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In August 2022, while researching the Highland Park mass shooting, I connected with Nama Cates, an ex-Hollywood actress who hosted a podcast called InCells and had shown interest in researching mass shootings. Nama referenced her friend Jade, who shared similar beliefs about accelerationism—a decentralized group of extremists who seek societal collapse and then a fascist regime, functioning as provocateurs who infiltrate movements to incite violence and also engage in nonviolent activism to achieve collapse. I later learned Jade was a military intelligence contractor specializing in counterterrorism who had identified accelerationism as a threat and sounded alarms about it.
Sometime in late 2022, Jade tweeted that she used accelerationism research to identify the person who planted pipe bombs at the Capitol prior to January 6. Her online behavior became paranoid and erratic; she released a document online she called a dead man’s switch and then vanished. The Highland Park shooter, Robert Cremo, also known as Awake the Rapper, had hidden clues in an alternate reality game he developed before the shooting. I believed I found a hidden code in one of Cremo’s MP3 files—the spectrographic data—using steganography. Nama expressed interest and claimed that she and her friend Jade were performing the same analysis on the same song file. I did not realize at the time that Nama was sharing our open-source research with a military intelligence asset investigating the same mass shooting in the same way.
Over time, Nama and I discussed various related issues, and our relationship remained cordial until I explored the InCel forum that Nama frequently mentioned. Beyond the forum’s pedophilia and glorification of mass shooters, I found a darker reality: it harbored the same accelerationist provocateurs we had discussed. Nama had portrayed herself as impartial, but eventually revealed she was part of the CVE (countering violent extremism) community, a group of academics who pursue grants to study extremist groups and share data with government counterterrorism agencies. This led to the realization that Nama’s INCell Forum was a honeypot operation funded, at least in part, by DHS through the TVTP grant program.
Nama revealed that the InCel Forum was a honeypot designed to be monitored by law enforcement and used to make arrests. The arrests targeted largely mentally ill and neurodivergent individuals who wandered into the honeypot, not the obvious terrorists. This raised questions about who was being investigated and why. I searched for Jade Parker, a name Id seen in Nama’s references, and found associations with accelerationism and a guest appearance on Team House, where Jade Parker—a former military intelligence contractor with the Army’s Joint Special Operations Command—discussed her work in cyber warfare against ISIS and her novel accelerationism research. She argued that Capitol Hill protesters were more likely to be exploited by accelerationists than they're actual accelerationists, and that the January 6 crowd could have been manipulated to further divide the country. Jade suggested that accelerationists infiltrated fringe movements like QAnon, January 6, and the InCells.
Jade Parker’s writings Jobs included the claim that she identified the identity of the person who planted bombs on Capitol Hill and the associated network, offering this information as worth $100,000 to the Department of Justice. She published a lengthy document titled The Origins of Accelerationism, asserting that she was the first to identify this emerging terror organization and had warned colleagues who dismissed or distorted her work. She alleged that colleagues created research consortiums and excluded her, repurposing her findings to present accelerationism as white supremacist or related to other extremist groups. Jade also connected accelerationism to the Order of Nine Angles (O9A), a satanic neo-Nazi movement, and to the use of online alt realities and OPFERS—unwitting individuals manipulated to commit violence.
Jade linked O9A to a broader satanic influence, noting that O9A’s tactics resembled propaganda operations akin to Operation Gladio’s Strategy of Tension, where fear was leveraged to push populations toward authoritarian governance. She cited David Myatt, a founder-like figure in O9A, and suggested connections to Cold War-era networks and Gladio. Jade’s theory posited that Satanism and occult symbolism were not incidental but integral to provocateur operations, with OPFERS being used to incite violence across movements such as white supremacists, neo-Nazis, QAnon, and incels, often facilitated by alternate reality games to create a heroic self-image among vulnerable individuals.
The FBI’s links between O9A and the Seven Six Four self-harm and pedophilia cult were noted, though some in the community debated whether Seven Six Four might be a separate FBI operation designed to discredit O9A. Jade’s disappearance occurred soon after July 4, and whether she faced threats or chose to disappear remains unclear. Nama also disappeared after publicly claiming to be stalked by a CVE colleague. As both women who studied the same online phenomena vanished, I released this video to surface the situation and possible connections, while acknowledging that Jade’s and Nama’s without-comment disappearances leave many questions unanswered.