A close examination of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' YouTube website indicates the congresswoman who was critically wounded Saturday in an assassination attempt in Tucson, Ariz., has a new stalker.
The stalker appears to be a Hispanic Marxist punk revolutionary group based in Spain that has linked to Giffords' YouTube channel as an imposter.
The stalker group is now registered on Giffords' YouTube website as a "Subscriber," using a username that mimics the username of Jared Lee Loughner, the suspect in the assassination attempt, and a "look-alike" YouTube channel that is designed to resemble Loughner's YouTube channel in appearance and content.
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Yesterday, WND reported Loughner remained subscribed to Gifford's YouTube website under the username "Classitup10."
Under closer inspection, it is clear that "Classitup10" is not Loughner but a group called "Pimiento 666" that has subscribed to Giffords' website under a username designed to look like Loughner's.
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To accomplish this deception, "Pimiento666" subscribed to Giffords' website using "CIassitup10," using a capital I to create the username, instead of the lower-case L that Loughner used.
The username "CIassitup10," the subscriber WND yesterday first identified as Loughner, is still on page 8 of Giffords' subscriber list, as seen in the screen capture below:
The person subscribing to Gifford's YouTube webpage is using "CIassitup10" with a capital I standing in the place of the lower-case L.
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That the current subscriber is not Loughner is made clear by clicking the user "CIassitup10," which goes to the following Web page :
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The website is designed to mimic the website Loughner created, even down to the detail of claiming it was created by Loughner.
The mimicked YouTube channel page is close to the original, as can be seen by comparing it to the YouTube website Loughner created.
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The mimicked website even includes the identical four videos contained on Loughner's website.
Still, the information at the center of the two websites differs in several important details.
Here is the center section of the mimicked website:
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The mimicked website indicates it was created Monday, two days after Giffords was shot. A close-up shows the Jan. 10 date of creation and notes that the total number of views for the channel was at the time of the screen capture 9,973:
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The mimicked website also includes a link to a new website created under the username "Pimiento666," as seen in the following close-up screen capture:
"Pimiento" is Spanish for "red hot chili pepper."
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The "666" in the username "Pimiento666" is an obvious reference to the "number of the beast" designating the biblical anti-Christ of the book of Revelation.
In sharp contrast to the imposter website, Loughner's website documents it was created Oct. 25, 2010, and had 3,685,676 views at the time of the screen capture, as seen below:
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Loughner's website includes no reference to "Pimiento666."
The conclusion appears to be that a person or group operating under the username "Pimiento666" has subscribed to Giffords' YouTube website with a username and YouTube channel designed to mimic Loughner's username and look just like the YouTube channel.
Is 'Pimiento666' Loughner's mind controller?
Clicking "Pimiento666" on the imposter website, links to the YouTube channel of "Pimiento666, as seen below:
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A close-up shows "Pimiento666" was created March 25, 2010, and had 44,800 channel views at the time the screen capture was made:
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"Pimiento666" continues to reference Loughner's YouTube channel "Classitup10" by embedding the introductory video Loughner posted on his "Classitup10." But the identity of "Pimiento666" is inserted into the re-engineered and transported videos.
The change was to position the head image of "Pimiento666" at the top of Loughner's chart, suggesting "Pimiento666" was the mind controller.
The video transported from Loughner's "Classitup10" YouTube channel has been renamed on "Pimiento666" in Spanish as "Como Controlar La Mente (How To Mind Controller).
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The re-engineered and transported video on the "Pimiento666" website is attributed to Loughner, as can be seen below:
The original video on Loughner's "Classitup10" YouTube channel was presented under the title "How to: Mind Controller" and an opening chart image, as seen below:
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"Pimiento666" re-engineered the video to insert the group's chili-pepper-head image at the top of the chart, possibly suggesting that "Pimiento666" was the mind-controller of Loughner, as seen in the following close-up screen capture:
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The "Pimiento666" YouTube channel indicates the redesigned video transported from Loughner's "Classitup10" website was created Jan. 10, two days after Giffords was shot, and that it had received 488 views at the time of the screen capture:
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The creator of "Pimiento666" is listed as "Tatanka iyotake," a name that appears Japanese in origin, with the unusual characteristic that the first letter of the last name is not capitalized.
Marx, Lenin, Satan and punk politics
In Spanish, "Pimiento666" self-describes as a Hispanic Marxist organization with a long and complicated history.
From the information currently available, it is impossible to tell who precisely "Pimiento666" is, or whether the group's self-description is accurate.
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It is also impossible to tell if Loughner had any association with "Pimiento666" or whether the group has just hijacked Loughner's username and YouTube channel design to use as a front in subscribing to Giffords' YouTube website.
The background images used in "Pimiento666" are radical revolutionary, including an angry-face pimiento, an automatic weapon displayed over an orange communist-like star and an image of a hooded figure who appears to be writing "All Cops Are Bastards" on a wall, as seen here:
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The map references the Basque country in Spain that is known in the Basque language as Euskal Herrira, a region distinguished by separatists that historically have engaged in violent nationalistic protests against Madrid.
Among the Channel Comments at the bottom right of the "Pimiento666" website is a bizarre comment simply bearing the name "Jared Lee Loughner" that was posted Jan. 10:
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The Spanish spoken in the initial videos by a chili pepper head appears to be from Spain, rather that North or South America.
Bizarre music and politics
The "Pimiento666" YouTube channel posts a variety of videos in Spanish that display typically bizarre punk music, satire and humor that is often laced with an overtone of violent, revolutionary or anarchist-type rhetoric.
The "Pimiento666" website lists the well-known Satanist and occult writer/musician Anton LaVey as an influence.
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The "Pimiento666" website also links to the URL for a Wikipedia entry in Spanish on Groupos de Resistencia Antifascista Primero de Octubre", the Anti-fascist Resistance Groups of the First of October, also know as "Los GRAPO."
GRAPO is a Marxist-Leninist organization formed by radical Hispanics from the Communist party of Spain who created the group in 1968 while in exile in Spain.
In violent political actions in the 1970s and 1980s, GRAPO functioned as the armed wing of the Partido Communista de España-reconstitutido, Communist Party of Spain – reconstituted, better known as PCE-r.
GRAPO takes its name from the murder by the PCE-r of four Spanish policemen on Oct. 1, 1975.
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By clicking the icon for a subscriber with the username "Pimiento100" on the "Pimiento666" website, a link opens the related "Pimiento100" website.
At the bottom of the "Pimiento100" YouTube channel webpage, several different websites with versions of the "Piemiento" name are listed as "Friends," as seen below:
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The websites listed as "Friends" are: "Pimiento555," "Pimiento666," "Pimiento777," "Pimienta999," Piemiento444," "Pimiento333" and "Pimiento."
Each of the "Pimiento" websites on YouTube appear to have different creators and content, even though all the content appears oriented toward a combination of punk-rock humor, Satanism and Marxist-Leninist revolutionary politics.
YouTube administrators have closed several of the related "Pimiento" websites because the channels contained content considered unacceptable.
Giffords and Loughner: Why the links?
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On Sunday, WND reported that Giffords or someone with access to Giffords' YouTube username and password had subscribed to Loughner's YouTube channel.
The subscription has now been removed from Giffords' YouTube channel, without any explanation.