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Antisemitic Terror Supporter Michael Valentine Forced To Close His Bar

Back in March, I posted about antisemitic terror-supporter bar owner and former Salt Lake City Mayor candidate Michael Valentine.

At the end of my post, I wrote:

During his ill-fated campaign, Valentine had this to say:

Citing his own experience living out of his car, he claims the city’s current efforts to help the housing and homelessness crisis aren’t enough. He’s made his own plan to tackle the issue, such as making abatements and anti-homeless architecture illegal. 

“I think homelessness is the most important issue,” Valentine said, noting that 159 homeless people died in Utah last year. 

Please spread the word about him and his business so he can return to his car.

I am happy to report that since my post, he seems closer to living the automobile life:

The Salt Lake City cider bar Weathered Waves — which faced criticism for its owner’s declaration that it was an “anti-Zionist” space — has closed, amid an ongoing dispute with its landlord.

The bar, owned by former Salt Lake City mayoral candidate Michael Valentine, posted Sunday on Instagram that it was the bar’s last day at its location in The Gateway shopping center, and that Sunday marked the “end of an era, beginning of something better.”

The post said the bar had 13 more years on its lease at 158 S. Rio Grande St., but that alleged “anti-business practices” by its landlord, Vestar, had forced Weathered Waves out early.

“We’re [going to] set sail and build a bigger and better place elsewhere …,” the post said. When asked about his future plans on Wednesday, Valentine declined to answer questions, referring to a news release Weathered Waves issued in September.

In that release, Valentine said Vestar had terminated Weathered Waves’ lease in “retaliation” for speaking publicly about Vestar’s “harassment” and “sabotage” of the bar. Valentine also said in the release that Vestar’s actions had cost the bar at least $300,000 in lost revenue in 2024.

A spokesperson for Vestar declined to comment on Valentine’s allegations in September, citing ongoing litigation.

In May, Vestar filed a complaint against Weathered Waves in the Third Judicial Court of Salt Lake County, alleging that the bar was overdue on rent and had violated its lease by changing its name without its approval. At the time, Valentine told The Salt Lake Tribune that he was up to date on his rent payments, and that he and Vestar had a “verbal agreement” to change the bar’s name.

The complaint also said Vestar served Valentine a three-day notice to pay or vacate on May 7; Valentine said he never got it.

Michelle Schmitt, spokesperson for the Utah Department of Alcoholic Beverage Services, said Valentine had requested and was approved a temporary closure on his bar license. Valentine has also applied for a location change, and that application is still under review, Schmitt said.

The dispute has been going on for quite a while, and in May, not-so-sweet Valentine opened a GoFundMe to raise $25,000 to “protect Weathered Waves, the first anti-zionist bar in America.”

He has raised a mammoth $195.

So while he claims he will “set sail and build a bigger and better place elsewhere”, I am guessing he will sink to the bottom of the ocean…where bottom feeders like him belong.

About the author

Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
Picture of David Lange

David Lange

A law school graduate, David Lange transitioned from work in the oil and hi-tech industries into fulltime Israel advocacy. He is a respected commentator and Middle East analyst who has often been cited by the mainstream media
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