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ILHealth3 days ago

Far-right streamer raises nearly $20k for Cornell student ‘not interested in working for a Jew’

A far-right YouTuber who has expressed admiration for Adolf Hitler raised over $19,000 for a Cornell University student, Austin Franco, who stated during an internship application process that he was 'not interested in working for a Jew.' The statement was made by Franco during his application for an internship at a software company owned by two Jewish brothers, Gabe and Aiden Einhorn. The message was shared by Gabe Einhorn on X (formerly Twitter), where it went viral before being edited to remove Franco's name. Franco later explained that he made the comment after learning the company was run

JTA — A far-right extremist YouTuber who has said he wants to see “another Hitler” has raised more than $19,000 for a Cornell University student in the US who told a potential employer that he was “not interested in working for a jew.”

The message was written by 19-year-old Austin Franco, a member of Cornell’s class of 2028, during his application process for an internship at a software company owned by two Jewish brothers, Gabe and Aiden Einhorn. The message, which Franco sent via the job application platform Handshake, went viral last week after Gabe Einhorn posted it on X.

“This kid applied to our job on handshake, we accepted him, and then he responded this,” Einhorn tweeted. “He probably knows nothing about Jews accept [sic] for what they tell him in college and on social media. Sad world.”

Einhorn’s tweet initially included a screenshot showing Franco’s name, but a minute after posting, he edited his tweet to obscure the name. (X allows users to view prior versions of edited posts.)

Franco drew more attention to himself the next day when he responded to Einhorn to explain his comment.

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“I was stating why I was not interested after you had asked to interview 3 times,” Franco replied. “I found out you were Jewish after the fact. My experiences with Jews have not been pleasant, both in person and online. This is not to say I havent had positive experiences, but on the aggregate that is not the case.”

Alluding to the criticism that he had received, he continued, “The reactions by your community only serves to further prove my point.” Efforts by JTA to reach Franco were unsuccessful.

Franco’s comments have triggered a bias investigation by Cornell. They have also been widely condemned by antisemitism watchdogs, the university and government officials — some of whom suggested that his comments should prevent him from being hired anywhere.

Leo Terrell, chair of the Department of Justice’s task force to combat antisemitism, posted dozens of times about the incident from his personal account, including one post urging the public to make Franco “permanently unemployable.”

But in antisemitic corners of the internet, Franco is emerging as a heroic figure, someone seen as willing to speak truth to power and say publicly what many believe about Jews.

“They’re treating him like a hero,” Gabe Einhorn told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in an interview. “There’s these main players with millions of followers across their accounts that their job, literally all they do, is post about antisemitic stuff,” he added. “They’re kind of leading the charge there, so they’re just picking him up and dragging him along with him.”

The support Franco has elicited includes the crowdfunding page created by Miles Routledge, the far-right English YouTuber known as “Lord Miles” who last year said he hoped to see “another Hitler” by 2039. Routledge has also encouraged his followers to leave negative reviews on the Einhorns’ parents’ business page.

“Jews are doxxing this man and trying to ruin his career,” Routledge wrote in the post sharing the fundraiser. (Doxxing is the intentional publication of personal or identifying information about a person on the internet.) He added, “I cannot let that happen.”

Comments on the donation page, which had raised more than $19,000 against a goal of $100,000 as of Wednesday morning range from “keep up the good work” to “We must separate ourselves from the Jew and his deceitfulness and every other disgusting trait they are born with, and forge a destiny decided by US without THEM.”

In another tweet about the fundraiser, Routledge wrote, “I just raised $10k for antisemitism.”

GiveSendGo is a Christian crowdfunding website that the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism says has collected funds “operated by or for extremists and their causes.”

The company said in a statement to JTA that it opposes antisemitism but had determined the Franco campaign was permissible under its rules.

“At GiveSendGo, we do not condone antisemitism, racism, discrimination, hate speech, or violence of any kind,” a spokesperson for the platform said in a written comment to JTA. “While we understand the concerns that have been raised regarding the fundraiser you referenced, the fundraiser itself does not violate our Terms of Service, which focus on activity and behavior within our platform.”

The spokesperson added, “GiveSendGo is not a place of judgment but a place of generosity, where people can choose how they wish to respond.”

The frenzy around the situation embroiled a different Austin Franco, a Dallas attorney who tweeted that he had received criticism aimed at the Cornell student. “To make matters worse, the undergraduate looks just enough like me to be confusing,” he said in a statement on X, which was accompanied by a video.

“My social media (Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn) and law fi…

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Source document: Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA)

2 reports

The Times of IsraelIndependentRight3 days ago
Far-right streamer raises nearly $20k for Cornell student ‘not interested in working for a Jew’

A far-right YouTuber who has expressed admiration for Adolf Hitler raised over $19,000 for a Cornell University student, Austin Franco, who stated during an internship application process that he was 'not interested in working for a Jew.' The statement was made by Franco during his application for an internship at a software company owned by two Jewish brothers, Gabe and Aiden Einhorn. The message was shared by Gabe Einhorn on X (formerly Twitter), where it went viral before being edited to remove Franco's name. Franco later explained that he made the comment after learning the company was run

Bias read (Right): The article highlights a far-right YouTuber who admires Adolf Hitler and raises funds for a student who expressed anti-Semitic views. The framing emphasizes the controversial nature of the YouTuber's ideology and the student's remarks, without providing balanced perspectives or counterpoints.

Official sources cited

The Times of IsraelIndependentCenter6 days ago
Cornell student turns down interview, saying ‘not interested in working for a Jew’

A 19-year-old Cornell University student, Austin Franco, declined a job interview with a New York-based startup called VryfID after learning it was founded by Jewish individuals. Franco stated in his response that his 'experiences with Jews have not been pleasant.' The Einhorn brothers, who co-founded VryfID, shared Franco's message on social media, expressing disappointment.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the events factually without overtly favoring either side. It reports the student's statement and the founders' reaction neutrally, without editorializing or emphasizing one perspective over another.

Official sources cited

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The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.