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Who's really behind the campus protests? Expensive tents, giant banners and adult agitators who have nothing to do with the schools where they're causing anarchy make expert think the uproar in America is a 'professional job'

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Anti-Israel protestors across US college campuses have shaken the nation over the last weeks, systemically setting up illegal encampments and sparking questions about the money behind the demonstrations.

Organized encampments have appeared across the country's most respected universities after first showing up at Columbia in New York City. Violent clashes between protesters and police have followed at various schools including UCLA and the University of Texas at Austin.

Many have pointed fingers at a company called Crowds on Demand, which provides paid protesters as a service, accusing it of hiring left-wing agitators to manufacture the movement.

But in an exclusive interview with DailyMail.com, CEO Adam Swart denied that his company has any involvement with the protests, and has actually denied requests from both sides.

'We've been inundated with requests by both sides. Not just in regards to the campuses, but just broadly in regards to this Israel-Palestine issue, we've been getting tons of requests over the past few months,' Swart said on Tuesday.

'We have heard from grown ups who want to do activity on college campuses...  lots of requests, including from very high profile wealthy donors on on both sides to get involved.'

Organized encampments have appeared across the country's most respected universities after first showing up at Columbia in New York City

Organized encampments have appeared across the country's most respected universities after first showing up at Columbia in New York City 

Crowds on Demand CEO Adam Swart said the similar tents at the protest are a sign there are larger groups funding the demonstrations

Crowds on Demand CEO Adam Swart said the similar tents at the protest are a sign there are larger groups funding the demonstrations 

Crowds on Demand, however, is not accepting any requests related to the war in Gaza, Swart added, because it's not the kind of issue he likes to get involved in. Swart emphasized that his company only hires protesters who already believe in a cause but may not be able to afford spending their day at a protest.

While his company is not taking the jobs, Swart believes someone is, because as an expert on this type of operation, he recognizes the telltale signs pointing to big money behind a cause, like similar tents and expensive banners seen at Columbia University over the last week.

'I do, to be clear, think there is money behind the pro-Palestine protests - 100 percent. I'm just saying we're staying out of it,' he said.

Swart said it's possible for tax-exempt advocacy organizations to not disclose their donors, and thus anyone could be funding their causes, opening the door to enemy foreign powers like China or Russia to sow discord in the US.

Swart denied that his company has any involvement with the anti-Israel campus protests

Swart denied that his company has any involvement with the anti-Israel campus protests

'If this is coming from abroad, and I believe that it might be in some part, that is very troubling,' he added.

The People's Forum, a tax-exempt advocacy group who often hosts propaganda events for the regimes of countries like Venezuela and Cuba, has been accused of being behind the Columbia protests.

The Washington Free Beacon reports the group, which has received $12million from Goldman Sachs, may have provided materials for the so-called occupation of Hamilton Hall.

Over 100 masked activists met at the group's Manhattan headquarters, a base for all kinds of leftist activism, to plan their moves on Monday, participating in breakout sessions that taught 'resistance' methods.

There, People’s Forum executive director Manolo De Los Santos told the group to 'give Joe Biden a hot summer' and 'make it untenable for the politics of usual to take place in this country.'

He then claimed 'Zionist' Columbia administrators 'want to be more like their masters in Israel.'

Daniel DiMartino, a PhD student at Columbia and a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, told DailyMail.com The People's Forum is a group that aims to lobby for enemies of the US.

A Crowd on Demand protest is seen above. Swart emphasized his company only hires protesters who already believe in a cause but may not be able to afford protesting

A Crowd on Demand protest is seen above. Swart emphasized his company only hires protesters who already believe in a cause but may not be able to afford protesting

'The People's Forum is one of several foreign-funded organizations whose goal is to create havoc in America and defend tyrannical regimes like China's, Russia's, Cuba's and Venezuela's,' the Venezuela native said.

'I saw it firsthand when they hosted employees and officials from the Venezuelan socialist regime in 2022 in New York City. They don't care about human rights, not of Palestinians or Jews and certainly not of Venezuelans.'

The New York Times reported last year that the Chinese Community Party was indirectly funding the People's Forum. 

Meanwhile New York mayor Eric Adams has warned that outside agitators have been instructing students as they took over Hamilton hall in Columbia.

'What should have been a peaceful protest, it has basically been co-opted by professional outside agitators,' he said. 

A video shown by the mayor shows Lisa Fithian, an infamous agitator at US protests for over half a century, showing protesters how to occupy a building. 

The People's Forum, a tax-exempt advocacy group who often hosts propaganda events for the regimes of countries like Venezuela and Cuba, has been accused of being behind the Columbia protests.

The People's Forum, a tax-exempt advocacy group who often hosts propaganda events for the regimes of countries like Venezuela and Cuba, has been accused of being behind the Columbia protests.

People¿s Forum executive director Manolo De Los Santos told the group to 'give Joe Biden a hot summer' and 'make it untenable for the politics of usual to take place in this country

People’s Forum executive director Manolo De Los Santos told the group to 'give Joe Biden a hot summer' and 'make it untenable for the politics of usual to take place in this country

Adams called Fithian 'the nation's best-known protest consultant', noting she gets paid as much as $300 a day to run demonstrations and teach how to take over streets during protests.

CNN has reported that at least half of demonstrators at Columbia are not affiliated with the university. 

The anti-Israel protest at the University of Texas at Austin also appears to include outside forces, according to Jamie Hammonds, a content creator who covers homelessness and current events and has attended all the protests at the campus.

Hammonds told DailyMail.com he attended over 30 Gaza protests that remained peaceful, before agitators showed up last week.

‘They were throwing water on the police, hurling insults, throwing water bottles, they were definitely provoking the cops to a confrontation,' he said.

Hammonds said he encountered a group that held signs that read 'Veterans against genocide' and admitted they were not students or even from Austin. 

A video shown by the mayor Adams shows Lisa Fithian, an infamous agitator at US protests for over half a century, showing protesters how to occupy a building

A video shown by the mayor Adams shows Lisa Fithian, an infamous agitator at US protests for over half a century, showing protesters how to occupy a building

Adams called Fithian 'the nation's best-known protest consultant'

Adams called Fithian 'the nation's best-known protest consultant' 

'They were wearing camouflage, and they were holding signs. They were very much provoking the police,' Hammonds said.

'They were right in the middle of it. Yelling slurs at them, calling them some of the most vile names that you an imagine.'

Most of the protests across the US campuses have been partly organized by Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), a campus group with more than 250 chapters across the country.

SJP was founded by UC Berkeley lecturer Hatem Bazian, who has repeatedly justified terror attacks against Israel and Intifada (uprising) in the US. 

Just days after the October 7 attacks, Bazian shared a video titled: 'Here's why Hamas says its attack on Israel wasn't unprovoked.'

The Detroit Free Press once quoted him as saying: 'The Day of Judgment will not happen until the trees and stones will say, "Oh Muslim, there is a Jew hiding behind me, come and kill him."'

Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) is one of the main organizers of a protest that brought Columbia University to a standstill

Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) is one of the main organizers of a protest that brought Columbia University to a standstill

A new report reveals the group got millions from several charities with alleged links to Palestinian terrorist organization Hamas. Students are pictured receiving checks from AMP

A new report reveals the group got millions from several charities with alleged links to Palestinian terrorist organization Hamas. Students are pictured receiving checks from AMP 

Bazian also once apologized after sharing a cartoon of a stereotypical Orthodox Jewish man celebrating the murder and rape of Palestinians and another of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un wearing a kippah and demanding money from the U.S.

The group has received millions from several charities with alleged links to Hamas, per a report by the think tank Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP).

SJP founder and Berkeley lecturer Hatem Bazian reportedly co-founded AMP

SJP founder and Berkeley lecturer Hatem Bazian reportedly co-founded AMP

The ISGAP report asserts that SJP has become an effective and well-funded network for organizing protests around the country, but that its failure to register as a charity or formal organization left its funding sources and operations murky and unregulated.

Hints of financial backing could be seen at the Columbia 'Gaza Solidarity Encampment', including students erecting several identical high-end tents costing hundreds of dollars each, and handing out free Dunkin' Donuts coffee, $12.50 sandwiches from Pret-a-Manger and $10 rotisserie chickens to participants.

The nonprofits funding SJP include the Westchester People's Action Coalition (WESPAC), Tides, American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), its parent organization Americans for Justice in Palestine (AJP), and Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP).

The ISGAP report said SJP had the closest financial links with WESPAC, which acts as a 'financial sponsor' for the organization, routing tax-free donations through its accounts to SJP chapters.

The anti-Israel protest at the University of Texas at Austin also appears to include outside forces, according to Jamie Hammonds, a content creator who covers homelessness and current events and has attended all the protests at the campus

The anti-Israel protest at the University of Texas at Austin also appears to include outside forces, according to Jamie Hammonds, a content creator who covers homelessness and current events and has attended all the protests at the campus

The report said SJP also gets extensive organizational aid from American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), a nonprofit under investigation by the Virginia attorney general and accused of being a reincarnation of a charity found liable for funding Hamas.

This week the protests at colleges have continued to highlight the discord in the country regarding the war in Gaza. 

On Tuesday night, NYPD officers carrying zip ties and riot shields stormed Columbia University’s Hamilton Hall which was being 'occupied' by pro-Palestinian protesters.

The protesters had seized the administration building more than 20 hours earlier in a major escalation as demonstrations against the Israel-Hamas war spread on college campuses nationwide.

A statement released by a Columbia spokesperson said officers entered the campus after the university requested help. A tent encampment on the school’s grounds began nearly two weeks ago to protest the Israel-Hamas war.

On Tuesday night, NYPD officers carrying zip ties and riot shields stormed Columbia University¿s Hamilton Hall which was being 'occupied' by pro-Palestinian protesters

On Tuesday night, NYPD officers carrying zip ties and riot shields stormed Columbia University’s Hamilton Hall which was being 'occupied' by pro-Palestinian protesters

Hours after students occupied the Columbia building, dueling protesters clashed at the University of California in Los Angeles, kicking and beating each other with sticks

Hours after students occupied the Columbia building, dueling protesters clashed at the University of California in Los Angeles, kicking and beating each other with sticks

'After the University learned overnight that Hamilton Hall had been occupied, vandalized, and blockaded, we were left with no choice,' the school said. 

'The decision to reach out to the NYPD was in response to the actions of the protesters, not the cause they are championing. We have made it clear that the life of campus cannot be endlessly interrupted by protesters who violate the rules and the law.'

Hours after students occupied the Columbia building, dueling protesters clashed at the University of California in Los Angeles, kicking and beating each other with sticks after pro-Israel demonstrators tried to pull down barricades surrounding a pro-Palestinian encampment. 

After a couple of hours of scuffles between demonstrators at UCLA, police wearing helmets and face shields slowly separated the groups and quelled the violence, but UCLA canceled classes Wednesday and urged people to avoid the area where the fighting broke out.

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