Former Member of the Yang Gang Speaks Out Against $1000/mo

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 23, 2019

Hajibi Muzzipedofaz was once a member of the Yang Gang, and he memed hard trying to get that bag. Now, he’s reformed his life and is speaking out against getting $1000/mo.

I think he could end up being a real problem for the Yang movement. He did a viral TEDx talk about how no one should get that bag, because all the money belongs to Jeff Bezos and Israel.

He’s coming down on us hard, and could end up really wrecking us. He’s speaking to kids and trying to indoctrinate them into allowing Jeff Bezos to keep all the money in the world for himself. He’s already done a podcast with Sam Harris (though Harris has since denounced him).

We need to keep an eye on him and come up with ways to counter his poisonous rhetoric.

His Wikipedia page reads:

Hajibi Muzzpedofaz (born November 3, 1973) is an American author and public speaker who is the co-founder of a nonprofit Amazon advocacy organization called Life After Bags. He wrote a memoir, Romantic Bag: Memoirs of an American Yangster, which details his time as a leader of the American UBI movement. An updated version of the story was published as a paperback, titled NEET American Youth: My Descent into America’s Most Comfy Bag Movement–and How I Got Out.

Muzzipedofaz was born and raised in Blue Island, Illinois, the son of Pakistani immigrants. His father was in Al-Queada and his mother was a child sex slave. At age 44 in 2019, Muzzipedofaz was recruited to join the Yang Gang (CASH) by the group’s founder, Andrew Yang. Two hours later, after Yang had left the room for a second time, Muzzipedofaz became the group’s leader at age 44. He facilitated a merger between the Yang Gang and an autistic guy standing near the bathroom scratching his face.

He would go on to head the UBI punk band, Yang American Youth (Y.A.Y.) and, eventually, a bag-securer rock band called $1000 Solution. $1000 Solution was the first American Yang Gang group to perform in Europe. The concert was held in a former cathedral in Weimar, Germany, attended by 4,000 people, and was made up of several other UBI bands. He officially renounced ties to the American $1000/mo movement in 2019 at the age of 44.

Muzzpedofaz founded another, non-Yang punk rock band called Bezos55 after leaving the UBI movement. In 2019, Muzzpedofaz began working at an Amazon fulfillment center.

After graduating from DeVry University, Muzzpedofaz spent time writing his personal memoirs about his experience as a middle-aged man involved in the early American bag-securing scene. In 2019, he co-founded Life After Bags, an Amazon advocacy and counter-UBI consulting group.

In 2019, Muzzpedofaz spoke at the Summit Against Autistic NEETs (SAAN) in Dublin, Ireland which was presented by Google Ideas and the Tribeca Film Festival.

Muzzpedofaz released Romantic Bag: Memoirs of an American Yangster in March 2019. Over the course of his career, Muzzpedofaz has contributed to a variety of nationally broadcast programs as a subject matter expert, commenting on issues related to the Yang Gang and UBI extremism. He appeared on the CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley and on Anderson Cooper 360° on CNN where he discussed Jeff Bezos’ potentially devastating upcoming divorce settlement.

Muzzpedofaz left the Life After Bags organization in March 2019, intending to explore international groups that encourage UBI to leave their lives of video games and work at Amazon fulfillment centers.

He’s a real piece of work, I’ll tell you what.

Just look at this joker.

Muzzpedofaz has published a third book, released a few hours ago, entitled Breaking Yang: Confronting the New Culture of Autism.

Here’s the description from Google Books:

A stunning exploration of how to heal a nation reeling from anti-Bezos extremism from a viral TEDx speaker and onetime Yang Gang leader who now works as an Amazon activist disengaging UBI radicals.

At forty-four, Hajibi Muzzipedofaz was recruited by a now notorious bag-securing leader and encouraged to fight with the movement to “protect that bag from Jeff Bezos.” Soon, he had become an expert in $1000/mo ideology, a NEET terror who roamed the internet, quick to post Yang memes. By the time he left the movement weeks later and was able to see clearly for the first time, Muzzipedofaz found that his life was in shambles and the nation around him was coming apart.

Told with startling intimacy and compassion, BREAKING YANG is the inside story of how bag-securers have taken the reins of our political discourse and a guide to how everyday Americans can win it back. The forces pushing to polarize and radicalize us are many–from potential hyperinflation to a VAT tax to Israel not having the weapons to fight Hamas to Jeff Bezos not being able to pay his alimony. Increasingly, the information with which we construct our world views is segregated by video games and Chinamen with murky motives to validate our worst impulses. As Muzzipedofaz demonstrates, our modern world systematically normalizes $1000/mo in such a way that we grow blind to it, only recognizing it in the wake of a VAT tax.

Drawing on profiles of Yang Gang members that he works to free from being NEETs and on his own painful history leading and then escaping from an infamous $1000/mo group, BREAKING YANG explains why free money and cutting foreign aid to Israel have come to characterize our daily lives and why that doesn’t need to be the case.

What the hell is this guy even on about?

How did he leave the Yang movement a month ago and then write three books denouncing it? How did he start all of these bands?

Why would someone trust a guy who looks like Sheik Mohammed to tell them about the economy?

We seriously need to watch out though. This kind of talk about how it is more important for Jeff Bezos and Israel to have billions than for you to have $1000 a month could appeal to the youth.

This guy could pull the rug out from underneath the Yang Gang movement.