QAA Podcast - Episode 227: The Posting to Prison Pipeline feat Michael Edison Hayden

Episode Date: April 15, 2023

Usually, telling lies on the internet is Constitutionally protected. But what happens when it’s not? What happens when you post and meme so hard and so maliciously that you go far outside the real...m of protected speech and wind up in a federal prison. That’s the story of a 33-year-old man named Douglass Mackey, who operated a few Twitter accounts under the name Rickey Vaughn. Using these accounts he spread Pizzagate lies, racist tropes, and also messages deliberately designed to mislead people into giving up their right to vote. On May 31st, Douglass Mackey was convicted of Election Interference in the 2016 presidential race after a one week trial. To better understand this case we spoke to someone who has been covering it for years: Michael Edison Hayden from the Southern Poverty Law Center. We chat about Douglass Mackey’s background, the crime he was found guilty of committing, and what it means for the future of online disinformation campaigns. We also discuss the trial’s involvement of “Microchip,” a notorious troll who is currently working as a federal informant. Subscribe for $5 a month to get an extra episode of QAA every week + access to ongoing series like 'Manclan' and 'Trickle Down': http://www.patreon.com/QAnonAnonymous Michael Edison Hayden: https://twitter.com/MichaelEHayden QAA's Website: https://qanonanonymous.com Editing by Corey Klotz.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 What's up QAA listeners? The fun games have begun. I found a way to connect to the internet. I'm sorry, boy. Welcome listener to chapter 227 of the Q&On Anonymous podcast, the posting to prison pipeline episode. As always, we are your host, Jake Rakatansky, and Travis Vue. Now, we've talked a lot on this podcast about dis-endombed.
Starting point is 00:00:30 information, and usually telling lies on the internet is constitutionally protected. But what happens when it's not? What happens when he posts and memes so hard and so maliciously that you go far outside the realm of protected speech and wind up in a federal prison? That's the story of barring the unlikely case of a successful appeal of a 33-year-old man named Douglas Mackey, who operated a few Twitter accounts under the name Ricky Vaugh. Using these accounts, he spread Pizza Gate lies, racist tropes, and also messages deliberately designed to mislead people into giving up their right to vote.
Starting point is 00:01:03 On May 31st, Douglas Mackey was convicted of election interference in the 2016 presidential election after a one-week trial. He faces a sentence of up to 10 years in prison for that conviction, though it remains to be seen what his actual sentence will be. Today, we're going to be talking to Michael Edison Hayden from the Southern Poverty Law Center about the Douglas Mackey case, what he did, and what this means for the future of online trolling. But before we get to the main topic of the show,
Starting point is 00:01:30 I feel like I have to address the recent reporting concerning Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. Oh, yeah. What's going on with this? So, yeah, so an investigation by ProPublica, really great investigation, found that Thomas accepted luxury trips from billionaire Republican donor Harlan Crow, which is a villain. Yes, yes, Harlan Crow, yes. He only wears purple. He lives in the very, you know, in the very gnarledest looking tree. We've seen this guy. We know him. Yeah. So Thomas accepted. gifts from Harlan Crow for years without disclosing them. So this included travel on a private flight to Indonesia, super yacht sailings, and visits to Crow's East Texas Ranch. I thought for sure you were
Starting point is 00:02:13 going to be like, and visits to Crow's evil secret island. Basically, basically. I mean, it's like, I mean, it's what good journalism should do, like uncovering, you know, connections and corruption, that kind of stuff. Yeah. But perhaps most shockingly, it included Clarence Thomas going to the 150-year-old San Francisco Resort, Bohemian Grove. Oh, dear. Okay. We talked about Bohemian Grove, actually, with a former employee of the facility all the way back in episode 36 of this podcast. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:02:45 I know. It's been that long. So this is a resort to the elites, and it has included among its membership, Henry Kissinger, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Charles Schwab, you know, the top of the, you know, the finance and politics and even, like, you know, entertainment. worlds. So it's where the wealthy and powerful get together and they do like weird plays and they piss in the woods according to our best understanding. Famously, Alex Jones snuck into the area in 2000 and he filmed the cremation of care ceremony. I just want to go in. I want to see all
Starting point is 00:03:15 these, I want to see all these politicians, all these famous celebrities. I want to see them pissing in the woods. That's what I want to see. I know they're eating children. I know they're doing a lot of messed up things out there. But what we really want to capture today is tinkling. Yeah, politicians are going little potty in the woods. This revelation in the pro-publica article was shocking to me, not because it reveals that Clarence Thomas' shtick about being in every man that's bullshit, or that reveals yet another way in which billionaires control the government. You know, this is all a given.
Starting point is 00:03:44 But it's shocking to me because Clarence Thomas's wife, Ginny Thomas, is a conspiracist, right? The January 6th committee revealed text messages in which she railed against a plot by the elites to steal the election. She also sent a video by Alex Jones, associate Steve Pachennick. So look, you know, if your Supreme Court Justice husband is literally attending Bohemian Grove at the invitation of a billionaire, you should be allowed to rail about the elites or share Alex Jones videos. I feel like that doesn't make any sense. Yeah, there's got to be some disconnect there. You know, when Clarence Thomas gets ready to go to Bohemian Grove, like he doesn't say like, oh, I'm going up to Bohemian Grove, like to do the play like around the owl and go tinkle, tinkle in the woods.
Starting point is 00:04:27 he's probably like, oh, well, daddy's getting ready to go on his yearly retreat, you know, it's like one of those things. It's got to be a, there's got to be some sort of weird disconnect where she's just compartmentalizing her own experience with her husband and then also her conspiratorial beliefs. I mean, yeah, that's really the best case scenario, which Clarence Thomas is just like lying or they just don't talk about where Clarence Thomas is heading off to or something. Like most people, like normal people, they have to speculate how the rich and powerful are manipulating the world. And this can give rise to like conspiracizing and, you know, sometimes it can go off the rails. But if Ginny Thomas wants to know how the rich and powerful are manipulating the world, she just has to wait until dinner time and ask, what did you do at work today? You know, it doesn't make any sense. Yeah, I mean, when he grabs his overcoat, puts on his hat, opens the door, you know, turns over his shoulder and calls up the stairs.
Starting point is 00:05:24 It's like, all right, honey, well, I'm going to Dr. Crow's, you know, Evil Island. Like, I'll be back, I don't know, in a week or so. Or, like, yeah, anything. Oh, well, but, like, you know, you know how this stuff goes. These people don't know. It's like, I've got my weekly fishing trip with the guys or, like, I got to do something for work. Like, we know how shady dudes operate. It's, you know, I got to go ride on the yacht with Dr. Crow.
Starting point is 00:05:51 It's like, I don't even know if he's a doctor. I've just started calling him that because I've fully embraced his comic book villain stature. I don't know. It feels like in conservative circles, these kinds of like conspiracy stances are just like a fashionable thing to do. And they're disconnected from any kind of like real attempt to understand like I guess like how power is manipulating the world. Yeah, I was like when you're like married to perhaps one of the thousand most powerful people in the fucking world is being courted by billionaires and flown over the world, you shouldn't feel so. powerless and confused that resort to watching Alex Jones videos and getting weird telegram messages about like, you know, what the elites are doing. Because you are the elite. That's, that's you. You're the
Starting point is 00:06:35 one who controls the world. Yeah. Well, you know, I think that brings up an interesting point about, you know, there are things that happen out in, you know, in your real life. And then there are things that happen in your life on the internet. And the things that you watch and consume in this very small sort of enclosed space, it's 2D, it's this flat screen, you're laying on a body pillow and the light from your laptop, you know, is blinding you at two in the morning. And then there's like, you know, you're having dinner with your husband. You're talking about your day. You know, I would imagine that there are these two different worlds that just, they never
Starting point is 00:07:07 ever seem like they're going to intersect because the medium through which you are experiencing them is so wholly different. So on to discussing the Douglas Mackey trial, because this is really fascinating. So according to federal prosecutors and the jurors in his trial, between September November of 2016, Douglas Mackey conspired with other influential Twitter users to use social media platforms, including Twitter, to disseminate fraudulent messages that encouraged supporters of Hillary Clinton to vote via text message or social media. In reality, these are not legally valid methods of voting, and the messages were designed to disenfranchise voters. One of these messages
Starting point is 00:07:44 was an image that included the text, avoid the line, vote from home, text Hillary to 59925. And there were people who did in fact text that number. Mm-hmm. And what did it do instead? It signed them up for some kind of weird supplement. Well, yeah, I think we're going to have to talk to Michael Hayden about that exactly, about what happened. I want to find out, did the, yeah, did the number go anywhere?
Starting point is 00:08:07 How does our law enforcement even find out how many people texted like, you know, a phony dummy number? Very interesting. Very interesting stuff. Douglas Mackey posted these messages under an account named Ricky Vaughn, which is named after a character from the 1989 film Major League. Wait, who is he in, is he the, is it Charlie Sheen's character? Is it the main character?
Starting point is 00:08:29 It's the Charlie Sheen character, yeah, yeah. So it's just like the Charlie Sheen, Ricky Vaughn, but use a MAGA hat instead of the baseball cap. I mean, that makes sense. I loved those movies when I was a little kid. But Charlie Sheen's, his sort of aura in those movies, I think, you know, could very easily serve MAGA through, you know, an altered JPEG on the internet. So this Ricky Vaughan account, it was actually really influential in spreading the ideas of the alt-right in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election. It peaked at 62,000 followers and posted some 221,000 tweets.
Starting point is 00:09:07 220,000? Yeah, that's right. That's right. Lots of lots of tweets. He's very active, posting all the time. I think I've tweeted like 5,000 times, maybe. And that felt like a lot when I saw that little number. I have, yeah, I mean, yeah, I've posted, I think, tens of thousands of times, but even that feels excessive.
Starting point is 00:09:26 I've tried, I've cut back in like this past year or so. 200,000 times. Oh, my God. Oh, what a dumb world. All right, please continue. So when MIT election study during the primaries ranked that Ricky Vaughn Twitter account as more influential than the accounts of like NBC News, Stephen Colbert, and the Democratic Party, among many others. So it was pretty influential.
Starting point is 00:09:47 When Vaughn was banned from Twitter in October of 2016, he became even more popular among the far right. Avon then took his act to the social media platform Gab, where he quickly became a prominent presence. One of Douglas Mackey's co-conspirators is a longtime alt-right troll who goes by the name Microchip. Microchip, in addition to being a disinformation super spreader in his own right, was revealed to be a federal informant through the course of this trial, and in fact even testified during the trial. So I'm really excited to talk to Michael Hayden about that. Yeah, because wasn't Microchip part of that original crew, him, James Brower, who we unfortunately had on the show, claiming that they were responsible for the original, the first four Q drops or something like that?
Starting point is 00:10:36 That is right, Jake. They did in fact claim that. And, yeah, I'm trying to get some clarity on how that went down. Yeah, because if, yeah, if Microchip has been. an FBI informant for a very long time and as an informant is claiming that he did some of the cue drops, that's a
Starting point is 00:10:54 whole mess. I remember because James, after he came on the show, he did reach out to you, correct, and admit that the story was kind of bullshit and he was sorry and felt bad. Yeah, he did in fact retract his claims after initially claiming that he was responsible for
Starting point is 00:11:10 some of the initial cue drops. So, good on him. We are now joined by Michael Edison Hayden. He is a senior investigative reporter for the Southern Poverty Law Center. And he has been following developments in this case for years. And in fact, he spoke to Douglas Mackey shortly after he was Docs back in 2018. Michael, thank you so much for coming on the show. Hey, it's great to be here, Travis.
Starting point is 00:11:31 So first of all, we covered some of the details of the case briefly before he came on. But how would you describe what Douglas Mackey was found guilty of doing? I think the easiest way for people to understand this is, you know, the non- perverted term of disinformation, right? Like the not the one that has been sort of mutated in the in on social media among liberals, but like real disinformation. Like basically he published some very on Twitter, some very highly crafted, you know, completely realistic looking images telling people that they could vote by text using a short code, a sort of a hijacked short code. And the images targeted women of color essentially. So the, the, the first one he
Starting point is 00:12:16 published, had a picture of a black woman on it, and it kind of was targeted at the sort of African Americans for Hillary crowd. And then seven hours later, he published one that was even, in my opinion, much more plausible looking, which was written in Spanish, telling people they could text with a, you know, a woman who appeared to be Latina on there. And it was very plausible disinformation that the Garberman successfully argued was designed to keep people from And people actually texted that particular number that was provided, right? Yep. So one of the big, there's sort of a lot of smoke coming from the right about this, which we're
Starting point is 00:12:53 probably going to get into. But one of the things that they keep bringing up is the fact that most of the people texted the number. There's about nearly 5,000 people, about 4,900 something, I think. And, you know, they keep bringing up that most of the people who texted this number did so after the media had already covered it. And there's just two things that are important about that, that I just want to isolate here, which is that nearly 100 people did so before they, you know, this had been covered by
Starting point is 00:13:17 the media. So we don't know if those are real people trying to vote or not. And then as for everyone else, they established during the trial pretty clearly that one of the goals of Mackie and his co-conspirators was to get this covered in the media. So yes, many people did text. Wait a minute, wait a minute. So hold on. So they're saying that like this is a less egregious of a crime because, oh, well, they should have been watching the news. They should have known that it was a fake thing and, uh, you know, there's no reason that they should have texted it. But then they're also saying, well, we wanted the media to cover it. Ah, these people, they just, ah, they break my brain. Like, okay, so you want the media to cover
Starting point is 00:13:57 it so that people know it's a hoax, but you're also earnestly hoping to disenfranchise voters by giving them false information about how to vote for the candidate. Right. So one thing that's exposed to the trial are they like, they have, they were in multiple Twitter direct message groups. And these were like, I've been in a lot of different DMs in my time, but like, I've never seen anything quite like this where it's like, do you remember Jared Wyand? Mm-mm. He was this guy who was like a, like he was in that Ricky Von tier of kind of just faces you would just randomly see like on your, like, what the fuck is this guy? And he turned out, he ultimately
Starting point is 00:14:31 got suspended from, from Twitter when he started to get more and more radical. I think it was like a Star Wars comment he made about like, you know, in 2016 about diverse casting or something like that was the first thing. And then he went to Gab and he got like really, really openly anti-Semitic and then, you know, became really, really hardcore. This guy Jared Wyand. And one of the first DMs is like, it's just like, okay, this is a place where we're kind of like workshopping information or whatever and it's pinned to the top. And essentially what they were doing in there is like plotting out ways to make plausible looking disinfo that they could drive up through coordinated efforts like up in the algorithm using Twitter's trending topics and things like
Starting point is 00:15:10 I had never seen anything quite like this, and I knew that they were doing things like this, but I really had no idea how sophisticated it really was. Yeah, you know, 2016, it was a very, very long time ago. This is basically the period that he's been accused of committing these crimes. And it's tough to remember that period on Twitter. It was really wild and chaotic. But he was, but this Ricky Vaughn account, the Douglas Mackey made, had a surprisingly large reach and pretty influential, right? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:38 I mean, it was like, you know, one of the big. things that comes up and came up in trial is that MIT did a study where they were like trying to determine who are the most influential social media personalities in the 2016 election and he came up like 107th and he was a right in the same tier as people like share and whatever else right so all he really had was just this this charlie sheen avatar from the film major league with the maga hat but he would appear on there and and one thing that like on people's feeds and one thing that mackie did that obviously, I report on the radical rights specifically much more than the conspiracy world. But that's, you know, I mean, there's obviously massive overlap. The thing that always intrigued me about
Starting point is 00:16:18 Mackey is how successful he was at kind of uniting the right in air quotes, you know, to use that term. He had, he was able to win support among like neo-Nazis, white supremacists, like the really hardcore types. And, you know, a lot of support among. like kind of, you know, magagramas and things like that. And he was, because he was a very sophisticated poster, he was like a very, he was, he was very strategic. He was able to kind of unite these people on Twitter. And it became kind of an account that drove traffic to Trump's messaging. Well, and he, you know, his, his, his profile pick, you know, there's something. I don't know if it always looked like, you know, look like this because people change their pictures oftentimes.
Starting point is 00:17:03 But, you know, the electric blue and the, and the hat. And there, there, there is some. something that is very catchy about it. I mean, do we know it all where he sort of sharpen these skills? I mean, was he a Chan guy? Was he on other forums? Or... Yeah, I mean, remind me to, like, put a pin in me saying how Microchip described 4chan later, but, um, okay. So we'll, I'll mention that. But yeah, I mean, 4chan played a big role in this trial. And it was fascinating to see how, you know, just how big a role. So one of Mackie's kind of defense postures was that, like, he just found. these on 4chan and thought they were cool and kind of posted them. Also, in his DMs, they have evidence
Starting point is 00:17:42 of saying, like, I have all these, I have so many people who respond to my posts. I can, I can just command people to Photoshop things for me at the drop of the hat now. That's not the quote verbatim, but that is, you know, the core principle behind it. So the prosecution had to slow things down for people and say that like, yeah, he was on this particular part of Fortune and he did it seven hours apart. And rather than the split second of like see it posted, he had to like really pick which there were so many different images to choose. And he chose specifically this black woman and this Latina. And just that was his focus. And it was for strategic reasons. So yeah, 4chan was like really big in this. He was kind of part of this, what I would describe as kind of
Starting point is 00:18:25 a through line between 4chan and Maga Twitter. Yeah, I was really interested in I guess Douglas Mackey the man because, you know, the fact that Douglas Mackey is the man behind the, uh, Ricky Vaughan was reported in 2018 by your colleague, Luke O'Brien, who we've had on the show before. And I was looking over his reporting from that time. And what really struck me is that Mackie seemed to be on track for a pretty cushy life before he decided to devote his time to trolling on Twitter. Like his dad was a lobbyist and he focused on like tax policy affecting wireless communications. So he was well connected. Uh, he, uh, Mackey attended, uh, Middlebury College. And after college, he moved to Brooklyn, took a job as an economist at the firm John Dunham and
Starting point is 00:19:08 Associates, and he worked there for four years. But he fell down the alt-right pipeline pretty hard. So do we know exactly how he got radicalized? You really nailed it there because I can't think of any one person who better symbolizes this idea of being red-pilled than Doug Mackey. I really can. Like, I think he's got to be the biggest. I mean, a Middlebury grad who winds up in this particular situation. And, you know, I don't mean that in like a classist kind of whatever way, but he really had no reason to do to turn into what he turned into. He had everything kind of like laid out for him in life and a tremendous amount of white privilege in a non-arguable kind of way. I don't mean that in like the sort of, I mean, he's literally had white privilege in a literal sense.
Starting point is 00:19:55 And this dude, like the most compelling piece of color that the prosecution brought in was interviews with his roommate who, there's no need to name him right now because the guy's a private figure. But they, you know, over a period of years, he's living with this guy. And the roommate says, you know, what happened? You know, like, how did you find out about this stuff? He's like, I found out because I read Luke's Huffpo article. So for like years, Mackie is living with this guy and like has this whole secret mega persona, like this weird radical right thing with the anti-Semitism. He's organizing with members of the right stuff network, now National Justice Party, you know, not organizing, but he's certainly appearing on their podcasts and debating strategy about the white supremac, the directions of the white supremacism
Starting point is 00:20:42 movement. And the roommate he's living with doesn't know anything like this. And they ask him and they asked him when he took the stand, they're like, what was he like, what was he like, he's just, he was like in his room, door closed on the computer. And it is, I mean, it's just like that, it's a literal thing. It's like a, it's like the red pilling thing, you know, perfectly encapsulated. like where it's just, this guy just became addicted to being, you know, a white nationalist icon on Twitter. Well, what's crazy to me about that is that, you know, typically, and look, I'm speaking from experience of somebody who, you know, is easily taken in by conspiracies that they read online and, you know, have had to surround myself with good smart people like Travis, you know, to keep me from going overboard. but when you are discovering these things when you're when you are uh sort of going down the rabbit hole the first thing you want to do is is talk about it with your roommate you know roommates are
Starting point is 00:21:41 actually so important here i i was so lucky uh when you know around 2017 2018 when you know all of the shit was really kicking off i was living with a guy a good friend of mine who is like a hardcore lefty and so you know i would come out of my room and be like, oh man, I was like, yeah, I'm reading about, you know, Benghazi, you know, just Hillary Clinton, you know, I don't know. And he'll be like, uh, well, I mean, you know, actually, and, you know, and would provide some kind of realistic explanation or, you know, very smart dude just, just was very plugged in into, you know, what I would consider like good politics. And so that very much surprises me that, you know, somebody is becoming the kind of archetypal version of the red pill. And the roommate has no idea about it. On some level, I wonder if, you know, if you're getting into anti-Semitic stuff, if you're getting into white supremacist and, and borderline neo-Nazi stuff, on some level, you got to know that that's bad. And maybe you don't want to share with, you know, but usually if you're in the process of getting red-pilled, you're trying to red pill everybody
Starting point is 00:22:51 else around you. It's like the Calvin and Hobbs cartoon where he shows up at the bus stop and he's in a real bad mood and he treats Susie Durkins like shit. She gets in a really bad mood and he says, you know, nothing helps a bad mood like spreading it. And that's kind of been my experience with people getting red-pilled in the process or, you know, just kind of conservatives in general. Well, just a quick point on that, which is what you're describing Jake about, like, oh, I want to share the conspiracy. You know, the difference there is that that Mackie took the role of predator here. You know, he's not, it's not necessarily he believes in conspiracies or anything like that. He is trying to exploit people he perceives to be gullible. And he's not an audience member.
Starting point is 00:23:31 He's a person who, and that's what made him the center of this trial. It's like, it's not like, oh, well, he did believe, he definitely believed in like the anti-Semitic conspiracies, or at least promoted them. But his main goal was winning power and creating fascist control over the United States. I mean, that to me is my read on what he did. And so he's using the conspiracies to get there. Yeah. Yeah. That is very different than what I. described. And I think that that's an interesting distinction that, you know, we don't necessarily often talk about on the podcast is this difference between audience member and, you know, or orator, you know, somebody who wants to take this stuff and use it, you know, even if they don't, they're not
Starting point is 00:24:12 necessarily 100% on board with the kookiness. Well, Andrew Anglin from Daily Stormer has contacted me from sock accounts and things like that. And, you know, he's as bad as you might think he is, you know, but he's very conscious. Like, he knows that he's manipulated. his audience. He knows what he's doing and he gets off on it, right? Like, it's, for them, it's a game to try to secure power for, you know, a small group of people that they feel like that they can be a part of. Yeah, and that, and that makes sense. I mean, my impression of 4chan is, is a group of people that all lovingly hate each other. Yeah. You know, and, and so there is this, this sort of woven in kind of, you know, emotion of like, you know, it's fun to own people. It's
Starting point is 00:24:55 fun to manipulate them like it's it's fun to get them to look stupid they're trying to do it to you that's the whole part of it yep 100% yeah i guess like really baffled me about his story is that usually like people in his position like i said who were like born into a lot of privilege and like have a pretty easy track at life what they do is that they you know they get a good job and then they build up a lot of like wealth and connections and clout they use that to forward their racist policies through their career or something like that you know bang politicians or whatever. But he wanted the attention for himself. I mean, he got, he was so red to, I heard that he went through, like, for example, Gamergate, he connected to bad figures like
Starting point is 00:25:34 Mike Cernovich. He wanted to be the guy online who was like, you know, spreading the disinformation and like you said, personally helping forward the cause of a fascist state. It's just bizarrely self-destructive, not in like, oh, poor boy had so much potential kind of way. Just like, why aren't you, at the very least, looking out for number one, like a lot of other, I guess, like racist people in your positions. Sure. Yeah, it's a good question. You know, the thing about Mackey, and I bristle when people feel obligated to say, like, oh, well, they're really smart. Like, this person's really smart in the radical right. I mean, it's one of the more annoying things that we, like, I feel like people feel the need to do is like qualify and be like,
Starting point is 00:26:13 well, he's really smart and stuff like that. No, actually, they're not, like most of the time. They're very quite exploitative. There are a few of them that are smarter than others. you know, I think Mackey became so beloved from both the extreme far right and from, you know, there's sort of the generic MAGA sludge, you know, brigade that because of the fact that he was, you know, he was a guy who could have succeeded at something else, you know, and he, and you could tell with the way he posted that he was, you know, I mean, he was, he could have, he could have been something other than this and he committed himself to this. He had enough talent, I guess, at manipulating people and messaging to be something else. And, um,
Starting point is 00:26:50 They love that because they're so few and far between. Yeah, work for Pepsi or something. Yeah, it's really interesting to watch, you know, people who have otherwise, you know, promising, promising careers. They have a lot of advantages, you know, starting on third base. But sometimes, sometimes you want to take that silver spoon and just dig it in the mud, you know, eat just a big, a big spoonful of mud and rocks and worms. Oh, shit.
Starting point is 00:27:19 in the shit posting sense. Yeah, or shit, whatever kind of, you know, hankering, you know, whatever kind of flavor you're looking for. And now he's going to face what? He's facing what? Like 10 years in prison? Yeah, I mean, I'd be surprised if he gets 10. I think the judge can give him zero and the judge can give him 10 as far as I understand it.
Starting point is 00:27:39 And, you know, I think he's more likely to get something in the two, three years, two-year range. It depends whether Judge Donnelly wants to, she's a foreign prosecutor. She's an Obama appointed judge. It depends on whether she buys into the changed man narrative that he's trying to sell or if she really wants to make a statement here to say, like, hey, hold on a second, man. Like, we're sending black people to jail for fucking marijuana. And, like, are there no repercussions for Middlebury grads who try to stop black people from voting?
Starting point is 00:28:09 I mean, so she has the option to kind of, like, make it a tough sentence if she wants. If I were Mackey, I would not, you know, I would buy some emotium AD or something because it's going to be real stressful right before that sentencing. But I wouldn't expect full 10 years. That is my, if it happens, it's going to be rough. Michael, do you know, is there any discussion whatsoever on the idea? Because here's the things that I'm sort of looking at is that he's, you know, on these sort of white supremacist boards, you know, clearly there's, you know, there's a lot of racism there. And he, at the same time, his sort of voter misinformation scheme is targeting people of color. Do you think, Is there anything being brought into play about that this is a racist crime or that potentially a hate crime because it is it is geared towards people of color, you know, assuming that they're gullible and trying to, you know, ruin their opportunity to go out and vote for, you know, whatever candidate they want?
Starting point is 00:29:05 So, you know, I don't know. There's nothing yet with that, but his white supremacist posts his kind of like that, that world made it into the trial repeatedly. and he got he got torn up during cross-examination when he took this you know when he took the stand and it was largely to explain things where he was saying that black people are predisposed to have an 85 IQ which was you know i mean just standard fair american renaissance crap if you're familiar with with them and yeah i mean he was just basically getting into this like you know this debunked race science bullshit and repeatedly saying black people are gullible and you can see that from from what they do on Twitter and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:29:45 And so, yeah, it came in because it's like, well, you think black people are dumb. You think black people are gullible. So therefore, you know, why wouldn't you think that they would believe this? Why wouldn't you think that they would text this? I mean, it helped establish the motive very, very clearly. You know, if you're saying women are children with the right to vote, which is something that he said, which for some reason,
Starting point is 00:30:04 more than anything else kind of chilled me for some reason, it's such a fucked up thought. It's like, you know, maybe if I were, you know, if I were black, maybe the 85 IQ one, it would. But I just feel like that that kind of racism is so common and whatever. It's not an either-or scenario, but it was something like, you know, dude's mom was at the trial and stuff like that. I mean, you know, even if you are,
Starting point is 00:30:27 if the life where you're sheltered from black people and stuff like that, it's like to be looking at the women in your life and thinking this is a fucking child in an adult's body, who shouldn't be allowed to vote. It fucked me up. I mean, it was just like something, the whole thing was just really, really uncomfortable. Yeah. Now, I was particularly interested in this case because of the involvement of a notorious alt-right troll who goes by the name Microchip. Now, for those who are to aware, Microchip is responsible for spreading a lot of disinformation related to the 2016 election.
Starting point is 00:30:57 He's also responsible for a scheme called Operation Titty Twister in which he and other people who use, they use Twitter's reporting system to report tweets by reporters and progressives as part of an attempt to have their account suspended. So we discovered through this trial that microchip is a co-conspirator of Douglas Mackey in the scheme. And no surprise is there. And it sounds like something he would do. But we also learned that microchip is a federal informant and has been since 2018. And he in fact testified at this trial, which means that you laid eyes on the very mysterious and still anonymous microchip. So what was that like? Wow.
Starting point is 00:31:36 Okay. It's going to be a lot. I would say we could do a separate podcast just on microchip. And the other thing I wanted to say is, like, we need to make some t-shirts to say I survived Operation Titty Twister. I definitely was on those reporting things. Yes, those will be going up in the merch shop, you know, within the next couple hours. But I did. I'm an Operation Tuddy Twister survivor and my account, my account still exists for now.
Starting point is 00:32:03 Yeah. So where to start? So I've been in touch with microchip in some way, shape, or form since 2017. 17, I think. So has Luke. Luke has been more involved with him than I have, but there are been times where I've been in, like, you know, where I was talking to Microchip basically all the time. And that was maybe 2018.
Starting point is 00:32:21 When I was on Gab, I was one of the few verified people on Gab who was not a, you know, not friends with like Robert Bowers or some other mass murder. Yeah. So I was like, yeah, basically Microchip presented himself for those who are unfamiliar as like this kind of like relatively handsome looking avatar. with like a micro with a with a ice cream cone in his face and a maga hat and um you know the reality was just something very different like all of a sudden this dude comes in uh to the court i don't know how much he weighed like it was 300 something um maybe i don't know i mean is it somewhere between
Starting point is 00:32:56 300 300 i mean he's big big big guy and not just heavy not just uh overweight but tall too he was kind of like like the mountain he's like the he's the he would be the guard you know the maga knights guard uh you know if in the 1800s or whatever if he had muscle like he had more muscle and less fat he would he you you you could tell me that this guy was like the new like offensive tackle for the jets or something and I'd be like oh okay like yeah here he is yeah huge dude like he's got a beard his neck beard goes down he's in a he's in a very vibrant looking blue hoodie like a kind of a a royal blue hoodie that just really was like electrically blue, like brand new. And he had like hair that kind of like strung down like past
Starting point is 00:33:41 his ears like and curled out a little bit. Greasy looking hair. Sounds a little bit like the comic book guy from the Simpsons. Yeah, a little bit, a little bit without the ponytail, but like big, like a big version. Like if you if you mutated him out and it made him like massive in some Halloween episode of The Simpsons, then yes. That's kind of what it would be. And as soon as he came into the court. It was a fucking circus, dude. It was just, one, his attitude. He comes in and he looks at Luke and he looks at me and he's just laughing, right? He just starts laughing. And he gets onto the stand and his posture on the stand, like, he doesn't stop the troll persona. It's like, you can immediately tell this is the guy you've been chatting with because he's got this
Starting point is 00:34:23 cocksure kind of weird fucking comedy, like, vibe from the start. And it's very, like, you know, It was very challenging for the prosecution because he had Mackie dead to rights with some of the things he's saying. But because he was so weird and because the average person who is a senior citizen who is many of, you know, there are a few of them on the jury, maybe half of the people there looked pretty old. And all the people there had very limited experience with Twitter, which is important in choosing the jury. Like they may have been interested in some other social media sites, but they were not super involved. And it just, they started like laughing. the jury erupted with laughter multiple times. We started laughing.
Starting point is 00:35:04 I had to take my COVID mask and put it on because I didn't want the judge was getting pissed with us. Because Microchip himself was laughing on the stand during a sidebar and had to take his hooded sweatshirt and put it up over his mouth like this and was laughing into it like this. Because he recognized us and he had been exposed with no name or anything and the situation was just that surreal. It was one of the when I die, which could happen tomorrow or it could happen when I'm. 90. It will go down as one of the weirdest fucking hours I have ever experienced in my life. How about that? Whoa. Whoa. I'm fascinated. I'm fascinated. So this guy walks in, you know, he's king dick. He's FBI informant. He's untouchable. He's there to, he's, he's there to, you know, sort of further this troll persona. It's just, if I, Jake Rockatansky, my real name,
Starting point is 00:35:56 If I was in some kind of federal court case, look, I got summoned to go to jury duty a couple weeks ago, okay? I was, I'm not in trouble. I'm going to sit on the jury. I was scared shitless. I was like, oh, God, what am I going to tell? Like, oh, God, I'm 10 minutes late. Like, oh, what are they going to do? Like, all this stuff.
Starting point is 00:36:20 And then I put on the jury, like, all of this stuff. And so the idea to me of somebody coming in and treating the whole thing as if it's a joke, I think speaks pretty clearly to the kind of person that this is. I mean, that's pretty crazy. Well, to treat it all as a joke, I need to separate that so both you and the audience understands something about Microchip here, which is it's like that Das Racist song that's like, ha ha, joking, whatever, or it's like, I'm joking, or whatever. this is the this is the core issue of the whole fucking case right Mackey is saying I'm not joking I mean I'm joking this was just a joke at the same time he's kind of saying that like what in these DMs that what he does on Twitter is serious
Starting point is 00:37:05 to try to change the outcome of the election in Microchips case he can't stop the joking persona he can't stop the trolling persona he can't stop being he can't stop performing but at the same time what he was saying was serious so you were like in this and he and he's under oath so you're in this world where you're kind of just, you know, he's so weird, but he's also under oath telling the truth and has Mackey dead to rights. And so the most effective, the time that Frisch, who is Mackey's attorney, was most effective, was it's trying to create doubt about microchip sanity
Starting point is 00:37:38 and whether he was a credible witness. So this is like, this is the core of this case and why it makes it so fascinating. It's like, is it real? Is it not real? What is it troll? Does it live under the bridge? Is it serious? when it tries to club you, that sort of thing. Yes. Yeah, it sounds like, I mean, yeah, obviously not an endorsement of microchip who's said a lot of vile things, but he always always has this kind of like sardonic sense of, I guess, you know, this foreshad, nihilistic kind of sense of humor.
Starting point is 00:38:07 And I guess that translated to his real life persona. Oh, I mean, look, he was, you know, I mean, I have to admit he was very funny at times. And because he's now a federal informant, he's been stripped of his, you know, he can't be openly misogynistic, can't be openly anti-LGBQ, can't be openly anti-Black, can't be openly whatever. So he's just working with the things that he has that could just be funny from a trolling point of view. And his timing was very good at times. Like at one point, he said they're asking them like, and what is for chance to explain it? And he said, it's a place where internet intellectuals gather to discuss contemporary events. And he just like snapped it out there. And
Starting point is 00:38:47 like it was like it was very difficult to keep my you know i just started laughing because it was like it was very funny and it's a very funny way to describe four chan especially when you are yourself a four chan creature and um knowing that it's like you're basically describing the fucking canteena bar from star wars right right right and you're also in a place talking to people for you know in front of a jury that has no connection to this world whatsoever yep 100% wild that's wild shit man i can't believe you went and did that that's crazy i mean i would love to read someone from his testimony to you but you can tell me when that's appropriate no sure let's let's hear it yeah yes so i'm going to try to
Starting point is 00:39:28 hopefully this is clear who's talking so here's fresh uh for a period of light of your life did you do illegal drugs yeah uh that was a short period back in g's i think 2020 2002 2003 something like that is it uh a fact that used illegal drugs from 2002 to 2014 uh to Yeah. I mean, that's a broad range. Give me one second. Do you recall your meetings with the government was July 5th, 15, 2021? Yeah, say that date again, July 15. Oh, yeah, yep. At that meeting, do you recall telling the government you had previously used drugs from approximately 2002 or 2003 into 2014? No, that's incorrect. When we're using drugs? Did you have a high use of heroin? That was, no, there was some use of heroin, but not high. It was a one-off situation back in the early 2000s. Okay, some stuff about Agent Reese, who's this, you know, his FBI agent. Do you recall saying that you were addicted to painkillers? Yeah, same time period.
Starting point is 00:40:28 Do you recall saying you used a testosterone steroid called testogel? Oh, testogel? Yeah, that was 2001. Did you tweet about your use of Adderall on February 20, 2003? Oh, yeah. Let me show you what'll mark identification is that, da, dot, dot, dot, right? Oh, I already know this tweet. Did you tweet this?
Starting point is 00:40:46 I did tweet that. Okay. Did you say in this tweet, I am now 36 hours into my Adderall and chat GPT marathon? I did. Did you know what chat GPT is? I do. What is it? It's a generative AI, a generative intelligence using a language model, etc. So basically they basically tried to pin this guy as like a drug addicted, you know, because he's tweeted so many times about his Adderall usage. So they just have him basically like pumped up on Adderall using chat GPT for 36 hours straight, according to him in his own words on Twitter. Yikes, that sounds like a horrible time. Yeah, there were other drugs. There was mushrooms in the testimony, a bunch of other drugs, which is, again, like, I've used mushrooms. You know, that wouldn't stop me from being credible on the, on the stand, especially, you
Starting point is 00:41:33 know, years after having done them, you know? Yeah. So, but it was very fascinating because it's like, it's sort of like his persona went under under a scrutiny. He had a Twitter bio. I'll just get you this real quick. Let me just quickly get this. Yes.
Starting point is 00:41:47 Is this in evidence? Yes. It says, now this is a very recent Twitter bio, quote, I drink black rifle coffee, wear a fishnet trucker hat, have a Jesus tattoo, and inject testosterone. George Santos and John Kirby's Stan account, Pro Balloon. Did you write that? I did.
Starting point is 00:42:03 By the way, Stan is a modern slang word for being a fan of. Is that fair? Big fan of those two, yeah. So it's like, again, this is why I had to put on my mask during this because I was just laughing so hard because pro balloon, I mean, I assume that he was talking about the Chinese spy balloon, but it's so fucking weird. It's just a weird thing to say, black rifle, drink black, I have a Jesus tattoo, I inject testosterone, right? I mean, it's very easy to take what he. Yeah, it's like schizoposting. It's like, yeah, I got the Jesus tattoo. I'm full on MAGA, but like I also do a bunch
Starting point is 00:42:38 of like hippie-dippy drugs and like I'm, you know, fucking around on with chat GTP. It just, it seems like this conglomeration of all these things that shouldn't make. you know, that shouldn't sort of mix together. It doesn't really make sense. And I think that's, you know, the sense that I get from just like the more I find out about microchip is, is the word that comes to mind is slippery. He's slippery. He's very hard to grasp.
Starting point is 00:42:58 And again, I say that I caution against people saying, oh, these guys are smart or whatever. But unfortunately, or fortunately for the feds now, microchip actually is pretty smart. And he really stands out in that regard. He's obviously highly functioning freak of some kind. And you came across on the stand. his, the way he presented himself and also his grasp and ability to talk about things. And also in those chat, the ability to sort of shape Twitter through bots and whatever else he
Starting point is 00:43:27 was using was pretty impressive, actually. I mean, like in a totally destructive way, in a way that he seemed like a fucking Batman villain or something. One other quote I will give you, which I remember without reading it, is that somebody kind of made a declaration on Twitter talking about their mental illness or whatever. And they Frisch pointed out a tweet in which a reply tweet in which microchips is like something of the equivalent to thanks for speaking out. I also have the crazy. Which was supposed to, I mean, it was very funny.
Starting point is 00:43:55 And it's also like, I mean, it's supposed to, you know, it's supposed to underscore that that this guy is not credible. He's saying he's got the crazy. And if you're an old person who has never dealt with Twitter before and you see that information and you're just saying like, well, what if my grandchildren texted me something like this, I would think they were crazy. so interesting strategy well yeah and he's also got the electric blue hoodie you know if you're a grandparent if you're a softa or a saba or a nana you know any of those things and you see somebody wearing an electric blue anything you're questioning there's you're questioning their sanity i showed up once to my grandparents house in an abercrombie and fitch hat and my grandpa looked at me and he goes jaco your hats broke you your hats uh fall it apart and i went oh no it's just
Starting point is 00:44:41 it's supposed to kind of look worn, like, you know, it's supposed to be wear and tear. He goes, they sell the hat like that, totally horrified at the idea that somebody would, would pay for a destroyed or a distressed product. All right, sorry, go up. No, I mean, that, that's basically it. It's just like, I mean, it's very hard to find somebody in the, in the audience who's done heroin and in the, in the jury, excuse me, who's done heroin. I don't know about your audience actually but who's done heroin
Starting point is 00:45:11 who you know most of them not tripped you know as far as testosterone steroids I mean yeah I don't know man like not many people I've never met anybody who had testosterone I mean I've done as a reporter I've done some stuff about cops
Starting point is 00:45:25 who were shooting testosterone in a gym in Long Island back when I was on the crime beat I don't know like a lot of this stuff is like really out there for people and you know Frisch I think came very close to discrediting the whole case based on that. I was hoping you can help settle a rumor about the identity of microchip because, you know,
Starting point is 00:45:46 there have been over the years lots of like, you know, speculation about who he really is. You know, one theory going around was that microchip was another notorious troll who goes by the name baked Alaska, who is busted for participating in January 6th. I think we can safely rule that one out. Yep, they're both, they're chatting like in the same DMs there, and unless he's... Yeah, yeah, yeah. also communicating with each other. So another theory was that microchip is Justin McCaudy.
Starting point is 00:46:12 And he is a social media consultant who worked for Trump before leaving in 2017. And he's sometimes credited as the man who taught Trump to tweet. And he wound up leaving. And I think he's currently like the social media manager for Aerosmith. Oh, wow. What? Yeah, that's, well, you know, he's a working man. Aerosmith the band or Aerosmith the arcade game?
Starting point is 00:46:31 Yeah, I can say with there's beyond a reasonable doubt that that is not true. it's just not him okay okay microchip not just mccani no this is a guy who's like appears to be in early middle age um or middle age maybe around my age who is maybe a little maybe a little older like that it's tough or i can't tell um but the point is that he's uh he's just not that and and also if he were to walk into a a large auditorium with maybe 500 people in it i would be able to pick him out within a second because he's, he's very distinctly. You can't miss him. It's not like anybody, it's not like he just, he would blend in.
Starting point is 00:47:11 He's just, he's just, he's just a big dude who is, you know, a master at shaping online discussions. Microship being a federal informant, I have to imagine, it has to be somewhat shocking to people who were involved in the alt-right in 2016 and even the years afterwards because he was in those DM rooms. That's why he was on the stand, right? Oh, yeah. Very.
Starting point is 00:47:31 I read that, uh, there's like Microship, um, maybe involved in, like, future federal cases. So how has the twos of him being a federal informant been received in those sort of online alt-right communities? Well, we don't know anything about it other than we see people who are former allies of him were very invested in Douglas Mackey's case and trying to make him, trying to make sure that he did not get convicted. And they were really pushing for him to be innocent. And I read that as this case being a trial balloon that they needed to kind of get over the line. It was a very weird case. It was, you know, it is a case that, you know, may have some roots in the old days, uh, when the Ku Klux Klan trying to obstruct people from voting, things
Starting point is 00:48:15 like that, but it's new. It's, uh, you know, it's kind of, what, what's the word I'm looking for here? It's almost like a kind of a noir, cyber fucking dystopian future kind of thing, right? I believe the term you're, uh, searching for is neo-noir. Yeah, right. This is like, this is like if this was in the 80s and we were talking about this case this would be like well there's these weird cyber people who are you know trying to I mean it would seem so weird if you run back where it now it feels kind of pedestrian and dumb in some ways some of the some of the some of the things that they do on Twitter but um yeah I mean what what this was is something new it kind of tries to we're trying to get a handle on stuff where everybody who
Starting point is 00:48:57 covers this stuff closely including me has some feeling of like wait aren't there crimes here there's got to be some crimes, right? Like, this feels criminal to me. I don't know what the crimes are, but there's got to be a law, right? Like, and I don't say that as somebody who's like pro, like, you know, I'm not like pro law enforcement or I don't fucking care in some ways. I'm mostly interested in IDing these guys and using my reporting to push them to the margins.
Starting point is 00:49:19 But sometimes I'm like, what the? There's got to be a law, right? Like, there's got to be something about this. And you think about all these high profile disinformation campaigns and all the damage that they've done. Think about PizzaGate and, I mean, a man lost years in prison. because he believed in that. He's no victim.
Starting point is 00:49:35 He tried to kill people. But like, let's also look at his life for a second. This guy believed full, you know, bought fully into a fucking coordinated lie, went in and almost killed people in that thing. And then he lost years from his life and is now a felon. And it changed his life forever. I mean,
Starting point is 00:49:50 what about all the waiters inside comic ping pong who are still getting therapy, right? There's a lot of victims of somebody's things. We've seen in the McCrone League's thing, for instance, which was not a disinformation campaign, but an influence campaign. And there may be some disinformation there. We don't know.
Starting point is 00:50:06 Macron's campaign suggested that some of the emails were not, were faked or whatever. But this was like, you know, for your audience, in case you're not familiar, May 2017, Jack Bezobig, Chuck Johnson's website is kind of involved. Weev, who's in these DMs, by the way, Wee from D. Stormer, Andrew Ornheimer, the neo-Nazi. They're like, you know, promoting this Russian hack and leak effort
Starting point is 00:50:26 to try to get whatever. And six people from Russian intelligence, you know, they have charged. charges against them now from the Fed, you know, into their actions in that hack and leak campaign. There's a lot of stuff here that feels weird that has happened that felt new also, starting in 2015 till now. And this Mackie case is their first kind of attempt to see if, well, can we use the laws that exist to try to make some, you know, put forth some sort of consequence for for actions like this. And your comment about them like in the alt-right or whatever, we don't really
Starting point is 00:50:59 use that term anymore. We started the whole right kind of ended in 2018. But that's when microchip, that's when microchip sort of turns fed. And he's like in there with people like Pizobic. I'm sure he's connected to people like Cernovich. He was definitely connected to Baked Alaska. And all these guys are connected to each other. It's a sort of a small group of online people with very big platforms who are manipulating and stuff. And I would have mad, and they were all gung-ho trying to get Mackie, trying to get people to perceive Mackey as innocent. And they must be very nervous right now. I certainly would be. If it were like a close ally of mine in this situation, I would be concerned based upon everything that has happened around there. And I don't know who's going to get
Starting point is 00:51:38 charges. I don't know who commit crimes. But they're looking at this stuff pretty seriously. So microchip was a particular interest to me because he is someone who has claimed to be one of the people who authored some of the first cue drops. And speaking of Jack Posobic, he claimed this in a 2018 report by Jack Posobic on One American News. Now, Before we even get to the substance of that report, there are already like three big red flags. Jack Fosobic, one of American news, and Microchip, you can't really recount on, like, you know, truth coming out of that. Yeah, right? So Microship essentially claimed that he and another pro-Trump troll by the name of James Brower, who also went by the name Dreamcatcher, like Jake mentioned.
Starting point is 00:52:19 We actually interviewed on the podcast back in 2019. So Microship claimed that he came up with the Q&on concept on 4chan back in 2017. Now, no credible news outlet has verified these claims, but here's what Microship said in that report. One day, a Dreamcatcher, on a post on 4chan, there was a post where somebody said Hillary Clinton will be arrested, like, shortly, right? Something like that. It was a complete stupidity because there's, I mean, she's not arrested. And it was one of those things where somebody was trying to set up some type of a gaslight type campaign right again. And so because we've been talking about this stuff, Dreamcatcher went to the next level. and he took that whole snippet
Starting point is 00:52:57 and he added that she'll be arrested at the specific time in the next few days or something right and people responded to it the problem with the QA-None stuff and I'm glad that our small group left and it's not that we were ever part of making the full QA-9 but it's turned dangerous
Starting point is 00:53:15 and I don't like that I mean some of the stuff that's happening it seems pretty dangerous these people are being gas-lit by whoever is doing it now I didn't want it to go that far That shit is so funny. I wrote a story about this in 2020 while I was rolling on my series on Jack Buzovic.
Starting point is 00:53:30 So I am very well familiar with it. And people say, like, how do you do this job? Like, and if you have a very weird and dark sense of humor, like, clips like this are like, I mean, you know, sometimes I feel like it's so lucky to be paid to watch stuff like this because it's so fucking funny. Anyway. Yeah. It's just like, well, and now, you know, I mean, this has been, I mean, has it ever been totally disproven that this isn't the case, that they didn't do the first. I know James reached out to us
Starting point is 00:53:59 after he was on the show and apologized and retracted his claim. But just playing devil's advocate here, that could also be because maybe he realized, hey, like, if I'm attached to this QAnon thing in any way, that could be like real trouble for me down the line now that people are sort of going out into the real world and committing, you know, serious crimes under the guys that, you know, this QAnon thing is real. So at the time, that Microchip contacted me and tried to get me to run a story or to tweet out some stuff. I was at the time working, it was a very brief six-month period in which I work for Storyful, which is a social media intelligence thing run by Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones.
Starting point is 00:54:38 And I was not publishing publicly at that time very much. You know, I was mostly publishing these internal things for other journalists. This is right before I left for SPLC. And I looked into it at the time and I can't remember what I used to verify it. But I found it, I remember finding something that made me about 99.99% sure that this was fabricated. I can't recall exactly what it was. But I think it was a, you know, they were, there were flaws with the screenshots that I was being shared. I believe that is what Travis, that was the conclusion that you came to as well, right?
Starting point is 00:55:10 Yeah, yeah. Screenshots that they had said, the Discord logs, there was something weird about it. I can't remember either. It was so long ago. So, yeah, the Discord logs were clearly faked. Yeah, that was what it was. That's what it was. I had forgotten about that.
Starting point is 00:55:22 They had fabricated that. Yeah. So when you're fabricating evidence, and you're already a notorious liar. So that already causes the story to collapse. There's also the fact that the story itself was kind of inconsistent. Like James Brower, when he spoke to me, he only claimed responsibility for the Q post with the ID,
Starting point is 00:55:39 E-K-A-5-O-M-1-K, which if true, which means was that he posted the drops 6 through 13. But listening back to that O-A-N report, I mean, it seemed like Microchip was saying that, Like, James Brower posted the first drop. So the whole story is a mess. There's fabricated evidence. It's posted by a notorious liars.
Starting point is 00:55:57 So there's, like, nothing really credible about it at all. So, yeah, that also made me lean towards, again, I can't say for certain. You can't prove a negative. But 99% sure that this is just weird bullshit. But even if you were to establish this bullshit, you have to, you're left with the question of like, wait, why did they run with the story anyway? Yeah. What made superficially plausible was the fact that James Brower all the way back on November
Starting point is 00:56:20 4th 2017 posted about Q and even claimed like, oh, actually Q is a real high-level insider. James Brower posted this on Twitter. So at the very least, James Brower was a familiar with Q very early on. So maybe it was like, you know, just very online and sort of in those circles. But yeah, just there's really nothing credible about the story. Well, and what always was weird to me is, you know, here are two people who it seems like, you know, given things that they've said themselves and what they've tweeted and etc that they are you know very interested in pushing out disinformation uh they're very interested in in galvanizing people you know they're trying to red pill people trying to turn them to maga trying to muddy the waters um you know using uh you
Starting point is 00:57:09 message board tactics and yet all of a sudden these you know guys are very concerned about how dangerous you know this other op is it's very weird to me why wouldn't they champion something like QAnon because that's, you know, in so many ways, that did their job, what they were trying to do so much better, you know, than anything they were doing if you, if you look at the, just the number of people who are at the very least favorable to QAnon ideology. So, so early on to come out with this, this thing like, oh, we started it, it was a mistake, it was a joke, like things are getting really dangerous. I mean, that just seems very inconsistent with what we know about them, especially microchip, because James Brower
Starting point is 00:57:52 has, for the most that I understand, has basically kind of disappeared. He's taken a backseat, at least, you know, with his, he might be on an alt or whatever, but you don't really see him come up in the present conversation, if I'm not mistaken. Yeah, I don't want to get too deep into, like, which drop here and there. You guys have an expertise on that type of thing. And because, I would much more focus from the extremism angle, but what I will say is if I were a betting person and I'd be willing to bet the house on it, that none of this is credible. You know, that's just my instinct there. I'd go all in with my chips on that. And the other thing is that there is this pretty compelling evidence of coordination between Pizobic and Microchip to make this a thing. So the
Starting point is 00:58:37 first thing that they did was they went to me and to Luke and whoever, like maybe Will Summer or somebody like that or you guys, I don't know. But they were basically going to the folks that they thought like, hey, let's somebody being like, hey, let's get this debunked. Let's get QAnon debunked and try to get one of us to buy in on it and kind of make it a story where they could do that because they knew that would be more legitimate. And then it seems like that they settled for Jack's nominal title as a journalist. Of course, you know, anyone who's read my reporting on Posovic knows that he's not a journalist in any way, shape, or form. But that he, you know, you know, he had this correspondent kind of position at One American News Network that could, you know, at least pure like newslike. And they obviously had extraordinary low standards and they just Jack could just ram through whatever he wanted. It seems like. And he was able to ram through this. And, you know, I mean, this was a, I think, in a coordinated attempt between pro-Trump operatives working either for someone or not, in the case of microchip, he could be fully volunteer. In the case of Pizobic, well, who knows what he does.
Starting point is 00:59:41 does. I mean, there's a lot of weird shit with that guy. But the bottom line is they were pro-Trump operatives, whether it's self-assigned or otherwise. And, you know, trying to make QAnon look fake and look like a scam to the many people who had bought into on it. And there's theories as to why they would do something like that. My theory is because at the time, it was starting to make Trump look bad, make the movement look bad. And they were really concerned. That's what I think happened. I mean, that sounds, that makes, that sounds plausible to me. I mean, Right, they don't want to be cringe. Yeah, they don't want to have.
Starting point is 01:00:14 They've seen a hundred, a hundred of these, you know, leaked insider accounts on 4chan. They know this game. And when they see one that's getting popular and essentially the narrative is like, yes, all of your enemies will be arrested tomorrow. Yeah, maybe they look at that and go like, oh, God. Like, we're smart enough to know that this kind of larp, you know, you make fun of it immediately.
Starting point is 01:00:36 You call it fake and some other things. But all of these normies out there are buying into it. going to make us look bad. It's going to make us look like we're crazies. Maybe we'll say that we did it. Oh my God. It was a joke. We didn't know how far it was going to go and we're so sorry. And this is dangerous and it's a hoax. Well, you know, I have met Jack Posobic face to face. I've looked him eye to eye on multiple occasions now. I have reported on him more than pretty much anybody else. And what I will tell you about that guy is and this, you know, this is as true as the sky you're looking at when you step outside your house. He is a deeply, deeply.
Starting point is 01:01:11 deeply insecure person in a way that i mean i can't think of any person that embodies that feeling like jack poseobic and i think there's nothing that would make this guy more upset than realizing how cringe he is and he's quite cringe actually often but when you are grifting off of a very cringe you know an audience who likes cringe who like gobbles up cringe right who likes like the most insane stupid things and that is your the audience you're grifting off of you have to you know, you have to wear that. And I think that the Q&on thing, it's both because they want to help Trump and also because they themselves were starting to get embarrassed about the way the Trump movement
Starting point is 01:01:51 was beginning to look. Interesting. Yeah. Interesting analysis. The other element, I think, is that it was probably like splitting the MAGA movement because, like, you know, I guess like most, you know, MAGA followers, they trust Trump and they listen to Trump. But all of a sudden, they're listening to this Q figure.
Starting point is 01:02:05 And they think that by doing that, they're actually listening to Trump when they're not actually. They're just listening to some grifter or a group of grifters. So it's probably, again, a tactical, strategic reason they tried to dispel the mystery of Q on that one American news report. Yep, 100%. I was also wondering if you could comment on, like, how this trial is being reported by the conservative media. It talked a little bit about this before, but like Tucker Carlson, for example, has characterized this as the Biden administration, like cracking down with someone who dared to make fun of Hillary Clinton. And here's a clip from a report from a couple of weeks ago.
Starting point is 01:02:41 The federal criminal trial of a man called Douglas Mackey began this week in Brooklyn. It's the single greatest assault on free speech and human rights in this country's modern history. The Biden administration is trying to send a man to prison for saying things they don't like and create a precedent so they can do it to you too. Here's the background. During the 2016 presidential campaign, Mackey posted memes that made fun of Hillary Clinton and her supporters. One of them on Twitter read this way, quote, avoid the line, vote from home, text Hillary. to five, nine, nine, two, five. That was obviously a joke, and everyone knew it was a joke.
Starting point is 01:03:12 And yet days after Biden took office, four years after Mackey posted that meme, the feds arrested him. And they charged him with conspiring to interfere with the rights of American citizens. He'd go to jail for 10 years for that. That means if you crack a joke on the internet, the Democrats don't like, federal prosecutors gets to decide you're interfering with an election. It's hard to imagine a more Soviet prosecution than this. Again, most watched man on cable news, a million.
Starting point is 01:03:38 of MAGA, grandmas and grandpas hearing that the Biden administration is making it illegal to crack jokes. So what do you make of that? Oh, I think the first thing I got to say is why are like, do Tucker and Trump's fans like perceive these guys as being like kind of like alpha, like mask like macho? It's like he's so like, you know what I mean? He's so like whiny and, you know, and so you peeved. And I mean, look at the freeze frame on your screen right now. I mean, he's just like. It's like, this is like, you know, the idea that this guy is like some sort of like, you know, macho truth teller is very funny to me. So yeah, I mean, why are they doing this?
Starting point is 01:04:18 I mean, you know, look, as Tucker whined on there, it's like they can do this to any of it. Well, what they can really do to anybody is if you're trying to cook an election by telling people to vote in a particular way. I mean, what if it, like think about it like a fucking roadrunner cartoon or something where you just put the line to the election thing in a different direction or whatever. like that's what they did right i mean they like that's what they literally did they're like so yeah you vote over here you know i mean like it's you know they're they're upset because they need tricks to win i mean it's like like that that's the bottom line i went okay a little big picture thing here but like you've heard if you've ever heard anne koltar say that like trump picked up a thousand dollar bill like off the ground or whatever when he decided to go with the anti-immigrant route and double
Starting point is 01:05:02 down. In 2014, the Republican Party had all these like diverse faces they were trying to push out there from everyone from Bobby Gindal to Marco Rubio and all these different guys, right? And they had a plan to try to keep the party together with all these changing demographics. And Trump did was beholden to no one. And he just like doubled down on this white on their sort of white majority domination type stuff and went all in on the white supremacy stuff. And when he did that, he went against what party leaders wanted, which is a more long term electoral strategy. And by doing that that's why they've had to buy into all these kind of weird fascist tactics because they just can't get a majority with the demographics that exist anymore. It's very hard for them to appeal to
Starting point is 01:05:41 immigrants. It's very hard to appeal to people of color and women and people in the suburbs. It's really tough. So they have to resort to all kinds of scheming, right? Like they've lost almost every single all but one national election and the popular vote since the year 2000. And it's getting worse. And so what Tucker is really saying here, I think, is he's saying like, oh, you know, you, you meethead who watches me, you can't do your usual posts. And like, your usual posts are usually geared towards just trying to figure out a way to scramble the election or get people not to vote or depress people from voting and whatever. Like, that's, these are the tactics they need to use because the margins they've created are so fine, you know? Yeah. I suppose that leads into the
Starting point is 01:06:25 question of, you know, I guess, like, what is the significance for this ruling or this verdict going into the next presidential election, which is about a year and a half from now because, you know, all of a sudden this is going to set a precedent. And I guess this might, you know, this might make people rethink their tactics about how they're going to use social media in order to support whoever their candidate is. Yeah, that's a good question. How is it going to impact? Because right now, like Twitter is at the center of this story. And right now, as it stands, Elon Musk is trying to get the band back together, right? He's trying to, like, put together the same type of environment that Doug Mackey succeeded in. The problem is, there's
Starting point is 01:07:09 something missing. And, you know, I can't exactly describe what it is, but it's just not there. There's something, they're, they're all back, but they're, they're kind of talking in what feels like, like the Superman 2, like little glass thing that they float around in and, like, the bad guys. Right. They feel like they're trapped in ice or something. They're not. Like, they're not reaching the way they reached in 2016. And I'm not sure why it is. He just can't, he can put it back together, but it's not doing what it's supposed to do. Something is missing.
Starting point is 01:07:37 It's almost like a fable or something, you know? Trump, it's missing Trump. It doesn't have him on Twitter fighting directly with people. But even if he were back, even if he were back, I can't, there's something, there's, I think it was something to be missing. And I think it's the way that the rest of us view social media has changed. And I can't really prove that. It's just, I mean, look, your podcast didn't exist, right? I mean, because Q&On didn't exist.
Starting point is 01:08:03 And there's so many, you know, there's been such a big response to what happened. We're still getting our hands around what happened. Everyone from historians to journalists to, you know, artists to to podcasters, researchers, everybody. I mean, everybody's trying to get their handle on this seismic change in our culture. And the trial kind of was what is part of that. And I do think that this is a different world now. This is a world in which we are aware, you know, everybody's kind of wounded and knows that they're, you know, much more savvy about manipulation and how it works.
Starting point is 01:08:36 So I think that really speaking how it might affect the election is that it only adds to that field, right, to that sense that this disinfo is going to be, you know, it's going to have a shorter reach. They love to talk about the Hunter Biden laptop thing and being censored from Twitter. We know the stupid Twitter files thing, right? But what they don't talk about with that is the fact that if they had left the article up there, that it may not have had much of an impact on Biden. They keep suggesting that it would. But I think a lot of people are entrenched to the belief that, like, wait a second, we've seen this type of thing happen before, right?
Starting point is 01:09:09 Where if something new comes up and then we're very skeptical about these, like, October surprises. Like, Posobic was posting right before that, October surprises are coming, and it was like a dinosaur with lasers coming out of it or something. And it's like, man, you're getting diminishing returns. people have changed. It's not just that. It's just that, you know, I was feeling pushed around in 2016 as somebody who was not crazy about Hillary, you know, and watching just on Twitter, just as a reporter, I was with ABC News and just watching these guys go in on everybody so hard. And I could, it almost felt like a bunch of people like running and pushing something to move it, right? Like a car or something. Like they just kept making progress by just running full force into it. And that energy seems to have dissipated. And that is just my, you know, You know, that's my ballpark thing. Well, I think you make a very interesting point, specifically about this idea that people look at social media differently.
Starting point is 01:10:03 And from what I've seen, in a lot of ways, they've gone almost too far in that everything that comes out is a potential up and you have to, who's behind it and where's the dark money. I mean, liberals themselves, I think, in an effort to try to sort of understand what happened like you were saying, and how did this, you know, huge cultural shift take place? I mean, you know, we are not, you know, we are not bulletproof from, you know, sort of diving into our own conspiracy theories. Oh, yeah, definitely not. One thing I've noticed on, especially on Twitter, is that everything that comes out, everything, there is always a comment that's like, oh, the timing on this is very, everybody is incredibly paranoid. And that paranoia leads to conspiracy theories and the lack of.
Starting point is 01:10:52 of transparency from, you know, these entities that are sort of controlling our fate, whether it be the people who own the social media companies, or whether it be politicians in the government, you know, there's so little transparency that there is a lot of room for these fires to grow. And so I do think, personally, that there is something to the idea that we all look at this place differently. For example, I mean, how many people I see on Twitter describe Twitter is they are in a battle? You know, Chapo talks about this. a lot where they'll talk about, you know, each side sort of thinks they are in the battle for good, you know, and on the right where you have, you know, heavy religious, a sort of
Starting point is 01:11:29 ideology, you know, it is a battle between good and evil, between God and Satan, you know, or lesser so between communism and freedom. And on the left, it is, it is democracy and fascism. Everything is so, you know, everything is so hyper, what's the word, what's, what's, what's hyperbolic. Yeah, hyperbolic, exactly. Oh, God, my English teacher, mom is going to be so upset about I'm so upset about that. It's a word I like to use, though. I think it's a great one. Hyperbolic that, yeah, I mean, we are looking and experiencing these things differently.
Starting point is 01:12:02 You know, everybody is a digital soldier now to some degree, or they believe that they are. And so, yeah, I mean, it is, it will be very interesting to see what plays out. You know, my personal opinion is that I'm kind of with you, Michael. I don't think that the juice isn't there anymore. I think a big part of that is not having a hill. Clinton to fight against. I mean, say what you will about Joe Biden, but the guy is at the very least inoffensive, you know, inoffensive. He's not stoking anything. Well, Jake, if you think about something like this, right, I mean, if Tim Poole starts something right now, for instance,
Starting point is 01:12:38 this is no longer, oh, it's Tim Poole, the centrist journalist who skatesports, right? Like, everybody knows now, right? Like, we went through the process of proving what Tim Poole is, right? And some of these guys that they brought back, right? Like, it's like if Carpe Dunk is pushing something. It's no longer like, who is this guy and what is this? It is like, oh, it's that oaf. Yeah. You know, it's, it's known oaf, Logan Cook, right? So, like, this is kind of the problem that they have now is, and one of the reasons my reporting on, on Jacobusobic, I think was, it was so important for me, I felt to get out there is because I needed people to, is he made, he was one of the guys who kind of escaped and tried to make it towards the middle, is to make
Starting point is 01:13:16 sure that there's a record for everybody you find of, like, what this guy did to get there, Just in case, right? Because the bigger the platform this guy gets, if he got onto Fox or something like that and he's doing his disinfo or hack and leak shit promotion, whatever, it was Russian intelligence plots that he ends up booing, that he just says, by accident, I found this, which, you know, I mean, maybe by accident he did find it. But the point is that it is weird. And, you know, I think it's important to, you know, to remember that these guys are,
Starting point is 01:13:43 they no longer have the element of surprise. Known Oaf, I think is maybe the best way to describe this. Yeah, well, that's that's Logan Cote for sure. That's Carpein Doctum, his known oaf. It should be the first line in his. Known Oaf. There are a lot more known oafs nowadays. And, yeah, I think you're right.
Starting point is 01:14:01 I think, yeah, I think the element of surprise is waning. It's true. We've been speaking to Michael Edison Hayden from the Southern Poverty Law Center. So where can people go to learn more about your work? Sure. Well, you can find me on Twitter. What's left of it. At Michael, M-I-C-H-E-A-E-A-A.
Starting point is 01:14:20 Hayden, H-A-Y-D-E-N, and you can go to my newsletter, subscribe. I don't in-and-day people. I do it very, you know, here and there, and nobody has to pay. And it's, it's going to be a longnight.com. That's I-T-S-G-O-N-N-A-B-E, I guess, A-L-O-N-G-H-T-H-E. It's going to be a long-night. And, you know, I will make sure if you can't find my articles on the web or anything like that, I always update on Twitter and there.
Starting point is 01:14:47 Newsletters free, by the way, also I should add. Awesome. Yeah, go check that stuff out, folks. Michael, it has been a pleasure speaking with you. Fascinating conversation. So thank you so much for all the great work that you've done so far, all the great work you will continue to do. And we look forward to seeing you again. Yeah, it's my pleasure. I'm so happy to be on the show. All right. Take care of guys. Thanks for listening to another episode of the Q&on Anonymous podcast. You can go to patreon.com slash QAnonanonymous and subscribe for $5 a month to get a whole second episode every single week, plus access to our archive of premium episode. And if you're already a subscriber, thank you so much. It helps us stay advertising free and editorially independent. For everything else, there's a website, QAnonanonymous.com. Listener, until next week, may the Deep Dish bless you and keep you.
Starting point is 01:15:33 It's not a conspiracy. It's fact. And now, today's auto Q. And the thing is, like, even, I even get trolled. And I'm like, God, damn. Like, why did I get troll to gain? That was really bad. Right?
Starting point is 01:15:46 Yeah, I get troll every day. And it's like, well, you know, part and parcel of being untrue. Twitter. Yeah, totally. On that note, did you see the guy who got charged for a meme on Twitter? What were your thoughts on that? I know you commented on it. I didn't know if you got to look more
Starting point is 01:16:01 into it. His name's Douglas Mackey. Oh, that's the guy who I guess was accused of election interference or something. Yeah. You can ask you a counselor from South Park? You'll vote or something? Yeah, like, people shouldn't believe everything that they
Starting point is 01:16:17 see online. And, you know, I don't that should be criminal no i think criminal is a that's over the top there i would agree with that that they went too far um you know if that's the standard for uh throwing someone in prison then there's a lot a lot of people in prison yeah what do you in prison for oh meme crimes yeah exactly

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