The MAGA Misinformation-Industrial Complex

Discussion in 'Politics' started by gwb-trading, Aug 11, 2024.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    The MAGA misinformation-industrial complex has gathered steam since 2020. Here’s how
    https://www.cnn.com/maga-misinformation-trump-conspiracy-theories/index.html

    (CNN) -- If I was trying to blend in, it wasn’t working.

    It was October 2020 – the height of Covid – and I was one of the only people wearing a facemask at a meeting in a drab windowless hotel conference room in Scottsdale, Arizona.

    One attendee, dressed in some kind of elaborate costume, directed a disapproving grunt my way.


    We listened as speaker after speaker explained that Trump was certain to win the 2020 presidential election – then just weeks away – in a landslide. Anything less would be a sign the Democrats had cheated.

    If that happened, warned a man from the podium, we may need to take matters into our own hands. Political violence, he argued, wasn’t all that bad – American history had been shaped by it after all.

    A little more than two months later that man would take part in an attack on the US Capitol. He is now serving an 11-year prison sentence.

    The other man – the one in costume who had grunted – would soon achieve global infamy. His painted face, and his headpiece made of animal horns, would land him on the cover of newspapers all around the world. We’d all come to know him as the “QAnon Shaman.”

    ‘Stop the Steal’ hasn’t stopped
    The Scottsdale event I had wiggled my way into in 2020 was “QCon,” a meeting of QAnon enthusiasts who were still fringe. Trump feigned ignorance about the movement and refused to denounce it. “I don’t know much about the movement other than I understand they like me very much, which I appreciate,” Trump said at the time.

    Some of the people in that conference room talked tough, but, I thought, maybe that’s about all they would do.

    It wasn’t. And we now know what happened next.

    That’s what concerns me most about the moment we are in now in the United States.

    The conspiracy theories didn’t go away. They’ve proliferated thanks to a sophisticated, relentless campaign. A surge of alternative social media sites, so-called “free speech” platforms like Trump’s Truth Social and the video streaming platform Rumble have cropped up. There’s also been an explosion of online MAGA influencers and video streamers, some with millions of followers.

    All of them are pushing the same conspiracy theory: The 2020 election was stolen, and the only way Trump can lose in 2024 is if it is stolen again.

    This is false, of course. Not least since polls show Trump and Harris neck-and-neck.

    In the middle of this growing MAGA misinformation-industrial complex: an affable pillow salesman.

    Mike Lindell, better known as the MyPillow guy, says he had never voted before 2016. Now, he is a Trump ally who is on a misguided crusade to, as he sees it, save American democracy.

    Lindell has bought into the conspiracy theories about the 2020 election – specifically that voting machines were hacked to steal the election (they were not). So he set up his own social media and video streaming services, Frank Social and Frank Speech respectively. They include programming from the likes of Steve Bannon and Rudy Giuliani. Shows decrying the demise of American democracy and warning of stolen elections are punctuated with pillow promotions.

    The Patriot economy
    When I met Lindell recently at the Republican National Convention, he was on his way to a live taping of the Steve Bannon show “War Room” to promote his “political prisoner” special – a discounted deal on a mattress topper. Political prisoners are what the MAGA world calls people convicted for their actions on January 6. It’s also how they sometimes refer to Bannon, who is currently serving fourth months in federal prison for defying a congressional subpoena. Bannon’s daughter filled in for him as host at the RNC.

    A vast array of Trump-supporting, election-denying influencers who are thriving on the new “free speech” platforms have their own pillow promotion codes. They help sell Lindell’s pillows, and in turn they get a cut.

    The promotion of election conspiracy theories is being subsidized by the sale of more and more “patriot products.” There are freedom steaks made from “unvaccinated” cows. A patriot cellular service that bills itself as “America’s only Christian conservative wireless provider.” There is even patriot water named Freedom2O. Its website sells Yeti products inscribed with quips like “This drink ain’t woke.”

    It’s very possible that if you are reading this you’ve never heard of any of these so-called “free speech” social media platforms. We are living in a far more fractured media environment today than we were at the time of the last presidential election.

    Millions of Americans are now getting their news, information, and misinformation on these platforms – and they are being primed for another “stolen” election if things don’t go Trump’s way.

    Many of us want to tune it all out, pretend it’s not happening. We want to ignore the conspiracy theories, the absurdity of QAnon Shamans and “political prisoner”pillow promotions.

    But just because it’s all a bit absurd doesn’t make it any less dangerous.
     
    Ricter likes this.
  2. notagain

    notagain

    They made it "all" obvious.
    Some rich bastards wanted to hire goons, stepping on their own people.
    The goons should have refused to be goons.
    Robbing a sinking ship is causing the ship to sink.
     
  3. Ricter

    Ricter

    I keep remembering that room with guys on laptops connected to a wall of phones, all logged in to different social media accounts.
     
    gwb-trading likes this.
  4. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Report names '35 rogue election officials' already refusing to certify the election
    https://www.rawstory.com/35-rogue-election-officials/

    Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) released a report Monday night identifying 35 "rogue election officials" who are refusing to certify the November election.

    The report, available at this link, first addresses the eight states where officials refused to certify the 2020 election, identified in Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Michigan.

    CREW explains that it isn't legal to not certify the election. So, for officials who seize upon the moment to "politically grandstand," it recommends that legal action be taken.

    Specifically, it cites ex-New Mexico county official Couy Griffin, ex-county officials Jerry Forestieri and Timothy DeHaan in North Carolina and Arizona county officials Ron Gould and Hildy Angiu for their role in attempting to overturn the 2020 election.

    If county officials successfully obstruct certification, it could have a cascading effect on state and federal certification deadlines. It could also lead to mass disenfranchisement of qualified voters.

    Among the legal specifics, CREW cites the Voting Rights Act, a law that prevents "conspiracy against rights" and "deprivation of rights under color of law."

    The full list of "rogue" election officials can be found here.
     
  5. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Let's take a look at MAGA intimidating election officials before November.

    Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson was swatted twice in five days. "I will not be intimidated. These threats never have & never will deter me from my job: ensuring Michigan citizens can have confidence in their secure, fair, accurate election."


    ‘I will not be intimidated,’ Jocelyn Benson says after home ‘swatted’ twice in 48 hours
    https://www.mlive.com/politics/2024...ays-after-home-swatted-twice-in-48-hours.html

    [​IMG]
     
  6. Atlantic

    Atlantic

    "maga" ...

    is dead.
     
  7. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

  8. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

  9. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Here is today's book recommendation. Learn how Autocratic Regimes like the one that Trump and MAGA want to put in place work.

    Autocracy, Inc.: The Dictators Who Want to Run the World
    Amazon - https://tinyurl.com/mtaj46mv

    Autocracy-Inc.jpg

    NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the Pulitzer-prize winning author, an alarming account of how autocracies work together to undermine the democratic world, and how we should organize to defeat them

    "A masterful guide to the new age of authoritarianism... clear-sighted and fearless… a masterclass in the marriage of dodgy government to international criminality… (both) deeply disturbing.”—John Simpson, The Guardian • "Especially timely."—The Washington Post

    We think we know what an autocratic state looks like: There is an all-powerful leader at the top. He controls the police. The police threaten the people with violence. There are evil collaborators, and maybe some brave dissidents.

    But in the 21st century, that bears little resemblance to reality. Nowadays, autocracies are underpinned not by one dictator, but by sophisticated networks composed of kleptocratic financial structures, surveillance technologies, and professional propagandists, all of which operate across multiple regimes, from China to Russia to Iran. Corrupt companies in one country do business with corrupt companies in another. The police in one country can arm and train the police in another, and propagandists share resources and themes, pounding home the same messages about the weakness of democracy and the evil of America.

    International condemnation and economic sanctions cannot move the autocrats. Even popular opposition movements, from Venezuela to Hong Kong to Moscow, don't stand a chance. The members of Autocracy, Inc, aren't linked by a unifying ideology, like communism, but rather a common desire for power, wealth, and impunity. In this urgent treatise, which evokes George Kennan's essay calling for "containment" of the Soviet Union, Anne Applebaum calls for the democracies to fundamentally reorient their policies to fight a new kind of threat.
     
  10. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Cleta Michell to Georgia: "If you don't like the election results, just challenge enough votes. There's no way to check them all before the certification deadline".

    The MAGA clowns are at it again -- attempting to undermine democracy and our voting system.

    Article originally from ProPublica


    Revealed: Election deniers secretly pushed rule to delay certification
    https://www.rawstory.com/election-d...uld-make-it-easier-to-delay-certification-of/

    Georgia’s GOP-controlled State Election Board is poised to adopt a rule on Monday that would give county election board members an additional avenue to delay certification of election results, potentially allowing them to throw the state’s vote count into chaos this fall.

    A former Fulton County election official who submitted an initial draft of the rule told ProPublica that she had done so at the behest of a regional leader of a right-wing organization involved in challenging the legitimacy of American election systems.
    That organization, the Election Integrity Network, is led by Cleta Mitchell, who helped orchestrate attempts to overturn the 2020 election and spoke on the call in which former President Donald Trump demanded that Georgia’s secretary of state “find” him 11,780 votes to undo Joe Biden’s victory.

    The Election Integrity Network’s role in bringing forward the proposed rule has not been previously reported.

    The State Election Board’s Monday meeting comes on the heels of a vote less than two weeks before that empowered county election board members to conduct “reasonable inquiry” into allegations of voting irregularities. That rule did not set deadlines for how long such inquiries might last or describe what they might entail, and critics worried that this omission could cause Georgia to miss the Dec. 11 deadline for sending its certified presidential election results to the federal government.

    The new rule is even more concerning, election experts said, because it requires county boards to investigate discrepancies between the number of ballots cast and the number of people who voted in a precinct, no matter how minor. It bars counties from certifying the election tallies until officials can review an investigation of every precinct with inconsistent totals. Such inconsistencies are commonplace, not evidence of malfeasance, and only in extremely rare circumstances affect the outcome of elections. The requirement to explain every one of them and litigation around investigations into them could take far longer than the time allowed by law to certify.

    “If this rule is adopted, any claims of fraud, any claims of discrepancies, could be the basis for a county board member — acting in bad faith — to say, ‘I’m not confident in the results,’ and hold up certification under the flimsiest of pretexts,” said Ben Berwick, who leads the election law and litigation team of Protect Democracy, a nonprofit that works to protect the integrity of American elections.

    “The bottom line here,” Berwick said, is that “election deniers are intentionally creating a failure point in the process where they can interfere if they don’t like the results of an election.”

    Until 2020, the certification of elections was a noncontroversial part of running them. After Trump made “stop the steal” a rallying cry in his attempt to overturn his loss to Biden, an increasing number of conservative election board members, especially at the county level, have attempted to block certification of subsequent elections. ProPublica has previously reported how these disruptions revealed weaknesses in the nation’s electoral system.

    Among those who would have the ability to slow down the count in the fall is Julie Adams, who is a Republican member of the Fulton County elections board and a regional coordinator with Mitchell’s Election Integrity Network. She was sworn in to the Fulton board in February, and one of her first official acts was to vote against the certification of the March presidential primary election, saying she needed more information to investigate discrepancies. She was overruled by her colleagues. She then sued the board and the county’s election director, asking for the court to find that her duties, such as certification, “are, in fact, discretionary, not ministerial.” The suit is ongoing.

    The State Election Board received the proposed rule in April from Vernetta Nuriddin, a former member of the Fulton County elections board. In an interview on Friday, Nuriddin acknowledged that Adams “brought that particular concern” to her and was “instrumental” in bringing that rule and several others to the board.

    In Nuriddin’s packet of paperwork asking for consideration of the rule, a cover letter said that the “Election Research Institute respectfully submits this petition for adoption.”

    The Election Research Institute is led by Heather Honey, a conservative activist who also played a role in attempts to discredit the 2020 election results and has worked to advance election system overhauls supported by Mitchell, the head of the Election Integrity Network. Another organization Honey co-founded, Verity Vote, is listed as working on “joint projects and events” with the Election Integrity Network in its handbook. Mitchell has praised Honey as a “wonderful person” on her podcast.

    Honey told ProPublica that her institute did not submit the proposed rule. “The Election Research Institute, like many, you know, nonprofits out there, have folks that have expertise in elections,” Honey said in a brief interview. “And so it is not uncommon for folks to seek our advice.” When asked about the language identifying the institute as submitting it, she said she would only answer further questions over email and then hung up. Honey did not respond to an emailed list of detailed questions.

    Mitchell did not respond to requests for comment or a detailed list of questions.

    Neither did Adams. In comments supporting the rule during a public meeting, Adams did not disclose her role originating it but explained that “it’s very hard to certify when you’re not following the law in knowing who voted, where they voted and how many ballots were cast.” She said that the purpose of the rule was to catch “problems beforehand” and that its goal was not “about throwing out precincts.”

    Nuriddin eventually withdrew her submission. She would not say why.

    An almost identical submission was provided to the board at about the same time by Bridget Thorne, a Fulton County commissioner and election denier. The primary difference was that Thorne’s version did not mention the Election Research Institute and said she was submitting it herself.

    Thorne’s proposal was considered by the election board in its May meeting. “My hope is to reel in the blatant Fulton County not running their elections correctly,” Thorne told the board. She acknowledged that she had worked with Nuriddin on the rule, and that Nuriddin had withdrawn her name because “she wanted some tweaking of the language, last minute.”

    In an interview, Thorne said she was encouraged to submit the rule by Honey, Adams and others.

    She said that she did not know where all of the language in it came from because she had consulted with many lawyers and election experts while putting it together, but that some of it had come from herself and Honey. She said that Adams was not a writer but an organizer of the rule.

    Thorne denied the rule was meant to be able to affect the outcome of the election. “The whole rule is to safeguard everybody’s vote,” she said, and to make sure that “nobody’s vote gets watered down by inadvertently double-scanning ballots.”

    In a 45-minute discussion of the rule, a Republican member of the State Election Board warned that it ran “counter to both the federal and the state law” because it suggested counties could ignore the existing legal deadlines. The Republican chair of the board said that “this rule needs a little bit more work on it to make sure that it fully follows the statute” and that it was “not yet ready for prime time.” The board’s only Democratic member emphasized that it “is a criminal act to refuse to certify valid votes.”

    Speaking alongside other conservative elections officials supportive of Thorne, Adams said that if an investigation was able to “find out why the numbers were wrong, a county might be late in certifying but they’d be a whole lot closer in returning accurate results.”

    The five-person board, which has four Republicans on it, voted the proposal down unanimously, while offering to have two members work with supporters to refine the rule for future consideration.

    That wasn’t the end of the proposal. In a matter of days, the Republican House speaker made a new appointment to the State Election Board, replacing a Republican lawyer who practices election law and who had said the rule was illegal and voted against it. In his place, the speaker appointed Janelle King. King is a conservative podcaster and panelist on a Georgia politics TV show, co-chairs a conservative political action committee, has no experience administering elections and has questioned the results of the 2020 election.

    In June, a conservative activist resubmitted the rule with only minor updates, retaining a misspelling in its most important sentence.

    In early August, during a rally in Atlanta, Trump praised by name the three members of the board’s new majority who are aligned with him, calling them “pit bulls fighting for honesty, transparency and victory” and saying they were “doing a great job.”

    Days later, the State Election Board adopted a rule by a 3-2 vote that allowed for county board members to delay certification of election results to conduct a “reasonable inquiry” into them. The Republican chair sided with the lone Democratic appointee in opposition. Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger harshly criticized that rule in a statement that called it “new activist rulemaking.”

    “Quick reporting of results and certification is paramount to voter confidence,” Raffensperger said. “Misguided attempts by the State Election Board will delay election results and undermine chain of custody safeguards. Georgia voters reject this 11th hour chaos, and so should the unelected members of the State Election Board.”

    ProPublica interviewed six election experts about the potential impact of the rule that is scheduled to be considered by the election board on Monday. Five said it seemed more likely to affect urban Democratic counties than rural Republican ones because the former are more populated and have more ballots and voters.

    “The statistical probability of a discrepancy is more likely to occur in counties with many voters,” said Paul Gronke, a professor at Reed College and the director of the Elections and Voting Information Center. “What’s unusual” about the proposed rule “is saying that any discrepancy is enough to refuse to certify a whole precinct’s worth of votes,” without considering the magnitude of the discrepancy or the votes it might disenfranchise.

    The six experts listed off numerous scenarios in which small discrepancies that do not impact the outcome of the election regularly occur, including: ballots getting stuck in scanners and overlooked, citizens checking in to vote and then discontinuing the process before finalizing their vote, memory sticks failing to upload, election systems being slow to update that a provisional ballot has been corrected and so on.

    According to the experts, election laws across America do not allow minor discrepancies to halt the certification process because legally mandated deadlines are tight. There are later opportunities to resolve the discrepancies, such as mandatory audits, investigations and litigation.

    “There’s a process for investigating problems” with vote tallies in the courts, “and so if a candidate feels there’s something wrongly done, they can go to the courts,” said Gowri Ramachandran the director of elections and security in the Brennan Center’s Elections & Government program.

    If the proposed rule were used to delay certification, the battle would shift to the courts, according to the experts. Georgia law is explicit that certification is mandatory and that attempts by county board members not to certify votes would prompt interested parties to seek a writ of mandamus, a type of court order forcing government officials to properly fulfill their official duties. This prescribed remedy goes all the way back to an 1899 decision by the state Supreme Court, arising from a situation in which a county board was overruled when it tried to refuse to certify a precinct to give victory to their preferred candidates.

    What would happen after that is less clear. Numerous outside groups would likely attempt to join the litigation, including the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee. On appeal, cases could end up at Georgia’s Supreme Court. Or they could get moved to federal court. The closest precedent is the recount of the 2000 election in Florida, which only ended after the U.S. Supreme Court stopped the count and awarded the presidency to Republican George W. Bush by a 5-4 vote.

    “The 100% definitive answer is that no one knows how such a crisis would play out,” said Marisa Pyle, the senior democracy defense manager for Georgia with All Voting is Local Action, a voting rights advocacy organization. “No one wants to find out."
     
    #10     Aug 19, 2024