Anonymous ID: d28e59 June 30, 2021, 6:55 a.m. No.14021115   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1136

617

Jan 27, 2018 2:06:14 AM EST

Q !UW.yye1fxo No. 175260

Jan 27, 2018 1:54:15 AM EST

Anonymous No. 175139

 

18A539B4-3085-4E11-8945-D….jpeg

 

Form 1649 false imprisonment

Was Hannity sending out a sos?

>>175139

SELECT news members / journalists are vital to delivering the message (as are YOU).

Imagine if these people were removed.

Total control re: MSM.

They represent a clear and present danger to the enemy.

Re-read past crumbs re: security.

Where is JS?

How do we truly protect those important to us?

[19] immediates [no longer with us].

Self-suicide if actioned.

Real life.

Q

Anonymous ID: d28e59 June 30, 2021, 7:27 a.m. No.14021331   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1486

Undercover GOP operatives trained by former spies infiltrated liberal groups to try and compromise them from the inside, report says

 

An ultrawealthy Republican donor and a former British spy spearheaded an effort to train GOP operatives to go undercover and infiltrate liberal organizations, The New York Times reported Friday.

The donor, Erik Prince, is a hardline Trump supporter who founded the private military contractor Blackwater, now known as Academi. Prince worked with a former British spy, Richard Seddon, on a conservative operation to "infiltrate progressive groups, political campaigns and the offices of Democratic as well as moderate Republican elected officials during the 2020 election cycle," The Times reported, citing extensive interviews and documents.

 

The outlet reported that Prince first recruited Seddon at the beginning of the Trump administration and asked him to hire ex-spies to train Republican operatives in the art of political sabotage on his Wyoming ranch, adding a new layer to the term "ratf—ing."

 

Two of the undercover operatives were Beau Maier and Sofia LaRocca. They embedded themselves in the Democratic operation in Wyoming, and targeted both progressives and moderate Republicans they believed were a threat to the Trump administration. According to The Times, Maier and LaRocca were based in Wyoming but ingratiated themselves in Democratic politics in Arizona and Colorado as well. Neither Maier nor LaRocca responded to the NYT's requests for comment.

 

And in retrospect, many of the personal details LaRocca offered to her new friends in Wyoming politics didn't add up: she claimed that she had to live in Colorado and not Wyoming because of her dog, and that she went under a fake name because of a stalker but changed it back because the police told her the stalker had "reformed."

 

The outlet reported that Seddon secured financial backing from Susan Gore, the wealthy Gore-Tex heiress, by the end of 2018 and began recruiting operatives from the right-wing group Project Veritas. The organization frequently traffics in misinformation and propaganda and is known for deceptively editing videos as part of its sting operations against mainstream-media outlets; its CEO, James O'Keefe, defended the group's work in a previous statement to Insider, saying that "not a single one of our videos has been deceptively edited or taken out of context."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/undercover-gop-operatives-trained-by-former-spies-infiltrated-liberal-groups-to-try-and-compromise-them-from-the-inside-report-says/ar-AALsanv