Let’s just say, it’s been a good couple of weeks for me.
Elon Musk’s TwitterFiles, a classic disinformation campaign, ended on a whimper, with a wedge forming between Musk and his mules Shellenberger and Taibbi over a host of issues.
One of those issues involved my getting accurate information to Matt Taibbi that Musk surely didn’t want printed, which in turn made it into the the generally misleading TwitterFiles (TF). What was that key information?
After Taibbi reported without accuracy on first the Hamilton68 (TF15) and then New Knowledge (TF17) in TwitterFiles, I spoke with Chahal whom in turn began communicating with Shellenberger to convey facts such as Jonothan Morgan the CEO of New Knowledge having built the Hamilton68 on behalf of Cliff Watts. That connection is fairly significant and sufficient to steer the narrative correctly to a more open and thorough disclosure.
When Chahal forwarded part three of the BNN files March 7th following Taibbi’s piece, Shellenberger was elated, wanting to collaborate. Key information was gleaned, then used from that article for a follow up TwitterFiles, exposing a valued asset, Renee DiResta.
Stuff like that causes rifts, animus and annoyance.
I was moderately surprised as I didn’t anticipate anything big to come of this, only to perhaps get Yonder’s name included. Recall that DiResta was and likely still is, working within the complex web of intermixing operations supporting the PayPal Mafia. When Musk took over, she was quote-tweeted by Yoel Roth who then in turn was quote-tweeted by Elon much to the chagrin of those that recognized her as Yonder and Project Birmingham taint.
Here is fellow Yonder op, Joe Fionda, who ‘saved’ some things.
Note what Joe says. “I worked for her.”
Joe has worked for Tim Pool, Rocco Castoro, Sputnik, Louise Mensch, and Yonder. That is quite the resume of disinfluencers and frauds before considering his joining Occupy and the Anonymous Collective. He does though, have the goods.
If Yonder wasn’t a criminal enterprise of sorts, working and hiring spies, hacking, running black flag operations, they would have nailed Joe for taking company secrets that really should, if I were Joe, be given to the FBI and Congress. It’s also a wonder that Yonder didn’t pay Joe’s reasonably priced ‘extortion fee’ to ensure his lips stayed sealed.
At any rate, Joe Fionda IS doing some things right, though not exactly for good reasons here showing he hasn’t learned from his past Sputnik employ.
Back to blowing up TwitterFiles.
There was a ton of other things I was doing behind the scenes that likely did contribute to TwitterFiles breaking up.
I have already shared one critical email I sent to co-conspirator, Ella Irwin, who presumably didn’t forward my emails to the FBI liaison responsible for investigating the Ryushi hack. There were more with specific directions that these need to be forwarded. The purpose of doing that is that that creates a documentable trail for the EU, Congress, Interpol, etc that are looking into how Twitter under Musk responded to a data heist that most assuredly will record record fines, and potential prosecutions.
When I worked on the nuclear accident case and thought I was able to make a governmental record while being spied on, I did so. Same with two other issues I resolved successfully. Always get things on the record while using one’s name.
I’ll keep the other part of what I did hidden for now.
Let’s just say I knew the message would matriculate back to Musk making the decision to can the TwitterFiles far more easy to do.