General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Y'all are gonna have to go on without me. I'm 81, and I've fought... [View all]mahina
(18,938 posts)is disinformation and information bubbles.
Hoping to remember who wrote an article I read today about a new method of disinfo- embedding a revolting lie in the middle of what looks like a pro-Harris ad.
I don't have any happy talk for you but hope you can think about Timothy Snider, keep listening and reading and you find your center again. Thank you for being here with us. Also seconding the lounge suggestion though you know your mind. Sending you aloha and a prayer to hold the light.
https://www.brookings.edu/articles/how-disinformation-defined-the-2024-election-narrative/
There are many reasons for the stunning election victories of Donald Trump and congressional Republicans: inflation fears, concerns about border security, worries about cultural issues related to race, gender, and sexuality, and feelings that President Joe Biden and the country as a whole were headed in the wrong direction. As my colleague Bill Galston persuasively has argued, peoples judgements about inflation and immigration were harsh during this election season, and these views harmed their assessments of Kamala Harris and strengthened the case for Trump.
But we cant ignore the ways in which disinformation shaped views about the candidates, affected how voters saw leader performance, and generated widespread media attention. As Elaine Kamarck and I argue in our Brookings Press book Lies That Kill: A Citizens Guide to Disinformation, there are systematic and organized efforts to shape public opinion in many areas, from public health and climate change to race relations.
So, we shouldnt be surprised that the same thing happened during the 2024 election. Campaign examples this fall include the infamous stories about immigrants eating cats and dogs, hurricane disaster relief funding going to undocumented immigrants, Kamala Harris in a swimsuit hugging convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, and the supposed case of Tim Walz abusing a young man 30 years ago. Disinformation flowed into our info-ecosystem from other countries as well. One video featured a Haitian man (although he was not really Haitian) saying he had just gotten to the United States and had voted in two countiesGwinnett and Fultonin Georgia, but it turned out to be a fake video made in Russia.
These and other efforts were successful in shaping the campaign narrative because they were disseminated broadly on social media platforms, promoted through funny memes, picked up and publicized by mainstream media outlets, circulated by internet mega-influencers, and amplified by leading candidates during rallies, debates, and interviews. In a situation where public confidence in news reporters is very low and new generative AI tools make it easy to create and disseminate fake pictures, videos, and narratives, the 2024 campaign was rife with organized efforts to sway voters, twist perceptions, and make people believe negative material about various candidates. /snip