COINTELPRO: The FBI Shadow Program That Silenced America
Jul 04, 2025, 01:02 PM
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The FBI’s COINTELPRO wasn’t dismantled—it evolved. This podcast-exclusive investigation traces how psychological warfare against dissent rebranded into modern surveillance, psyops, and algorithmic silence.
This episode is produced exclusively for the Divergent Files Podcast.
They didn’t end COINTELPRO.
They rebranded it.
From the 1950s through the 1970s, the FBI’s COINTELPRO ran covert psychological operations to disrupt, discredit, and destroy movements it labeled “subversive.” The record is no longer in dispute. It’s in memos, court filings, and sworn testimony.
This episode revisits the receipts—then follows what happened next.
We examine how leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. were targeted with intimidation and psychological pressure; how Fred Hampton was drugged and killed during a police raid; and how artists like John Lennon were surveilled for the crime of influence. These weren’t excesses. They were tactics.
Then we track the evolution.
When COINTELPRO was publicly exposed, the program was “terminated.” The methods weren’t. They migrated—into broader surveillance authorities, influence operations, fusion centers, and digital systems that shape visibility, credibility, and reach.
This investigation connects the historical playbook to modern mechanisms:
• Disinformation, forged communications, and media manipulation
• Behavioral profiling and predictive policing
• Fusion centers and inter-agency data sharing
• Algorithmic throttling and reputational suppression
• The quiet targeting of whistleblowers, journalists, and organizers
We also examine COINTELPRO’s documented overlaps with MK-Ultra and how psychological control shifted from individuals to populations once the tools went digital.
This isn’t speculation.
It’s paper.
Memos read aloud.
Court transcripts.
Buried records that explain why dissent doesn’t always get arrested anymore.
Sometimes it just disappears.
If leaders were erased in the past, the question now isn’t whether suppression exists.
It’s how many voices have already been deleted—without anyone noticing.
Stay curious. Stay grounded.
And remember… no matter what they tell you, the truth is still out there.
They didn’t end COINTELPRO.
They rebranded it.
From the 1950s through the 1970s, the FBI’s COINTELPRO ran covert psychological operations to disrupt, discredit, and destroy movements it labeled “subversive.” The record is no longer in dispute. It’s in memos, court filings, and sworn testimony.
This episode revisits the receipts—then follows what happened next.
We examine how leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. were targeted with intimidation and psychological pressure; how Fred Hampton was drugged and killed during a police raid; and how artists like John Lennon were surveilled for the crime of influence. These weren’t excesses. They were tactics.
Then we track the evolution.
When COINTELPRO was publicly exposed, the program was “terminated.” The methods weren’t. They migrated—into broader surveillance authorities, influence operations, fusion centers, and digital systems that shape visibility, credibility, and reach.
This investigation connects the historical playbook to modern mechanisms:
• Disinformation, forged communications, and media manipulation
• Behavioral profiling and predictive policing
• Fusion centers and inter-agency data sharing
• Algorithmic throttling and reputational suppression
• The quiet targeting of whistleblowers, journalists, and organizers
We also examine COINTELPRO’s documented overlaps with MK-Ultra and how psychological control shifted from individuals to populations once the tools went digital.
This isn’t speculation.
It’s paper.
Memos read aloud.
Court transcripts.
Buried records that explain why dissent doesn’t always get arrested anymore.
Sometimes it just disappears.
If leaders were erased in the past, the question now isn’t whether suppression exists.
It’s how many voices have already been deleted—without anyone noticing.
Stay curious. Stay grounded.
And remember… no matter what they tell you, the truth is still out there.
