


The FBI is making new extremists every day.
What happened to "fighting terrorists just makes more terrorists"? I guess they never believed that. They just said that because they are political allies of terrorists.
New documents released Monday warned that common internet lingo is being associated with "Violent Extremism" by the FBI.
The Heritage Foundation's Oversight Project said it used a Freedom of Information Act request to expose FBI documents that include glossaries showing that common internet slang has been flagged as an indication of "Involuntary Celibate Violent Extremism" or "Racially or Ethnically Motivated Violent Extremism."
Part of the document refers specifically to "incels," or those "involuntary celibate," whom the "threat overview" describes as possibly seeking to "commit violence in support of their beliefs that society unjustly denies them sexual or romantic attention, to which they believe they are entitled." The assessment notes, "While most incels do not engage in violence," some have been involved in "at least five lethal attacks in the United States and Canada."
Many of the terms mentioned in the FBI's list of incel terminology are either widely used across the internet or innocuous in nature.
The one term in the glossary is "Red Pill," which comes from the 1999 film "The Matrix" and has been used a metaphor for seeing hidden or politically incorrect truths about the modern world, particularly when it comes to politics or dating. The FBI list of key terms defines it as "a belief shared by many online communities that society is corrupt, and that the believer is a victim of this corruption."
No way The Regime is corrupt!
Many of the terms listed are focused on self-improvement or the struggle to reckon with the marketplace of modern dating.
The glossary defines the term "Chad" as a "Race -specific term used to describe the idealized version of a male, who is very successful at getting sexual and romantic attention from women," later noting, "incels unsuccessfully compete against Chads for attention."
It's not "race-specific." They're just inventing new reasons to spy on people.
The list also included the term "Looksmaxxing" which is defined in the document as the "process of self-improvement with the intent to become more attractive."
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The FBI list for terms associated with "Racially or Ethnically Motivated Violent Extremism" (RMVE) has a mix of extreme terms and innocuous ones.
"Red Pill" also appears in this list, but with a different description: "In the context of RMVE ideology, taking the red pill or becoming 'redpilled' indicates the adoption of racist, anti-Semitic, or fascist beliefs."
"Based" is defined by the FBI as a word used to "refer to someone who has been converted to racist ideology, or as a way of indicating ideological agreement." In regular parlance, based is a context-specific word coined by rapper Lil B that can mean, as KnowYourMeme describes, anything ranging from "something that is 'agreeable' and 'cool,'" to something "considered anti-woke."
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The FBI declined to comment when reached out by Fox News Digital.
Of course they refused comment-- why would anyone even think the Stasi owes us any answers?
Meanwhile: Google, Twitter, FaceBook, and TikTok are "crawling with hundreds of former federal officials." The social media companies have all been infiltrated and converged by the government.
Google, Twitter, Meta and TikTok's executive ranks have included over 200 former employees of surveillance government agencies, creating an employment pipeline between the government and Big Tech companies, a Daily Caller investigation found.
The technology companies recruited 248 employees from the DOJ, FBI, CIA and DHS, a LinkedIn search revealed. The hiring occurred mostly between 2017-2022, with several filling top director positions after having decade-long careers in the surveillance agencies.
Google hired 130 former DOJ, DHS, CIA and FBI employees, the Daily Caller's key term cursory search on LinkedIn found. Meta, the company that owns Facebook and Instagram, employed 47 people for those three entities who were previously at the DOJ, FBI or DHS. TikTok, the Chinese-based app embattled with national security concerns, employed 25 former DOJ, FBI, DHS or CIA employees. Twitter had 46 executives who had previously spent time working for the three-letter agencies.
Reed Rubinstein, former deputy associate attorney general under President Trump, told the Daily Caller that Americans should be "concerned" about "terrifying" integration of Big Tech companies and federal agencies.