having a badge or anything like that.
>> Just stay near the car, okay? Don't come
near us.
>> Is this Is this slightly [music]
excessive?
>> It's absolutely exciting.
>> Seems like um a bully tactic run around.
>> Yeah. Well, I don't know who uh placed
that phone call.
>> How you doing, man?
>> Hey, what's up?
>> How are you?
>> How we doing?
>> Doing good. Getting pulled over. You
know what we're up against. Small town
police department. Small town politics.
Lots of money.
>> All right. So, apparently the reason why
these cops came out of thin air is
because who just got called?
>> Uh, well, we're going to find out. The
council president just called me.
>> So, who is Morty Bernstein?
>> He is the council president in Jackson,
New Jersey, and the most powerful man in
the town. Does he have the police in his
pocket?
>> I don't think he has the police in his
pocket at all. Uh, but the man does have
an incredible amount of power. Uh, he's
involved in political action committees
with very rich and powerful developers.
A lot of political connections.
>> Who are we messing with here right now?
Chris, was this a mistake? Is this video
a mistake? Man,
>> I'm going to be honest. Uh, [music] the
powers out here are pretty immense. Like
I said, it it goes up. You have
billionaires from Lakewood being
involved in what's going on in Jackson.
people connected to the president of the
United States.
>> If we zoom out, where does this all end?
>> Right now, it's gone to every town on
the outskirts of Lakewood. They're
buying up everything. Even if they're
not occupying things, things are being
bought up. I always say it's a real life
game of Monopoly. So, it's gone into
Brick and it's gone into Howell and it's
gone into Jackson and Tom's River. Now,
it's going into Manchester. There are
large portions of property being bought
in South Jersey. We cannot keep up with
this.
>> How do you combat a group of people
chosen by God practicing rampant
ethnepotism?
>> Here's a problem, bro. One Jewish dude
in Manchester said to me this. You guys
will never come together because you
have no shared sense of purpose. And
that hit me because he was [ __ ]
right. Jews have a shared sense of
purpose in what their outcome is going
to be. And that's to expand the Juda the
the the the religion. That's expand
their people. We don't have a shared
sense of purpose. We're too busy arguing
with each other. We're too busy talking
Trump. We're too busy yelling about ICE.
We're too busy focusing on Epstein's
list. We don't have a shared sense of
what is America and what are we trying
to accomplish together. Americans don't
have a shared sense of purpose about
America. Jews have a shared sense of
purpose in what their outcome's going to
be. And the only way that you're going
to stop it and the only way you can
fight back about it is by getting people
that have a shared sense of purpose in
the number
that matter. Getting enough people with
their eyes open to say, "Holy, something
has to be done here. You have to get rid
of the Arl Lupa laws." I don't think
it's ever been challenged by the Supreme
Court. It has to be taken to the Supreme
Court. I think it violates the
Constitution. You have to fight fire
with bigger fire. And the sad part about
it is
>> you're not welcome.
>> What do you guys think?
Definitely bias. Definitely.
because
unfruitful in 1718 kids but the zel
town
is just
um [snorts] just
probably
mention for
business
meaning
and that's it.
Like the video, like, subscribe, and
that's it. We did four lives today.
[laughter]
Um, I didn't think I'll I'll review,
but I did.
Okay.
Um, whatever. But just
editing but
stupid.
Um,
that's that. Okay.
I'll talk to you guys
next time.
Bye for now.