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Espionage

Pool has friends who conduct assassination operations for US government overseas

Timcast IRL · Charlie Kirk Memes Are DESTROYING His Legacy, This Is The Op · July 10, 2026
Pool has friends who conduct assassination operations for US government overseas
Timcast IRL
Timcast IRL
Charlie Kirk Memes Are DESTROYING His Legacy, This Is The Op
"I have friends who do wet work. You know what that is? Means they drop from helicopters in foreign countries and assassinate and kill people for the US government. It's not as rare as you might think. There's a lot of people you walk around every day, you know, they do stuff like this and they talk about going in into countries."
Pool reveals he has personal friendships with individuals who conduct assassination missions for the US government, describing them as dropping from helicopters in foreign countries to kill targets. He claims these operatives, whom he distinguishes from private military contractors, are more common than people realize and have told him that destabilization tactics they use abroad are now appearing domestically in America. Pool states these sources are among those who have warned him about civil conflict risk.

About this episode

Tim Pool and his co-hosts explore claims of coordinated information warfare targeting American political discourse, intelligence warnings about civil conflict, and technological manipulation of public opinion. Pool reveals that intelligence sources have warned him of real civil war risk by 2030 due to international conflict and domestic polarization. He presents a conspiracy theory that simultaneous AI meme campaigns mocking both George Floyd and Charlie Kirk are designed to create political apathy among Gen Z by making both left and right activism appear ridiculous. Pool discloses he has personal friendships with individuals who conduct assassination operations for the US government and claims these sources see domestic destabilization tactics similar to those used in foreign regime change operations. The conversation examines how algorithmic manipulation on platforms like Facebook systematically polarized Millennials and Gen Z starting in the late 2000s by creating separate political realities. Pool and his co-hosts discuss their own algorithm experiences, noting how phones listen to conversations and feed content accordingly. The discussion also covers concerns about political polarization affecting personal relationships, with Pool describing family members who cannot accept any positive statements about political figures they oppose. The episode includes an extended tangent about HVAC systems, discussing the Kigali Agreement's impact on refrigerants, allegations that only two companies control the market with products that are more expensive and worse for the environment, and geothermal cooling alternatives. Throughout, the hosts express concern that younger generations have become so cynical and desensitized that genuine political engagement is increasingly difficult, with taking anything seriously now considered cringe.

Key takeaways

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