On August 27, 2025, the Combat Antisemitism Movement launched a new app called Report It, designed to help users document antisemitic incidents in real time.
But behind the polished interface lies a surveillance and influence network tied to the Israeli military, U.S. oil billionaires, and a global campaign to crush anti-Zionist dissent.
Let’s dive into the structure behind this operation and what it really represents..... 🧵
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Who Funds CAM?
CAM is primarily funded by one man: Adam Beren, a Kansas oil billionaire and Republican megadonor. His family foundations control the Combat Hate Foundation, the nonprofit that operates CAM.
From 2020–2022, Beren-linked foundations funneled over $6.6 million into CAM, nearly 70% of its total revenue. In 2023 alone, another $3.6 million was transferred through the Beren Sea Foundation.
This is not a grassroots movement. It’s a single-donor vehicle, backed by fossil fuel wealth and ideological interests.
And for four years, Beren’s role was hidden from the public. It wasn’t until 2023 that CAM admitted he was its founder after independent researchers exposed the connection.
Why keep it secret?
Image: Mayor of Beverly Hills, Sharona Nazarian and Adam Beren. She takes terrible photos.
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Who’s Behind the Movement? Who Is CAM?
The Combat Antisemitism Movement presents itself as a global civil rights coalition, but it’s not a movement. It’s a centralized digital operation run by a U.S. nonprofit called the Combat Hate Foundation, created in 2019 with close ties to Israeli state ministries and political operatives.
CAM claims to coordinate over 850 “partners,” but its real power comes from centralized leadership, strategic media influence, and coordination with U.S. and Israeli policy elites. These “partners” include groups like StandWithUs, UN Watch, and the Israel Allies Foundation organizations that actively justify Israeli apartheid and suppress Palestinian advocacy. Others, like Voice4Israel, promote censorship and surveillance in the name of “interfaith peace.”
CAM is policing political speech.
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Follow the Money
CAM is bankrolled by Adam Beren, a Kansas oil billionaire and Republican megadonor who has poured tens of millions into Zionist and militarist causes.
From 2020–2022, Beren’s foundations funneled over $6.6 million into CAM’s nonprofit arm, the Combat Hate Foundation accounting for nearly 70% of its revenue.
But that’s just one branch of his influence. At the same time, Beren donated:
- $570K+ to Friends of the IDF
- $8.9M to Ohr Torah Stone, which trains settlers for IDF service
- $2M+ to Chabad’s Zionist programs
Beren kept his role in founding and funding CAM a secret for years. He only admitted it in 2023, after researchers publicly exposed the connection.
That kind of secrecy doesn’t protect civil society. It protects political warfare.
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Political Influence: Not Just Israel
Adam Beren isn’t just a Zionist billionaire. He’s a top-tier Republican megadonor using political contributions to shape U.S. policy at home and abroad.
From 2008–2023, Beren has poured millions into GOP campaigns and infrastructure:
• Nearly $490,000 to the Republican National Committee (RNC)
• $225,000 to the Trump Victory Fund in 2016
• $149,500 to Republican PACs in 2020
• $100,000 to Glenn Youngkin (VA Governor) in 2023
• $6,600 to Ron DeSantis’ 2024 bid
• $2,800 to Ron Estes, KS Congressman
• Among the top private donors to Trump’s 2017 inauguration
Beren’s donations help fund the very politicians who push censorship bills, anti-BDS laws, and unconditional support for Israel.
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CAM’s Israeli State Ties Run Deep
CAM brands itself as a civil society initiative, but its alliances tell a different story—one deeply embedded in Israel’s diplomatic and military agenda.
• Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Co-hosted summits and public campaigns, including state-backed advocacy against BDS and Palestinian solidarity.
• Strategic Affairs Ministry: Prior to its 2021 shutdown, this ministry developed “delegitimization” strategies adopted by CAM to suppress global dissent.
• Israeli Embassies: CAM coordinates directly with embassies worldwide to promote censorship laws and IHRA legislation.
• IHRA Definition: CAM aggressively lobbies governments and institutions to adopt this Israeli-backed framework, which redefines resistance as hate.
From diplomatic platforms to surveillance narratives, CAM’s work mirrors and amplifies Israel’s geopolitical strategy.
Photo Credit: al Mayadeen
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The Evangelical Connection
Rev. Johnnie Moore isn’t just a board member of the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM). He’s also on the board of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), the U.S.-Israeli backed entity now running biometric aid distribution and militarized containment in Gaza.
But who is Johnnie Moore?
He’s a Christian Zionist powerbroker, president of the Congress of Christian Leaders, claiming to speak for 600+ million Evangelicals worldwide. He’s also president of JDA Worldwide, a top PR firm with ties to pro-Israel advocacy, and a former commissioner on the U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom (appointed twice by Trump).
Moore’s career sits at the nexus of religious nationalism, propaganda, and foreign policy, especially in the Middle East. In 2020, the Simon Wiesenthal Center awarded him the “Medal of Valor.” His sermons have reached Israeli settler communities and U.S. military circles alike.
Now, he plays a key role in two overlapping operations:
- CAM, which rebrands resistance to Israeli apartheid as antisemitic “hate”
- GHF, which merges tech, military contractors, and religion to control occupied Gaza
He represents the ideological arm of this machine: Evangelical imperialism repackaged as humanitarianism.
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Built by Spies, Run by Soldiers
CAM calls itself a civil rights coalition. But its leadership? Straight out of Israeli military and intelligence operations.
Here are just three key figures:
🧠 Brig. Gen. (Res.) Sima Vaknin-Gil
25 years in Israeli intelligence
Former Chief Military Censor
Led Israel’s Ministry of Strategic Affairs (MSA), funding U.S. NGOs to avoid foreign agent laws
Helped design CAM’s Report It! app
Oversaw anti-BDS ops, campus spying, and digital propaganda targeting U.S. activists
📲 Revital Yakin Krakowsky
Ex-senior official at Israel’s MSA
Specialist in online hasbara
Led digital campaigns against BDS, trained social media operatives
Now runs CAM’s narrative warfare strategy
🕵️♂️ Sacha Roytman Dratwa (CAM CEO)
Ex-IDF commander, “Hasbara Unit” (digital psyops)
Ran real-time influence ops during Gaza wars
Former strategist at World Jewish Congress and B’nai B’rith
His wife? Former UN Israeli mission spokesperson, now in venture capital
These are Israeli-appointed information warriors, trained in censorship, narrative control, and psychological operations. CAM isn’t just tracking antisemitism, it’s waging a digital war to criminalize dissent and blur the line between hate and resistance.
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State-Aligned from the Start
CAM isn’t just a tech-savvy nonprofit—it’s a state-aligned propaganda and censorship vehicle.
The group has worked with:
🇮🇱 Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA)
🇺🇸 The U.S. State Department’s Special Envoy on Antisemitism
🇺🇳 The UN’s Office of Genocide Prevention
🏛️ The Israeli Knesset and key U.S. lawmakers
CAM also partners with the World Jewish Congress, AJC, ADL, and the Israeli-American Council, groups that blur the line between civil society and state power.
This is not a grassroots movement. This is a geopolitical project designed to reframe resistance as hatred and criminalize dissent.
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The “Report It!” App Is Not a Tool. It’s a Weapon.
CAM’s new app isn’t about “reporting hate.”
It’s a surveillance pipeline, engineered to turn criticism of Israel into criminal evidence, and dissent into data.
This isn’t civic engagement. It’s digital policing.
Here’s what it really does:
•Lets users submit “antisemitic incidents” but those reports don’t stay on your phone.
•Every submission is GPS-tagged, time-stamped, and stored.
• Photos and videos are automatically mined for metadata.
• Anonymity is offered but it's not what it seems. Submissions are reviewed and verified by CAM’s team, not an independent body.
• Data is forwarded to law enforcement, media, and CAM’s network including groups like the ADL and StandWithUs.
And those partners?
• The Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which already works hand-in-hand with law enforcement and social media companies to suppress speech.
• U.S. law enforcement, including FBI and DHS-linked “counter-extremism” units.
• Private Israeli intelligence contractors, with long records of spying on students, journalists, and activists.
• There’s an 80–90% likelihood that incident reports go to the ADL.
• ADL’s own tracking tools (e.g., “Report Hate”) rely on third-party inputs like this.
• CAM and ADL co-host events, coordinate definitions, and push similar legislation.
Global Scale, Narrow Agenda
• App operates in 100+ countries, but excludes those critical of Israel (e.g., Iran, Venezuela).
• Promotes the IHRA definition of antisemitism, which conflates criticism of Zionism with hate.
• CAM calls it “actionable intelligence” to help shape law enforcement, media coverage, and policy.
Enter the Blacklists:
• CAM and partner groups compile lists of activists, speakers, academics, and students.
• Project Esther is one such list, labeling people as threats based on social media posts or campus events.
The Legal Threat:
CAM supports the IHRA definition, which treats calling Israel an apartheid state or criticizing Zionism as antisemitism.
That means your activism, your Palestine speech, even your college event could be submitted as “evidence.”
The ADL can then submit it to prosecutors, push for “hate crime” classification, or demand platform bans under anti-terrorism and extremism frameworks.
This is the digital weaponization of Zionist ideology, and the target isn’t hate.
It’s you.
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I only do these things once in a while but GXG has all the juice…
The flood of fake news stories pushed — and never corrected — by the same influencer crowd is getting out of control. It’s more than just sloppy. It’s coordinated. Let’s take a look at some of the biggest nothing-burgers in recent months.
A thread. 🧵
1. The Epstein Binders
In February, a group of pro-Trump influencers were handed “exclusive” Epstein files by Pam Bondi. It was hyped as explosive. Livestreams, countdowns, vague promises. But when the binders dropped? Loomer meltdown and nothing new — just recycled court docs.
Who got them? A mix of slop-tier influencers: DC Draino, Emily Austin, Jack Posobiec, and others, all staunchly pro-Israel, anti-Palestine, and loyal to the Trump admin. At least one, Emily, even flew to Israel after receiving her binder.
A made-for-Twitter “bombshell” that fizzled instantly.
2. Greenland
Since Trump took office, some of the loudest
(and dumbest) influencers have started openly pushing American exceptionalism into the Arctic.
Accounts like DC_Draino, Nick Sorter, and John Cooper—all with massive followings—have hyped up the idea of annexing Greenland. Sorter said it’s “only a matter of time” before Greenland becomes part of the U.S. Cooper, with over 1 million followers, posted memes saying things like, “Let me in so I can save you from what I’ll do to you if you don’t let me in.” Creepy.
All this while polls in Greenland overwhelmingly show they do not want to be part of the U.S.
The story was pushed hard, but it was fake—just another distraction from the real mess at home.