Army Reserve Major Bryan Bintliff (AKA Harlow)

USACAPOC, United States Army Civil Affairs and Psychology Operations Command

Posted: September 30, 2025

  • Bintliff goes by Harlow on social media and in his job as an actor

    This link shows a picture of him when he was an Army Captain

    Following Charlie Kirk’s assassination, Bintliff took to threads and openly mocked his death, posting several threads regarding the incident.

    Here are some of his Instagram Thread posts:

    • A monster died today. So did children in Colorado. The children are the only innocents here. It’s awful Charlie’s kids had to see that. That those videos will likely haunt them for their whole lives. But those kids in Colorado are gone, because Charlie promoted the ideology that they were necessary casualties.
    • Kash Patel needs to stop tweeting. What was it, twice they thought they had the guy, but it was a bust? Dude, stfu. You suck at your job. Also, if this shooter is as photogenic as Luigi, we definitely live in a simulation.
    • You can brag all day about taking the high road while the undertow drags you out to sea and drowns you. Tiny face, lower case teeth Theo Fascist Charlie, died not only while being a transphobic, homophobic bigot, he died trying to convince other people to be the same as him. That’s why he died. Do you think he decried the assassination of the MN legislators? He did not. Instead he said Empathy was a disease.
    • Fuck Charlie Kirk. And Fuck Mike Johnson Even More. (above a post about Johnson asking for a moment of silence for Charlie)
    • “Let’s not let him get sugar coated after death. Drag him for all that he was and all the harm he would eventually do if he continued to live.”
  • Smith praised the Army for its steps toward DEI but wants it to become a more inclusive branch:
    • “There are policies, programs and activities that provide for whomever people are, whatever their orientation is,”
    • “We have DEI, and as an Army, I think we are good on the diversity and equity part. The inclusive part was always a struggle. How do we pay it forward? How do we showcase to people who are behind us, who are asking, ‘Is there a place for me in this Army? Can I be myself? Can I be successful? Who has paved the way for me?”
    • “We’ve opened combat arms to women,” he said. “We have leaders who are part of the LBGTQ+ community who are successful commanders. We allow certain platforms to recognize all groups. We we have EEO (Equal Employment Opportunity program) observances or monthly activities for multiple groups. Those are ways to recognize the Army hears those communities and recognizes they may be a small part of the population, but still matter.”

Photo Source: IMDB