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Are we really as divided as we have been led to believe?

I read an article today about how Russian bot heavily influenced the negative social media reception to “The Last Jedi”

It’s fascinating how broadly the Russians are willing to reach to amplify that which divides us.

All the arguing over Dems vs Repubs recently... how much of it is being amplified by agents (not secret agents dummy!) that benefit from the chaos.

My advice to those that find themselves sucked into an irrational argument is to step back and ask yourself: are you accomplishing anything?

Once someone shows evidence of not discussing with sincerity, there’s no point in continuing to engage those folks.

Just something to consider.
Keraunos · 36-40, M
The only thing fascinating is that there are actually people who fall for this "Russians bots are responsible for everything I don't like" conspiracy theory.
JaggedLittlePill · 46-50, F
Farrell, Henry. "The U.S. has just accused Russia of hacking America's elections. That's a very big deal." Washingtonpost.com, 8 Oct. 2016. General OneFile, link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A465892874/ITOF?u=nhc_main&sid=ITOFξd=0ac60f12.

DiResta, Renee. "Russia's Information Warfare." New York Times, 18 Dec. 2018, p. A23(L). Global Issues in Context, link.galegroup.com.ezproxy.snhu.edu/apps/doc/A566070991/OVIC?u=nhc_main&sid=OVICξd=da7c7478.

https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C14&q=russian+bots+and+the+2016+election&btnG=

The last is a google scholar search which you could perform yourself to read anything you want about the evidence found that Russia launched a campaign of disinformation online and not just in America. Have a lovely day.
JaggedLittlePill · 46-50, F
@Keraunos it derived from the Russian disinformation campaign. please stop. you are not helping yourself. again.... have a nice day.
Keraunos · 36-40, M
@JaggedLittlePill You just saying "it derived from the Russian disinformation campaign" and then doing the in-text equivalent of throwing up your hands and sighing at my alleged hopelessness is not an actual argument. You need to provide some basis for why it might be reasonable to believe that (which, in fairness, you can't do, because it isn't).

Two of those links you provided do not appear to be possible to view without having login data for Southern New Hampshire University. The original [i]Washington Post[/i] article popped up readily in a search, but I am not finding that exact [i]New York Times[/i] article (I assume from its date of publication that it deals with the Senate Intelligence Committee reports from December?). But that's fine, we can start with the [i]Washington Post[/i] one.

First, what is up with this headline?

[quote]The U.S. has just accused Russia of hacking America’s elections. That’s a very big deal.[/quote]

This is a blatant lie right out of the door, and given how many people these days just catch a glimpse of an article's headline while foregoing the article itself: "That's a very big deal." If you read its contents, nothing like that accusation has actually been put forward. Misleading headlines of this sort have led some people into sincerely believing that our intelligence agencies have accused the Russian government of directly hacking into our voting machines and changing the outcome of the election. This is similar to how a great many Americans ended up coming to believe that Saddam Hussein had something to do with 9/11 back in 2002 and 2003, despite no one [i]technically[/i] saying so if you paid enough attention.

Next, two questions for you: do you know the meaning of the word "evidence", and did you actually read this article? Because all it is doing is reporting that U.S. intelligence agencies said the Russian government "interfer[ed] with the U.S. presidential election" by hacking into some email accounts. The article openly admits that no evidence has been provided for these claims, and even concedes that governments often have good reason to lie about this sort of thing and should not necessarily be taken at their word.

In fact, it seems this usually turns out to be what people come up with when asked for evidence of the "Russian bots" conspiracy theory: not evidence as such, but [i]appeal to authority[/i] — merely reminding us that our intelligence agencies claim certain things have taken place. Well, yes, everyone knows that already, this is how the narrative got put forth in the first place. But it is no reason to suppose it's true. To quote a previous post I made on this site:

[quote]Frankly, I'm not even sure what the hell is going on with this idol-worship of the "intelligence people" by allegedly-liberal dissenters nowadays. These are the same motherfuckers who lied us into the Iraq War. The same motherfuckers who've backed coups in countless other countries. The same motherfuckers who blatantly perjured themselves by denying mass surveillance of American citizens just months before the Snowden leaks. The same motherfuckers who tried to blackmail Martin Luther King, Jr. out of the civil rights movement. The same motherfuckers who used to perform human experiments on Canadian psychiatric patients in hopes of finding a mind-control drug. It is almost incomprehensible how lackwitted and selectively inattentive to reality a person would need to be to actually believe that our "intelligence people" are good, credible people who do not habitually operate with insidious ulterior motives.[/quote]

On the other hand, Assange himself has said that his sources for the DNC and Podesta leaks were not linked to any sovereign state. Assange has run an organization dedicated to transparency which has never to this day run a false story, to his own great personal imperilment. On the question of who to take at their word, Assange or our venerable intelligence agencies, it hardly needs to be said who is more trustworthy.

But the problem is actually worse than this. Take a look at what this accusation of interference in our election really is. The accusation being made is certainly [i]not[/i] that anyone "hacked our election", but that they [i]truthfully notified the American public of corrupt behavior on the part of a leading U.S. presidential candidate[/i]. It is not at all obvious that the American public was done any disservice here regardless of who is responsible, and it is kind of shocking how successful our intelligence agencies have been in painting this in any kind of negative light to begin with.
it is called, "Divide and Conquer" as long as we fight our countrymen, we are not noticing the whole sale Theft of our national economy, [b]by the powerful, for the powerful.[/b]
the same it true in Russia, where they have a similar mythology about how they have to beat the bad old Americanski, or thwart the Ukraine or own the Crimea

It is a most Ancient Con job
JaggedLittlePill · 46-50, F
@SatyrService it is definitely an ancient con job. We just now have a better platform for spreading it like wildfire.
JoeyFoxx · 51-55, M
Indeed.

Within the US, this started in the 20’s.

The Rockefeller’s dispatched people to create conflict where there was none.

The common folks fight amongst one another and the rich proceed unnoticed.

The wall and the “national emergency “ is a shell game being played in Washington, and we are buying into it.

@SatyrService
Sicarium · 46-50, M
Did you ever stop to consider that just maybe the Russian boogeyman excuse is being used to rile you up, or do you just blindly accept it everytime someone screams, "The Russians Did It!"?
Sicarium · 46-50, M
@JoeyFoxx So, that's a "no".
@Sicarium I think it very much did,, did you not just suggest that all this is a smoke screen? whether Blame the Russians OR the Libtards.

it is still there to distract us.
Sicarium · 46-50, M
@SatyrService No, the reality was as just demonstrated by @JoeyFoxx. This is all nonsense to justify closed-minded, tribalist idiocy.
SevIsPamprinYouAlways · 56-60, F
Well, as long as this is occurring, I'm afraid so:

The problem is people can't go far if one side is willing to understand their political opponents while the others keep fanning the hatred. It's got to go both ways.
Ryannnnnn · 31-35, M
Which further instantiaties that we should be critical of all we hear and pay attention more to our own lives and follow our selves rather than the unstrustworthy notions of others. Not looking to one source but hearing both sides and being aware of the current climate of information.
Primnproper · 56-60, F
Sometimes when I see some here and the way they bicker I think they almost enjoy it..it's sickening that they can't agree to disagree they always get personal and attack.
We can only be divided if we cooperate.
Badly phrased. We can only be divided if we cooperate with those who would divide us. @JoeyFoxx
JoeyFoxx · 51-55, M
Ahhh. Yes. That makes more sense.

I think many don’t realize how easy it is to be insincere on the Internet.
@Mamapolo2016
It's easy to be insincere anywhere. Sincerity is the tough one, and it's so unfashionable.@JoeyFoxx
Harriet03 · 41-45, F
[image deleted]
JaggedLittlePill · 46-50, F
I am trying.
JaggedLittlePill · 46-50, F
P.s. I have been reading all about this through research for a paper I am writing for my class...there are so many things that I have come to learn from this!
SevIsPamprinYouAlways · 56-60, F
@strongbow [image deleted]
SevIsPamprinYouAlways · 56-60, F
@strongbow [image deleted]

 
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