The Infiltration of MAGA: Inside the Extremist Plan to Hijack the Right
- Anthony Puyo

- May 4
- 10 min read
Updated: May 14

Infiltration can destroy everything and anything!
What is infiltration? What do I mean when I say we've been infiltrated? It can mean a lot of things depending on the context. Are we talking about a society being infiltrated? A movement? A government? A country? There are many angles to look at infiltration, but the kind I’m talking about today is when a group of people—ideologically or socially—is deliberately infiltrated by those who aim to steer it in another direction.
The inspiration for this piece came after a video started circulating on X, formerly known as Twitter. The footage showed a woman named Shiloh Hendricks—white, visibly angry, and holding a child—being filmed during what looked like a confrontation involving an alleged five-year-old African American boy. According to reports and commentary surrounding the video, the child allegedly put his hand in her child's diaper bag, which Shiloh took as an attempt to steal something.
Now, we don’t actually see the child stealing anything on the video. What we do see is Shiloh visibly upset, hurling racial slurs, and repeating those slurs even after being called out. She confirms them on camera without remorse—directed both at the child and the man filming.
When I first saw the clip, I reacted with disgust. I said, in effect, that she was trash and not a good person and that I didn’t care what others thought of my opinion because I believe in God. And if I see something wrong, I’ll call it out. I stand by that, even though in hindsight, I could have chosen better words. That’s called regret, people—something a Christian often feels. Sorry for the snark, but it is a "wisdom and rant" article.
Back to the piece: I knew the backlash would come quickly, that's why I made sure to make people aware of where I was coming from. My unwavering faith in God would not allow evil directed toward me to bother me or change my opinion in any way. Naturally, I was questioned for using the word “trash” and accused of lying down God’s judgment. I cleared that up quickly by stating that God didn’t say anything there—that it was all me. I don’t have any authority to cast anyone into hell or say, “You’re going to hell,” and so forth. It was simply my observation as a person and my own opinion of another person. I made it clear there’s a separation between me, the individual, and God. I’m human—a sinner—and God is all-knowing and is the Omega. Clear distinction. And because I’m a Christian, it is impossible for me to hate anyone. But I do hate sin. See? Simple.
We live in an age where everything is exaggerated—stories, opinions, emotions. So, I knew the backlash could be heavy for my comment. But I didn’t care. Why? Because I knew what I was looking at.
I was raised to call things as they are. And when I watched that video, I saw someone speaking with malice. Her body language, the expression in her eyes, her voice, even her tattoos—they all told me something about who she was. I’m not trying to be cruel, but she didn’t come off as someone who made good life choices. You’re chasing someone else’s child, shouting racial slurs, and holding your own child in your arms? That’s reckless and hateful. The "tattoos" for her, a sign of rebellion.
When the attacks on me started rolling in that's where things got interesting.
The Reaction and the Realization!
You’re probably wondering how I knew the backlash would come. I had already noticed, based on some of the comments, that more people were on her side than not—which we’ll get into a bit more later. So, I was immediately attacked by several accounts. At first, it caught me off guard because nearly all of the backlash didn’t come in the form of any kind of intellectual disagreement. These people didn’t seem like the typical conservatives I interact with on X.
Side note: I almost always interact with conservatives, and it’s usually positive. And even when there’s a disagreement, it’s typically cordial enough to share points and opinions without the mess of blasting each other.
I’m someone who believes in the message of MAGA. I voted for Trump. But I don’t pledge allegiance to any party—I’m an independent. My guiding principle is my faith. I’m a Christian above all else. If conservatives or MAGA ever started straying from God or hating Jesus, then I wouldn't follow them anymore. That's not the case currently and that’s why I tend to align more with conservatives: many of them are Christian too.
But this crowd felt different. Some of them weren’t just defending Shiloh Hendricks—they were celebrating her. That’s when I started to dig a little deeper. The post I had commented on was about how she was raising tons of money. I made it clear that I couldn’t care less about that. It’s not my money, and I don’t care what others choose to do with theirs.
But what I did find interesting was that she never apologized—not even while asking for donations. To me, that’s another character issue.
The man who filmed the video was also being attacked. People were bringing up charges against him, saying he had tried to sexually attack a 16-year-old. I looked into it. There were charges that were later dismissed, and he himself posted a video denying everything. But here’s the thing: whether or not those charges were true didn’t change my opinion about what I saw in the video. I don’t know the full story of his background, and there was no conviction. As a Christian, I won’t slander someone based on accusations alone. The Bible warns us not to bear false witness. If he’s a bad guy, that’s for God or the courts to decide. But in that moment, what I saw was a woman driven by hate, not justice.
She wasn’t a bystander reacting to a mistake. She came off as someone fueled by anger, someone who didn’t care about right or wrong. And again, I say this from the perspective of someone who pays attention. I try to read people. Her body language, the lack of a husband or partner present there or even on her donations page, no wedding ring (child out of wedlock?), the choice to endanger her own child in a fit of rage—all of it painted a clear picture. That’s why I said what I said.
But it didn’t stop there in the comments. I started noticing something strange: many of the people who came at me weren’t your average MAGA supporters. They were something else. A different kind of account. So, I did what I always do—I started digging.
And what I found disturbed me.
Stumbling Into the Shadows
Out of curiosity, I clicked through some of the profiles that had responded to me. That’s when I realized I had unknowingly wandered into a corner of X I’d heard about but never ventured in before—a pocket of users who weren’t just sharing opinions but quietly building something darker.
The more I explored, the more I realized that many of these accounts—ones that claimed to be MAGA or conservative—weren’t authentic. They looked like MAGA accounts on the surface, with flags, Trump pictures, and slogans. But their messaging was different. Instead of God, country, or family, their posts were dripping with racial bitterness. Not overt slurs in every post, but subtle, coded language meant to stir division: things like “why is it always Black people in these videos?” or “White guilt has gone too far.”
These weren’t real conservatives. They were infiltrators. How do I know, you ask? I followed some of the outright racist accounts, and many of them had additional account handles listed in their bios. When you clicked on those, they took you straight to their fake MAGA accounts.
I started diving deeper into the racist profiles, reading their replies and posts—and what I found was shocking. Some were openly strategizing about how to infiltrate MAGA and other spaces, even going so far as to teach others how to do it. They were deliberately creating fake conservative accounts to blend in and gain followers. Then, once established, they’d begin to sow division—injecting race-based resentment bit by bit. The goal wasn’t just to express hate. It was to radicalize.
In the racist posts, one user wrote something along the lines of: “We’ve been good too long to these minorities. It’s time to take back the country—by force if we have to.” Another, hiding behind the mask of old-school patriotism, called for “a return to 1930s values.” Some mocked older conservatives who spoke out against racism—people who may have just stumbled into the thread by chance—calling them weak and blaming them for “losing the country.”
I saw an account I’d recognized before—a solid MAGA supporter who had always spoken out against racism. He made a post saying, “I support Trump, but I don’t support hate.” That should’ve been an easy stance. But the replies he got were vile. They came after him hard: “Shut the hell up, old man.” “Your generation failed us.” “You made us weak.”
These weren’t political arguments—they were threats. You could feel the seething resentment behind their words. And they weren’t alone. These accounts had reach—some with tens of thousands of followers. One had nearly half a million. They were spreading poison. They pushed the idea that an all-out white America was the only path forward. And they were clear about their strategy: they planned to turn MAGA in their direction to gain the manpower they’d need to make their vision a reality. Their plan is a calculated psyop. They are trying to hijack a movement.
Some people in these posts suggested Shiloh Hendricks herself might be a plant. That her tattoos, which seemed to reference Viking mythology and Valkyrie symbols, were signals—coded messages aligning her with white nationalist or Norse pagan ideology. I don’t know if that’s true, and I’m not going to speculate beyond what we know. But I do know that imagery and symbolism matter to people who live online, and when certain patterns show up, they get noticed.
Here’s what I do know: real MAGA people—the ones who helped elect Trump and love this country—they typically believe in God, loving their family, the Constitution, the Second Amendment, and free speech. But now we’re seeing new profiles. Accounts that still fly the MAGA flag but speak with a different tone—one that’s colder, more militant, more tribal.
This is how movements get hijacked. Look at what happened to the Democratic Party. Once upon a time, Democrats still had space for Christians and moderate voices. But then came the infiltration—by radicals, by identity politics, by the far-left, by the alphabet mafia. Slowly, that party was overtaken and rebranded into something unrecognizable. It’s not the party of JFK anymore. It’s the party of drag shows in elementary schools and God being booed at.
And that same kind of hijack is now threatening the right.
What’s happening isn’t just political—it’s spiritual, psychological, and deeply strategic. I want people to ask themselves something: Why do we keep seeing the same kind of videos over and over? You get on X or any other major platform, and you’re bombarded with clips: immigrants committing crimes, Black people doing much of the same, white people being victims. It’s endless. It doesn’t matter what race is in the video—it’s always chaos, always division, always violence. Ask yourself—how often do you see these things in real life compared to what’s constantly being pumped into your feed? It’s curated for a reason. It's all a psyop. I'm sure if I was on Black Twitter, I would be bombarded by videos of the opposite. It's all there to harden our hearts.
It’s the same kind of tactic the CIA has used in foreign nations. Destabilize the culture. Sow division. Turn people against each other. That’s how you keep a nation from reaching its full potential. And now, those tactics are being used against us—against Americans, by bad actors both inside and outside our borders.
If you see enough of this curated violence, your heart hardens. Maybe you weren’t racist two years ago, but after watching 500 videos of people from another race committing crimes—most without context—you start to feel different. You start to get angry. And that anger gets redirected. Before long, you’re radicalized, and you didn’t even see it happening.
That’s how it works. It’s not just news, it’s conditioning.
And that brings me full circle to the concept of infiltration. What we’re seeing online is not just chaos—it’s war. It’s psychological warfare. And if we’re not careful, we’ll lose not just our sanity, but our souls.
A Warning to MAGA
These infiltrators are patient. They’re smart. They know how to play the long game. They start off posting patriot memes and quoting Trump. But slowly, they inject poison into the bloodstream—racial bitterness, revisionist history, coded language. They blend in just enough to gather influence and start nudging real conservatives toward radical ideas. And if you're not on guard, it could work on you.
I’ve seen it myself. I’ve followed the threads. They talk about “purity.” They talk about “taking back the country.” They talk about old bloodlines, Viking gods, and overthrowing weak conservatives. They want a full-blown race war, and they believe it’s coming. These aren’t patriots. They’re saboteurs. Wolves in red hats. We’ve already seen what infiltration did to the Democratic Party. The Christian, blue-collar, working-class Democrats of the past got swept aside by identity politics, Marxist leanings, and radical social agendas. The party became something it was never meant to be. And if the right isn’t vigilant, the same thing will happen to them.
They'll lose their values. They'll lose credibility. And worst of all, they’ll lose the moral high ground.
As a Christian, that matters to me more than anything. I lean towards conservative politics. We don’t win by becoming what we hate. We don’t protect America by turning on each other.
This is why I wrote this. I hope people on the right—my fellow conservatives, my fellow Christians, my fellow Americans—wake up to what’s happening. Because there’s still time to stop it. But that window is closing fast.
If you see an account pushing racial bitterness, block it. If someone’s preaching hate while pretending to be one of us, expose them. If your feed starts looking like a war zone, remind yourself—it’s designed to make you feel that way. They want us divided. They want us angry. They want America to fall. Because if the American domino falls, the rest of the world follows. And that’s exactly what the globalists want. Don't let it happen.
Till next time, God bless.
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