This is one of the most interesting threatening stances I have seen Susan Portnoy use on her KassandraSeven account recently.
Note how Sue says someone else chooses violence and in the third tweet she herself chooses violence?
Tracey is one of those garbage far-right antagonists pushing pro-Russian and other dangerous narratives, yet Portnoy promoting this sort of tweet of his that isn’t violent, is at best perhaps minutely discriminatory, with a reference that again ties her to being in her fifties, not the young activist she portrays herself to be, is just another one of those narrative things.
Here is what pops up with Fenkell.
This isn’t the only time a paid abuser like Portnoy did this on Twitter. Here is criminal cyber stalker and defamer trained militarized PsyOpm Brad Shuttleworth lying about ‘bloodlust’ back in December.
The above was attached to the Russian speaking Portnoy tweet below via screenshot.
Susan Portnoy is an American spy serving pro-Russian interests such as fomenting a Civil War meant to take down American democracy, who happens to speak Russian. Sure she failed to get people killed November 4, 2017, yet it is still part of the historical record that she actively recruited people to attend an event flagged for intended violence and mayhem.
And just like she did today, she flipped the script lying about her true nature. Sue isn’t a pacifist herself having a deeply vindictive criminal soul.
Jim Stewartson has never called Susan Portnoy a Russian spy, despite clear indicators of collaborative effort that suggests partial truth to that. Russian speaking yes. In our first communication he explained that Susan, while working to serve Russian interests is herself loyal to no one but coin, essentially a digital mercenary.
Susan would do the same to anyone, even her associates, if she were paid appropriately for doing so, as she lacks a moral compass, is a psychopath, and enjoys thinking she is hurting people. She is simply a paid thug, with extensive past media connections due to her decades old work at Condé Nast as VP of Communications, losing.