[ CYPHER CODE #406 ]
The loudest voices tearing America apart aren’t even American.

[ CYPHER CODE #407 ]
Foreign ops don’t need bombs anymore. They just need an X account and a trend.

[ CYPHER CODE #408 ]
If a “civil war” hashtag is trending, check the location before you check your pulse.

[ CYPHER CODE #409 ]
Half the outrage online is manufactured. The other half is Americans falling for it.

[ CYPHER CODE #410 ]
Nothing is organic in a digital battlefield run by ghosts with keyboards.

BRIEFING

Jett here. X just pulled the curtain back on one of the biggest secrets online: half the chaos shaping American politics isn’t even coming from America. Let’s get into it.

That new "account based in" feature is exposing something we’ve all known for years but could never prove. A lot of the accounts pushing “civil war,” “MAGA is dead,” “burn it all down,” and every other engineered meltdown are not sitting in Ohio, or Texas, or New Jersey like their bios claim.

This is likely what the "MAGA IS DEAD" movement looked like behind the scenes.

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Many of these posters are in Nigeria. They’re in the Middle East. They’re in Europe and India. Basically, they’re everywhere but here, posing as Americans while stirring the pot, lighting political fires, and manufacturing division on a massive scale.

A lot of the posts claiming Thomas Massie has massive grassroots momentum and should run for president are coming from foreign accounts, not Americans.

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Much of the support you see online for Marjorie Taylor Greene is also foreign.

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And now that we can see it, the pattern is totally undeniable.

Those anti-Trump accounts with flags and Bible verses in the bio? Many are foreign.

Those “Groypers” pushing Hitler memes and screaming for a “white revolution” in the US? A shocking number are actually offshore.

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The proud-to-be-white lady is actually a dude in India.

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This America First account, with almost 150K followers, is based out of Turkey.

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But you wouldn't know that by reading their bio, would you?

Also, the waves of "anti-Jewish" posts tied to Nick Fuentes also seem to have a massive foreign footprint.

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Even some of the biggest “pro-MAGA” monetized accounts, the ones with half a million to a million followers, aren’t even in the US. The 1 million+ Ivanka fan page is based in Nigeria, and a major Trump account with more than 600k followers is operating out of India.

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Actually, many MAGA accounts are based in places like Nigeria, India, the UK, and Pakistan.

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And for a real kicker, the account that's literally named "American" is posting about South Asia, likely India.

The fraud is so off the charts that even the “Russian Army” page isn’t posting from Russia. It’s based in India.

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Many of the popular "philosophy" and "self-help" accounts are also based in India.

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Sure, a “daily motivation” page from Bangladesh isn’t going to spark a civil war, but the political and cultural stuff is a different story. Take this very popular anti-Trump account, for example. It claimed to be posting from New Jersey, but it’s actually operating out of Kenya. "Ron Smith" deleted his account after being exposed as a fraud.

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And speaking of the cultural stuff, a lot of the accounts claiming to be “Native American,” calling the US colonizers, and pushing anti-white hate aren’t Native at all. They’re posting from Bangladesh.

Countless "Native American" accounts are posting from Bangladesh.

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A lot of these accounts even go out of their way to look “real,” right down to posting fake photos.

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None of this is organic. It’s astroturf at scale.

These people are not invested in America’s future. They’re invested in the algorithm. They want clicks, chaos, cultural fragmentation, and Americans at each other’s throats. And for years, they’ve gotten it because nobody could see behind the mask.

Until now.

And here’s the real twist: many of the accounts with small followings don’t matter, but the ones with large reach absolutely do. Some of them set the tone for entire news cycles. They amplify bad takes, inject poison into politics, and build fake trends that legacy media then treat as “the national mood.” It’s a psyop pipeline disguised as social media.

This new feature didn’t just expose the truth. It explained the last decade of political insanity in one gut punch.

DEBRIEFING

Now that the curtain has been yanked back, the question isn’t whether foreign influence is shaping American discourse. The question is who’s behind it, why they're doing it, and how deep the operation goes.

You don’t get waves of anti-Trump propaganda from Kenya by accident. You don’t get fake “Native American” accounts from Bangladesh pushing racial resentment by coincidence. You don’t get pro-Trump influencer pages operating from India and Nigeria without someone, somewhere, benefiting from the noise.

Someone is paying for reach. Someone is paying for engagement. Someone is paying to steer narratives that Americans end up fighting over like they’re organic, homegrown debates.

And now that X has exposed the footprints, the next step is obvious: we need answers

Who’s funding these accounts?
Are they government-backed?
Are they part of data farms?
Are they tied to political groups, NGOs, PACs, or foreign intelligence?
Are they monetized operations exploiting American chaos for cash?

Or worse, is it ideological warfare designed to push the country toward internal conflict while the real puppeteers sit safely offshore?

NOW YOU KNOW

This changes everything about narratives, influence, and what we think is “real.”