Anonymous ID: 980c70 April 26, 2021, 12:42 p.m. No.13518335   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8341 >>8464 >>8569 >>8598 >>8845

muh BIG LIE

 

So I'm looking for an explanation on how this audit works, and shit, but checkout this cunt Brahm Resnick

first of all his name is Brahm

But he's interviewING the public liason for the audit, and whining like a little bitch about credibility and bias.

 

Then in the interview and check his twitter feed which is 100% bias in favor of voter fraud and all the big lie

 

Ken Bennett (Liaison for the Audit) Shuts Down Fake News Reporter, Brahm Resnik 12 News in Phoenix.

23,376 views

•Apr 12, 2021

 

he's very loud

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=38DlJgv8uY4

Anonymous ID: 980c70 April 26, 2021, 1:05 p.m. No.13518464   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8560 >>8598 >>8833 >>8845

>>13518341

>>13518335

 

no bias here

Everyone I don't agree with is a NAZI

> https://archive.ph/A1FKm

 

Reporter Called Out for Suggesting Republicans Are Nazis: ‘He Could Incite Violence’

By Zachary Stieber

August 13, 2019 Updated: August 13, 2019

 

An Arizona reporter is under fire for suggesting Republicans are Nazis.

Brahm Resnik,a reporter for 12 News, reacted to a post by the Arizona Republican Party that showed a river with the caption “We’re All In This Together” and the share line: “One people. One land. One Arizona.”

“Pretty picture. Just a thought here: A tweet that echoes ‘Ein volk. Ein Reich. Ein Fuhrer’—likely unintentional, because who knows history these days, right?—isn’t a great look at the present moment,”Resnik wrote.

The German quoted by Resnik means “one people, one realm, one leader,” andwas the motto of Nazi Germany.

Resnik later deleted the tweet but has not apologized or retracted his claim.

According to his bio, Resnik covers local, state, and national politics and government for 12 News, an affiliate for NBC.

Dr. Kelli Ward, chairwoman of the Arizona GOP, said Resnik had smeared Republicans.

“Millions of good, honest Arizonans have been sadly caught up in a disgusting smear by Brahm Resnik of @12news. Reporters are supposed to report, NOT create news!” she wrote on Twitter on Aug. 12.

“Many people (phones ringing off the hook) demanding he apologize.”

 

Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) also called for action to be taken.

“Brahm’s hateful rhetoric should not be tolerated. He could incite violence. I propose a Twitter and Facebook ban for him only to be lifted when #LauraLoomerForCongress is returned to social media,” he said, referring to how Loomer, a Congressional candidate who was previously banned from the social media platforms, hasn’t been allowed to come back.

According to the Arizona Daily Independent, 12 News has not addressed Resnik’s tweet.

“If they don’t comment it means they fully support his hateful rhetoric. At least that’s what @12News says if Trump or Ducey or any Republican doesn’t immediately condemn the latest most urgent pressing daily controversy on which they are reporting,” Gosar wrote.

Anonymous ID: 980c70 April 26, 2021, 1:22 p.m. No.13518560   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8562 >>8833

>>13518464

a jew, calling legitimate questions about election integrity: (((The Big Lie)))

 

If one poses the question “Why do Jews always ask so many questions?” the quick response from a fellow Jew might be “Why not?” We are a people of questions: secular and Talmudic scholars, great philosophers and, well … yentas. We all ask questions all the time, from the sublime “What is the meaning of life?” to the ridiculous “Nu, are you married yet?”

 

So maybe it’s not so difficult to understand why there seem to be such a large percentage of Jewish TV newscasters. On cable and network news, we’ve spent many hours with the inquiring minds of Mike Wallace, Ted Koppel, Barbara Walters, Larry King, Andrea Mitchell, Wolf Blitzer and Jon Stewart.

 

In Arizona alone we currently play host to three prominent TV newsmen: Mark Curtis andBrahm Resnikat Channel 12, KPNX, in Phoenix; and Matthew Schwartz, investigative reporter on Channel 4, KVOA, in Tucson. Each of the three grew up sitting at seder tables and hearing the Four Questions, the epitome of the process of asking questions to become better informed, to better understand. So maybe it’s no coincidence that’s what they do today in their jobs in the news. Well, at least it couldn’t hurt!

 

Brahm Resnik

 

Brahm Resnik is a news reporter and substitute anchor as well as the moderator of “12 News Sunday Square Off,” a popular political talk show that airs at 8 am Sunday mornings on KPNX. Brahm was born and raised in Cote St. Luc, a nearly all-Jewish section diversity for thee of Montreal, Canada. “It was virtually a Jewish ghetto,” he comments, “but in a good way!” One of five children, hehails from Russian roots and grew up in a Conservative household. His family has always been involved in the Jewish community. His father was in the underground in Russia during World War II. “His story is chronicled in the movie ‘Defiance,’ ” Brahm says. One of his brothers was a paratrooper in the Israeli Army during the Yom Kippur War. His mother ran the Yiddishkeit group “Mama Loshen” (Mother Tongue) in Montreal for many years.

 

Brahm was at McGill University where he earned his bachelor’s degree when he met his wife-to-be Wendy, who had come from Virginia. She followed him to Northwestern, where he earned his master’s degree in journalism, and they were married in the Shakespeare Garden on the Northwestern campus. “It was the perfect setting,” he says. “The garden is filled with every flower and plant mentioned in Shakespeare’s fol

io and the main bough wraps around in a semi-circle to make you feel enveloped and warm. That’s where we put the chuppah.”

 

Brahm began his professional life in print journalism, and he and Wendy soon moved to Milwaukee, where their sons were born. “Milwaukee has a great Jewish community, but you still have to shovel snow,” he remarks. In 2000 there was an opening at the Arizona Republic for a business editor, and Brahm snagged the position. Within five months, the Republic was sold to Gannett. Since Gannett also owns Channel 12, there were suddenly additional opportunities. His mother and brother had been encouraging him for some time to give broadcast journalism a try, so without any previous experience, he summoned his courage and auditioned for an opening on TV. With his comfortable on-air presence, resonant voice and sincere smile, he won the position. “It’s like learning golf in front of 100,000 people,” he grins. “I still struggle with golf, but feel I’m getting the hang of being on TV! You make your mistakes, learn from them and move on.”

 

Brahm finds moderating the “Sunday Square Off ” to be both challenging and exciting. He has the ability to request the guests he wants, and he writes his own tough questions. “I pay attention to detail to try to devise just the right question, to make sure we hold our leaders accountable. I don’t lean one way or the other in my questioning, but leave it to the viewer to determine if ‘what they say is what they’ve done,’ based on their actual record.”

Anonymous ID: 980c70 April 26, 2021, 1:22 p.m. No.13518562   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13518560

His sons Max and Jack nod their heads when they watch him ask those tough questions – they’re used to them! The boys each became a bar mitzvah through Temple Emanuel in the East Valley. Max was active in the Arizona Jewish Theatre Company’s youth program, and Jack stayed Jewishly involved through TETY, the Emanuel chapter of the Nationa Federation of Temple Youth, the national Reform teen program. He also volunteers at Camp Swift. Wendy works at the Phoenix public library system, where she is currently the Youth Services Coordinator at the Burton Barr main branch in downtown Phoenix.

 

One of Brahm’s recent proud moments was last summer when he became a U.S. citizen. He has mastered the pronunciation of “out” pretty well, but says he still has to stop and think about “project” and even “taco” as they are pronounced differently north of the border.

 

The final “tough” question put to Brahm: Where did the name Brahm come from? It doesn’t sound very Jewish. “Aha!,” he laughs. “My grandfather wanted me to be named after his brother-in-law, Abie. He wouldn’t allow ‘Anthony,’ my mother’s first choice – too Italian. My mother said she wouldn’t name me Abie, nor would she agree to Abraham, but from that came Brahm. My Hebrew name is Avraham. The funny thing is that one year when I went to camp, there were four Brahms there! The other three were Glickman, Weinstein and Schekman!

Anonymous ID: 980c70 April 26, 2021, 2:03 p.m. No.13518833   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13518560

>“His story is chronicled in the movie ‘Defiance,’

 

>>13518464

kek

 

wasn't there a notable recently about__ lack of evidence__ about the holohoax…provingthe holohoax?

 

Preserving Jewish civilization under the noses of the Nazis

Roger Ebert January 14, 2009

 

"Defiance" is based on the true story of a group of Jews in Belarus who successfully defied the Nazis, hid in the forest and maintained a self-contained society while losing only about 50 of their some 1,200 members. The "Bielski Partisans" represented the war's largest and most successful group of Jewish resisters, although when filmmakers arrived on the actual locations to film the story, they found no local memory of their activities, and, for many reasons, hardly any Jews. Edward Zwick's film shows how they survived, governed themselves, faced ethical questions and how their stories can be suited to the requirements of melodrama.