Den Tarragon sends in his Bully Boy.
Online Feud Escalates as Tarragon Deploys Bully Boy/Enforcer in Bizarre Historical Spat.
In the increasingly convoluted and bitter world of online historical debate, a new front has opened, moving from intellectual disagreement to outright intimidation. The central figure, a controversial agent provocateur under the name Den Tarragon, has reportedly dispatched his Bully Boy defender to issue threats against a rival researcher, Matt Taylor.
This escalation comes in the wake of what sources describe as a series of public relations disasters for Tarragon. He is said to have suffered a significant defeat in a digital debate with the popular YouTube supremo known as Jupiter, followed by further criticism from ‘Taffy,’ a prominent voice from the Welsh Valleys known for denying the truth of King Arthur II.
Amidst this turmoil, Matt Taylor publicly presented evidence that paints Tarragon not as a legitimate researcher, but as a “cheap agent provocateur,” who replies on “pseudo evidence,” to validate his argument.
It was this act that appears to have triggered the latest, and most sinister, development.
The response came not from Tarragon himself, but from an account named ‘I Love Fishing,’ widely seen as Tarragon’s online Bully Boy/Enforcer. The message was a blunt command: “Leave Den alone. He is one of the best guys you could ever meet.”
Taylor, refusing to be cowed, issued a public challenge, drawing a parallel to a past controversy. “I would have been saying the same thing years ago, 'Leave John Wanoa alone. He is one of the best guys you could ever meet,'" Taylor replied. "I would love to discuss this live on my show."
The retort from ‘I Love Fishing’ was swift and laced with calculated venom. In a deliberate act of disrespect, he intentionally misspelled the name of Taylor’s former associate as ‘John Wankoa’.
“He played a small part in calling out John Wankoa,” the enforcer wrote, before issuing a more direct threat disguised as a warning. “Just do as you are told and leave Den alone.”
Perhaps most revealing was the subsequent boast, which laid bare the real-world implications of this digital feud. “I have never met John Wankoa. I have met Den, many times and in fact I drove with him when we doorstepped a few of his enemies.”
The admission of participating in “doorstepping”—the practice of confronting individuals uninvited at their homes—marks a serious escalation, moving the conflict from the keyboard to the doorstep.
The exchange concluded with ‘I Love Fishing’ attempting to debunk one of Taylor’s long-standing projects, stating, “The evidence is that there is NO moai powerhouse business. Never was.”
The situation raises alarming questions about the nature of online discourse. What begins as a war of words over history and evidence appears to be spilling over into campaigns of harassment and real-world intimidation, with controversial figures employing loyalists to do their dirty work while they remain in the shadows. The community now watches to see if Matt Taylor will stand his ground, or if the bully boys of the internet have succeeded in their mission to silence a critic.
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