4. Counterfeiting, sock-puppetry, and impersonations are hardly unknown on the internet. In fact they pervade social media.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
5. On twitter we chat with long dead presidents (*ahem*
@dick_nixon) or with men pretending to be women (or vice versa)2 replies 10 retweets 10 likes -
Replying to @HeerJeet
6. Joshua Goldberg impersonations allegedly became entangled with terrorism. But how different is that from FBI use of agent provocateurs?
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Replying to @HeerJeet
7. Almost all "successful" government terrorism prosecutions involve impersonation and entrapment: the reverse Joshua Goldberg.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
8. Old Cold War joke: Communist party USA thoroughly infiltrated by FBI & USA gov't by KGB. So USA saved by a communist coup.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
9. Hardly an accident that Breitbart hit piece on Shaun King that Goldberg helped start written by FBI informant.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
10. The world Goldberg swam in -- the world of Breitbart, trolling and the FBI -- is a world of false flags, agent provocateurs.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
11 CORRECTION: Breitbart does publish a FBI informant but he didn't write the Shaun King story. (Thanks to
@CathyYoung63)2 replies 4 retweets 6 likes -
Replying to @HeerJeet
12. Stepping back a little: impersonation and counterfeiting are advanced by technology. Simulacrum is product of artifice.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
13. Forget about the internet and social media: one of the key technologies that allowed for the proliferation of false identities is print
2 replies 5 retweets 7 likes
14. Jonathan Swift, like Joshua Goldberg, rarely used his real name: he was variously anonymous, A Modest Proposer, Lemuel Gulliver, etc.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
15. Gulliver's Travel imitated the form of travel writing, just as Goldberg imitated SJW polemics.
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Replying to @HeerJeet
16. A Bishop who read Gulliver's Travel when it first came out said he thought it was a pack of lies and didn't believe half of it.
1 reply 2 retweets 9 likes - Show replies
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