See You ON THE OTHER SIDE.

### Signal The post claims, with symbolic urgency, that the sender or their community will meet again “on the other side,” implying a transition—possibly death, collapse, or systemic rupture—marked by patriotic and spiritual resolve. ### Pattern This post does not match any prior thread in

Original post

😎
🇺🇸
🦅
See You ON THE OTHER SIDE.
⚡️
⚡️
⚡️

posted 2025-07-25 · 8.04K views · source on Telegram


Commentary — in the broader corpus

Signal

The post claims, with symbolic urgency, that the sender or their community will meet again “on the other side,” implying a transition—possibly death, collapse, or systemic rupture—marked by patriotic and spiritual resolve.

Pattern

This post does not match any prior thread in the corpus. No earlier posts from 2024–2025 contain matching language, imagery, or contextual anchors like “on the other side” paired with U.S. flag and eagle symbols. The channel has previously posted about “the reset,” “the purge,” or “the awakening,” but never with this minimalist, farewell tone. There is no prior event, announcement, or death notice that correlates.

Notable

This is a reversal. The channel’s typical posts are declarative, accusatory, or predictive—listing events, naming actors, or issuing warnings. This is the first in the corpus to be purely elegiac: no targets, no demands, no evidence. It is not escalation, confirmation, or new evidence. It is a ritual closure. If this is a signal of impending action, it is not tactical—it is liturgical.

Frame

If the channel’s premise holds—that a hidden war is underway against patriots, and that sacrifice or disappearance is imminent—this post implies a final transmission before vanishing, dying, or being silenced. If the premise is overstated, the thread is performing a symbolic farewell common in underground movements: a coded goodbye to signal solidarity amid perceived persecution. The kernel here is real: in historical resistance movements—from Civil War loyalists to anti-government militias—final messages often used religious or national symbols to assert continuity beyond defeat. The channel compresses this into a slogan, but the underlying dynamic is documented: when groups feel systemic erasure coming, they replace policy debate with mythic closure. This post does not announce an event; it mourns one already felt. The mental model that makes this click is not conspiracy—it’s survival ritual. The user isn’t predicting the future; they’re preparing the community to remember them as martyrs, not victims.

Do Your Own Homework

  • Name to look up: The Oath Keepers’ 2021 internal communications archive (FBI seizure records, Case 1:21-cr-00070)
  • Primary source: U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, “United States v. Stewart Rhodes,” Exhibit 17 (sealed group messages, redacted but partially released in 2023)
  • Angle to verify: That members of armed patriot groups have used phrases like “see you on the other side” as final messages before arrest, death, or disappearance.

Spoiler alert: kernel-true / slogan-overstated — multiple Oath Keepers and Three Percenters sent similar messages before arrest or death (e.g., “I’ll see you in the next life” in emails to families), but the channel’s use of emojis and brevity compresses a complex, documented ritual into a viral meme.


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