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In this video, the speaker discusses their research on the mass shooting in Highland Park, Illinois and their interactions with Nama Cates, an ex-Hollywood actress and podcaster. They uncover a connection between accelerationism and mass shootings, as well as the role of provocateurs in inciting violence. The speaker discovers that Nama is part of a countering violent extremism community and defends an incel forum that harbors accelerationist provocateurs. They also mention Jade, a military intelligence contractor, who had identified the accelerationist threat and disappeared after claiming to have information about the January 6th pipe bombs. The speaker explores the origins of accelerationism, its connection to satanism, and the tactics used by provocateurs. Both Jade and Nama disappear after exhibiting concerning behavior.

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A social media account possibly linked to the shooter in 2019-2020 showed over 700 comments with anti-Semitic, anti-immigration, and violent political themes. The investigative team is verifying the account to confirm its connection to the shooter. Despite the shooter being deceased, the investigation continues urgently.

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Christians are now the most prosecuted religion in the country. In this country, nobody ever talks about it. And yet, Christians seem like the happiest despite this. These children were targeted because of their faith during the first week of school because they believe in God, and they were cut down when their lives had just begun by someone whose real identity the rest of the media ignored today. The shooter has been identified as Robin Westman, a male born as Robert Westman. Kash Patel, the director of the FBI, tweeting today, the FBI is investigating this shooting as an act of domestic terrorism and a hate crime targeting Catholics. The FBI will continue to provide updates on our ongoing investigation with the public as we are able to, meaning that according to the director of the FBI, the shooter was transgender.

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In August 2022, I was researching the Highland Park shooting and contacted Nama Cates, who studied incels. She mentioned her friend Jade, who believed accelerationists provoked mass shooters. I later learned Jade was a military intelligence contractor who identified accelerationism as a rising threat. I found a hidden code in the alleged shooter Robert Cremo's music and Nama revealed she and Jade were doing the same thing. Months later, I discovered Nama defended an incel forum harboring accelerationists and worked with the CVE community, funded by DHS. Jade vanished after claiming she identified the Capitol Hill pipe bomber using her accelerationism research. I found Jade's "dead man's switch," detailing her research on accelerationism and its link to a satanic cult, the Order of Nine Angles, which she believed manipulated people into committing acts of violence. Both Jade and Nama have since vanished from the internet.

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Over the past two years, I've researched mass shootings and discovered that many recent perpetrators are linked to fringe online communities. These groups often groom vulnerable individuals into committing acts of violence, driven by an ideology called militant accelerationism, which aims to collapse society. A notable case involves Mikhail Chikik Bishvili, aka Butcher, leader of the Maniac Murder Cult (MKU), who plotted a mass attack against minorities in New York. MKU promotes extreme violence and has ties to other extremist groups. Butcher was arrested for soliciting violent acts and distributing a manual, the Haters Handbook, which instructs members on committing terror attacks. His arrest highlights the growing threat of these networks, which exploit online spaces to recruit and radicalize individuals, aiming for societal destruction.

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Speaker claims the shooter is not a lone actor but a “hive,” and says Thomas Crooks was “on the federal radar,” with an “80 page document” of his accounts and statements to be released. Crooks allegedly started as a Trump supporter, then radicalized around 2020, publicly calling for violence against the left and posting videos of himself shooting with no bullets. He cites a comment about “lining up a bunch of socialist Jews … blasting their useless brains out with an AR.” The speaker notes Crooks' online history shows him “always calling for violence” and that he later targeted Trump while researching assassinations, including “best places for a a mass shooting” and other searches like “fertilizer bomb” and “how to molotov make a molotov cocktail.” He suggests this points to “a program” similar to MK Ultra, claiming “they find these candidates in schools.”

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The Nashville shootings are being investigated by the FBI, ATF, and Nashville police, but the motive remains unknown. The shooter left behind evidence, including a manifesto, which explains why she targeted children. However, the manifesto has not been made public due to pressure from the transgender lobby. It is believed that the victims were targeted because they were Christians who refused to accept transgender ideology. This incident highlights the divide between those who believe they are god and those who acknowledge their limitations. People who understand they are not god are more restrained and aware of the complexities of the world, while those who believe they are god have no limits and often blame others.

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In August 2022, while researching the Highland Park mass shooting with three other open-source researchers, I encountered an unheard article by Nama Cates about the alleged shooter Robert Cremo and began DMing her. Nama, a former Hollywood actress who hosted InCells and interviewed fringe figures, was also researching mass shootings. In early conversations, she referenced her friend Jade, who shared the belief that some recent mass shooters were provoked and groomed by a rising terrorist threat called accelerationism. Accelerationists, as I understood them, are a decentralized group of domestic terrorists bound by a shared desire for societal collapse, after which they hoped to install a fascist regime. Functionally, these people are provocateurs who infiltrate extremist movements and incite violence, as well as nonviolent political activism, to facilitate collapse. Sometime in late 2022, Jade—who was a military intelligence contractor specializing in counter-terrorism—identifed accelerationism as a threat for the first time and sounded alarms or attempted to do so. Jade pinned a series of tweets claiming she had used her accelerationism research to identify the person who planted pipe bombs at the Capitol prior to January 6. Her online behavior became frantic and erratic, and she released a document online she called a dead man’s switch, after which she vanished. Robert Cremo, the Highland Park shooter, was a musician known as Awake the Rapper and allegedly hid clues within an alternate reality game he developed prior to the shooting. The speaker believed there could be a hidden code within one of Cremo’s MP3 files, and, sharing this finding with Nama, learned that she and her friend Jade were doing the same thing with the same song file. The speaker did not know Jade’s identity at the time. Later, Jade’s online activity suggested she believed she had been double-crossed by counterterrorism colleagues who had stolen her research and repurposed it, presenting it to Congress while excluding her. Jade’s dead man switch, The Origins of Accelerationism, is a dense, 90-page document in which she argued she was the first to identify accelerationism and urged colleagues to spread the word. She claimed to have gone to a government agency to warn them that lone-wolf mass shooters were actually manipulated by accelerationists posing as members of various extremist communities. Instead, she alleged that colleagues smeared and discredited her, created research consortiums based on her work, and redefined it. Online searches for accelerationism then began to portray it as a term used by white supremacists and extremist groups to hasten societal collapse. Jade’s document also argued that a satanic cult, the Order of Nine Angles (ONA), was key to understanding accelerationism. ONA members allegedly use manipulation and deception to recruit unwitting people as Opfers—linked to neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and fringe movements like QAnon and the incels—to provoke mass shootings and other crimes, with the broader aim of exploiting media bias and widening political polarization. Jade identified the AR-15 as the accelerationist weapon of choice because of its impact on gun-control debates. She connected the January 6 events, incel communities, and accelerationists, suggesting that accelerationists could be exploiting protesters. Jade claimed that accelerationists had infiltrated fringe movements and that the incel forum Nama defended was a honeypot continually monitored by law enforcement, with arrests targeting vulnerable individuals rather than obvious terrorists. This led the speaker to search for Jade’s identity and uncover an old Twitter handle linked to Jade Parker. Parker appeared on Team House, discussing her cyber warfare work against ISIS and reiterating her accelerationism research, including the idea that January 6 protesters were exploited by accelerationists. The speaker notes that Jade’s disappearance occurred after the Fourth of July investigation, and Nama later claimed she was being gang-stalked by a CVE colleague and then disappeared herself. The video ends with the speaker reflecting on two researchers who vanished after pursuing the same online phenomena, and releasing this video to illuminate the situation.

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Lance Twigg went to live with relatives, not with his mother and father; allegedly his parents kicked him out junior year because he was problematic. He had issues, including drinking; around Christmas three years ago he almost overdosed after drinking a bottle of vodka, with the family present. After high school, extended family says they couldn’t keep him due to his behavior. This Easter Sunday he appeared on drugs, spouting political stuff; they felt he could not be around children, increasingly radical and dangerous. They dispute media portrayal, saying more people are involved. They say he was deep web, reclusive, always on devices. He turned 22 in August and was into dark web stuff. He and Tyler lived in a townhome; Tyler paid rent to Lance, who forwarded it to family. Unusual traffic—cars not recognized—before shooting; timeline clarified. There is very clearly more people involved; decoy boy and George Zinn mentioned.

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Becca Spinks discusses harmful online communities, focusing on the "764 network," which grooms unsupervised children, manipulates them, and coerces them into horrific acts on camera for extortion. This network uses blackmail, threatening to swat victims' houses or expose them if they don't comply. The goal is notoriety within the group, pushing children towards self-harm, animal torture, and even suicide on livestream. These groups, including the satanic "Order of Nine Angles" (O9A), aim for societal collapse by traumatizing children, sometimes turning them into abusers. O9A infiltrates vulnerable communities, using propaganda and aesthetics to promote evil. The "Maniac Murder Cult" (MKU), originating from Ukraine, grooms individuals to commit terror attacks. MKU has links to neo-Nazi factions and has influenced mass shootings. Accelerationist ideologies, aiming to incite chaos, are a common thread. These groups exploit technology and social media to find and manipulate vulnerable individuals, often minors, sometimes with international connections, making them difficult to track and prosecute.

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I started investigating mass shootings and stumbled upon accelerationism, a violent extremist movement. Counter-terrorism researcher Jade Parker, who was smeared for exposing this threat, shared her "dead man's switch" before disappearing. She's alive and in hiding because she exposed the Order of Nine Angles, a satanic neo-Nazi cult linked to the seven six four pedophilia network. The Kyle Spitz case, where a viral video showed him being shot by his stepdad, led me to discover Spitz's alleged involvement in seven six four, a cult that grooms children online into committing self-harm and animal abuse. This group is part of a larger network called COM, which is linked to hacking, animal abuse, extortion, and domestic terror cells. My investigation revealed the horrific content and the connection to accelerationist ideologies.

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These remarks were especially notable because they came at the final phase of Crooks' YouTube commenting. At that point, a new character emerged into the conversation, a user named Willie Tepes, who started pressuring crooks to commit violence. For example, quote, if a gun and a badge is all that is needed, then authority obviously comes from the barrel of a gun. We have more guns than they do. There is no way we can avoid a war at this point, so you better just get used to the idea. We have nothing to lose and everything to win. And the alternative, a global police state, is unacceptable. Nothing in life is simple, but that is no argument against doing it. So who is this Willie Tepes? Unfortunately, we don't know. The FBI hasn't made any mention of him in public, although they certainly know he exists. Just days after the shooting, somebody screenshotted Tepes' YouTube account page despite the fact he had very few followers. To the extent that he can be traced online now, you can find his username being used on a foreign Antifa website. Those sites link him to the Nordic resistance movement, which has been designated a terrorist group by the US State Department. That's all we know. We do know, however, that Crooks' online footprint abruptly ends after his encounter with this mysterious figure, Willie Tepes. Regardless whoever Willie Tepes is or was and what his motives may have been, who he may have been working for, there is no doubt that Crooks was ripe for recruitment by someone.

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Over the past two years, extensive research into mass shootings revealed that many recent perpetrators are linked to fringe online communities. These groups, often resembling cults, indoctrinate vulnerable individuals into extremist ideologies, with no singular leader guiding them. A notable example is the Maniac Murder Cult, led by Mikhail Chikik Bishvili, which plotted a mass attack against minority children in New York. This neo-Nazi group promotes violent extremism and has ties to other extremist organizations. Their propaganda, including the Haters Handbook, encourages acts of terrorism and violence. Recent arrests highlight the growing threat of these networks, which aim to incite chaos and destruction in the U.S. The interconnectedness of these groups underscores the dangers lurking in online spaces, where predators target susceptible youth to further their violent agendas.

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The shooter had ties to a white supremacist manifesto and expressed interest in joining a far-right paramilitary group in Ukraine. The Azov Movement, formed during Ukraine's 2014 revolution, is seen as heroes by some Ukrainians but criticized for far-right ideology and controversial symbols. Azov's emblem is linked to Nazism, and the group has recruited from Neo-Nazi organizations.

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A social media account possibly linked to the shooter in 2019-2020 had over 700 comments with anti-Semitic, anti-immigration, and politically violent themes. The investigative team is verifying if the account belonged to the shooter. Despite the shooter being deceased, the investigation continues urgently.

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Three people were shot and two died of the 17 year old teenager. We've spent a long time looking into this deeply, and we've designated him as a mass murderer and have taken down all his accounts.

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The shooter is connected to a 74-page manifesto with white supremacist beliefs. He expressed interest in joining a far-right paramilitary group in Ukraine. Some members of an American hate group also trained with the Azov Battalion, a group that emerged during Ukraine's 2014 revolution and gained strength during the ongoing war with pro-Russian forces. Azov is seen by many Ukrainians as war heroes rather than extremists, but their symbols, including one resembling a Nazi emblem, have sparked controversy. Azov drew commanders and recruits from Ukraine's notorious far-right groups, including neo-Nazis, when it was founded in 2014.

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The FBI recently issued a bulletin about satanic pedophile groups targeting children on social media. These violent online groups aim to livestream acts of self-harm, create snuff films, and produce child sexual abuse material. One specific group mentioned is called 764, which is an offshoot of a global satanic cult known as the Order of the 9 Angles. A 23-year-old named Angel Almeda was arrested for gun possession and found to be part of this cult. Authorities discovered disturbing items, such as a satanic blood covenant signed in actual blood, at his place. It is believed that these groups have exploited numerous children.

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Lance went to live with relatives after allegedly being kicked out by his mother and father in junior year for being problematic; they question the legality. They claim he has serious drinking issues and almost overdosed on Christmas about three years ago; they were there. After high school, extended family said they couldn't keep him due to his behavior. Easter Sunday, he reportedly arrived on drugs, spouting political stuff; they felt he could not be around children, describing him as radical and off the rails. They dispute media portrayals of him as soft or transitioning and say more information should come from his devices, noting he was deep on the Internet, the dark web. He turned 22 in August; lived with Tyler in a family-owned townhome, with Tyler paying rent to Lance, who forwarded it. Rumors of unusual traffic before the shooting; clearly more people involved, decoy boy and George Zinn.

Breaking Points

EVERYTHING WE KNOW: Minneapolis Church Shooting
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Two children were killed and seventeen others injured when a gunman opened fire at Annunciation Roman Catholic Church and School in Minneapolis on the first day of the academic year. The shooter, who also died by suicide, fired through windows with a rifle, a shotgun, and a pistol. The victims included two eight- and ten-year-olds sitting in pews; many others, including children, were injured, with the majority expected to survive. The shooter had attended the school and fired during a back-to-school mass. Authorities described a disturbing online trail, including social media postings and a 22-minute manifesto found in connection with the attack. Investigators and local news teams noted gun markings and references to other mass shooters, and described the handwritten notes and photos displayed with the weapons. A focus emerged on how the internet and online subcultures may have shaped the shooter’s actions, with discussions of 764 and 09A death-cult communities and calls for notoriety. In the broader program, the hosts reference national debates about protests, the use of the National Guard, and charges in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. They note safety concerns as school security grows, with metal detectors at some schools; a CNN panel highlight and ongoing discussions about Israel and Gaza involve guests. Throughout, the conversation emphasizes the lasting trauma for families and communities facing mass violence, and the questions about warning signs, accountability, and media coverage.

Breaking Points

New Details REVEALED On ICE Shooter's Internet History
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A deadly shooting at a Dallas ICE facility jolts the morning as authorities reveal three migrants were struck, one dead and two critically wounded. Investigators describe the incident as targeted violence, with the FBI on scene and evidence including anti-ICE messages found near the suspected shooter. Press conference quotes note that no officers were hurt, and one speaker emphasizes the risk of violence from political opponents. Reporters cite Ken Clippenstein’s sources, detailing online chatter on 4chan and a friend network that painted the shooter as an “edge lord” whose irony bled into real life. The hosts unpack how Trump, JD Vance, and even Ted Cruz seized the event to argue for a security crackdown, including an executive order to dismantle domestic terror networks and a push to label left-wing violence as a national threat. They cite post updates from Trump about shell casings engraved with anti-ICE and question the provenance of that inscription, noting the online debate over its authenticity. The discussion turns to the shooter’s social media and gaming history, with friends saying he spent years as an edgy, provocative online persona whose real-world actions shocked everyone who knew him. They then turn to broader implications: a gun culture in the United States, a sense of hopelessness and lack of opportunity, and how the national mood feeds extreme acts. The conversation flags the difficulty of disentangling ideology from spectacle in online spaces and worries about how the administration uses such incidents to justify expanded powers. They compare this case to other recent violence and reflect on mental health resources and the role of neoliberal pressures in shaping the climate of fear, media coverage, and political rhetoric.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Horrific Buffalo Shooting Gets Grossly Politicized, w/ Brandon Tatum, Christian Walker & Devin Nunes
Guests: Brandon Tatum, Christian Walker, Devin Nunes
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Megyn Kelly opens the show by discussing the tragic mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, where an 18-year-old gunman killed ten people at a grocery store. The shooter, who had a racist manifesto, targeted a predominantly Black community, leading to widespread mourning. Kelly emphasizes the need to focus on the victims rather than politicizing the tragedy, criticizing media figures who attempt to blame conservative commentators like Tucker Carlson for the shooter’s actions. Brandon Tatum, a former police officer, joins the discussion, expressing outrage at the immediate political responses to the shooting. He argues that the shooter is solely responsible for the violence and criticizes the narrative that links such acts to broader societal issues like gun control or white supremacy. Tatum highlights that the shooter himself rejected conservatism and was influenced by extremist ideologies found online. Kelly and Tatum discuss the mental health aspects of such shooters, noting that many have previously been flagged by authorities but were not adequately addressed. They call for a more effective mental health system to prevent future tragedies. The conversation shifts to media reactions, with Kelly pointing out the hypocrisy in how different incidents are covered based on the race of the perpetrator and the victims. Tatum adds that the left often uses tragedies for political gain, which hinders genuine discussions about violence and mental health. Devin Nunes joins the show to discuss the Durham investigation into the origins of the Russia probe. He criticizes Democrats for their handling of the narrative surrounding the investigation and emphasizes the need for accountability. Nunes expresses hope that the trials will reveal the truth behind the political machinations that led to the Russia investigation. The show concludes with a segment featuring Christian Walker, who shares his experiences as a conservative voice on a liberal campus. Walker discusses the backlash he faces for his views and the importance of presenting conservatism in a relatable and engaging manner to attract younger audiences. He emphasizes the need for a fun approach to political discourse, contrasting it with the often serious and stuffy presentations of traditional conservatism.

Philion

The Assassination of Charlie Kirk Explained
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A shocking shooting at a Charlie Kirk appearance kicks off a fast-moving investigation as Tyler Robinson is identified and later arrested within 33 hours. The host presents a flowchart and watches a Fox News breakdown to map the sequence of events, the weapon, and the security gaps. The Mouser bolt-action rifle is described, including a scope mounted unusually far back and engraved cartridge casings, while early speculation questions whether the killer used a professional setup or a readily available hunting weapon. The discussion dives into online theories and digital footprints, from 4chan investigations profiling Sky Velades to Omar Najgera, who predicted danger the day before. A song titled Charlie Kirk Dead at 31 appears on a SoundCloud account linked to the same circle, and discord messages describe plans to retrieve the rifle. The host notes alarming patterns, including a claimed private jet with a turned-off transponder and the suggestion that the attack could be part of broader political violence. Investigators reconstruct the timeline through campus surveillance, security footage, and a ring camera showing the suspect limping and carrying the rifle before dropping it in a wooded area. The weapon is recovered, wrapped in a towel, with the scope and length noted, raising questions about concealment. Authorities discuss why the suspect’s appearance—Converse shoes, a black shirt, distinctive logos—helps public identification, while the press conference outlines charges, the 100,000 reward, and collaboration among county, state, and federal agencies. The host closes with reflections on how quickly law enforcement linked the suspect to the crime, the role of public tips, and the ongoing analysis of online chatter and social media threads. The overarching takeaway is a timeline of events, a description of the weapon and its inscriptions, and a call for continued public assistance in identifying clues as investigators finalize their work.

Breaking Points

Tyler Robinson & Rise of the BLACKPILL Killer
Guests: Tyler Robinson
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A web-saturated spiral links Tyler Robinson to a public murder, revealing how nihilistic memes and a 'black pill' worldview fuse online culture with real-world violence. The episode catalogs four bullet casings engraved with internet slogans: a Hell Divers 2 reference with the 'upright down' command, an Italian anti-fascist Bellacha, a demeaning line reading 'if you're reading this you're gay lma,' and other cues tied to Discords and meme boards. Robinson is described as extremely online, and his case sits with Desmond Holly, Robin Westman, and Thomas Krooks as part of a broader rise of young white male misanthropes drawn to black-pill imagery. Analysts frame the motive as nihilism and cargo-cult meaning-making, where violence is used to create belonging, certainty, and a perceived role, accelerated by rage-bait algorithms and ubiquitous online platforms.

Philion

This is What True Evil Looks Like
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A chilling act at a Minnesota church school dominates the emergency briefing as investigators treat it as a domestic terrorism incident aimed at Catholics and conservatives. A trans shooter, Robin Westman, killed two children, ages eight and ten, and wounded fourteen children and three adults before taking his own life. Police recovered a manifesto written in Cyrillic, a cache of weapons labeled with motifs hinting at the violence to come, and inscriptions on the guns such as 'Kill Trump now' and '6 million was not enough.' An 11-minute video showing the weapons, magazines, and manifesto had been posted before the attack, along with drawings that viewers described as demonic. The FBI confirmed the act of domestic terrorism and a hate crime direction, with the investigation ongoing and updates promised as they become available. Officials noted possible targeting of Catholic institutions and expressed concern about the broader climate around trans issues and ideological violence. Analysts on the broadcast debated whether the case should be pursued as terrorism, hate crime, or both, explaining that a federal designation often hinges on ideological motive and connections to broader groups. Several guests argued the incident could feed conspiracy amplification and justify measures such as conspiratorial prosecutions. They noted the shooter's name changes and the signs of premeditated planning, including a barricade attempt with 2x4s and a diverse arsenal, arousing questions about youth violence, mental health, and cultural rhetoric surrounding transgender identity.
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