Patreon Dumps Tyler Oliveira Over Latest Antisemitic Exposé
YouTuber Tyler Oliveira is facing mass deplatforming after his "Jewish Invasion" video targeted New Jersey’s Orthodox community. Using "goyim" slurs and 1930s-style tropes, the creator has been denounced by the ADL and Laura Loomer for inciting division.

We've all seen plenty of YouTube grifters chase clicks with outrage bait. (Candace Owens saying Erika Kirk was part of Charlie's murder???)
But Tyler Oliveira just dropped the nuclear option: a 73-minute “documentary” titled “I Exposed New Jersey’s Jewish Invasion…” (uploaded February 24, 2026), that somehow manages to be both breathtakingly lazy and genuinely dangerous.
He opens with the classy greeting “Hello Goyim…” (because nothing says “just asking questions” like dusting off medieval slurs). Then he marches into Lakewood and Jackson Township, Ocean County, New Jersey, home to one of America’s largest Orthodox Jewish communities, and spends over an hour recycling every antisemitic trope in the playbook:
“Welfare-addicted Jews” draining taxpayers
“Organized crime” tactics and “blockbusting”
Secret political takeover via “block voting”
Turning towns into “Little Jerusalem” enclaves
“Anti-goyism” and “insulated acidic Jewish community”
He even throws in lines like “zero upside for them to exist for me.” Subtle.
The “investigation”? Street interviews with frustrated non-Jewish locals (fair enough, demographic tension is real in fast-growing areas), cherry-picked stats on large families and school funding fights, and zero serious engagement with the fact that these are American citizens exercising their constitutional rights to live where they want, build private schools, and vote as a bloc — exactly like every other tight-knit immigrant or religious group in U.S. history.
Instead of nuance, we get sensational B-roll of traffic jams, kosher stores, and Hatzolah ambulances framed like they’re an occupying army. Police got 150 calls while he was filming because residents felt harassed. Shocker.
And the kicker? Patreon nuked his account within hours of upload.
Sponsors bailed.
Even Laura Loomer, not exactly a shrinking violet on conservative issues, clapped back hard, calling out the “expose what? Jewish US citizens living their life peacefully?” energy and warning about the optics for Republicans who once hyped his earlier work.
Although Tyler would have you believe otherwise, this isn’t brave truth-telling. This is a 26-year-old with 9 million subscribers realizing that “invasion” thumbnails and “goyim” dog-whistles rack up 1.4 million views in 48 hours.
It’s the same playbook he used on Kiryas Joel last month, and the same reason the ADL correctly flagged it for recycling classic stereotypes about Jewish insularity, money, and dual loyalty.
Real issues like rapid population growth straining suburbs, zoning battles, or public vs. private school funding? We can (kind of) understand those who might think that's worth debating.
But slapping a “Jewish Invasion” title on it, opening with “Hello Goyim,” and editing it like a propaganda reel?
That’s not journalism — that’s stochastic terrorism with better production value.
Tyler’s defense? A boilerplate “educational purposes” disclaimer begging viewers not to harass anyone.
Cute.
The damage is already done: millions of impressions, fresh fuel for the “noticing” crowd, and another reminder that some creators will happily traffic in 1930s-level rhetoric if it pays the bills.
This wasn’t an exposé. It was a calculated antisemitic cash grab that deserved every bit of the backlash, deplatforming, and reputational self-immolation it got. If your “documentary” gets called out by Laura Loomer for being too far, maybe it’s time to rethink the grift.
Watch it if you want to see how low YouTube will let someone go for engagement. Or better yet, don’t. There are actual problems in America that don’t require reviving medieval blood libels to discuss.