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FBI Says Anti-semitic Domestic Terrorists Planned to Attack Trump’s Birthday UFC Event

Kash Patel’s agency has a history of arranging bogus terror plots.

Kash Patel’s FBI and the Knox County Sheriff’s office in Ohio have added an opportunistic twist to Trump’s Ultimate Fighting Championship event at the White House over the weekend. Five people were arrested and charged with conspiracy to commit murder, according to court papers.

Naturally, the suspects, said to number nineteen people—from Ohio, California, Nebraska, and Missouri—are described as espousing “fringe conspiracy theories.” They allegedly made “antisemitic remarks” that dovetail nicely with the government’s supercharged battle against Jew haters, most of whom are folks with anti-Zionist views appalled by the mass murder of women and children in Gaza and southern Lebanon.

Authorities claim the anti-semitic terrorists discussed flying drones loaded with explosives over the event and then shooting into the crowd as people ran for their lives. According to court documents, the suspects shared maps and photos of the area and discussed escape routes. The Justice Department said the supposed plotters planned to storm the White House gate. As should be expected, Fox News first broke the story.

Law enforcement learned about the threat Wednesday, four days before the mixed martial arts party on the White House South Lawn, FBI Director Kash Patel said Tuesday on X. “And thanks to the rapid action of the FBI, our partners, and the Department of Justice in a multi-state operation, multiple individuals are now in custody and allegedly planned attacks were stopped cold,” Patel wrote, according to NBC News.

One suspect, Tycen Proper, 19, was apprehended in Ohio. Authorities said they found thousands of rounds of ammunition and weapons. Proper’s mother called local police worried about her son due to his “recent conduct,” including firearms purchases and communications with “random” people online, according to court documents, NBC said.

The suspect’s family told police Tycen recently made “concerning statements,” including “making sympathetic comments about Adolf Hitler and posting anti-Semitic comments on Facebook.”

The reference to Hitler will obviously throw momentum behind the effort by a number of Jewish organizations, including the ADL, to heighten awareness of the small number of actual anti-semites, while also going after the far larger number of outspoken people outraged by the Zionist genocide and destruction of Gaza, now also unfolding in Lebanon.

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Proper’s mother told the authorities her son had “recently begun interacting with a group online that was comprised of individuals who claimed to be ex-military and Christian-based,” according to court documents.

The FBI believes there is a growing domestic terror threat from military members holding extremist Christian views. The agency declares Jews are the most targeted religious group in America and actively encourages people to report anti-semitic incidents. Jewish Federations of North America believe anti-semitism has increased exponentially since the al-Asqa Flood of October 7, 2023.

The alleged domestic terror plot follows a familiar pattern. The would-be terrorists were radicalized online by unknown “random” people, according to the FBI. For instance, Shamsud-Din Jabbar of Texas was said to have been radicalized by ISIS online, while the so-called “Turtle Liberation” group called for anti-ICE violence on Instagram. Patel and the FBI bragged about foiling a Halloween terror plot in Michigan hatched on social media. The FBI also claimed earlier this year to have prevented four attacks by tracking suspects online.

Left out of the propaganda about terror plots is the documented fact the FBI has arranged a number of incidents. Tervor Aaronson, author of The Terror Factory, has documented a surprisingly large number of such fake terror plots. The FBI seeks out a “disgruntled few” to participate in plots arranged by paid informants, Aaronson writes, and often they provide hapless patsies with plans, equipment, and weapons. More than a few of the would-be terrorists caught up in fake terror plots are mentally ill, according to reports.

In the days ahead, more details will emerge on the alleged UFC terror plot as the FBI, the Trump administration, and the corporate media work to convince the public domestic terrorism is an imminent threat possibly requiring new laws, additional surveillance, and of course, efforts to stem hate speech online, most notably speech in opposition to genocidal violence of an outlaw state, the most prolific terror outfit in the world after the United States.

Article posted with permission from Kurt Nimmo

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