Everything about that clip feels staged.
The direction he came from doesn’t line up with any Jewish areas where you’d find men in black hats.
He’s wearing gloves and a mask at 6:30 a.m., when it’s cool but not freezing, around 45°F that morning in Brooklyn on November 5, 2025. That’s premeditated behavior. But he leaves the hat on. That’s not caution; that’s costume.
The hat itself doesn’t match any Syrian Jewish style, and the area where it happened is majority Syrian, where most don’t even wear hats. It’s not the kind worn by Ashkenazi Haredi Jews either. It looks like someone trying to look Jewish, not someone who is.
Too many tells. None of them make sense unless it was meant to look this way.
As everyone has pointed out, there are cameras everywhere in that area, it's a Jewish school. But that is the point, isn’t it? The hat was not to hide. It was to be seen.
I look forward to seeing who is caught, regardless of background.
People live chronically online now. The hatred that festers on this platform seeps into real life. You think no one would play into that? Even Hamas’ spokesperson Abu Obaida adjusted his tone with every speech to match whatever is trending in the streets.
People called the D.C. murders a “false flag” too. The hatred for Jews runs so deep it bends logic itself.
With the kind of vitriol unleashed on social media and in the streets today, a small staged act of vandalism or fear-baiting is not unthinkable.
Your own hatred for us justifies it. For God’s sake, read the responses.
We are living in an age where hate does not just appear. It performs.