That's their Breitbart Jerusalem logo. They have bureaus there, London, California and Texas. This article came from there and was put on the main website. I think Andrew Breitbart was Jєωιѕн.
Fascinating side note. Breitbart was of Irish descent and brought into the ѕуηαgσgυє at 3-months old. Wiki linkImagine... mixing the Irish genes of creativity and flair with тαℓмυd-inspired obnoxiousness?He was the living epitome of the Christian-Jєω battle... to eternity.Early lifeBreitbart was born in
Los Angeles,
California, on February 1, 1969.
[7] He was the adopted son of Gerald and Arlene Breitbart, a restaurant owner and banker respectively, and grew up in the affluent neighborhood of
Brentwood, Los Angeles. He was adopted at three weeks old and raised
Jєωιѕн.
[8] His biological parents had been
Irish American.
[9] He said that his birth certificate indicated his biological father was a folk singer. His adoptive mother had
converted to Judaism when marrying his adoptive father.
[10][11] Breitbart studied at
Hebrew school and had a
Bar Mitzvah.
[12] Theologically he was an agnostic.
[10]Breitbart attended
Brentwood School, one of the country's top private schools, but did not distinguish himself, saying: "My sense of humor saved me".
[10] However, he discovered that he loved writing, publishing his first comedic piece in the school newspaper, the
Brentwood Eagle, analyzing the inequality in his high school's senior and junior parking lots: "One had Mercedes and BMWs, the other Sciroccos and GTIs.""
[10] Breitbart remembers his upbringing as
apolitical, except in one instance: when the family's rabbi tried to defend
Jesse Jackson against charges of antisemitism after his "
Hymietown" comment, his parents left the ѕуηαgσgυє in protest.
[10]Breitbart would remain "proudly and playfully Jєωιѕн" throughout his life, although not always religiously observant. He would sing Hebrew songs at work while also teasing his Orthodox Jєωιѕн colleagues for keeping a kosher diet.
[13] Joel Pollak wrote: “He carried his faith as he carried all his convictions: with a lighthearted touch but a deep commitment.”
[13] Breitbart later said of his profession: "I'm glad I've become a journalist because I'd like to fight on behalf of the Israeli people... And the Israeli people, I adore and I love."
[13][14]While in high school, Breitbart worked as a
pizza delivery driver; he sometimes delivered to celebrities such as
Judge Reinhold.
[15] He earned a
BA in
American studies from
Tulane University in 1991, graduating with "no sense of [his] future whatsoever."
[16] His early jobs included a stint at
cable channel
E! Entertainment Television, working for the company's
online magazine, and some time in film production.
Previously left-leaning in his politics, Breitbart changed his political views after experiencing "an
epiphany" while watching the late 1991
confirmation hearings for Supreme Court justice
Clarence Thomas, due to what he considered unfounded attacks on the part of liberals based on former employee
Anita Hill's sɛҳuąƖ harassment accusations.
[17] Breitbart later described himself as "a
Reagan conservative" with
libertarian sympathies.
[1]Listening to radio hosts such as
Rush Limbaugh helped Breitbart refine his political and philosophical positions, igniting an interest in learning that he had suppressed as a result of his distaste for the "nihilistic musings of dead
critical theorists"
[18] that had dominated his studies at Tulane. In this era, Breitbart also read
Camille Paglia's book
sɛҳuąƖ Personae (1990), a massive survey of Western art, literature and culture from ancient Egypt to the 20th century, which, he wrote, "made me realize how little I really had learned in college."
[18]Ben Shapiro, who was a friend of Breitbart's for the last 14 years of his life, said Breitbart cared less about public policy than that people should not be lied about or bullied.
Producer
Jeremy D. Boreing wrote:
He wasn't actually very political–that is, he had almost no interest at all in policy. What defined and motivated Andrew was his unique ability to perceive the gross double standard that the media, the political establishment, and the pop culture employ in their war on those with whom they disagree. What he hated were bullies.[19]