Antisemitic caller cut off at Walnut Creek City Council meeting

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Antisemitic caller cut off from Walnut Creek City Council meeting

An antisemitic caller was cut off from a Walnut Creek City Council meeting.

In what seemed to be a coordinated effort, multiple people called into the public comment portion of Tuesday night's Walnut Creek City Council meeting to spout antisemitic propaganda at the council.

Councilmember Kevin Wilk, who was Walnut Creek's first Jewish mayor and city council member, said Wednesday there were "pretty stunning comments" made by four different callers.  

One caller, who identified himself as "Scottie, resident of Walnut Creek," said "I'm calling today to address some irrational statements made by certain council members who know who they are, regarding the pro white banners that they cried about on the news probably about six months back." 

Video of the call was posted on the Twitter account @Scottie8841, which also contains antisemitic, anti-Black, pro-white propaganda.  

"Scottie" also said in the video: "I was just wondering why they think it's OK to -- it's not OK to be pro white. If you're a Jew or a Black, it's applauded. It seems every time whites express love for their people, some Jew wants to shut it down."

When Mayor Cindy Silva interrupted the caller to say "Let's be respectful, please," "Scottie" said, "We don't have an issue of white supremacy like you guys like to place in your Jewish media narrative. We have an overwhelming issue of Jewish supremacy that is becoming more clear daily, even to non-whites. You guys cry about the antisemitism." 

At Wilk's urging, the call was then cut off.

Wilk and the Walnut Creek council have been vocal in their opposition to displays of antisemitism. In October, Wilk spoke publicly about a group placing antisemitic leaflets in neighborhoods bordering Concord. 

The literature was left in the neighborhood sometime during Sept. 27-30, during the Jewish High Holidays between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. 

Wilk called them "awful, vile leaflets" and said he mentioned them because "we must unite as one community to push back on this."  

"We've made great strides in our city to be inclusive and all-welcoming, and we refute this kind of antisemitic and any hate material in every way, shape and form," Wilk told the council. "There's more work to be done, but we as a council need to expose racism, antisemitism and hate crimes for what they are." 

The flyers said "every aspect of the Ukraine-Russia War is Jewish," speculated Jews were responsible for 9/11, blamed Jews for slavery, and said they control the United States government and media, among other claims.
 

Similar leaflets were found last year in Danville, Palo Alto, Berkeley and Marin County.