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ID: kC33R0lt/pol/508608240#508608692
6/24/2025, 8:44:17 PM
>>508608440
It just is ok??
It just is ok??
ID: 8KhAJfP4/pol/508496408#508496408
6/23/2025, 9:59:49 PM
6/16/2025, 9:29:17 PM
>Joshua Caleb Sutter, a known neo-Nazi in the early 2000s, was deeply embedded in extremist circles in the United States, associating with groups such as Aryan Nations and later becoming a key figure within the Order of Nine Angles (O9A). This British-born occult movement fused esoteric Nazism with violent accelerationism and ritual abuse, glorifying atrocities as tools for personal "ascension." Through his publishing house, Martinet Press, Sutter made O9A’s once-obscure doctrines widely accessible.
>However, in 2021, revelations from The Guardian and court documents exposed him as a paid FBI informant since at least 2004, receiving over $140,000 while simultaneously distributing extremist materials. The disclosure ignited controversy over law enforcement tactics: while the FBI framed Sutter’s role as crucial for infiltrating domestic extremism, critics argued that his work, funded by the government, had fueled a new wave of radicalization among alienated youth online.
>The influence of these extremist ideologies took root in digital communities on 4chan, Telegram, and Discord, where O9A’s ideas mutated into ironic memes, occult rituals, and radical self-help narratives.
>This digital transformation laid the groundwork for groups like CVLT and 764, which, despite lacking direct leadership ties to O9A, heavily drew from its texts. These decentralized, meme-based collectives engaged in online grooming, exploitation, and sadistic roleplay, targeting minors and operating in secrecy through encrypted channels.
>Led by figures like Bradley Chance Cadenhead, 764’s digital subculture radicalized individuals such as Kaleb Merritt, who kidnapped a child; Natalie "Samantha" Rupnow, responsible for a school shooting in Wisconsin; and Solomon Henderson, who carried out the Antioch High School shooting in Tennessee. Each had been active in these online spaces, where ideological extremism blurred into real-world violence.
>However, in 2021, revelations from The Guardian and court documents exposed him as a paid FBI informant since at least 2004, receiving over $140,000 while simultaneously distributing extremist materials. The disclosure ignited controversy over law enforcement tactics: while the FBI framed Sutter’s role as crucial for infiltrating domestic extremism, critics argued that his work, funded by the government, had fueled a new wave of radicalization among alienated youth online.
>The influence of these extremist ideologies took root in digital communities on 4chan, Telegram, and Discord, where O9A’s ideas mutated into ironic memes, occult rituals, and radical self-help narratives.
>This digital transformation laid the groundwork for groups like CVLT and 764, which, despite lacking direct leadership ties to O9A, heavily drew from its texts. These decentralized, meme-based collectives engaged in online grooming, exploitation, and sadistic roleplay, targeting minors and operating in secrecy through encrypted channels.
>Led by figures like Bradley Chance Cadenhead, 764’s digital subculture radicalized individuals such as Kaleb Merritt, who kidnapped a child; Natalie "Samantha" Rupnow, responsible for a school shooting in Wisconsin; and Solomon Henderson, who carried out the Antioch High School shooting in Tennessee. Each had been active in these online spaces, where ideological extremism blurred into real-world violence.
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