The Right produces and needs non-stop conspiracies to counter t***h and reality--and they buy it hook, line, and sinker
This is so utterly laughable, to the reasonable and sane, as to be above any mention...yet is typical of the Right, even basic, so needs to be addressed. Conspiracy theories are not fringe but the foundation of their allegiance to Trump; it allows their dev**ed following.
At a White House briefing on the c****av***s March 20, President Donald Trump called the State Department the “Deep State Department.” Behind him, Dr. Anthony S. F***i, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, dropped his head and rubbed his forehead. The straight talking and knowledgeable words of this "elitist" Dr. F***i, an obvious operative for the "deep state" sharing medical facts, has been excluded from the last two p**********l briefings.
Some thought F***i was slighting the president, leading to a vitriolic online reaction. On Twitter and Facebook, a post that falsely claimed he was part of a secret cabal who opposed Trump was soon shared thousands of times, reaching roughly 1.5 million people.
A week later, F***i — the administration’s most outspoken advocate of emergency measures to fight the c****av***s outbreak — has become the target of an online conspiracy theory that he is mobilizing to undermine the president.
That fanciful claim has spread across social media, fanned by a right-wing chorus of Trump’s supporters, even as F***i has won a public following for his willingness to contradict the president and correct falsehoods and overly rosy pronouncements about containing the v***s.
An analysis by The New York Times found more than 70 accounts on Twitter that have promoted the hashtag #F***iFraud, with some tweeting as frequently as 795 times a day. The anti-F***i sentiment is being reinforced by posts from Tom Fitton, the president of Judicial Watch, a conservative group; Bill Mitchell, host of far-right online talk show “YourVoice America”; and other outspoken Trump supporters such as Shiva Ayyadurai, who has falsely claimed to be the inventor of email.
Many of the anti-F***i posts, some of which pointed to a seven-year-old email that the doctor had sent praising Hillary Clinton when she was secretary of state, have been retweeted thousands of times. On YouTube, conspiracy-theory videos about F***i have racked up hundreds of thousands of views in the past week. In private Facebook groups, posts disparaging him have also been shared hundreds of times and liked by thousands of people, according to the Times analysis.
One anti-F***i tweet Tuesday said, “Sorry liberals but we don’t trust Dr. Anthony F***i.”
The torrent of falsehoods aimed at discrediting F***i is another example of the hyperpartisan information flow that has driven a wedge into the way Americans think. For the past few years, far-right supporters of Trump have regularly vilified those whom they see as opposing him. Even so, the campaign against F***i stands out because he is one of the world’s leading infectious disease experts and a member of Trump’s v***s task force, and it is unfolding as the government battles a pathogen that is rapidly spreading in the United States.
It is the latest twist in the ebb and flow of right-wing punditry that for weeks echoed Trump in minimizing the threat posed by the c****av***s and arguably undercut efforts to alert the public of its dangers. When the president took a more assertive posture against the outbreak, conservative outlets shifted, too — but now accuse Democrats and journalists of trying to use the p******c to damage Trump politically.
“There seems to be a concerted effort on the part of Trump supporters to spread misinformation about the v***s aggressively,” said Carl Bergstrom, a professor of biology at the University of Washington who has studied misinformation.
Adding that F***i is bearing the brunt of the attacks, Bergstrom said: “There is this sense that experts are untrustworthy, and have agendas that aren’t aligned with the people. It’s very concerning because the experts in this are being discounted out of hand.”
Are these assholes still here?
rumitoid wrote:
This is so utterly laughable, to the reasonable and sane, as to be above any mention...yet is typical of the Right, even basic, so needs to be addressed. Conspiracy theories are not fringe but the foundation of their allegiance to Trump; it allows their dev**ed following.
At a White House briefing on the c****av***s March 20, President Donald Trump called the State Department the “Deep State Department.” Behind him, Dr. Anthony S. F***i, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, dropped his head and rubbed his forehead. The straight talking and knowledgeable words of this "elitist" Dr. F***i, an obvious operative for the "deep state" sharing medical facts, has been excluded from the last two p**********l briefings.
Some thought F***i was slighting the president, leading to a vitriolic online reaction. On Twitter and Facebook, a post that falsely claimed he was part of a secret cabal who opposed Trump was soon shared thousands of times, reaching roughly 1.5 million people.
A week later, F***i — the administration’s most outspoken advocate of emergency measures to fight the c****av***s outbreak — has become the target of an online conspiracy theory that he is mobilizing to undermine the president.
That fanciful claim has spread across social media, fanned by a right-wing chorus of Trump’s supporters, even as F***i has won a public following for his willingness to contradict the president and correct falsehoods and overly rosy pronouncements about containing the v***s.
An analysis by The New York Times found more than 70 accounts on Twitter that have promoted the hashtag #F***iFraud, with some tweeting as frequently as 795 times a day. The anti-F***i sentiment is being reinforced by posts from Tom Fitton, the president of Judicial Watch, a conservative group; Bill Mitchell, host of far-right online talk show “YourVoice America”; and other outspoken Trump supporters such as Shiva Ayyadurai, who has falsely claimed to be the inventor of email.
Many of the anti-F***i posts, some of which pointed to a seven-year-old email that the doctor had sent praising Hillary Clinton when she was secretary of state, have been retweeted thousands of times. On YouTube, conspiracy-theory videos about F***i have racked up hundreds of thousands of views in the past week. In private Facebook groups, posts disparaging him have also been shared hundreds of times and liked by thousands of people, according to the Times analysis.
One anti-F***i tweet Tuesday said, “Sorry liberals but we don’t trust Dr. Anthony F***i.”
The torrent of falsehoods aimed at discrediting F***i is another example of the hyperpartisan information flow that has driven a wedge into the way Americans think. For the past few years, far-right supporters of Trump have regularly vilified those whom they see as opposing him. Even so, the campaign against F***i stands out because he is one of the world’s leading infectious disease experts and a member of Trump’s v***s task force, and it is unfolding as the government battles a pathogen that is rapidly spreading in the United States.
It is the latest twist in the ebb and flow of right-wing punditry that for weeks echoed Trump in minimizing the threat posed by the c****av***s and arguably undercut efforts to alert the public of its dangers. When the president took a more assertive posture against the outbreak, conservative outlets shifted, too — but now accuse Democrats and journalists of trying to use the p******c to damage Trump politically.
“There seems to be a concerted effort on the part of Trump supporters to spread misinformation about the v***s aggressively,” said Carl Bergstrom, a professor of biology at the University of Washington who has studied misinformation.
Adding that F***i is bearing the brunt of the attacks, Bergstrom said: “There is this sense that experts are untrustworthy, and have agendas that aren’t aligned with the people. It’s very concerning because the experts in this are being discounted out of hand.”
This is so utterly laughable, to the reasonable an... (
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Nothing new here. Conservatives don't believe in g****l w*****g due to greenhouse gasses either. They only believe what Trump tells them to believe because after all he is the greatest expert in everything.
Lonewolf wrote:
F*****m at its best
F*****m?? Look in the mirror lately??
proud republican wrote:
F*****m?? Look in the mirror lately??
If I didn't know better I would think this was a liberal f*****t forum based on the comments made so far.
LAPhil wrote:
If I didn't know better I would think this was a liberal f*****t forum based on the comments made so far.
Agreed!
They who live in glass houses shouldn't throw the first stone!!
proud republican wrote:
F*****m?? Look in the mirror lately??
I’m confused, is this democratic f*****m or
Republican f*****m??
proud republican wrote:
HYPOCRITE !!! img src="https://static.onepolitica... (
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Me thinks thou doth protest too loudly!
Milosia wrote:
I’m confused, is this democratic f*****m or
Republican f*****m??
Ask Lonely....He will tell you!!
If you don’t like Science
There’s always religion!
You told him to look in the mirror.
This is why I asked you.
Milosia wrote:
You told him to look in the mirror.
This is why I asked you.
Ok,Democratic F*****m!! Feel better now??
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