The Dozen with Liam Tuffs
“Jihad Is For Losers” - Jonathan Sacerdoti’s Powerful WARNING!
10 May 2026
Chapter 1: What happened during the Golders Green terror attack?
You wake up in the morning and you decide you're going to go and kill people.
Both officers kicked him in the head with their boots on. I'm thrilled. If I had it my way, it would have been far worse than that.
Some Brits may have had negative opinions of Jews, but I think that that has been magnified enormously by Muslim immigration into this country.
Jihadists will quite clearly say Saturday first, then Sunday. That means Jews first, Christians next.
We're all in there. The number of Jews killed for being Jews in this country is really low. The number of Brits killed by the same jihadist ideology, much higher.
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Chapter 2: Why does Jonathan Sacerdoti believe the police's actions were justified?
We share in this a common enemy.
Organ harvesting and child sacrifice and child trafficking. Where does that come from? Because again, there's some people that are absolutely adamant that Jews are responsible. For the last year, I've been working with Ryan from Change and now they're sponsoring our channel so we can keep bringing you these conversations.
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Chapter 3: How is antisemitism on the rise in Britain?
Change offer one-on-one training, online courses and group seminars so you get all the support you need to succeed. If you're looking for a new opportunity, get in touch with Ryan via Instagram at RyanJB and he'll take you through all the steps to building your own successful business. Jonathan, thanks for coming on. Great to be here. So you're a journalist and you're an anti-Semitism campaigner.
Now, we've recently had a terror attack, well, another terror attack in Golders Green.
I want to ask you, before we get under the bonnet of all the conspiracies that are out there at the moment, and I'm glad that you said that there's nothing off the table, when the police officers had that terrorist on the ground and they kicked him in the head, I think both officers kicked him in the head with their boots on. There's been a discussion, a debate online.
Zach Polanski even retweeted someone suggesting that it was excessive. So did you think kicking that terrorist in the head by British police was excessive, just about right, or not enough?
I think it's very uniquely British of the 21st century that we were worrying a lot about how the terrorist was. in his arrest for having just stabbed Jews and indeed one other guy that same day, a Muslim guy. But I think the memory of those guys who attacked the police in Manchester airport, I think it was not that long ago.
And then the footage that came out of that, where the police were also seen at first in what was released to have been a bit brutal. And then we got more footage and we understood why they were so brutal. So I think it had echoes of that, but of course not. I think Most likely from what we know, which is not everything. The police did not know exactly what they were up against.
The guy appeared to have something on him that may have been an explosive device.
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Chapter 4: What does 'Globalize the Intifada' mean in the current context?
I understand he still had the knife, which he was refusing to drop if you listen to the audio. So when I first saw it, yes, it looked brutal. But taking down a guy who's stabbing people probably does look brutal. And I think the police were pretty brave to go in there and do what they did. And our police aren't armed. Those ones in particular were not armed police.
I believe if the armed police had got there quicker, that guy probably wouldn't have had his head kicked in. He'd probably be dead. So I suspect that there will be a lot of discussion to come out of it.
But I think Zach Polanski rushing to say that over everything else, rushing to try to make this an issue of police brutality against a potentially mentally unwell man, rather overlooked the actual point of the story, which is this guy had just stabbed Jews. completely unprovoked in an indiscriminate way, possibly discriminate in that they're Jews.
And he saw them dressed that way and went for them. That seemed to me to be the biggest story. And I think our police do a really tough job in trying to keep people safe.
When I saw them kick that guy in the head, I was thrilled. I was delighted. I was absolutely ecstatic that they'd done that. For once, they actually done their job and they went in with gusto because it's a dangerous situation. And this time, compared to the Manchester assault where they were punching female officers, WPCs in the face with great ferocity.
And the previous footage come out weeks later.
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Chapter 5: What are the implications of pro-Palestine marches in the UK?
So you were led to believe that the police were guilty from day one. Whereas this time in Golders Green, I saw the attack first where he sort of walked up to the guy, he's adjusted his kipper and then he's rushed him from about a metre and he's plunging the knife in his neck.
Yeah.
I couldn't believe, thank God that he's alive, but I thought he's dead. But yeah, so I'm thrilled that they kicked him in the head. And if I had it my way, it would have been far worse than that.
Well, look, I've not got a lot of experience of tackling, thank goodness, terrorists or even particularly in physical fights. So I don't know what the best technique is. But more broadly speaking, what I think was important to realise is, you know, lots of people said, oh, it's just another stabbing. We've got loads of those in London all the time. Why are you so obsessed with this one?
But I will say this, it's horrific whenever anyone gets stabbed in London. Someone got stabbed, a young guy got stabbed at the end of my road a few years ago and killed and had nothing to do with Jews. As far as I'm aware, it was completely unprovoked. He was a young guy who wanted to become a lawyer. Stabbing is really at epidemic levels and I think that is a big problem.
But it was a stabbing that appears to be directly targeted at Jews at a time when Jews have been directly targeted by other brutalities and other terror attacks, arson attacks. Just in the last few weeks before that, there were arson attacks on synagogues, arson attack on a premises that used to be a Jewish charities premises still had all the markings of it.
There have been vandalisms of other Jewish related premises, smashing of windows, daubing of red paint like blood, even places that have nothing to do with Jews in Israel, like Gail's Bakery is being attacked constantly because one of its initial founders, who has nothing to do with it anymore,
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Chapter 6: How does the media portray the conflict in Gaza?
is an Israeli so I think in the context of that it is really important that this was two Jewish people who apparently according to what I understand from the police so far they believe were targeted for being Jewish because you could see they were Jewish because how they were dressed not all Jews are visibly Jewish and
When we heard things like globalize the Intifada for years as slogans, it's worth a lot of people, I think, who say that. A lot of younger people today don't know what the Intifadas were. The Intifadas, the first and second Intifadas in Israel, were periods of terrorist uprising and violence against Israelis by Palestinian Arabs.
And among those Intifadas were numerous rock throwings, but also suicide bombings, which killed people, targeted people, civilians in nightclubs or pizzeria or cafes or bus stops. These were regular occurrences in those days.
And then since then, there have been more minor, let's say, collections of violence called the ramming intifada and the knife intifada, which are often less spoken about outside of Israel. Those were much more recent. And what they were...
were exactly what they sound like people who would take civilian vehicles or even a vehicle if they drove it for their work a van or something and drive it into people at bus stops to kill them or people who would take knives like household knives kitchen knives just go out and stab people with the knives why because the israelis got very very good
foiling terror attacks that involve more planning. Suicide bombing requires more people to be involved. A bomb maker requires a recruiter usually who talks the person that's going to carry out the bombing into it. It requires mapping, planning, somebody who takes them there, a dispatcher. And so that gives the intelligence and police bodies much more opportunity to interrupt it and stop it.
And Israel got very good at doing that. So what happened was they didn't become fewer in number because there was less intention of killing Jews. They became fewer in number because Israel was preventing them. So people were then encouraged ideologically to take things into their own hands, take a knife,
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Chapter 7: What are the historical roots of antisemitic conspiracy theories?
take a vehicle. Only one person needs to know about that. It's you. You wake up in the morning and you decide you're going to go and kill people. And that was called the ramming intifada and the stabbing intifada. So what happened here in the UK, in Manchester, at Heaton Park Synagogue on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year, somebody rammed the synagogue with a vehicle.
Two people were killed, one tragically by the police trying to shoot the terrorist. And then in this incident, in Golders Green in London, a very Jewish area, these two people were stabbed with a knife by an individual. So globalize the intifada really does mean something to people who followed what's gone on in Israel over the years.
And these things are direct reflections of that sort of violent urge.
So in short, is the phrase globalize the intifada eradicate every Jew on the planet?
Well, look, I can't say what's in anyone's mind when they say certain phrases, but I can say what's in my mind when I hear them. And I can say what's in many people's minds when they hear them. So if I – I don't know – if I call for a Holocaust – And I didn't mean to replicate the industrial scale eradication of Jews when I said it.
It doesn't mean that that word doesn't have importance and meaning and power. And it doesn't mean that it doesn't have some level of accepted meaning to other people. The same applies to other words like intifada. So there are those who will defend their use of that phrase by saying it means an uprising, a resistance.
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Chapter 8: What lessons can be learned from the Holocaust to combat current antisemitism?
It doesn't necessarily mean violence.
But I think the fact that it's understood that way by so many people, and I would say correctly understood that way, justifiably understood that way, logically understood that way, means that when you are saying it, certainly now you know it is deeply offensive and problematic and may well have contributed to the actual wave of violence, which is trying to and sometimes succeeding in killing Jews.
then perhaps you would think twice about using it, but apparently not. Apparently this is a point of principle, that if you want to stand up for so-called Palestinian rights, you insist on using these phrases which deliberately hark back to times when Jews are being killed wantonly, when civilians are being slaughtered, when people were being blown up.
I'm not sure why you would use that phrase unless your intention is to echo those moments, to make Jews afraid, to make non-Muslims afraid, whatever it might be.
Recently, we've had pro-Palestinian marches. I think most people that observe those marches listened to phrases such as globalise the intifada, waving Hamas flags, would say that they were hate marches as opposed to free a country from suppression marches. So what are your views on those marches, being a Jewish man? And also, how do you think they should be managed?
Should those marches be banned?
I'm not generally in favour of banning protests or banning speech. Of course, there is a but coming. And I would say that in this case, these are not normal protests. So to have massive protests and marches every two weeks or however often it is for over two years is obviously an extraordinary thing. It's extraordinary in many ways. I mean, it requires massive police resources to police it.
It requires police forces from around the country to be pulled wherever they're needed and to have their leave cancelled. And for... probably millions of pounds of taxpayers' money to be spent on all of this. And for what?
For people who want to go out and at least if we give them the benefit of the doubt to express their dissatisfaction with, their trauma at, their sadness about, their disgust with the way Israel is conducting itself in a war, which was started by Palestinian Arabs who invaded southern Israel.
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