Welcome back to False Flag! Sam Stein and I had another wild MAGA Mondays livestream this morning, covering everything from the Reflecting Pool mess to this crazy Washington Post story about Tulsi Gabbard acting as a puppet of an alleged cult leader. For False Flag readers, though, the most intriguing story involves a Candace Owens death hoax. Over the weekend, far-right personality Lilly Gaddis—one of the people who’s become (in)famous lately for using the n-word—claimed that Owens had died under mysterious circumstances. Owens shot back that she was still very much alive. In response, Gaddis claimed the message had been posted to her account by none other than Jordan Daley—the Ryan Fournier pal accused last week of posing as a fake Secret Service agent. For his part, Daley denies having anything to do with the Owens hoax. Speaking of mysteries, a series of surprising resignations has shaken Michael Flynn’s nonprofit group—and the reasons why are weirdly unclear. We get into it below! As always, we do this all only with the support of Bulwark+ members like you—so thanks for reading and for being part of our community! –Will There’s Major Unrest at Michael Flynn’s NonprofitAnd we have painfully few clues as to why, beyond a cryptic post about a “drunk night between grown adults.”SINCE TAKING OVER THE STORIED conservative group America’s Future in 2021, retired general Michael Flynn has turned it into a real rogue’s gallery. For one, Flynn, who briefly served as Donald Trump’s national security adviser in the first administration, put Lara Logan—the former CBS News reporter turned conspiracy theorist—on the nonprofit’s board. Flynn also launched an anti-child trafficking initiative within America’s Future called “Project Defend & Protect Our Children,” which he stocked with fringe activists, including Pizzagate true believer Liz Crokin, who now serves as a Project board member. The group held events at Mar-a-Lago, where they screened QAnon-themed films and listened to a speech from Crokin, in which she promoted Pizzagate. Crokin has been joined on the advisory board by the likes of James O’Keefe-associate Brian Gamble, whose wife, Alysia Gamble, was the recent subject of a Politico story about a bizarre honeypot operation targeting low-level Democrats. It was kook heaven! But it was hardly paradise. This month, a number of prominent Project Defend & Protect Our Children figures started noisily quitting the anti-trafficking operation. On June 9, activist Lynz Piper-Loomis announced that she had resigned from the group’s advisory board a month earlier. She hasn’t offered an explanation yet, but suggested she might soon. “I may speak more on this later,” Piper-Loomis wrote in an X post. “There is a reason I authored a book titled, ‘I Am Silent No More.’” Piper-Loomis wasn’t alone. Two more members of the advisory board also quickly announced that they too had quit. Crokin was the first, |