The fanatical Red Pills have a history of infiltrating mainstream culture to plant their poisonous ideologies. The head of the Red Pill Subreddit we found, was a member of the NH Legislature. The notorious provocateur 'Ricky Vaughn' was a Wall Street operative. And we all know of Vox Day's attempts to hijack various literary guilds.
Now we find that the cretinous podcaster 'Specter' is really freelance writer Trey Garrison. Garrison published articles in the Dallas Morning News; The Land Report; D Magazine; and Reason---as well as publishing novels for media giant, Harper-Collins. More recently, he was a regular contributor to several Manosphere sites; Red Pill Twitter-feeds; and the host of The Third Rail, a podcast. He portrayed himself to his deluded followers there, however, as a psychiatrist living in the Seattle area. In reality, he has no degree in psychology and lives in Plano, Texas.
For those not familiar with The Third Rail, 'Specter' is an advocate of the Red Pill/Game philosophy. He's also a Holocaust denier. After the December conviction of Charlottesville murderer James Fields, Specter opined that "the verdict was a travesty of justice. Sadly, the notion we are a 'nation of laws' has been thrown out the window through the subversion of the Jews."
As Specter, Garrison often incited his followers to harassment of innocent people, for which Red Pill Andrew Anglin effusively praised him. Here's a gem, transcribed from a podcast last May, of suggestions for harassing Blacks:
"Should you find yourself in a nice shopping mall, high-end store, and you see a black person, kinda mosey over to the security guard and say, ‘I think I saw that lady put something in her purse.' Or, as another example, if you see two or three of ’em gathered on a street corner and you see a cop, just kinda walk up to ’em and say, ‘Hey, I don’t know if it was a gun, but I think I saw one of those guys had a gun.'"
That sounds like fun, doesn't it? Seriously, how is this any different than the tactics of the Whacko Left---chasing people out of restaurants or disrupting events?
Last Summer, Garrison and his cohorts at The Third Rail, promoted a campaign called 'The Day of the Brick'. This was a coordinated campaign of intimidation and advocating violence against reporters, in particular writers for The Huffington Post. One does have to wonder if---given the psychological profile of most Red Pills---this wasn't an act of envious retribution that Garrison hoped to execute upon his more successful peers.
Since Garrison was exposed, several women have admitted that he has a long history of online stalking and other crude behaviors towards themselves and other women. This is also fairly typical Red Pill behavior. So much for another manly Alpha leader shown up as a lying sneak and an envious fraud.
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