Mike Belcher posted a series of tweets on December 3, 2025, addressing topics ranging from personal safety to drug policy and political history.
In a tweet at 2:52 a.m. UTC, Belcher advised, “Don’t leave angry, just leave.”
Later that day, at 1:02 p.m. UTC, he discussed situational awareness in response to perceived threats: “As long as tyrants are inflicting anarcho-tyranny on the people you need to up your situational awareness. Put the phone away. Don’t go to sleep. Look around. Carry a gun if you’re able. Anyone purposely throwing a liquid on you might just need to be presumed a deadly threat.”
At 3:54 p.m. UTC, Belcher commented on drug legalization debates and their historical context: “If your solution to Chinese and cartel fentanyl and other chemical warfare is ‘just legalize it’ I have to inform you that you’re just dutifully parroting the line of the Soviets via the ComIntern that infiltrated college ‘liberty’ movements many decades ago – including the work”
Belcher’s comments about “anarcho-tyranny” reference an idea describing governments or regimes seen as failing to enforce laws against serious crime while imposing strict regulations or punishments for minor infractions—a term popularized in some conservative circles.
His remarks regarding fentanyl mention both Chinese suppliers and Mexican cartels, reflecting ongoing concerns about international sources contributing to opioid distribution in the United States.
Belcher also alludes to historical Soviet influence through the Communist International (ComIntern), an organization established in Moscow after World War I with aims of promoting communist ideology abroad. Claims of Soviet infiltration into Western organizations have been part of political discourse since the Cold War era.
