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Griffin continued by portraying her call to action as reluctant but necessary, suggesting that radical behavior is unavoidable in the current political climate.
“And I know you don’t want to participate in something radical. I don’t either… but it is happening all around you. It’s happening around you. I live in Los Angeles. It’s happening at targeted places in Los Angeles.”
The most controversial moment came when Griffin urged her followers to personally vet their neighbors and determine where they stand politically.
“I think it’s time to talk to the neighbors in real life. It’s time to talk to your neighbors. Find out if they’re MAGA or not. Sorry, but we have to know who’s on our team and start to plan.”
Critics say that language mirrors tactics used in authoritarian regimes and raises serious concerns about intimidation and harassment of ordinary Americans based solely on their political beliefs.
Griffin then praised activist networks in Minnesota that oppose Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations, describing what she called an advanced underground communication system. According to Griffin, these groups rely on encrypted apps, sound signals, and small cell organization.
WATCH:
“When I hear from my followers in Minnesota, they describe a very sophisticated channel of a system of things that they do to help one another,” Griffin says.
She added further details about how those tactics were developed.
“And they use encrypted apps. And, like I said, everyone has whistles and honks their horn, but they organize in small groups. And they have told me that they learned this from the George Floyd incident, because George Floyd was murdered 20 blocks away from these other murders, roughly. And so they said they learned a lot from that experience.”
Those same encrypted channels were recently exposed after being infiltrated by conservative journalist Cam Higby, whose reporting revealed coordination efforts designed to interfere with federal law enforcement activity.
Griffin closed her remarks with a familiar activist slogan and a self aware jab at her own tone.
“If you’re silent, you are complicit,” Griffin declares at the end of the clip, adding, “Sorry, I know I’m being a judgy bitch.”
The reaction online was swift and intense. Supporters applauded Griffin for what they described as speaking truth to power, while critics accused her of encouraging neighbor against neighbor tactics that threaten public safety and civil peace.
For many conservatives, the episode underscores what they see as an increasingly radical wing of the left that no longer hides its hostility toward Trump supporters. Calls to “start to plan” and identify political opponents at the neighborhood level have only heightened concerns that political rhetoric is sliding toward something far more dangerous.
As the video continues to circulate, questions remain about how far activists are willing to go and whether public figures like Griffin will face accountability for rhetoric that critics argue encourages division, surveillance, and confrontation among everyday Americans.




