>>520801085
(Cont.)
To make clear, though, it seems not every situation of such a time was publicized or even led to an arrest at all, if something happened like I described. Basically, the person who made the shitpost not even being there (whether it’s because they were just out of the house at the time, OR were using a VPN that just happened to be traced to that location, hence weren’t even physically there at all), so basically:
Cop just knocked on the door, talked about
>Some threats made about a sheriff in Florida…?
And gotten:
>I have no idea what you’re talking about
And so leaving.
NOTE: I *DO* believe 100% this was used as a psyop, for heavyhanded governmental overreach, hence likely from a federal level, like the FBI, to justify these interstate arrests, intimidation of people online, + psyop to release in the public sphere of a demoralization/demonization of chosen targets (like “the alt-right loser incels on 4chan”).
So, I have to say, GOOD WORK on a post like this:
>>520796752
For revealing the very likely psyops of it + ties to the FBI + almost certainly Feds/glowies actually also posting online to bait or pseudo-entrap about it.
I think these pseudo-entrapment ops seem to be pretty popular in the Fed/Glowie community online.
Essentially, I call it “pseudo-entrapment” because they could do it in a way which isn’t TECHNICALLY or LEGALLY the definition of entrapment. However, on a psychological, moral, spiritual level, it’s essentially a form of it. They infiltrate some forum online, and try to slip in such suggestions even potentially with “memetic warfare”, encouraging a general feeling of lawlessness, chaoticness, + also high spirits and good humor generally, baiting someone into saying it. Including even with a troll-post or shitpost of one’s own, for instance.