The FBI on Monday released new documents that reveal common words used on the internet are being flagged by FBI agents as extremism.
The new documents were released by the FBI after the Heritage Foundation’s Oversight Project filed a FOIA request.
The documents are titled “Involuntary Celibate Violent Extremism” and in them, they contained a glossary of several words that the FBI claimed were used by “incel” extremists.
FBI documents associate internet slang like ‘based’ and ‘red pill’ with ‘extremism’ https://t.co/L9i3MC9YSP pic.twitter.com/v4vT4eCv16
— New York Post (@nypost) April 10, 2023
The term red pill by definition mean “refers to a process by which a person’s perspective is dramatically transformed” and it became popular after it was used in the 1999 movie the Matrix.
‘Chad’ is internet slang for an alpha male and ‘based’ just means to stay true to yourself.
Here’s the FBI’s list:
More…
The FBI uses a “glossary of terms” to look for online that could indicate someone is involved with “violent extremism,” according to documents obtained by The Heritage Foundation’s Oversight Project.
The flagged terms include “redpilled,” first popularized by the 1999 film “The Matrix,” “based,” “looksmaxxing,” and the names “Chad” and “Stacey.”The FBI also flags phrases that include “it’s over” and “just be first.”
The documents were obtained by The Heritage Foundation’s Oversight Project through a Freedom of Information Act request. (The Daily Signal is Heritage’s multimedia news organization.)
The following sentence now gets FBI attention: "A based chad who took a red pill whil larping," FBI documents associate internet slang like 'based' and 'red pill' with 'extremism' https://t.co/SfOQDj7iMt #FoxNews
— Tom Fitton (@TomFitton) April 10, 2023
By Anthony Scott