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To: jimwatx

Oh in the previous posts I said tweets when I meant text messages. These were all from screen shots sent in by Charlie’s friends not some hacked files. They had dates and time stamps and were posted on X by Charlie’s friends he texted with so they are definitely real.


60 posted on 12/22/2025 8:34:34 PM PST by jimwatx
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To: All

Islamic Neo-Nazi: The Rise of Amrou Fudl (Myron Gaines)

Born Amrou Fudl, Muslim raised, Gaines has been associated with a series of extremist views, including neo-Nazi sentiments and Holocaust denial. Gaines chose the pseudonym "Myron Gaines" partly to obscure his Sudanese-Arab Muslim background.

In the overlapping worlds of online "manosphere" content, far-right conservatism, and certain Muslim influencer circles, Amrou Fudl—known publicly as Myron Gaines—stands out as a prominent figure promoting a toxic blend of misogyny, Holocaust denial, and overt antisemitism. Born to Sudanese heritage and identifying as Muslim, Fudl has leveraged his podcast Fresh and Fit (co-hosted with Walter Weekes) to amass over 1.5 million YouTube subscribers. What started as "red pill" dating advice has increasingly incorporated neo-Nazi rhetoric, including praise for Adolf Hitler and conspiracy theories alleging J "control" over media, finance, feminism, communism, and other societal issues.

Fudl positions himself within a subculture of Muslim male influencers called "akh right bros" (from the Arabic "akh" for brother). This group often rejects Western values in favor of a hyper-conservative, misogynistic interpretation of Islam, while echoing white nationalist and antisemitic tropes. Experts, such as Islamic studies scholars cited in media reports, have noted that this strand exploits religious conservatism to justify extreme views online.

Key Incidents and Statements






Fudl's alliances with figures like Andrew Tate and his unapologetic embrace of Hitlerism illustrate a disturbing trend: the fusion of certain Islamic conservative elements with neo-Nazi ideologies in the digital age. Rather than promoting traditional Islamic values, this "akh right" phenomenon often serves as a vehicle for hate under the guise of anti-Western rebellion.

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61 posted on 12/22/2025 9:38:48 PM PST by Words Matter
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To: jimwatx; All

On those ridiculous “theories “ If isr. Would ever want to “assassinate” ANY person for holding a certain political view, it would have done so in its own country first, it would eliminated the Islamic Jihad apologetic HAARETZ, inciting journalists , years ago.


64 posted on 12/22/2025 9:52:41 PM PST by Words Matter
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