By Wilfred Reilly
Wednesday, July 09, 2025
Internet users recently witnessed a very odd phenomenon.
After Israeli warplane strikes caused a
day-and-a-half-long internet outage in Iran, during the quick but sharp war
between the two Middle Eastern powers, dozens of Twitter and Facebook accounts
that back the independence of Scotland from the United Kingdom “abruptly” went quiet.
These social media profiles, most of which contain
user-specific bios — an example might be “Pro-white Glaswegian socialist gal” —
are normally active on an hourly basis. They have posted hundreds of thousands
of messages during the past few years. The obvious conclusion is that these
accounts, focused on the potential breakup of a European great power, were in
fact stage-managed by or from Iran.
This is not, to put it rather politely, the first time
something like this has happened. Just a few days ago, after an intense
internet dispute, pro-Israel activist Eyal Yakoby took to Pastebin and 4chan to
dig up the location of the hard-right Red Pill Media. He came up with “Karachi,
Pakistan” as the account’s base and the name “Abdul A.” as the site’s
primary manager. Known for such MAGA-coded tweets and blog posts as “I
am an American citizen . . . born and raised in America . . . I refuse to
die for Israel,” Abdul turns out to have previously and unwisely posted about
his (real) home country. Among other things, he is on the record saying: “I love
Pakistan! I would sacrifice my LIFE for Pakistan!!!!!!!!”
Red Pill Media’s may be the most notable recent case, but
half a dozen others from across the hard/alt/dissident right immediately spring
to mind. Prominent hard-right pundit Ian Miles Cheong — who, to his credit, has
never hidden his background — talks almost entirely about goings-on in the U.S.
and yet hails from and remains based in Malaysia. The person behind Radio
Genoa, by appearance a passionately “pro-white” European nationalist, is quite
probably Cambodian. The sometimes funny but frankly racist Garbage
Human series of accounts is managed by an Australian
man who has never lived in the United States. It goes on and on.
There is a serious point to be made here about a real
concern. Just as it was very obviously the case on the left during the heyday of the
Russia-funded anti-nuke and anti-war movements, some individuals on the modern
hard right are clearly serving as active assets or as “useful idiots” for the
U.S.’s foreign opponents, in addition to others who are simply foreign-based.
Less than a year ago, recall, it was conclusively
established that “a media company linked to (major) conservative influencers .
. . was secretly funded by Russian state media employees to churn out
English-language videos that were ‘often consistent’ with the Kremlin’s
‘interest in amplifying U.S. domestic divisions’ in order to weaken U.S.
opposition to Russian interests.” This primary recipient of Russian funds was
Tenet Media, a significant brand employing Lauren Southern, Tayler Hansen,
Benny Johnson, and numerous others. All told, agents of RT and other
Russian-bear-affiliated state media shoveled roughly $10,000,000 toward various
conservative and edge-right influencers.
Russian nationals Kostiantyn Kalashnikov — admittedly, a
top name for a spy — and Elena Afanasyeva are currently charged with violations
of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) and with money-laundering
conspiracy in connection with the Tenet scheme. “They remain at large,” the
Associated Press drily noted, regarding two individuals who presumably reside
in Moscow or Saint Petersburg. Some of this is disturbing, some again almost
funny — but all of it has a few clear implications.
Most notably, pro-America conservatives should be careful
not only when consuming left-leaning media; they should also take a
great deal of “dissident” content with a few caviar spoons of salt. The foreign
origins of a great deal of alt-right and “red-pill” content, paid or not, may
well explain some of the . . . odd trends that we have all been witnessing
online of late.
For instance, while about 75 percent of Republicans are generally quite pro-Israel,
Twitter/X and Facebook are full of content like Jake Shields’s viral “Never
forget what Israel did” post — a caption he used for a video of the
destruction of the World Trade Center’s twin towers on 9/11. Similarly, whereas
by 1920 the U.S. had recognized the coast-to-coast right of women to vote,
today we see dozens of popular online petitions arguing for a “repeal of the 19th Amendment.” There is an
Occam’s razor explanation for this: The people posting this sort of junk,
whatever their profile pictures might look like — remember the “Scots” from
Iran — are not your average citizens of the United States. What we are seeing
is not the edgiest imaginable content from Cleveland or Queens but rather
everyday stuff from, say, Karachi.
Consider this: If you were an Iranian agent and wanted to
create widespread dissensus in a diverse rival country, what better technique
would there be than setting up two rival websites or accounts called — just for
a laugh — “Blacks Taking
Losses” and “I Expose
[White] Racists and Pedos,” building them both up by mixing a bit of news
and humor with racism, and arguing essentially with yourself about which
American racial or ethnic group is the worst and most criminal?
Don’t fall for it. Keep a weather eye on that white, or
black, “advocate” online. He probably is a fed . . . but not necessarily
one from this country.
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