It is a variation of the "everyone is a fed" meme.
I think I seen someone call it "discredit through implication", sort of like guilt by association.
It's a semi-effective tactic for when an opposition group resorts to strategies which can't be immediately shut down because they're not violent (violence being something that alienates broader support. See israel bombing gaza, and losing international support for details).
The thinking is "if the grass on the otherside (political) is astroturf, is it really greener on the other side."
It's designed to keep you from uniting over issues rather than identity/ideology being used as lever to divide.
They'll bring out the violent regime supporters soon, when these other tactics fail. They'll dress like and look like the gaza/palestine protesters, but will do shit that alienates the public.
I don't really care either way, because all of it falls within the scope of things that accelerate the collapse, namely disgusting overreach that will fail, and backfire spectacularly sooner or later.
Or… maybe it’s an election year and the astroturfing kikes that also plagued jan6 protests are at it AGAIN and now want to escalate both sides in order to help usher in more censorship laws?
SumerBreeze 2 points 2 weeks ago
Or… maybe it’s an election year and the astroturfing kikes that also plagued jan6 protests are at it AGAIN and now want to escalate both sides in order to help usher in more censorship laws?
Think about it…