💰 Grifter Tor Gustaffson Brookes / CatboyKami / Lolisocks - Deranged Attention Whore, Homoerotic Provocateur, Nick Fuentes's Boyfriend, Co-Founder of the Cat Nats, a (ironic) fag

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Catboykami is live again and top of IP2
catboykami.png
 
UPDATES

Vid 1 :
>The feds still have his phone
>Moved into new apartment
>Investigation still ongoing
>"This [stream] is probably the last you'll see of me for a while"

Vid 2 :
>life-sized george floyd doll never arrived, scammed out of money
>still doesn't have his stuff (PC, phone, laptop(?)) back from the feds
>never charged by the feds with anything
 
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Catboy was found lurking a boy-lover pic sharing telegram group.

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The owner was archiving and purging the chat (I think they got found) and started banning everyone, which shows everyone's username.
 
So Fuentes' guy friend is a pedophile. Fucking hilarious that the grifter right dies like this.
 
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So Fuentes' guy friend is a pedophile. Fucking hilarious that the grifter right dies like this.
Isn't it interesting how the extreme people on "both sides" are usually the kind of people you especially wouldn't want to leave your kids with?
 
Kami's real name is Tor Gustafsson Brookes and he was born in Sweden, before moving to Australia at a young age. Kami was featured on a recent ABC report where he gets described as an outcast from his high school. https://www.abc.net.au/radionationa...-an-ipswich-bedroom-to-global-infamy/13466384

Shout out to the "insider" larpers in this thread like @Stanley Tit who have perpetuated false info whilst claiming to somehow also know Catboy Kami personally, not to mention faildoxing Kantbot. Do not take this person seriously.
 
Kami's real name is Tor Gustafsson Brookes and he was born in Sweden, before moving to Australia at a young age. Kami was featured on a recent ABC report where he gets described as an outcast from his high school. https://www.abc.net.au/radionationa...-an-ipswich-bedroom-to-global-infamy/13466384

Shout out to the "insider" larpers in this thread like @Stanley Tit who have perpetuated false info whilst claiming to somehow also know Catboy Kami personally, not to mention faildoxing Kantbot. Do not take this person seriously.
He was identified as Philip Hedley by Buzzfeed & the ADL in November of last year. I first posted on this site in January of this year.



If they were incorrect, then they were incorrect. I haven't listened to this radio story yet.

I've not claimed to know him personally. You are lying about this & you will hear from my solicitor.

If the Kantbot dox is incorrect--then correct it!
 
He was identified as Philip Hedley by Buzzfeed & the ADL in November of last year. I first posted on this site in January of this year.



If they were incorrect, then they were incorrect. I haven't listened to this radio story yet.

I've not claimed to know him personally. You are lying about this & you will hear from my solicitor.

If the Kantbot dox is incorrect--then correct it!
its documented now in the media and hes been doxed, they talked to his dad

if you take anyone online seriously you've failed

I'm not the one claiming to be an insider
 
Kami's real name is Tor Gustafsson Brookes and he was born in Sweden, before moving to Australia at a young age. Kami was featured on a recent ABC report where he gets described as an outcast from his high school. https://www.abc.net.au/radionationa...-an-ipswich-bedroom-to-global-infamy/13466384

Catboy Kami: How an internet troll went from an Ipswich bedroom to the heart of the US far-right movement​

Background Briefing
By Alex Mann with additional research by Ariel Bogle
Posted 6 hours ago, updated 3 hours ago
[ original | archive ]

A group of men towered over 17-year-old Daisy and they were shouting. "Go back to Mexico!" one spat. "Trump 2020!" another yelled.
Daisy and her sisters had come to a Trump rally in Phoenix, Arizona, to celebrate Joe Biden's election win, a kind of victory lap after four years of fear and anxiety for them.

Warning: This story contains coarse language and examples of offensive and racist content.

But a group of young men had just arrived and what had started out as a celebration was quickly turning into something that felt dangerous.

"So we're black hair, dark features. You can tell that we are Mexican and Hispanic," says Daisy.
The young men shouted racist abuse while holding mobile phones and live-streaming the girls' reactions to an online audience.
Daisy noticed straight away that one of those voices sounded nothing like the others.

"The Australian guy," she says. "I remember hearing him."

Video of the day captured the young man, who appeared to be in his early 20s, introducing himself: "Hi I'm Catboy Kami and I hate n*****s".

"He was just totally ruthless, mean, evil … him and his people were the ones who were insulting us."

Little did Daisy know, confrontational stunts like these had seen this Australian man embraced by some of the most high-profile far-right personalities in the world.

Russian YouTube videos about him receive hundreds of thousands of views while his personal Telegram channel has almost 44,000 subscribers.

And with that fame and notoriety, he's become a useful recruitment tool in the expansion of one of the globe's most extreme social movements.

His strength is his ability to wrap a political message in a shell of entertainment and provocation, says ASPI analyst and former ABC tech reporter Ariel Bogle.

"It was such a good example of the weaponisation of humour in the far-right movement," says Bogle.

"It sort of dared you to get offended or think it was gross or get upset by it. And if you did that, it kind of got you."

But exactly who he is, and how he ended up in the US, has until now been a mystery.

An ABC Background Briefing investigation has uncovered his real name, Tor Gustafsson Brookes, and can for the first time reveal how he went from making prank videos in a bedroom on the outskirts of Ipswich, in south-east Queensland, to rubbing shoulders with some of the US's most high-profile white nationalists.

Some of those other men would later be directly involved in storming the US Capitol building and even enter Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's office.

"Extremist movements deeply value anybody in their ranks that can get people laughing," says Jared Holt, a resident fellow at the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab and an expert on home-grown extremism and the ways it's organised and inspired by things online.

He says Catboy Kami is more than just an offensive jokester and he deserves to be unmasked.

"His actions have traumatised people," Holt says.

"They have targeted children. He's connected to an active white nationalist organising network that is seeking to push very brutal agenda items and targeting minorities."

The real Catboy Kami​

It's clear that Tor Brookes has made some effort to mask his online footprint.

The confronting nature of his videos has seen him banned from almost all mainstream social media channels but Background Briefing has spoken to his family and school associates to piece together a picture of his early years.

They reveal a portrait of a young man pushing boundaries from an early age.

Growing up around Indooroopilly in Brisbane, Tor played video games with his brother and dad under the name Kamikaze.

Tor had an ambitious vision for his online future. He saved his pocket money to buy bitcoin and looked up to global online superstars like PewdiePie.

At home, he and his brother were encouraged to speak freely. Nothing was taboo.

In the last few years of high school he'd started adopting more provocative online usernames like "Tiberian#gayc**t", "When I cum in her hair" and later on, "Raped in the privates".

One of his classmates from high school, Jack, says Tor lacked social skills and "didn't know how to talk to people correctly … didn't really understand how people work."

Despite this, Jack and Tor had some things in common. Jack says they both used to play Modern Warfare 2 and people playing these online games often used vile language.

"You know, there were kids his age saying, you know, the N-word, calling each other a lot of racial slurs … There was no censorship."

This was kind of normal for the games they were playing, Jack says, but Tor seemed to relish it in a way that took the offensive banter to another level.

There's one interaction from those school days that even now is fresh in Jack's mind.

The pair were playing a first-person shooter game called Call of Duty, Black Ops which is set in a conflict zone during the Vietnam War

"I remember him and this other dude, who was also Asian, would get into this argument about who was better," Jack recalls.

"And he said, 'I bet you'd always pick the g*** and hide in the trees'. I remember that very clearly because it was very like, holy shit," says Jack.

"It just kind of blew everyone away, how he would openly say it. In his mind he thought it was kind of funny banter [but] he would be the only person laughing."

Tor finished high school around 2015. By 2019, he was live streaming from a house in Rosewood on the outskirts of Ipswich.

His humour was getting even more offensive and it was increasingly targeted at children.

In one, he dresses up in blackface and an afro wig and, while brandishing a gun, he scours the video chat platforms for Black kids to taunt.

In another, he dresses up as a policeman and kneels on an effigy he's made in the likeness of George Floyd.

At one point, he was streaming 24 hours a day, for days on end. It was earning him thousands of new followers in places like the US and Russia, and real money.

He became the 7th-highest-earning streamer on a popular alternative to YouTube called D-Live, according to Social Blade DLive Statistics.

Then, with his profile still on the rise, he suffered a massive setback.

In a video uploaded to his Telegram channel, Catboy Kami told his fans he had just lost access to Twitch, the world's biggest live streaming platform for gamers, and YouTube.

"But I'm not dead yet, so I'm not going to stop," he said. "I can't even begin to think what the f*** I would do, if I wasn't a streamer."

Tor Brookes had bigger plans for his online persona and they would take him a long long way from home.

"As long as I'm alive, and as long as I have some vague ability to do so, I'm gonna f***en stream, and I'm gonna be the best."

Hitting the big time​

In late 2019, Catboy Kami popped up in America. A video posted online shows him chatting and joking side-by-side with one of the US's most high-profile white nationalists, Nick Fuentes.

Over the following months, he made connections with the who's who of American far-right internet celebrities, from Milo Yiannopolous to Richard Spencer, and white supremacist streaming stars like a guy calling himself Baked Alaska.

It was a significant jump from the outskirts of Ipswich to the top ranks of the US white power movement, says the Atlantic Council's Jared Holt.

"It sort of speaks to, one, his personal friendship and closeness to people who aren't just shit posters but are serious organisers in the white nationalist movement," Holt says.

"And also, the degree to which he, as an Australian, sees part of himself in what's happening in the US."

Nick Fuentes was at the infamous white supremacist rally in Charlottesville in 2017 when a woman was murdered by a neo-Nazi driving his car into a crowd of people.

That same year, Fuentes started his own YouTube channel called America First.

Fuentes is a racist, he questions whether the Holocaust really happened and he's become the de-facto leader of a Gen Z white nationalist movement called the Groypers.

But while Catboy Kami presents as a messy internet troll, Nick Fuentes sells his far-right vision in a suit and tie.

In one of his many live streams, Fuentes explained the strategy behind the unusual match.

"It's because he has a good sense of humour," Fuentes said of Catboy Kami.

"It's because he's good looking. It's because he has demonstrated this repeatability that he's able to achieve viral moments, and he's able to retain a streaming audience.

"I recognised all those components early on, and now here we are, you know, six or seven months later, he's a breakout success."

Today, Catboy Kami's name is synonymous with his most extreme content. His videos are a mix of racial stereotypes and hardcore shock tactics.

Hate groups and racists flock to his content, sharing his videos and posting propaganda and links to their own groups, channelling his audience towards political action motivated by race hate.

Jared Holt says the global white supremacist movement needs people like Catboy Kami.

"And extremist movements are always looking to build, especially with younger audiences," he says.

"When you pair that with the fact that extremist movements also deeply value anybody in their ranks that can get people laughing or can be entertaining, because that has proven to be a really potent gateway to getting people directed towards the more sincere content."

Interviewed by the FBI​

By mid-late 2020, Catboy Kami's popularity was nearing its peak.

Politically, the US was in turmoil. As it became clear Donald Trump had lost the election, Catboy Kami's new associates Nick Fuentes and other key organisers of the US far-right saw another opportunity to take their online movements offline and into the real world.

This was the moment that brought him into contact with Daisy on the streets of Phoenix Arizona, and the kid from Queensland showed how far he'd come.

Tor had started with attention-seeking pranks on Ipswich's outskirts and ended up at one of the major Stop the Steal rallies on the streets of Phoenix, Arizona.

In a video he uploaded online, you can see many of the people who would later storm the Capitol building.

The QAnon Shaman was there — easily identifiable with his horned helmet and bellowing voice — as was the man who accompanied Catboy Kami on this day, Baked Alaska.

But in the months following that street rally, the FBI cracked down on Catboy Kami's friends.

Baked Alaska has been charged for his role in the Capitol riots.

Sources inside the FBI have confirmed that Tor Brookes was also interviewed in February but they declined to provide any more details about this separate investigation.

Jared Holt says Tor Gustafsson Brookes needs to be held to account.

"I think it is incredibly important whenever we find figures like this, to the degree that we're able and to the degree that it's appropriate to, you know, kind of tell a fuller story of who they are, because the way that we can kind of try to deter people from joining on to these bandwagons is by bringing a certain degree of accountability to it."

Background Briefing has been able to track Tor Brookes to Scottsdale, in Arizona.

The program sent him detailed questions via his remaining social media platforms. He appears to have seen the questions but he hasn't responded.

The Atlantic Council's Jared Holt says that while the world now knows Catboy Kami's real name, and Tor Brookes can no longer hide behind his online persona, he thinks we might not have seen the last of him.

"How somebody like Catboy Kami, evolves from this … where he goes from here is kind of hard for me to conceptualise, but I certainly don't think that he's going away anytime soon."

--

It's not every day that a lolcow gets this sort of coverage on an MSM website. Gotta love the way that the writers of this story have attempted to try and translate the Catboy Kami story into language that normies might understand.
 
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Over the following months, he made connections with the who's who of American far-right internet celebrities, from Milo Yiannopolous to Richard Spencer, and white supremacist streaming stars like a guy calling himself Baked Alaska.

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It's not every day that a lolcow gets this sort of coverage on an MSM website. Gotta love the way that the writers of this story have attempted to try and translate the Catboy Kami story into language that normies might understand.
Lazy hitpiece, he made no connections with Milo or Spencer. Do they say how they found his name, it sounds like something Catboy Kami would make up.
 
Do they say how they found his name, it sounds like something Catboy Kami would make up.
They say they asked a source in American law enforcement, & he simply handed it over.

It is a terrible show. The whole point is that they got his name--there's really nothing beyond that. Yet they say nothing about his name having previously been misreported by mainstream outlets, even though they fill a lot of time by cannibalizing the Buzzfeed piece that called him Philip Hedley, & make reference to its author (without using her name--Brianna Sacks). The runtime is otherwise padded out with generic quotes from Jared Holt.

The doc ends very abrubtly. At one point they say they weren't able to find out why Kami is under criminal investigation--despite having a law enforcement source who fed them his name.

It's bizarre, hypocritical, & ultimately deceptive.
 
They say they asked a source in American law enforcement, & he simply handed it over.

It is a terrible show. The whole point is that they got his name--there's really nothing beyond that. Yet they say nothing about his name having previously been misreported by mainstream outlets, even though they fill a lot of time by cannibalizing the Buzzfeed piece that called him Philip Hedley, & make reference to its author (without using her name--Brianna Sacks). The runtime is otherwise padded out with generic quotes from Jared Holt.

The doc ends very abrubtly. At one point they say they weren't able to find out why Kami is under criminal investigation--despite having a law enforcement source who fed them his name.

It's bizarre, hypocritical, & ultimately deceptive.
The whole point is to make him persona non-grata by publicising his name, the guy openly states it, and by making it known that he presumably lives in Rosewood, Ipswich, or at least used to.

The Atlantic Council's Jared Holt says that while the world now knows Catboy Kami's real name, and Tor Brookes can no longer hide behind his online persona, he thinks we might not have seen the last of him.

It's ironic when the supposedly 'racist/fascist/XYZ-ist' commercial news stations and papers are tracking reasonably credible extremists who try to physically threaten them, whilst the ABC is going after some anime larper. You're not going to find Kami's videos unless you're explicitly searching out for reuploads and clips of his content.
 
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