Zionists Contact AG for Police to Visit Israel's Toughest Critic Lucas Gage
The conflict in Israel continues to push Americans to their limits, as the divide between America First and Zionism pits citizens against citizens.
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Friday afternoon, influencer, commentator and author Lucas Gage was unexpectedly met by half a dozen local and state troopers at his home.
“Swatting,” the criminal harassment of deceiving law enforcement to initiate a response upon another individual, isn’t a new tool in the political sphere. In fact, a simple Google search would show incidents occurring on the regular.
The 39-year-old veteran didn’t fear as he walked into a den of law enforcement officials questioning him on his social media posts, specifically X, which somehow warranted a police presence.
Gage entered the scene equipped with his camera as it panned across a wasteful display of tax-payer money to an officer gripping his bulky body armor.
The officer initiated by asking Gage about the posts he made referencing “Jewish people.”
Gage started, “I’m pushing my free speech to the maximum, not saying anything violent. I don’t wish death upon anyone.” Then, the veteran told the officers about the multiple death threats he had received, mentioning he has “IP addresses” and that the evidence had “all been saved on his computer.”
The officers denounced the threats, but Gage pushed a little further, saying he “sent the stuff [to law enforcement] and nothing happened.”
The police responded that they were not enforcing “what he can or cannot say.” They furthered that this was not the first occasion they visited either, to which Gage responded that the FBI had indeed dropped by after some of his posts on COVID-19.
Gage added that the antiwhite sentiment doesn't appear as enforced as alleged antisemitism, an “existential threat,” according to CNN. The officers seemed to agree, but they probably failed to understand the nuance of the discourse.
He explained further the conversations surrounding Israel and Palestine were simply words, but those words had cost him his Linktree, PayPal and Venmo accounts.
The lead officer stated:
It’s not a Jewish thing. It seems to be just about everything.
His statement demonstrates an apparent lack of understanding of politics and general news; still, Gage insisted on telling his narrative to the officers:
I’m pushing back … where people understand: ‘Look, don’t be afraid. Go hard back. Listen, just because this happened 70 years ago to your people doesn’t mean you could do this to the Gazans—it’s pushing back with words. I’m not ever going to be violent.
The officer said he doesn’t “care about words … [but] actual physical violence and stuff like that and threats of violence … that is our primary purpose in coming out.”
Gage responded, “I’m saying what people want to say … We’re tired of this whining about this event, and we can’t talk back—we can’t question it. People are supporting me because I’m truly about free speech.”
The officer indicated three posts on X that he felt were “more egregious,” causing him and his squad to visit Gage. One officer fessed up that he was a state trooper and was anonymously tipped by the attorney general hotline that Gage allegedly posed “a threat to the general public and Jewish people specifically.”
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The officer then began to press Gage on the whereabouts of his firearms, which the veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) addressed at the onset of the brigade’s investigation, demonstrating he could not legally own a gun.
“It’s all documented,” said the state trooper, hinting that Gage may be lying. “But do you have any guns that we don’t know about?”
Gage, patient and trusting of law enforcement, reiterated his ailment and the toll that it had taken on him as a reason for why he did not own any firearms.
He then queried back:
What do I do with the threats that I get? I have them all documented.
The officers told Gage to report all threats and that the department would do “live lookouts,” which are essentially extra concentration on particular residences, typically done to homes prone to burglaries.
The lead officer then warned him, “If you cross that threshold, it’s really [going to be] a different conversation,” adding, “There might be criminal charges.”
He then asked Gage, “Do you have any issue with politicians or the governor, AG, [or] law enforcement?” He denied any plans or hidden motives, then was told:
Just be smart, that’s all.
After Gage’s unadulterated defamation by Rolling Stone last week and the constant threats by crazed, perpetually online Zionists, he should consider fortifying through legal support. That is not only to retain his brand but also for his and his family’s safety.
Paleocon Publishing denounces all forms of violence regardless of ideology or other personal attributes. That being said, Gage’s rhetoric does not demonstrate violence—just a challenge against what we know as Americans as the “establishment.” His methods are well within the bounds of free speech, unlike the many Zionists who have called for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine on X, digital media and the corporate press.