Tucker Carlson. Candace Owens. Cenk Uygur. Zohran Mamdani.
They disagree on virtually everything, and yet somehow they have all arrived at the exact same conclusion: that the Jewish people do not have the right to a homeland. They call it "anti-Zionism," as if attaching a political label to it makes it something other than what it is.
Tucker spent the last week accusing Chabad of engineering a "religious war." Trump kicked him out of MAGA, saying he "lost his way" and is "not smart enough to understand" what he's doing. Ted Cruz called him "the single most dangerous demagogue in this country." Candace Owens was literally named "Antisemite of the Year," and she told her followers that Jews orchestrated the slave trade. She then called Israel a "demonic nation."
Cenk has spent years painting the only Jewish state on earth as uniquely, singularly evil in a region filled with authoritarian regimes that crush dissent without a whisper of international outrage. And Mamdani, the man who is supposed to keep this city safe, just hosted Mahmoud Khalil at Gracie Mansion and called it an "honor": the man who justified October 7th, while Mamdani's own wife was caught liking Instagram posts celebrating the attack.
Pure evil.
This is what happens when people with massive platforms normalize hatred under the banner of political commentary. The words become permission. The permission becomes violence. "Anti-Zionism" starts as a talking point and ends with aggression, like we just saw in California.
I built Iron Dome Coffee because I believe in standing for something when it would be easier to stay silent. If you're reading this, I appreciate your support, and I acknowledge your stance against this total hatred.
AM YISRAEL CHAI!!!
— Justin Yehuda, Founder, Iron Dome Coffee

