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Posobiec is on pace to reach one million Twitter followers by the end of the year.
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Trump also posted a self-promotional video to Twitter on May 16, where he was depicted as being surrounded by his allies while he gives a speech from the movie "Independence Day." Posobiec’s face was included in the video alongside Vice President Mike Pence. In the tweet Trump boosted, Posobiec commented on violent crime commonly associated with Black suspects, comparing it to a white supremacist murdering an antiracist demonstrator at the Charlottesville event. 14, 2017, two days after the deadly “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. It was not the first time Trump promoted Posobiec to his millions of followers. Keep up the good work!” Trump was referring to the OANN anchor boasting on Twitter that the President reads his feed. On May 2, President Donald Trump praised Posobiec in a tweet: “That’s right Jack. President Trump tweeted about Posobiec on May 2.
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The full statements of those groups as well as additional evidence of Posobiec’s antisemitic remarks can be found here. Three Jewish rights groups – the Anti-Defamation League, the Simon Wiesenthal Center and Bend the Arc: Jewish Action – described Posobiec’s behavior as antisemitic or condemned OANN’s relationship to him after Hatewatch reached out for comment on this investigation.
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Posobiec also targeted a group of journalists reporting on a press conference hosted by Peter Thiel. His targets included CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer, whose Polish family survived the Holocaust during World War II. Posobiec used Twitter to target Jewish journalists with antisemitic hate. At the time Posobiec introduced himself to the public on Twitter as “fmr CBS News,” he promoted now-infamous disinformation campaigns such as “Pizzagate.” He built up a larger audience during this time, gaining over 9,000 followers per month from September 2016 to March 2017. CBS News told Hatewatch he never worked for them. This first story in the series lays out how Posobiec rose from being a pseudonymous Game of Thrones blogger to linking up with such white supremacists as Richard Spencer and a neo-Nazi who endorsed terrorism while using the online handle 34, described himself in his Twitter bio as being “fmr CBS News” during chapters of his life detailed in this story. His connections to white supremacy are too numerous to compile into one article, so Hatewatch is running a series of stories on the correspondent’s ties to the movement and promotion of it. Posobiec’s ties to far-right extremists travel beyond borders into Europe.