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Anti-Zionist Jews must play a role in Palestinian liberation

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Anti-Zionist Jews must play a role in Palestinian liberation

Israel’s almost year-long genocide of Palestinians in Gaza has brought many long-simmering questions of politics and identity within the international Jewish community to the fore. What does it mean to be Jewish? Is ‘never again’ a statement primarily based in nationalism or in an ethic of universal justice? Speaking from his experience organizing Canada’s Jewish community against Israel’s genocide, Corey Balsam of Independent Jewish Voices of Canada joins The Marc Steiner Show for an extensive discussion on what it means to be an anti-Zionist Jew today.

Studio Production: Cameron Granadino
Post-Production: Alina Nehlich


Transcript

Marc Steiner:  Welcome to The Marc Steiner Show here on The Real News. I’m Marc Steiner. It’s great to have you all with us.

Today, there’s massive demonstrations going on in Israel against the war in Gaza to bring the hostages home, as well as ending the slaughter in Gaza. But the worldwide tide is turning against Israel. This Israeli illegal murderous occupation of the West Bank and the slaughter and devastation taking place in Gaza allows the rise of antisemitism in the world, antisemitism, which always lurks just below the surface. It’s always here. Neo-fascism is on the rise in the world and is in control of the government of Israel, and we face a very dangerous, complex, uncertain future.

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My guest today is Corey Balsam. He’s coordinator of the Independent Jewish Voices of Canada, to bring his experienced analysis about this war in Gaza and the growing movement against it in Canada, in the world, and Jewish community. And he’s worked for Oxfam. He lived in Palestine for three-and-a-half years, and we really do welcome him to the show.

Good to have you here, Corey.

Corey Balsam:  Pleasure to be with you.

Marc Steiner:  There’s so many places to start this, but in all my experience in years of working around this issue, being part of the anti-occupation movement since the late ’60s, there’s something about this particular moment that is really treacherous and dangerous, that we’re on some kind of precipice. This is a bit different with this far-right government in Israel and the slaughter taking place in Gaza. I’d like to hear your analysis of where we are and why you think we’re at this place, and where you think this takes us?

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Corey Balsam:  Yeah, really good question. I completely agree with you that we’ve never seen anything like this. I’ve been involved for quite a long time. I never imagined it would get this bad. It’s a genocide, what’s happening in Gaza.

And I think with the fog of “war”, we’re seeing the Israeli government move on a lot of their objectives with respect to the West Bank as well. So we’re really at… Yeah, a precipice is a good way to put it.

We’ve also never seen such a movement in response. I think, in terms of anti-war movements, this is definitely a historic one where, obviously, the campus protests and the weekly demonstrations with tens, hundreds of thousands of people around the world protesting, and we’re seeing some movement there. And I think in Canada, I can talk about some of the developments here.

But I think Israel has been so emboldened over the years. They know that they have the US veto. They’ve tested the waters for quite a long time and have seen that there’s really been no response or very little response, mostly just words. So they’re just continuing.

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I think those who were in the leadership there, unfortunately, are quite frankly genocidal. We’ve known about them for a long time, and I lived in the West Bank for quite a while, and I saw the settlers, and I saw the stars of David on Palestinian homes and things like that, which really was something that shocked me in those days. And now we’re just seeing them able to enact what it is that, at one point, radical fringe in Israeli society has wanted to do.

Marc Steiner:  Right.

Corey Balsam:  And what scares me, really, I don’t know if some of your readers or you, Marc, saw, there was a podcast in Israel, an English language podcast called Two Nice Jewish Boys.

Marc Steiner:  Oh, yeah.

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Corey Balsam:  And there’s clips of that podcast that have gone viral where they say, basically, we talk to everyday Israelis. Basically, the street is saying, if you gave us a red button to wipe out all the Palestinians, we would do it in an instant without thinking.

So what’s really scaring me is the mainstreaming of the genocidal thinking, and, to some extent, connections with that in the Jewish community here and elsewhere, not just the Jewish community. I think broader Zionist audiences are latching onto that. I’m not saying that’s everyone or even represents the majority, but I am quite concerned about the level of complacency and support despite, of course, the mass movements, which, again, we can talk about.

And so yeah, it paints a pretty dark picture for the future. I am inspired by the movements. I don’t think this can go on forever. I don’t think the occupation, the apartheid, all of that can go on forever. Like they say, it usually gets worse before it gets better. So hopefully soon we’ll be on the track for it getting better.

Marc Steiner:  So I’m really curious, two things, semi-connected here, is your own sojourn as a Jewish man into opposing the occupation and opposing what’s happening in Israel, and where that came from for you? Let’s just start there and stop, and I’ll do the second part after that.

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Corey Balsam:  It’s a big question, Marc. I’ve been asked this a number of times.

Marc Steiner:  I’m sure you have. I have too. I understand completely.

Corey Balsam:  Yeah. Where did it start? I went to a very multicultural, multi-ethnic school. I had a Palestinian friend from the age of… What was it? Maybe seven or something like that. So that helped. The politics weren’t there to help break down some possible ideas that I might have about Palestinians wanting to kill Jews, me in particular.

I later got in, in part because I… Actually, so I was telling Marc before the show that I practice Capoeira, an Afro-Brazilian art form, which is very much rooted in resistance and struggle against racism and slavery and things like that. And through starting that, I connected with a lot of people that were very open to the world and had, I think, some quite progressive politics. So that, I think, helped me think about things in a different way.

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And eventually, again, it’s a long story, there’s a lot that went into it, but I ended up taking a position to come out and say, as a Jewish person, I’m going to use what I know. I’m going to use the platform that’s given to me to speak out and to try to push the power that has the ability to make the change, the Israeli government, and by extension, Jewish communities around the world to take action.

Marc Steiner:  As I was thinking about the work that you all do in Canada and reading about it, and also the struggle going on across the planet and what’s happening in Israel-Palestine right now. As I said at the beginning of the program, antsemitism is always lurking below the surface. It runs deep in human society. People love to hate Jews. That’s a reality.

And what I often say sometimes, people in conversations, I speak, is that, but for the first time in our history as Jews, we’re the ones unleashing it, hard as that is to say, because of what’s happening in Israel and Palestine.

And I find that sometimes it’s something you really have to wrestle with, with family, with friends, with people you know. Why are you taking this position? How could you be against Israel” Right? I’m sure you experienced that.

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So I’m curious, for you, how those two things interact, opposing this occupation and this slaughtering in Gaza, and also realizing that antisemitism runs deep and how we wind ourselves through that murky water?

Corey Balsam:  So a big part of what we do with Independent Jewish Voices is make the case that you can stand up for Palestinian liberation and you can also be staunchly against and actively oppose antisemitism. So we lead workshops with a lot of movement allies and unions and other groups to really help people understand the history of antisemitism, what it looks like, what it looked like in the past, what it looks like today, and also what is not antisemitism.

Because so much of what the movement faces and those who speak out for Palestinian human rights or liberation are accusations of antisemitism to shut them down.

We’ve, in many ways, taken a leadership role globally in the fight against the IHRA definition, the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition, which has been a core part of the global strategy with involving the Israeli government and pro-Israel lobby groups to shut down and silence the criticism of Israel and movements in support of Palestine. So I think it’s really important to understand those distinctions.

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And yeah, a lot of people will say, oh, we’re Validating the antisemites or that sort of thing. I think we’re doing actually so much just being at the protest and having a Jewish voice that’s like, we’re Jews, we’re proud Jews, and we’re standing up for Palestine. I think that does so much to oppose antisemitism and to allow people to go in that direction.

Because antisemitism is about conspiracy theories for the most part, right? Jews controlling the world and controlling our politicians and this and that. And I think what we need to continue to explain to people and to show is that Israel is not Jews. Zionism is not Jews. These things are distinct.

Obviously, many Jews are Zionists, unfortunately, today, and hopefully less and less as they see what’s unfolding as a result in Palestine. But these things are different and it’s not, again, because of Jews. So yeah, that’s, I think, what we need to continue saying.

And these things really undermine movements. I’m reading a book now called Safety Through Solidarity: A Radical Guide to Fighting Antisemitism.

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Marc Steiner:  Shane Burley’s book?

Corey Balsam:

Yeah, Shane Burley.

Marc Steiner:  We’ll be interviewing him with that book in about a week. Yeah.

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Corey Balsam:  Oh, amazing. Yeah, I know. It’s great. Great. It’s a really important [inaudible]. Also to think about how to oppose antisemitism in a time of Israeli genocide.

Marc Steiner:  Right.

Corey Balsam:  What does that mean? How to negotiate those conversations. Obviously we should be prioritizing, in my view, the genocide. That is the big issue right now. Are some Jews facing antisemitism? For sure. Is it, in many cases, like on campus, for instance, are those accusations weaponized to shut down protesters? Yes. So it takes a lot of nuance to be able to navigate this terrain. That’s something that we’re forced to reckon with and to deal with. And it does take up a lot of our time, but I think it’s important work.

Marc Steiner:  It is important. I also wrestle with how we as Jews, how the oppressed can so easily become the oppressor.

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Corey Balsam:  I think our most famous member, probably, is Gabor Maté.

Marc Steiner:  Oh, yeah, sure.

Corey Balsam:  He speaks a lot about these types of things. And for me, when I see what’s happening, in no way do I want to absolve the Israeli government, Israelis participating in this, of responsibility, but I think, how did we get to this? Where did this mentality come from? It came from the Holocaust and from years of Jews being oppressed, that whole idea of cycle of violence.

Gabor says when people ask, Jews, of all people, how could they do this? How could they be doing this to the Palestinian people? And his response is like, how could they not, given the history, in many ways? It’s very explainable, I think, from a psychological perspective.

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And so our job also as Jews engaged in this is to really try to undo some of that. One thing that I really resented growing up and learning about the Holocaust and antisemitism was that the way it’s so often taught is not to heal, not to heal and move on and focus on never again for anyone.

In most institutions, at least from my experience, it’s mostly about never again for us, and another Holocaust could be around the corner at any moment, be on guard, be afraid, be afraid. Rather than, again, about healing and trying to think about tikkun olam and how to make sure these things don’t happen again to anyone.

And we’re seeing that play out today. In Toronto, we’re now seeing these armed or security groups that are popping up, and even the Jewish Federation is announcing all these measures for security. And it really just, I think, keeps people in the state of perpetual fear. And when you’re in that state of perpetual fear, all alleys lead to Zionism and supporting Israel as our savior.

When in fact, and I agree with you, that’s what’s contributing to the anger, obviously. I don’t think, for the most part, it’s anger against Jews. I think it’s anger against Israel. There are people that do not make that distinction, unfortunately.

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Marc Steiner:  Unfortunately. There are many of them, as well. So what do you think, in terms of being an organizer in the Jewish world and large world around Israel-Palestine, and we’re watching what’s taking place now, where do you politically see the path forward? And your role as well, and the role of Jews to help stop the slaughter?

Corey Balsam:  Yeah, I wish I had the answer for you, Marc, in terms of —

Marc Steiner:  You don’t have an answer? No, I’m just kidding [both laugh].

Corey Balsam:  The political path forward. We said immediately after Oct. 7, there’s no way of resolving this militarily. Oct. 7 came out of a context in which Palestinians were pushed to desperation, they, especially in Gaza, were kept in an open air prison, denied access to the world and basics. So it’s no surprise that there would’ve been an explosion like that.

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So what is the response? One thing not to do, like the Canadian government, is tell Israel, well, they have the right to defend themselves. That’s basically giving them carte blanche to do what they did, and now we’re almost a year later.

The way forward is actually having the world say, you know what? We need to actually address the core issues here that led to Oct. 7 and have led to all this anger, and pursue justice. Justice, justice, we shall pursue. I think that’s really the only path.

And I don’t have a particular agenda as to one state, two state, red state, blue state [Steiner laughs]. I think any system, any state needs to be one that is, or any system of states, where there’s no group that’s oppressed, there’s no group that’s dominating, or a state is not geared around dominating the other group, which is the case right now.

So I think that’s really the only way, and there has to be pressure. Obviously, we’ve now seen international court decisions. We’ve seen movement in the General Assembly, but nothing really binding and nothing really threatening the Israeli government. So they know that. They know that they can get out of it.

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And in terms of reputation, I think they’ve sacrificed that. For a long time, I think Israel was much more worried about their reputation. At this point, I think they’ve sacrificed their reputation, in many ways, because they know that there won’t be consequences anyway.

So there needs to be consequence. There needs to be sanctions, and we need to push towards some sort of resolution, or else this is just going to continue.

Marc Steiner:  As one of the leaders and founders of the Independent Jewish Voices in Canada, how do you see that movement growing, and do you see it growing?

Corey Balsam:  Oh, yeah. So before Oct. 7, IJV was, arguably, the biggest grassroots Palestine solidarity organization in the country. Now, I think it’s still probably the case as a national organization, but the level of mobilization at the local level across the country, it’s totally unprecedented. We’re seeing this all around the world. So many different organizations, so many different people that are engaging.

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Just on the Jewish side, we’ve almost doubled in numbers. We had 13 local chapters active on Oct. 6. I think we have 23 or 24 now.

Marc Steiner:  Really?

Corey Balsam:  We have a chapter on Cape Breton Island.

Marc Steiner:  Really?

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Corey Balsam:  With a rabbi.

Marc Steiner:  With a rabbi [laughs].

Corey Balsam:  I didn’t even know there were Jews there [Steiner laughs]. So really, it’s incredible to see. And obviously the pros or lobby groups are trying to downplay our numbers and our role, but I think it is just growing. We’re hiring right now. We have a few staff. Our organization is mostly volunteers. We hired for this job last year in September, I think we got six applicants. This year, we got 36 applicants.

Marc Steiner:  Wow.

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Corey Balsam:  Extremely strong candidates. So I think there’s a lot of interest. There’s a lot of engagement, especially amongst the younger generations, university students. So that bodes well for the future, to some extent. That’s one thing that we can be optimistic about in this very dismal reality that we’re living.

Marc Steiner:  And it is. I don’t know how this ends either in Israel-Palestine, this moment without a US government or other entities, Canadian government stepping in saying, no, no more guns, no more arms, bringing you to the table. Come to Camp David. We’re going to stop it. We have to figure out a future.

That is something I think, in some ways, for people like you and me, like us, to come up and say, this is what we have to do. This is what the next step has to be. Is it a bi-national state? Is it a Commonwealth? Is it one state? We have to have a solution. It has to end. We cannot become this murderous people slaughtering innocent Palestinians. We can’t be that.

Corey Balsam:  I don’t like to associate with that. People, obviously, there’s a big tradition of Jews [inaudible], but I agree with you that we need to push towards a resolution. It’s almost a year. We need to turn the tide on this and push towards justice.

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In the US, there’s a very strong campaign to cut or to make weapons conditional. We have a campaign in Canada called Arms Embargo Now.

Marc Steiner:  Called What?

Corey Balsam:  Arms Embargo Now is our —

Marc Steiner:  Arms Embargo Now. Okay. Yeah, yeah.

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Corey Balsam:  Yeah. It’s a Canadian coalition that’s pushing similar demands. Obviously, we don’t have anywhere near the same amount of backing, financial or military backing of Israel as the US does.

But we’ve actually seen some movement on that, and that’s really promising. Just yesterday actually, the Foreign Minister announced that they’ve suspended 30 existing arms permits to Israel and are opposing — We’ll see what actually happens with this — But they’re opposing a shipment of arms from a Quebec company through the US that’s destined for Israel. And that’s the result of the organizing that’s happening right now.

It’s also the result, I think, of, actually, in my riding or electoral district, there’s a by-election now, and the NDP, a center-left Party has a candidate who’s saying vote for him to stop the genocide in Gaza. And that’s actually something that’s quite in play politically. So I think they’re realizing that this is an election issue, that this is something that interests a lot of people, and they don’t want to be complicit.

There’s also a legal case against the Canadian government regarding their sale of weapons to Israel and then violating their own laws. So I think that’s a good avenue to take. I think there are various avenues to take.

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Another thing that we’ve really been focusing on are the charities, and we actually just had maybe our biggest victory ever over the summer in the revocation of the charitable status of the Jewish National Fund of Canada. And the JNF is really, at the core, I’m sure, Marc, you’re familiar with the JNF.

Marc Steiner:  I was shocked when I read in preparing for our conversation today that that actually happened.

Corey Balsam:  It actually happened. Now they’re appealing it. They released about 360 pages of documents going back decades, actually, discussing possible revocation or issues with the JNF and the government.

And the final document doesn’t really get into some of the issues that we were raising around their support for the IDF and for the settlements and things like that, but that’s all in there. And I think it played a big role in getting to that place now.

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So of course, we hope that sticks, but that’s a big blow to, I think, the Zionist movement globally. There are about 40-something fundraising branches of the JNF around the world.

And for those listeners who don’t know, maybe just to give you a sense of what that is, the JNF was established in the beginning of the 1900s to fundraise to colonize Palestine and establish Jewish settlements. They went on to become the caretakers of the forest where they actually covered up something like 90 Palestinian villages with forests so the villagers couldn’t return. And they’ve continued in that same vein in the West Bank, helping the settler movement and helping the IDF and things like that.

So it goes back quite a long way, and it’s really a core organization to the whole Zionist idea and the idea of a Jewish-dominant apartheid state, essentially.

So we’re quite happy with that. And we’re pushing on other charities now too, that are funding extreme right organizations in Israel that are supporting settlements and the IDF. Obviously, in the US, you have a lot of that as well. Getting all sorts of calls from organizations and activists in the US and around the world saying, how did you do it with the JNF [Steiner laughs]? We want to do it here too. So I think that’s an angle, as well, that’s really important to be pushing on.

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Marc Steiner:  That was a huge victory. And I’m glad we have this connection. And I’m also looking forward to many more conversations and getting you together with other activists around the country, this country, your country, the world, to continue this conversation, and in Palestine-Israel as well. Because it’s critical to the future of the world, I think, the danger of conflagration emanating from that, that could affect the entire planet. It’s huge and really important.

And so I appreciate you and the courage you have for standing up in the face of serious opposition for members of our community. And so Corey Balsam, thanks for joining us, and thank you so much for the work that you do.

Corey Balsam:  My pleasure, Marc.

Marc Steiner:  Oh, before we let you go, let folks know how to get in touch with you and how to get in touch with your organization in Canada?

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Corey Balsam:  Sure. So it’s Independent Jewish Voices Canada. You can find us on Instagram, on Twitter, on Facebook. Our website is ijvcanada.org. So yeah, feel free to reach out. And of course, if you’re here and you want to get involved or join, you’ll find all that information on the website.

Marc Steiner:  And I would just say as we go, we’re actually taping this on the 11th of September, which is a significant date in its own right. And so thank you so much, Corey, for the work you do and for joining us here today.

Corey Balsam:  My pleasure. Thanks, Marc.

Marc Steiner:  Once again, let me thank Corey Balsam for joining us today. His perspectives are always enlightening, and it’s critically important to hear the voices of Jewish resistance to the occupation of the West Bank and the strangulation and slaughter now taking place in Gaza.

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And here in the studio, let me thank Cameron Granadino for running the program, audio editor, Alina Nehlich, Rosette Sewali for producing The Marc Steiner Show, and the tireless Kayla Rivara for making it all work behind the scenes, and everyone here at The Real News for making the show possible.

Please let me know what you thought about what you heard today, what you’d like us to cover. Just write to me at mss@therrealnews.com and I’ll get right back to you.

Once again, thank you to Corey Balsam for joining us today and all the work that he does. And please keep listening to all the reporting and stories we’re producing here at The Real News about the struggle in the Holy Land. So from the crew here at The Real News, I’m Marc Steiner. Stay involved, keep listening, and take care.

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Everything Erik and Lyle Menendez have said about Monsters

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Everything Erik and Lyle Menendez have said about Monsters

The case of brothers Lyle and Erik Menendez who gunned down their parents at their Beverley Hills family home commanded global attention in the 90s.

The pair were convicted on two counts of first-degree murder and conspiracy to murder their parents Jose and Kitty and sentenced to life in prison without parole in 1996.

Almost 30 years later, the story is still grabbing the headlines after Netflix released its latest true crime series Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story.

The nine-episode drama, based on the compelling court case, was created by Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan who were behind the first Monsters series about US serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer.

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This latest show has claimed the number one spot in the streaming services dramas since it’s release on 19 September.

But it has also courted controversy with many criticising its portrayal of the brothers.

LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES: This 1992 file photo shows double murder defendants Erik (R) and Lyle Menendez (L) during a court appearance in Los Angeles, Ca. The Menendez brothers have been found guilty of first degree murder 20 March in their second trial for the killing of their parents. AFP PHOTO Mike NELSON/mn (Photo credit should read MIKE NELSON/AFP via Getty Images)
Brothers and double murder defendants Erik (r) and Lyle Menendez (l) during a court appearance in Los Angeles (Photo: Mike Nelson/AFP/Getty)

Why is there controversy around Netflix’s Monsters?

Some viewers have expressed concerns about the treatment of the two brothers, who have consistently claimed they were the victims of physical, emotional and sexual abuse at the hands of their parents.

The Netflix drama has chronicled the story from both Lyle and Erik’s perspectives but also that of their deceased parents Jose and Kitty Menendez.

Taking to social media, some viewers said they felt the brothers had become victims once again as a result of their depiction in the show.

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One wrote: “Sensitive about the Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story on Netflix because the Menendez brother’s story is one of deep trauma and injustice.

“I don’t feel anyone should be telling their stories unless they’re factual and portraying them as the victims they really are.”

There is also a suggestion made within the drama that the brothers were in an incestuous relationship, which Lyle had denied during the trial.

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A viewer criticised this online writing: “Confused why Netflix made the decision to further victimise Erik and Lyle Menendez by inventing facts

“Was hoping this was an opportunity for truth that could help not salacious fiction.”

The incest line was also debunked by Robert Rand, who wrote The Menendez Murders: The Shocking Untold Story of the Menendez Family and the Killings that Stunned the Nation.

He told The Hollywood Reporter: “I don’t believe that Erik and Lyle Menendez were ever lovers.

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“I think that’s a fantasy that was in the mind of Dominick Dunne [the reporter portrayed in the series by Nathan Lane].”

Monsters: The Lyle And Erik Menendez Story. (L to R) Nicholas Chavez as Lyle Menendez, Cooper Koch as Erik Menendez in episode 201 of Monsters: The Lyle And Erik Menendez Story. Cr. Miles Crist/Netflix ?? 2024
Viewers have been critical of the suggestion of incest in ‘Monsters: The Lyle And Erik Menendez Story’ (Photo: Miles Crist/Netflix )

Aside from viewers comments, the critics have also expressed their displeasure with the series in their reviews.

Jesse Hassenger, writing for The Guardian, said: “This is probably supposed to come across as multifaceted.

“Instead, it’s an exhausting, repetitive alternation between two overplayed notes: the brothers as victims twisted and broken by years of abuse, and the brothers as delusional, sloppy, possibly sociopathic connivers.”

Katie Rosseinsky reviewing the series for The Independent wrote: “Moments of high drama sometimes come across as inadvertently camp: one scene in the first episode, in which Sevigny brutally whips a toupee from her son’s head, leaving him bald and morose, feels destined to become a meme.

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“Sequences like this, interspersed with exposition-laden dialogue about the police investigation, mean the tone oscillates from silly to serious. “

While Variety described it as a “repetitive slog” after the fifth episode.

“The show falls into the deep end.”, wrote Aramide Tinubu. “The unwieldy tone, which teeters between ominous and light camp (there’s a shocking toupee and overdone homoeroticism), implodes on itself, and the rest of the episodes are a repetitive slog.”

She concluded: “Despite the gripping subject matter and the outstanding performances, Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story has no idea what it wants to be.

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“Therefore, it just dissolves into a retelling of unspeakable abuses and gruesome crimes.”

What have the Menendez brothers said about Monsters?

Erik Menendez, who is currently serving a life sentence with his brother Lyle at the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility in California, issued a statement on X via his wife Tammi Menendez the day after the Netflix series launched on Thursday 19 September.

In it he said: “I believed we had moved beyond the lies and ruinous character portrayals of Lyle, creating a caricature of Lyle rooted in horrible and blatant lies rampant in the show.

“I can only believe they were done so on purpose.

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“It is with a heavy heart that I say, I believe Ryan Murphy cannot be this naive and inaccurate about the facts of our lives so as to do this without bad intent.”

Brothers Erik and Lyle Menendez are serving life terms for the 1989 shotgun murders of their parents. Erik is pictured above in an August 2002 California Department of Corrections mug shot. His older brother Lyle (whose given name is Joseph) is seen in a July 2003 shot taken at the Mule Creek State Prison. (Photo by Bureau of Prisons/Getty Images)
Erik (pictured above) and his older brother Lyle (given name Joseph) are serving life sentences without parole (Photo: Bureau of Prisons/Getty)

Making reference to the sexual abuse he and his brother said they endured during their upbringing, he added: “It is sad for me to know that Netflix’s dishonest portrayal of the tragedies surrounding our crime have taken the painful truths several steps backward – back through time to an era when the prosecution built a narrative on a belief system that males were not sexually abused, and that males experienced rape trauma differently than women.”

He added: “Those awful lies have been disrupted and exposed by countless brave victims over the last two decades who have broken through their personal shame and bravely spoken out.

“So now Murphy shapes his horrible narrative through vile and appalling character portrayals of Lyle and of me and disheartening slander.”

And he asked: “Is the truth not enough? Let the truth stand as the truth.

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“How demoralizing to know that one man with power can undermine decades of progress in shedding light on childhood trauma.”

How has Ryan Murphy responded to the criticism?

In an interview with US show Entertainment Tonight, Ryan Murphy, who created the show with Ian Brennan, responded to Erik Menendez’s comments saying he had much to say on the topic.

“I think it’s interesting that he’s issued a statement without having seen the show”, he said, “It’s really, really hard — if it’s your life — to see your life up on screen.”

He added that he felt he and the show’s creators had given the brothers a fair hearing in the drama.

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“The thing that I find interesting that he doesn’t mention in his quote, is if you watch the show, I would say 60 to 65 per cent of our show in the scripts and in the film form centre around the abuse and what they claim happened to them”, he said, “And we do it very carefully and we give them their day in court and they talk openly about it.”

He said they had spent three years researching for the show and that there were four people’s perspectives to be included in the piece.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: (L-R) Javier Bardem, Cooper Koch, Nicholas Alexander Chavez, and Chlo?? Sevigny attend the Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story | NY Tastemaker at Crosby Hotel on September 12, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Netflix)
Javier Bardem, Cooper Koch, Nicholas Alexander Chavez, and Chloe Sevigny (l-r) star in the Netflix series Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story. (Photo: Roy Rochlin/Getty/Netflix)

“What about the parents?”, he continued. “We had an obligation as storytellers to also try and put in their perspective based on our research, which we did.”

Murphy said he was “very proud” of the work and of the acting in it.

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China probes Calvin Klein over Xinjiang cotton

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China probes Calvin Klein over Xinjiang cotton

China has announced it is investigating the company that owns US fashion brands Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein for suspected “discriminatory measures” against Xinjiang cotton companies.

The move marks a new effort by Beijing to fight back against allegations from western officials and human rights activists that cotton and other goods in the region have been produced using forced labour from the Uyghur ethnic group.

The US banned imports from the area in 2021, citing those concerns.

China’s Ministry of Commerce accused the firm of “boycotting Xinjiang cotton and other products without any factual basis”.

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PVH, which owns the two brands and has a significant presence in China as well as the US, did not respond to a request for comment.

It has previously said it complies with laws in the regions where it does business, including the US Xinjiang law.

It has 30 days to respond to the Chinese authorities, at which point it could be added to the country’s “unreliable entities” list, raising the prospect of further punishment.

Cullen Hendrix, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute of International Economics, said it was not clear exactly what prompted the investigation into PVH now.

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But he said the announcement was likely to hurt the firm’s reputation among Chinese shoppers – and send a wider warning to global firms of the risks of simply bowing to western concerns.

“China is, to a certain extent, flexing its muscle and reminding, not necessarily western governments, but western firms … that actions have consequences,” he said.

“This same kind of naming-and-shaming tactic, that human rights organisations in the west have used, can be weaponised here.”

The investigation of PVH comes as tensions between China and the west have been growing on a range of issues, including electric cars and manufacturing.

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On Monday, the US proposed rules to ban the use of certain technology in Chinese and Russian cars, citing security threats.

China has previously put US firms on its unreliable entities list, which it created as trade tensions heated up between Beijing and Washington.

Those firms were major defence contractors, such as Lockheed Martin and Raytheon, over their business in Taiwan.

Mr Hendrix said the decision to target PVH – a consumer-facing firm with a clearly recognisable US brand – showed the two countries’ disputes were widening beyond areas such as defence and advanced technologies.

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“These things have a way of spilling over,” he said. “It’s affecting a growing number of supply chains across different sectors of the economy.”

In its annual report, PVH warned investors of revenue and reputational risks stemming from the fight over Xinjiang.

It noted that the issue had been “subject to significant scrutiny and contention in China, the United States and elsewhere, resulting in criticism against multinational companies, including us”.

The company was named in a 2020 report by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute that identified dozens of firms that were allegedly benefiting from labour abuses in Xinjiang.

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At the time PVH said it took the reports seriously and would continue to work to address the matter.

PVH employs more than 29,000 people globally and does more than 65% of its sales outside of the US.

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Asda shoppers clear the shelves of Cadbury advent calendars scanning for 85p – it’s the cheapest around

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Asda shoppers clear the shelves of Cadbury advent calendars scanning for 85p - it's the cheapest around

ASDA shoppers are delighted after discovering a Cadbury chocolate advent calendar is selling for just 85p in stores.

The deal has been shared on the Extreme Couponing and Bargaining Facebook group and users are shocked by the reduced price.

The Cadbury advent calendar is a fan favourite - and now only 85p

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The Cadbury advent calendar is a fan favourite – and now only 85p

The advent calendar is selling in stores for 85p.

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It is a Cadbury Dairy milk advent calendar, containing 24 milk chocolates in various festive shapes.

On the Cadbury website, the calendar sells for £2.25, meaning this Asda bargain is 62% discounted from the original price.

One excited member commented: “I’m going to go look for this after work”.

While another person responded: “get me one if they do have it please”.

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The item is available in store and online on the Asda website for the bargain price

When we searched around, we couldn’t find an offer cheaper than this one for the same advent calendar.

On Ocado the calendar is priced at £2.25, which is still 62% pricier than Asda.

And in Poundland you can buy the calendar for £2.75, making the Asda purchase almost a 70% save.

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And for shoppers looking for something a bit different, Asda’s entire advent calendar range is available online and in store.

White chocolate lovers can purchase a white chocolate Cadbury Calendar for £2, which is selling on Amazon for as much as £8.89 – meaning an entire £6.89 off your purchase.

Shoppers can also satisfy their sweet tooth at Asda with Maltesers, Milkybar, Galaxy or Terry’s Chocolate Orange options, both for the price of £2.50.

In comparison, Morrisons is selling the Galaxy Smooth Milk Chocolate Christmas for £3.25, which is 75p extra.

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There is also a Swizzels Sweet Shop calendar available for £6.00, which is sold in other retailers such as Selfridges for £8.99 – meaning a £2.99 save.

I made my own luxury beauty advent calendar for less than the price of one you’d find at Nordstrom and I didn’t buy all the items

Other places already offering great deals on low priced advent calendars include Poundland and Home Bargains.

Poundland sells alternative non-chocolate calendar options, such as a Hot Wheels or Christmas barbie advent for as cheap as £1.

And in Home Bargains, punters can buy a Polar Express or Grinch style calendar for £1.25.

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Despite these low prices, the iconic Asda Cadbury advent was still the cheapest option we found online.

To find your nearest Asda store, use the store locator tool on the retailer’s website.

And to secure the best prices, make sure you shop around, by comparing prices in Whats New or Deals via multiple retailers’ websites.

How to save at Asda

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Shop the budget range

Savvy shopper Eilish Stout-Cairns recommends that shoppers grab items from Asda’s Just Essentials range.

She said: “Asda’s budget range is easy to spot as it’s bright yellow! Keep your eyes peeled for yellow and you’ll find their Just Essentials range.

“It’s great value and I’ve found it has a much wider selection of budget items compared to other supermarkets.

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 Sign up to Asda Rewards 

The savvy-saver also presses on the importance of signing up to Asda’s reward scheme.

She said: “Asda Rewards is free to join and if you shop at Asda you should absolutely sign up.

“As an Asda Rewards member, you’ll get exclusive discounts and offers, and you’ll also be able to earn 10% cashback on Star Products.

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“This will go straight into your cashpot, and once you’ve earned at least £1, you can transfer the money in your cashpot into ASDA vouchers.

We’ve previously rounded up the best supermarket loyalty schemes – including the ones that will save you the most money.

Look out for booze deals

Eilish always suggests that shoppers looking to buy booze look out for bargain deals.

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She said: “Asda often has an alcohol offer on: buy six bottles and save 25%.

“The offer includes selected bottles with red, white and rose options, as well as prosecco. There are usually lots of popular bottles included, for example, Oyster Bay Hawkes Bay Merlot, Oyster Bay Hawkes Bay Merlot and Freixenet Prosecco D.O.C.

“Obviously, the more expensive the bottles you choose, the more you save.”

Join Facebook groups

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The savvy saver also recommends that fans of Asda join Facebook groups to keep in the know about the latest bargains in-store.

Eilish said: “I recommend joining the Latest Deals Facebook Group to find out about the latest deals and new launches in store.

“Every day, more than 250,000 deal hunters share their latest bargain finds and new releases. 

“For example, recently a member shared a picture of Asda’s new Barbie range spotted in store.

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“Another member shared the bargain outdoor plants she picked up, including roses for 47p, blackcurrant bushes for 14p and topiary trees for 14p.”

What else is new for Christmas items in Asda?

Asda have released a full Christmas range already – from Christmas dinner items, to bakery goods, to Christmas gifts and festive drink products.

On the Asda website you can “build your own cheeseboard”, with cheeses starting from £1.95.

The Wensleydale Creamery Hot and Spicy cheddar is currently reduced at £1.95 from £2.20.

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For £3.25, punters can also buy a box of 12 pigs and blankets, and 12 Golden Yorkshire Puddings for 220g.

There are also great deals on wine, where if you buy 6 bottles you save 25% off – perfect for those hosting Christmas this year.

And Christmas gift sets start from just £4.00, such as the Lynx Africa duo which is selling on the Boots website for £8 – double the price.

However, Boots is also great for gift sets, with up to 2,212 options to shop from.

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For example, if you’re just looking for something small, hand cream gift sets only cost the punter £2.50 on the Boots website.

In order to get the best prices, we recommend you shop around before you buy.

To compare prices efficiently, use the “sort by” tools on each retailer’s website, so you can see the cheapest items first and surf the best deals.

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

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Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

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Great British Bake Off fans moan 'wish I could un-see' minutes into new Channel 4 series

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Great British Bake Off fans moan 'wish I could un-see' minutes into new Channel 4 series


Great British Bake Off viewers were left divided as the popular Channel 4 show returned on Tuesday night with a Barbie-themed opening sequence including Alison Hammond

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New Commerzbank CEO expected to fight a potential UniCredit takeover

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Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Commerzbank on Tuesday announced its new chief executive would be Bettina Orlopp, who is expected to fight a possible takeover of the German bank by Italy’s UniCredit.

Orlopp, currently Commerzbank’s chief financial officer, will succeed existing chief executive Manfred Knof “in the near future”, Germany’s second-largest listed lender said.

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Earlier this month, Commerzbank said Knof would not seek another term after his contract expired at the end of 2025.

People familiar with Orlopp’s thinking told the Financial Times she was not supportive of a tie-up with UniCredit, which has positioned itself to become Commerzbank’s largest shareholder with a 21 per cent stake, depending on it obtaining regulatory approval. UniCredit currently has a 9 per cent stake.

Key arguments against a UniCredit takeover are that a change in control could undermine Commerzbank’s lending to the German small and medium-sized companies that form the backbone of the country’s economy and that integrating the two companies could take years, the people familiar with Orlopp’s thinking added.

The German government has already voiced opposition to a UniCredit acquisition.

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In a statement on Tuesday night, Orlopp, a former McKinsey partner who joined Commerzbank a decade ago, acknowledged it was facing a “significant task” but vowed to “navigate through the challenges ahead of us successfully”.

She will remain chief financial officer until a successor has been found. Michael Kotzbauer, head of Commerzbank’s corporate client unit, who is said to share Orlopp’s concerns about a UniCredit takeover, was named deputy chief executive.

“We have found an ideal successor,” Commerzbank chair Jens Weidmann said, adding Orlopp and Kotzbauer were the “co-architects” of the bank’s strategy until 2027.

UniCredit’s potential takeover escalated on Monday when it announced it had acquired a further 11.5 per cent of the German bank’s shares through derivatives positions. These will only be settled once the Italian lender receives the necessary regulatory approval to raise its stake above 10 per cent.

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German chancellor Olaf Scholz lashed out against UniCredit, saying that “unfriendly attacks [and] hostile takeovers are not a good thing for banks and that is why the German government has clearly positioned itself”.

UniCredit said on Monday it was keeping its options open and might either keep its 9 per cent stake in Commerzbank, sell it or increase it further.

“This will depend on the outcome of engagement with Commerzbank, its management and supervisory boards as well as its wider stakeholders in Germany.”

People close to Commerzbank expect that a full takeover and merger with UniCredit’s German subsidiary HypoVereinsbank is the Italian bank’s preferred scenario.

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Knof joined Commerzbank in 2021 from Deutsche Bank after an acrimonious boardroom battle that resulted in both the chair and chief executive resigning.

He embarked on cost cutting at Commerzbank, axing 10,000 jobs in Germany and closing half of the lender’s branches.

Commerzbank’s share price tripled as it increased its dividends and started the first share buybacks in the bank’s 154-year history.

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Terraced house goes on the market for £0 – but its inside will leave you stunned

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Terraced house goes on the market for £0 - but its inside will leave you stunned

A TERRACED house has hit the market for FREE – but buyers may be stunned at what they find inside.

The property steal up for grabs, in New Tredegar, Wales, holds endless potential for those with renovation projects in mind.

A terraced house has hit the market for free - but buyers may be shocked at what they find inside

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A terraced house has hit the market for free – but buyers may be shocked at what they find insideCredit: WNS
The property is located a commutable distance from the M4

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The property is located a commutable distance from the M4Credit: WNS

As reported by WalesOnline, the home is in dire need of a complete revamp – after being ravaged by a fire.

It’s in a “sorry state of repair”, but for a £0 price tag – auctioneers predict the house will attract plenty of bidders.

Inside there is hoards of room to create a large home, or even transform the space into flats.

Sean Roper from Paul Fosh Auctions said: “The terraced house is in the village of New Tredegar, and comes with sweeping valley views.

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“The village benefits from a good range of amenities and shops and is ideally situated for access to Bargoed and Blackwood.”

The property is located a commutable distance away from the M4, as well as Newport and Cardiff.

Merthyr Tydfil, Aberdare and Abergavenny are also accessible.

Sean added: “Although severely damaged in the fire and now partially stripped out, the building, which is being sold with vacant possession, appears to offer three rooms on the ground floor.

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“There are a further four rooms on the first floor with three to four rooms on the lower ground floor with a bathroom area. The property has a rear garden and is served with a lane access.

“Listed with a £nil reserve this large property with huge potential could end up being sold at auction for a matter of just a few hundred pounds depending on interest and a developer’s appetite for the challenge.”

Privacy Fences vs Trees: Smart Solutions for Your Garden

The property is welcoming bids online by Paul Fosh Auctions from 12pm on Tuesday, October 1.

Bidding will come to a close on 5pm on Thursday, October 3.

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It comes as the UK’s ‘cheapest house’ is also on the market from an unbelievable £0 – but it may be difficult to find the front door.

Homebuyers may be excited to find the Welsh property on sale in the village of Dyffryn Cellwen in the Upper Dulais Valley, for such an astonishing price.

The 6,156 sq ft home is located on the outskirts of the beautiful Bannau Brycheiniog national park, with convenient access to the A4109 leading to Swansea.

However prospective buyers will have to go “in with their eyes wide open” as the house is definitely considered a ‘fixer upper’, completely overgrown with brambles and foliage.

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House-flipping tips

A HOUSE-flipper who has made £45,000 on her latest home has revealed her tips and tricks for renovating on a budget.

Deborah Marshall, 47, has been flipping houses in Yorkshire for eight years alongside her husband Paul, 44.

  • Do your homework
  • Take a cue from the style of the house
  • Steer clear of structural changes, unless they’re essential
  • Cheapest isn’t always best for budget
  • Don’t compromise on your dream kitchen
  • Look out for discounts
  • Bundle up your bathroom
  • Compare quotes for the specialist jobs
  • Stick to the plan
  • Keep an eye on knock-on costs
  • Decorate from the heart
  • Furniture size matters
  • Shop smart
  • Avoid money pits
  • Keep an emergency cash pot

Elsewhere in the UK, an ordinary three-bedroom flat went on the market for £115,000 – but inside it’s like “stepping into Narnia”.

Meanwhile, a man who brought a crumbling castle that was once fit for a king revealed how he bagged a royal’s paradise for just £1.

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Martin Higgins, 60, from Brockham in Surrey, bought Betchworth Castle for cheap after the local council refused to restore it.

The house was ravaged by fire

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The house was ravaged by fireCredit: WNS
It is in a 'sorry state of repair'

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It is in a ‘sorry state of repair’Credit: WNS
It could be used as multiple flats with the right planning permission

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It could be used as multiple flats with the right planning permissionCredit: WNS
The old furniture is still inside

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The old furniture is still insideCredit: WNS

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