How the Controlled Opposition Spreads Disinformation
A Series On Misinformation, Disinformation and Subterfuge
The key difference between a prank and a false flag is the intent. In the case of Yonder’s copious false flag operations, the intent’s deception has been to stage narratives desirous to the PayPal Mafia, with rare exceptions.
In order to spread the false flag, they contract out operatives like Andrew McGimpsey, Susan Portnoy, Matt Donovan, Remi Barrette to run sock accounts and botnets. They also have extensive assets in the media and real world, some unwittingly duped, to maximize spread. For example, Mike Rothschild knowingly spread the false flag built to help Chad Loder, about the fake Antifa hit list last year, whereas Ben Collins was deceived into spreading the lie.
Because Mike Rothschild knew it was fake, and was doing so to help cover up a criminal conspiracy, prosecutors could choose to charge him with two felonies, obstruction and conspiracy in relation to the massive Twitter hack. Ben Collins might get asked about how he came to spread the hoax.
False flags are part of the business of private spy craft. They are also far more traceable given the very nature of the plotters to implicate themselves. I personally love how Cody Webb threw out the reasoning behind the false flag’s creation in advance of Chad Loder lying to the press.
Chad was of course banned for reporting on a hack he participated in. He gave false reports to at least the French, as shown here.
That of course makes it very hard for him to travel abroad once a warrant is issued. Who knows if it will or what the eventual outcome is.