Twitter personality “Bronze Age Pervert” took to twitter to announce his latest podcast, “Caribbean Rhythms Episode 42.” Fans hailed the latest episode as a tour de force. BAP covers ancient history, Western civilization, and exposes potential Deep State Syria mercenaries meddling in Antifa protests in the former Seattle autonomous zone known as CHOP/CHAZ, which has since been dismantled by the Seattle police.

To listen to the entire show, you will have to subscribe on Gumroad, but you can listen to the first thirty minutes for free on Soundcloud.

BAP highlighted potential connections between federal agencies and antifa.

For more on the alleged federal agent activity, see the twitter thread by user RHGR.

BAP covers the so-called “Thucydides trap,” which basically just means that an existing power will feel threatened by a rising power and may start a war.

Twitter user Phocaean Dionysius has taken notes on the entire show, if you are interested click on the twitter thread:

Bronze Age Pervert has been engaged with a running dialogue with the Claremont Institute on the pages of their American Mind website.

Bronze Age Pervert, or BAP, is the anonymous creator of both a popular Twitter account and the independently published Bronze Age Mindset (BAM), a hit on Amazon. BAP’s approach is unorthodox but profoundly compelling to his followers, one of whom recently called BAM “the deepest introspection into the human soul you’ll read in decades.” The book is addressed directly to these followers, whom BAP enjoins to become “a brotherhood of men” and fight against “the grim shadow of a movement” which is oppressing all valorous life. Otherwise human society will remain the drab, weak prison of conformity BAP calls “bugworld.”

As this phraseology suggests, BAM is somewhat different in tone and outlook from most of the books that garner attention at the Claremont Institute. But that is in part why Michael Anton—senior fellow at Claremont, lecturer in politics at Hillsdale College, and former national security official in the Trump administration—did decide to review BAM in the summer 2019 Claremont Review of Books. Anton’s review takes its subject seriously as a work of political philosophy (although BAP himself insists that he does not write philosophy but “exhortation”). BAM, writes Anton, has a “serious core” beneath its internet jargon: “it speaks directly to a youthful dissatisfaction…with equality as propagandized and imposed in our day.” Subsequently, BAP published his own response to the review in The American Mind. [American Mind]