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With numerous reports coming in about pro-Palestinian protests at colleges and universities, American Jews, including those in the Jewish enclave of South Florida, are buying guns to feel safer.

One Jewish woman, 48-year-old teacher Vicky Furer, told Bloomberg this week that she will be joining several members of her synagogue in taking shooting lessons at a firing range in Pompano Beach, just north of Fort Lauderdale.

“It’s scary holding this thing, thinking of how I will ever be able to shoot at someone,” Furer said about her firearm.

Many American Jews who historically lean to the “left” politically and generally seem to support gun control are suddenly changing their minds now that “antisemitism” is said to be on the rise in response to Israel’s handling of the Gaza situation.

The latest data from the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) shows that the number of gun purchase-related criminal background checks in Florida increased by 30 percent in October compared to September.

“This is the first time I really feel unsafe in the U.S.,” said Michele Lazarow, a Hallandale Beach city commissioner. “Maybe it’ll finally be when I get a firearm.” According to one gun store owner in Hollywood, Florida, even Orthodox Jews have been buying record numbers of firearms, due to fears that they may be attacked inside of the United States.https://t.co/oChVEWC3RF

DC, Last Legion, Infinity Redux (@DerektheCleric) October 23, 2023

(Related: A lot of what the Western media is publishing right now about the Israel-Gaza conflict is untrue they are slanting the news in favor of Israel.) The Middle East conflict between Israel and the Palestinians has come to America

At prominent schools like Harvard University, there has reportedly been a surge of pro-Palestinian protests ever since Israel launched its genocide campaign in Gaza. These protests are said to be scaring Jewish people who feel as though opposition to the Israeli political project in the Middle East constitutes “antisemitism.”

There have been a few reported incidents of Jewish students being harassed by protesters, one receiving a rock to the head at a protest on the Tulane University campus in New Orleans.

In Los Angeles, a 69-year-old man demonstrating in support of Israel’s war died after sustaining a head injury during a fight with a pro-Palestinian protester.

“I wonder how they would cover a bunch of white guys practicing together with firearms due to fears of anti-white attacks,” one commenter wrote about how the media handles Jewish fears of violence versus white fears of violence.

“Answer:
1. Domestic terrorists
2. White supremacists
3. Nazis,” responded another.

“So once again it is the Jews who are the real victims here, not the 12,000 Palestinian women and children they just bombed to death,” wrote another about Israel’s massively outsized response to the Hamas attack.

“The weird thing is that the Palestinians are Semites but the non-Sephardic Hebrews are not,” wrote another about how if we really want to talk about antisemitism here, it must include the people whom Israel is bombing right now.

Others speculated that perhaps in the near future, many American Jews who used to lean left will pivot more to the right as they come to appreciate the Second Amendment and what it represents.

“The time to dig a well is before you are thirsty,” one of them wrote about this sudden rush to arm up across South Florida.

“If you are confronted by an armed thug, I recommend not being afraid of your weapon,” wrote another in response to Furer’s comment about being scared of her gun.

The latest news about the Israel-Gaza conflict can be found at Prophecy.news.

Sources for this article include:

ZeroHedge.com

NaturalNews.com
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Kantar owners plot £5bn sale of Worldpanel data division

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Kantar owners plot £5bn sale of Worldpanel data division

The owners of Kantar Group, the global market research firm, are to explore a £5bn-plus sale of the division which supplies closely watched data on the performance of Britain’s supermarkets.

Sky News has learnt that Kantar’s Worldpanel arm could be put up for sale later this year.

The move, which has yet to be formally approved by Bain Capital and WPP Group, Kantar’s owners, would leave the company as a pureplay brand strategy consultancy.

Kantar Worldpanel is in the process of combining with Numerator, a US-based business which was acquired in 2021.

Collectively, the enlarged business provides data representing five billion consumers globally.

Read more from Money:
Two-way shootout looms for WH Smith high street chain
Football chiefs in secret summit to revive landmark financial deal

Banking sources said on Sunday night that the Worldpanel business could fetch well over £5bn in a sale.

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That would leave the Kantar brand strategy business to be listed or sold separately, according to the sources.

Alternatively, Bain Capital and WPP could elect to float the entire group instead of pursuing the Worldpanel sale.

Bankers have yet to be appointed to handle any auction.

A sale at a bumper valuation would deliver a rare piece of good news to WPP, which has seen its shares hammered amid doubts about its strategy in a marketing services industry increasingly susceptible to disruption by advances in artificial intelligence.

Kantar and Bain Capital have been contacted for comment.

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DePIN needs thoughtful regulation — not lawsuits

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DePIN needs thoughtful regulation — not lawsuits

The new SEC leadership has an opportunity to set a positive precedent for crypto regulation by providing clear guidelines for DePIN projects.

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Two-way shootout looms for WH Smith high street chain

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Two-way shootout looms for WH Smith high street chain

A two-way shootout for WH Smith’s high street chain will take place this spring as the 233-year-old retailer’s brand prepares to disappear from towns across Britain.

Sky News has learnt that Alteri and Modella Capital, both of which specialise in buying troubled retailers, are now the only two remaining parties in talks with WH Smith and its advisers about a potential deal.

Doug Putman, the owner of HMV and widely tipped as a logical bidder for the chain, is no longer in talks with bankers at Greenhill, although he could yet try to pitch a new offer before the auction concludes, according to insiders.

Alteri, which owns Bensons for Beds and had a disastrous spell in control of Missguided, the fashion brand, and Modella, which recently bought The Original Factory Shop and also owns Hobbycraft, would be expected to conduct major surgery on WH Smith’s high street business if they took control.

A definitive deal could be announced at the time of WH Smith’s interim results in April.

Sky News revealed in January that WH Smith’s London-listed holding company was looking to offload the high street business, which comprises more than 500 shops.

If completed, the deal would leave WH Smith as a company focused on its more lucrative travel retail operation in airports, railway stations and hospitals, which comprises about 1,200 stores globally.

A sale of its high street arm would mark a watershed moment for the UK high street, which first saw the appearance of the name in 1792.

The business, which specialises in selling items such as greeting cards and stationery, employs about 5,000 people across the country.

A WH Smith spokesman declined to comment.

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