Search Results
7/22/2025, 2:50:49 PM
>>511043541
Show your flag, bitch. Turn off the VPN.
Show your flag, bitch. Turn off the VPN.
7/19/2025, 6:20:47 PM
>>510808183
Nice try glownigger. You know you can't shut it down so you try to get us to leave. Not going to work.
Nice try glownigger. You know you can't shut it down so you try to get us to leave. Not going to work.
7/11/2025, 9:48:08 PM
7/11/2025, 4:36:11 AM
An agent provocateur is a person who infiltrates a group or movement with the specific goal of provoking it into self-destructive or criminal behavior, often to discredit or dismantle it.
The core definition is a covert operative who intentionally incites unrest, illegal acts, or extremism within a targeted organization, community, or movement, usually on behalf of a third party such as a government, corporation, or rival faction.
Key traits of an agent provocateur include pretending to be part of the group to gain trust, pushing the group toward extreme or unlawful actions, creating situations that justify suppression or public backlash, and working for a hostile actor or institution.
Common tactics include encouraging violence at protests to provoke law enforcement response, suggesting illegal plans in communications to entrap members, spreading paranoia or internal mistrust, framing group members or planting false evidence, and disrupting cohesion with lies or manipulation.
Historical examples include the FBI's COINTELPRO program which targeted civil rights and anti-war movements in the United States, the use of provocateurs in Tsarist Russia to discredit revolutionaries, and modern-day online accounts that infiltrate activist spaces to incite chaos or discredit them publicly.
The core definition is a covert operative who intentionally incites unrest, illegal acts, or extremism within a targeted organization, community, or movement, usually on behalf of a third party such as a government, corporation, or rival faction.
Key traits of an agent provocateur include pretending to be part of the group to gain trust, pushing the group toward extreme or unlawful actions, creating situations that justify suppression or public backlash, and working for a hostile actor or institution.
Common tactics include encouraging violence at protests to provoke law enforcement response, suggesting illegal plans in communications to entrap members, spreading paranoia or internal mistrust, framing group members or planting false evidence, and disrupting cohesion with lies or manipulation.
Historical examples include the FBI's COINTELPRO program which targeted civil rights and anti-war movements in the United States, the use of provocateurs in Tsarist Russia to discredit revolutionaries, and modern-day online accounts that infiltrate activist spaces to incite chaos or discredit them publicly.
7/11/2025, 3:10:52 AM
>>510053385
You glowniggers aren't even trying anymore. What a drag.
You glowniggers aren't even trying anymore. What a drag.
7/6/2025, 12:33:10 AM
>>509608897
No.
No.
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