The Reservation Has Always Had a Fence

This one hurts to write.
I was deceived by the many layers of the social engineering mechanism we call the culture war, much of it packaged and handed to me by the so-called New Establishment gatekeepers. Sure, boomers watch the news. Not me, though. I was a free thinker. I watched algorithmically curated videos from Silicon Valley. No way I was being controlled. Two sides of the same coin.
Alex Jones. A man I used to adore until I actually started reading and doing my own research. Gradually, the wool was lifted from my eyes.
I am not trying to break a commandment here. But when you realize you were kept inside a reservation, inside a controlled narrative reality, for years, you do not want others to fall into it too. Especially when a certain streaming apologist of Orthodoxy tied to the Infowars network is leading many into churches. And Rex Jones, Alex’s son, is in the Orthodox Church too.
If the same network that shapes the culture war can funnel people into ecclesial spaces, then, in theory, it could also shape those spaces from within. That is what troubles me.
Anyway, people tied to intelligence agencies do not have your best interests at heart. That much history has made clear.
Let us have a look.
All in the Family

Alex Jones’s parents, David Jones and Carol Hamman, have been described in alternative intelligence archives as having worked for the CIA in the 1970s and 1980s. Alex has spoken about this himself. On June 10, 2014, he recounted that in the late 1980s the CIA attempted to recruit his father for what he described as a four-year stint at an underground base in Maryland, allegedly tied to cybernetics and advanced implant research. He also said his father was a pioneering dental implant specialist who performed procedures on CIA personnel during the Cold War.
CIA and dentists. That pairing gives me pause. Over the years, claims have circulated that dentists played a unique role in Cold War-era experiments because of their access to the human body and their work with implantable materials. Timothy McVeigh reportedly visited the dentist dozens of times while in the military. Some believe he was a mind-controlled patsy. The Epstein files repeatedly reference dentistry and dental chairs. I am not suggesting anything directly. Dentistry simply feels like a strange rabbit hole, and the idea of a CIA-connected dentist carries a weight that is hard to dismiss once you notice it.
Alex says his father refused an offer to work at what he describes as a Gordon Freeman, Half-Life-style underground base. He then expands into broader claims about industrial-scale operations. “It’s Island of Doctor Moreau level stuff,” he said. Whether this reflects exaggeration, misinterpretation, or proximity to something real is hard to determine. But it forms part of the psychological architecture of Jones himself — a man whose worldview appears to have been shaped, at least in part, by what he believes he glimpsed at the edge of his family’s private life.
On April 17, 2013, during an appearance on The Opie and Anthony Show, Alex said that at family reunions, “half the people in the room are former or retired CIA,” and that those relatives tell him he is “dead on.” He delivered the line without hesitation, as if describing something ordinary. “I grew up in Dallas, Texas, with my family doing things like helping take in East German defectors.” A perfectly normal childhood, obviously.
I am not making accusations. I am using his own words. Personally, I have a hard time trusting anyone who is “part of the boys,” given the agency’s long, documented history: Allen Dulles, regime changes across Latin America and the Middle East, Operation Gladio, MK Ultra, and the Phoenix Program. These are not rumors. They are declassified parts of the historical record.
And then there is the uncle.
Alex’s uncle, William “Biff” Hamman — his mother’s brother — is described in alternative intelligence archives as having served in U.S. Army Special Operations and participated in CIA-aligned activities during the 1970s and 1980s. He is also described as a helicopter pilot during the Vietnam War, the era when the Phoenix Program was active. The program is now publicly acknowledged to have targeted suspected Viet Cong through secret detention, interrogation, and assassination. Some researchers argue that techniques tested in Vietnam did not simply disappear but evolved and migrated. David McGowan’s Programmed to Kill explores this thesis in depth. Read that book. I mention it whenever I can.
On December 19, 2015, appearing on Eddie Bravo’s UFC internet radio show, Jones described his uncle as “like the Oliver North of the Army,” who served as an Army Special Operations commander in Guatemala. “He just told us a buncha wild stuff,” Jones said. “So I grew up hearin’ about that… ’cause I had a buncha family in the Army Special Operations.” He was emphatic that clandestine operations are not the domain of fictional spies. “It’s Army Special Forces. That’s actually who they use in clandestine stuff. They always have.”
Guatemala is not incidental. In 1954, the CIA overthrew Jacobo Arbenz. Decades later, Operation Condor — with U.S. intelligence backing — coordinated surveillance, kidnapping, and assassinations of political dissidents across Latin America. If Jones’s uncle was in Guatemala during that period, as Jones himself claims, he was operating in one of the Cold War’s most active and brutal intelligence theaters.
Verna Grayce Chao is Biff’s daughter and Alex Jones’s cousin. She has been described as a CIA contractor through Dell and previously IBM, both firms with documented contracts with the CIA and the Department of Defense. Independent researchers have noted that one of her job titles at Dell is nearly identical to the contractor roles held by Edward Snowden when he worked for Dell as a CIA and NSA contractor between 2009 and 2013. She later became Director of Global Brand and Solution Thought Leadership for Dell. “Thought leadership.” An interesting phrase in this context. Alex, after all, has directed the conspiracy narrative like a maestro for decades. He has openly admitted that his family has deep CIA ties. Her brother, Buckley Stratton Hamman, is described as one of the original founders of Infowars in 1995, along with Alex and his father, the dentist.
Buckley has confirmed parts of his upbringing. During an August 8, 2014, appearance on Jones’s radio show, he described growing up in Guatemala City within a secure U.S. government and military compound, traveling in armored vehicles, hearing bombs nearby, and watching the Guatemalan government confiscate his father’s HAM radio equipment amid suspicions it was being used for intelligence activities. “People would say that he was working for the CIA,” Buckley said. “The government literally came and confiscated all of his equipment.” Jones introduced his cousin warmly that day: “We’re gonna talk to Buckley Hamman, my cousin, who helped start Infowars 19 years ago.” The same Infowars that was built, in part, by people who grew up inside the very world it claims to oppose.
The marriages are also, let us say, interesting.
Erika Wulff-Jones, whose LinkedIn once described her as having “a crazy ass life story,” is the founder of New Order Yoga. In its original Sanskrit, yoga means union, yoking, or binding together. New Order Yoga. Yoga for a new order. Whether the name is deliberate or oblivious is a question best left to the reader.
She was mentioned in a 2002 Voice of America article about American students studying abroad. Voice of America is a U.S. government-funded media outlet established during World War II to broadcast American messaging to foreign audiences. Critics have long described it as a soft-power propaganda arm. From 1986 to 1991, it was led by Richard Warner Carlson, Tucker Carlson’s father. Tucker, with whom Alex is buddy-buddy. Her mother, Michele Traynor Wulff, served as Economic Education Coordinator for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. A man publicly fighting the New World Order. His wife runs New Order Yoga. Her mother coordinates economic education for the Federal Reserve system. They divorced in 2025. Who exactly are the globalists?
Alex’s first wife, Kelly “Violet” Nichols, worked for the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Information Agency, and U.S. diplomatic infrastructure. She was candid about it. In a 2018 social media post, she wrote: “Also, summer work for DOD, FAA, USIA, US Consulate (my Dad was a diplomat)… omg conspiracy freaks will have a field day with that, I’m sure.” Her father, Edmund Lowe Nichols, was a career Foreign Service officer who held senior diplomatic positions across Europe during the Cold War, working in environments where diplomacy and intelligence routinely overlapped. He later resigned following a 1993 federal conflict-of-interest case.
Also, both of his wives were half-Jewish. Do with that what you will.
This is the man positioning himself as outside the machine.
Staff Infection

Over the years, Jones has assembled a network of individuals whose backgrounds span military, intelligence, and influence operations. Names commonly noted by observers include Joe Biggs, Quentin Carter, Mike Cernovich, Mark Dice, Tim Kennedy, Patrick Riley, Jack Posobiec, Tim Reames, Craig Sawyer, and Aaron Wilson. Some are veterans. Others come from intelligence-related fields, media warfare, or political narrative management. What they share is proximity — not necessarily to each other initially, but to Jones’s platform and, through it, to millions of listeners.
Jack Posobiec stands out as a cleaner example. A former U.S. Navy intelligence officer, he shifted from military intelligence to media and political influence, becoming a highly effective communicator at the intersection of narrative, symbolism, and mass persuasion. He appeared onstage with Jones and Tucker Carlson, rosary in hand, during the run-up to Trump’s second term. A trio of spooks waving a rosary for the cameras. To supporters, it looks like conviction. To skeptics, it looks exactly like what it is.
Mike Cernovich followed a similar yet distinct path. He was among the figures granted access to sensitive Epstein-related materials during a controlled disclosure phase. The selection itself raised more questions than it answered — not only about Cernovich but also about the ecosystem that filters, distributes, and legitimizes what the public sees and when.
Chase Geiser, who appears regularly on Infowars and has become one of its more visible on-air personalities, has his own interesting Masonic footnote. He is a 32nd degree Scottish Rite Freemason, though he has said he does not like to talk about it because it is “a stupid distraction.” In 2016, he publicly demitted from his Tennessee lodge in protest after the Grand Lodge of Tennessee voted to uphold its ban on gay members, telling The Tennessean: “The older masons have very conservative Christian values. The younger masons are theistic.” He has since reinvented himself as a Christian nationalist commentator. From lodge reformer to culture war soldier, the journey is relatively short in this ecosystem.
Rob Dew — longtime Nightly News Director and Senior Producer at Infowars from February 2009 to September 2021, back in some capacity as of 2026 — is not a peripheral figure. He helped shape the platform’s editorial direction during its most influential years. His uncle, John R. Dew, served as a U.S. Navy officer before spending over twenty years as an FBI special agent in white-collar crime, counterintelligence, and the Joint Terrorist Task Force, mostly from the Manhattan field office, later specializing in infrastructure protection and risk management. Hmm. Manhattan. White-collar crime. I think I know of a prominent criminal who operated out of Manhattan. Not an accusation. Just proximity, patterns, and the recurring spectacle of an anti-establishment media outlet staffed by people with unusually deep roots in the establishment.
Then there is Stratfor — a private intelligence firm based in Austin, Texas, whose self-description as a geopolitical analysis company was complicated somewhat by WikiLeaks’ release of the Global Intelligence Files. Those files described a company that provided confidential intelligence services to the Department of Homeland Security, the Defense Intelligence Agency, Lockheed Martin, and Raytheon, while maintaining a global network of informants and employing money-laundering techniques. Its vice president for intelligence previously served as a counterterrorism official at the U.S. State Department. In other words, not merely a think tank.
During a 2013 broadcast, when asked how many Infowars employees were former Stratfor interns, Jones reacted strongly. A caller asked about Molly Maroney, his Managing Editor, and her previous internship at Stratfor. Jones dismissed the question as “mental illness.” He argued that Stratfor is a common Austin internship destination because of the University of Texas, that media options are limited, and that his positions on vaccines and 9/11 would make him “the worst government agent the planet’s ever seen.”
Notice the move. The question is not debated. It is pathologized. “Mental illness” becomes the slur used when questioning moves too far outside the reservation. A famed Orthodox apologist streamer connected to Infowars uses similar rhetoric when pressed. Now that “antisemitism” no longer carries the same weight in every context, I imagine “mental illness,” “schizo,” and similar labels will be the new tools for shutting down questions that stray outside the gatekept perimeter of acceptable reality.
Or, viewed another way, that positioning would make Jones an elite, intelligence-connected limited hangout — possibly the best they have ever produced.
Tip of the Spear

The official emblem of U.S. Special Operations Command features the phrase “deep behind enemy lines.” It is a motto rooted in unconventional warfare: infiltrating enemy territory not as an obvious force but as something embedded, adaptive, and indistinguishable from its surroundings. Alex Jones has repeatedly described Infowars as the “tip of the spear.” That same phrase circulated widely during the Q movement, positioning Trump as a hero engaged in a covert battle against hidden power structures. Language borrowed directly from military doctrine seeped into civilian psychological terrain, turning political identity into something resembling operational identity.
Jones has openly discussed his unusual proximity to military and intelligence personnel. In a February 2016 broadcast, he described encounters with retired generals, Special Forces colonels, and active-duty Delta Force members who questioned whether he had been recruited. “They’ll actually ask me, ‘Hey, really, what intelligence agency are you with? Did you get sheep dipped out of high school?'” Sheep dipping is the practice of giving operatives civilian cover identities so they can operate without formal affiliation.
Jones rejected the idea that he was part of any agency. He described himself as organic, untrained, and self-made. But in the same breath, he added: “I do have branches of different agencies actually trying to couple with what we’re doing to resist the globalists.” Not formal cooperation. Alignment. A parallel movement rather than a chain of command. The distinction he makes is subtle enough to be convenient.
It is worth noting that Jones’s self-proclaimed intellectual origin is Gary Allen’s 1971 book None Dare Call It a Conspiracy — a foundational text of modern American conspiracy culture. Allen was a member of the John Birch Society, which positioned itself as fiercely anti-communist and anti-globalist, yet critics have long argued that it functioned as a containment mechanism: channeling populist anger into a tightly controlled narrative that exposed certain elite structures while carefully avoiding others. That is the definition of a limited hangout. None Dare Call It a Conspiracy described globalism as a coordinated elite project, but within limits that some argue protected deeper financial and intelligence interests. That framework became the template.
When Alex presents himself as organic and awakened simply by reading Gary Allen, it is worth noting that his intellectual starting point was already embedded in an organized anti-establishment movement with its own gatekeepers, donors, and political strategy. The reservation has always had a fence. He just never pointed it out.
Counter-Coup

In August 2017, on Coast to Coast AM — a historic platform long associated with controlled disclosures and intelligence-adjacent narratives — Jones’s account of his role escalated considerably. The show’s original host, Art Bell, became a cultural conduit for fringe and classified-adjacent ideas. His photograph hangs in Joe Rogan’s studio. Continuity is important in this business.
Speaking with host George Noory, Jones claimed he had been contacted by individuals within U.S. Special Operations Command, covert elements of the Defense Department, and what he called “breakaway groups” within the CIA. He described involvement in a counter-coup to assist then-candidate Trump. “Most people are behind us,” he said. “I’d say ninety percent of the CIA, Defense Intelligence, the military, and Special Ops are behind us.”
He then claimed that Israel and Netanyahu had “come to America’s aid.” The enemy, he said, was already aware. But the identity of that enemy remained undefined, described only in broad terms: the globalists, the shadow government, the boogeyman. If Israel and Netanyahu are the cavalry, these enemies do not sound particularly frightening. We are never told exactly who they are. Only the blanket term “globalist” and George Soros. Two wings of the same bird, in my estimation.
Jones described being briefed and participating in a coordinated resistance operation supported by CIA, Defense Intelligence, the military, and Special Operations. He openly admitted to participating in what he called a psychological operation aligned with Israel and Netanyahu. This is not a critic’s characterization. It is his own account of his role.
Conduit

In April 2018, Jones described his relationship with intelligence sources as going well beyond proximity. He claimed repeated contact with one of the “top five people in the CIA,” who fed him information and authorized him to publish it. He admitted he had questioned whether he was being used. “I said, ‘Why me? I don’t think you’re trying to set me up. You’ve given me great intel before. Why me?'” He said the answer was his reach — his ability to punch through and deliver messages directly to millions.
He admitted discomfort with the role. “I don’t wanna be part of some psyop.” Then, in the same breath, he reassured himself that it was the “good guys” against the “bad guys.” In his telling, the distinction is not institutional but moral. Not government versus citizen, but faction versus faction.
Then, in moments that blurred the line between metaphor and self-revelation, Jones said flatly, “I’m with the CIA,” and escalated: “I run the CIA.” He framed the agency as reactive, an institution that listens as much as it directs. “They listen,” he said. The implication was that influence flows both ways — that he is not merely receiving information but shaping the environment in which that information operates.
A man who built his career by claiming to expose the hidden machinery of influence, openly describing himself as a conduit within that same machinery. He insists he takes no orders. He just happens to receive authorized briefings from top CIA officials and relay them to millions. Organic. Untrained. Real.
Stay-Behind

By September 2018, Jones had arrived at perhaps the most explicit articulation of his own role. During one broadcast, he referenced Operation Gladio and the concept of stay-behind networks — covert resistance cells established across Europe during the Cold War to operate behind enemy lines in the event of a Soviet takeover. Gladio later became one of the most documented and disturbing examples of intelligence infrastructure operating within civilian populations without public knowledge.
Jones said: “Thank God the Army, in the ’50s, created stay-behind networks in America.” He initially said he was not officially part of such a network. Then he said: “We are a stay-behind network for America. It’s the big secret. That’s what we are. The stay-behind networks support me. I’m from a stay-behind network. Most of my family was from stay-behind networks.”
He acknowledged the darker associations. “I don’t defend what NATO did under that,” he said, referring to allegations that stay-behind networks became entangled in political violence and covert destabilization. He then distinguished between corrupt factions within intelligence agencies and what he called more patriotic elements operating in parallel.
He described the CIA as created by “blue bloods and globalists,” but said, “it isn’t all bad either. It’s a large consortium.” I beg to differ. But the point is not my opinion of the CIA. The point is that, by his own account, Jones does not come from outside the system. He comes from within it — in a tradition of embedded networks operating in civilian clothing, positioned to activate when needed. He insists he is not officially part of any agency. He only says he comes from the same cloth, that the networks recognized him as one of their own, and that his family has always been part of them.
The anti-establishment broadcaster. The stay-behind asset. In his own words.
The Name Itself

Even the name “Infowars” traces back to institutional vocabulary. During sworn courtroom testimony on August 2, 2022, Jones explained that the term and the website itself originated with Victor Vreeland, an Air Force veteran who had worked in Air Force Intelligence. According to Jones, Vreeland approached him in the late 1990s and introduced him to the concept of “information war” as a formal military doctrine. “All information’s propaganda, whether it’s true or not,” Jones recalled Vreeland saying. Vreeland secured the Infowars.com domain and built the site’s initial framework.
The phrase was not coined for branding. It was borrowed from military doctrine. Information war: the psychological terrain where perception becomes the battlefield and narrative becomes the weapon. Jones would later spend decades positioning himself as a fighter in that war. But the structure of his platform — the name, the infrastructure, even the physical address — came from the same ecosystem he claimed to oppose.
The office park at 3019 Alvin Devane Boulevard in Austin, the shared address for Infowars, also houses Vindicator Technologies (later acquired by Honeywell, a major defense contractor), Pinnacle Peak Holding Corp., Prometheus Security Group Global, TESS Inc., and Worksteps Inc. — firms operating in security consulting, infrastructure protection, and defense-industrial support services. The anti-establishment headquarters shares the pavement with defense contractors. Keep your enemies close.
The Disinformation Company

Alex Jones’s early documentaries were distributed by the Disinformation Company, founded by Richard Metzger, who openly described it as a “magic business” that drew on Aleister Crowley’s definition of magic as “the science and art of causing change in conformity with will.” Metzger applied this framework to media, suggesting that shaping perception itself was a form of influence. The company distributed Jones’s documentary on Bohemian Grove, which became the foundation of his public career.
Disinformation also published material featuring Robert Anton Wilson, Marilyn Manson, Grant Morrison, and Kenneth Anger — figures associated with chaos magic, Discordianism, transhumanism, and techno-paganism. A key figure at the company was Matt Staggs, who later became a talent booker for The Joe Rogan Experience. The revolving door between early conspiracy media and modern podcast culture runs on well-oiled hinges.
Jones himself has framed pivotal moments of his career not as independent journalism but as guided operations. In a September 2019 interview, he claimed that Jon Ronson — the British journalist who paid him and facilitated his infiltration of Bohemian Grove — was actually MI6, a disinformation operative, and that the entire arrangement was a setup involving competing factions, local Democrats, and British intelligence as the deeper hand. He recasts the event that made his career not as rogue journalism but as a managed operation with handlers, agreements, and institutional shadows. This is his own telling.
MindWar and Michael Aquino

The conceptual framework behind operations like Infowars has documented precedent in military psychological warfare doctrine. MindWar — co-authored in 1980 by Colonel Paul Vallely, who now sits on the advisory council of Turning Point USA, and Lieutenant Colonel Michael Aquino — argued that future warfare would be conducted primarily through psychological influence rather than direct physical force. Aquino, a psychological operations officer, described warfare that must target perception itself, shaping belief systems through media, symbolism, and narrative control. He wrote that television, radio, and emerging digital media would become the primary battlegrounds.
Aquino is a genuinely unsettling figure — not merely for his military work. He served in the 6th and 306th Psychological Operations Battalions and participated in Operation Wandering Soul during the Vietnam War, a psychological warfare campaign that used audio broadcasts exploiting Vietnamese cultural beliefs about death and the afterlife to demoralize enemy combatants. A self-described Satanist, he later founded the Temple of Set after leaving Anton LaVey’s Church of Satan, claiming to have received direct communication from a supernatural entity. His security clearance was maintained despite documented allegations of child abuse at the Presidio Army base in San Francisco in the late 1980s. He later worked in the aerospace and space industry. Of course he did.
Jones frequently uses mythological metaphors: Excalibur, the rebirth of a republic, and the sacred mission of the patriot. This imagery, when placed alongside Aquino’s MindWar framework, maps rather cleanly onto a doctrine of perception warfare that uses symbolic psychological techniques to influence at the subconscious level. Whether intentional or ambient, the aesthetic is consistent.
Bill Hicks and the Comedy Pipeline

A 2019 documentary by the late independent journalist and researcher Matthew North traces a noteworthy lineage. Dick Gregory — comedian and civil rights activist — helped circulate the Zapruder film to the public, demonstrating how comedians can serve as intermediaries between suppressed material and mass audiences. The documentary argues that the same dynamic also works in reverse: by framing controversial ideas in humor, comedians can simultaneously expose and neutralize them.
Bill Hicks — the Austin-based comedian who wove conspiracy themes and critiques of institutional power into his routines — was linked to members of the John Birch Society. He was reportedly involved in circulating footage of the 1993 Waco siege, an event that profoundly shaped anti-government consciousness in America. He was also offered a television program on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom, with plans to interview figures including Noam Chomsky and Terence McKenna — a show designed, at least in part, to shape alternative political discourse through controlled media channels.
Hicks also reportedly developed plans for a fictional political talk-radio character modeled after Rush Limbaugh, demonstrating an explicit awareness of political media personalities as constructed narrative vehicles. He died in 1994. Alex Jones emerged from Austin shortly afterward, working in a similar register, covering similar subjects, and building a similar audience. The mantle was passed, whether deliberately or by cultural gravity.
Today, podcast culture has largely inherited this role. Hosts present themselves as independent thinkers on independent platforms, yet they operate within algorithmically controlled distribution systems owned by the same Silicon Valley corporations they occasionally critique. The aesthetic of rebellion is fully compatible with the infrastructure of control. In fact, the former is often necessary to make the latter palatable.
So What Are We Looking At?

Not a simple accusation. Not a clean binary. Not “agent” versus “not agent.” That framing is the trap, keeping people locked in personality warfare rather than in structural analysis.
The more disturbing possibility is functional: that this operation functions as a mechanism designed to route dissent back into system-compatible channels. Real truths are offered, wrapped in spectacle, delivered through a branded identity that converts suspicion into allegiance to “good factions” within the intelligence state. The audience is allowed to feel awake. Allowed to feel rebellious. Allowed to rage at the mainstream while remaining tethered to a mythology in which salvation comes not from repentance and truth, but from hidden patriots within the same institutions that built the cage.
That is controlled opposition: not the suppression of dissent, but its management. Not silencing, but steering. Not hiding the truth, but making it theatrical, so that truth becomes entertainment and entertainment becomes containment.
Consider what that looks like in practice. Jones — who has admitted to deep Masonic roots in his own family, who said on air that he is CIA, who has described himself as Jewish — hires a 32nd degree Scottish Rite Freemason, Chase Geiser, to host shows on his network. His early career was launched through the Disinformation Company, a self-described “magic business” built on Crowleyan principles of reality engineering, which distributed his foundational work to the world. His intellectual origins run through the John Birch Society. The Discordian and occult threads woven through his network’s early years are not incidental.
I can admit, with some embarrassment, that I was kept inside the Infowars reservation for years — looking for George Soros under the bed and in the closet, conditioned to fixate on the Arab boogeyman, trained to look everywhere except where it mattered most. It was not until coming to Christ and reckoning with the spiritual dimensions of what an ethnostate actually means that the spell broke. Jones had one job, and he did it well.
The question of why to trust anyone associated with and platformed by him deserves a direct answer: you should not, reflexively. Even those doing apparently good work within that ecosystem must be held at arm’s length. Once a spook, always a spook. One lie for every ten truths is the oldest formula in the intelligence playbook, and it works precisely because the ten truths are real.
As Albert Pike, the Sovereign Grand Commander of the Scottish Rite Freemasons — and the man whose statue Trump personally ordered restored in Washington — once wrote: “We always give the public their heroes. We give the heroes to every faction, and then people, once they hear this person say all the right things, give their power to the authorized heroes.”
Trump fits the Pike-ian hero model exactly: a figure engineered to win the loyalty of those most likely to resist, a Pied Piper leading the duped deeper into a controlled dream. And Jones was the warm-up act — the grand maestro who lulled the Second Amendment-loving, freedom-oriented dissident class with what amounts to a Masonic wand, herding them into “trust the plan” while Trump locked in NWO agenda items that would never have been accepted from the Democrat wing of the same Masonic bird. The gun-owning patriots were pacified, stupefied, and kept arguing about whether Michelle Obama has a dong while the final mechanisms of the beast system were quietly assembled around them. Perhaps the greatest controlled opposition operation ever run. No going back from here without Divine intervention, baby.
I say all of this as someone who fell for it. I consumed the content. I felt awake, as if I were seeing through the illusion. The whole time, the illusion had a second layer, and I was living comfortably within it. The best cages are the ones you do not recognize as cages.
Have faith in no man. That was before finding Christ. It applies here, as well.
Postscript: Shortly after this piece was first posted, Infowars announced the shutdown of its platform. A character of Jones’s magnitude does not simply disappear. Whatever form he resurfaces in, the framework above applies. Be aware. Never fully trust anyone associated with the platform. The formula has always been one lie for every ten truths — and that ratio is precisely what makes it effective.