The common varient of The Bartholumeth-Linchon Memetic Agent; consisting the demon "Kalos"

The common varient of The Bartholumeth-Linchon Memetic Agent; consisting the demon "Kalos"

The Bartholumeth-Linchon Memetic Agent is a memetic/cognitohazardous image that places any Sleeper Agents of the foundation to suddenly activate, which likely leads to their return to the Foundation. This memetic agent is notably used for the activation of RSCP Foundation Sleeper Agents, GFAH Sleeper Agents, etcetera. Several variants of the memetic agent exist for separate versions across multiple Foundation branches and GFAH related branches, including non-foundation Related Divisions.

History

The Bartholumeth-Linchon Memetic Agent was first theorized during a RSCP Foundation and Division GLOBAL-FAH symposium on covert operatives and long-term asset dormancy. The goal: create a cognitohazardous trigger that could bypass conventional communication channels and activate embedded agents without compromising operational security.

The Creators of the Memetic Agent; Dr. Eliza Bartholumeth (RSCP Foundation, Memetics Division) and Dr. Renald Linchon (RSCP Foundation, Behavioral Engineering Unit) collaborated on the prototype. Their combined expertise in memetic encoding and neurocognitive imprinting led to the first successful activation trials in 2003.

Common Usage

The agent takes the form of a seemingly innocuous image—often symbolic—embedded with layered memetic triggers. These triggers are only cognitively accessible to individuals who have undergone specific neuro-conditioning protocols. Upon exposure, conditioned individuals who undergone sleeper programs will experience a cascade of psychological responses:

  • Dissociation from civilian identity
  • Reassertion of mission loyalty
  • Compulsion to return to designated rendezvous points or Foundation facilities

Multiple variants exist, each tailored to the memetic encoding standards of different organizations:

  • RSCP Foundation (Alpha, Delta, and Omega branches)
  • Division GLOBAL-FAH (Central and Peripheral Divisions)
  • Non-Foundation Related Divisions (e.g., the Karswell Institute, the Vireline Compact)

Evolution and Deployment

  • 2005–2012: The agent was refined into modular formats, allowing for deployment via digital media, physical documents, and even subliminal broadcast. During this period, sleeper agents embedded in hostile or neutral territories were successfully reactivated with minimal collateral.
  • 2013 "The “Echo Variant” Incident": A corrupted version of the agent—known as the Echo Variant—accidentally triggered mass activation across incompatible sleeper networks, leading to a chaotic convergence at RSCP Site-09. This incident prompted a full audit and redesign of memetic containment protocols.
  • 2020–Present: Modern variants now include adaptive encoding layers that respond to environmental context and individual psychological drift. This ensures only relevant agents are activated, reducing false positives and operational risk.

Strategic Implications

  • Operational Sovereignty: The Bartholumeth-Linchon Agent allows organizations to maintain long-term influence without direct oversight, embedding loyalty deep within the subconscious of operatives.
  • Ethical Controversy: Critics within both the RSCP Foundation and Division GLOBAL-FAH's Ethics Committee and external watchdog groups have raised concerns about autonomy, psychological harm, and the potential for misuse—especially in non-Foundation divisions with looser oversight.
  • Countermeasures: Rival organizations have begun developing anti-memetic shielding and cognitive firewalls to prevent unauthorized activation. Some factions within Division GLOBAL-FAH have even explored reversible conditioning, though success remains limited.

Internal Report

Following the collapse of Operation Veilroot and the failure to recall embedded operatives in the Karswell Zone, the RSCP Foundation authorized Project Genesis: a joint initiative with our own Division GLOBAL-FAH to develop a cognitohazardous trigger capable of activating sleeper agents without direct contact. The project was greenlit under Directive 7.3.1, which is listed as 'to ensure operational sovereignty over long-term embedded assets through non-verbal, non-traceable activation mechanisms.'