Everyday Erinyes #168

 Posted by at 8:59 am  Politics
Jun 012019
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

When David and Barbara Mikkelson got divorced, I admit I was concerned about the future of Snopes dot com. David had founded it in 1994, but Barbara had been doing most of the writing, and apparently, most of the fact checking. But, as it turned out, there was actually no cause for concern.

When the site was founded, it was mostly focused on fact-checking urban legends. I always felt it was scrupulously honest, using such gradations as “Partly True” and “Mostly False” in addition to the obvious “True” and “False,” and thus giving at a glance a more accurate picture of reality than most.

After the dust had settled from all the changes, and now that it is actually owned by an entity called “Snopes Media Group” – although David is still there – and has added staff substantially:

Now our team of researchers, writers, developers, and support staff is probably greater than you can fit in a large passenger van, although we haven’t scientifically tested that yet.

it has become a force to be reckoned with.

My attention was drawn to it recently by an article (“diary”) in Daily Kos which cited a “must-read” article at Snopes. I would say the Snopes article is indeed a must-read for anyone who wants to be familiar with the details of how Facebook (along with other social media) is being used, not just to spread misinformation, but to make it so ingrained in the minds of those who fall for it, that it becomes almost impossible to communicate the truth.

This article, by Alex Kasprak (everything is by-lined at Snopes; no one hides behind anonymity, and all sources are linked), reports on a two-month-long investigation Alex did into

a small group of radical evangelical Christians that re-purposed Facebook pages and PACs to build a coordinated, pro-Trump network that spreads hate and conspiracy theories.

The page names imply groups, and the names put together imply diverse groups – at least, sort of diverse. But all the pages – Alex found 24 and suspects there may be more – can be tied to one person. That person is Kelly Monroe Kullberg. Kullberg is neither black nor Jewish, despite both of those groups showing up in some of the group names. Another group which turns up is women – and I’m sad to sad that apparently Kelly is a woman, though she doesn’t appear to be a “senior” (another group) and I doubt she’s a veteran (another group), although that, alas, is not impossible.

Watch the GIF to see a string of group names. The GIF is from all of those pages, and more.

Snopes refers to this collection of pages as “the Kullberg network,” and also found that there is one prominent GOP donor (there may be more, but they found one) funding (and possibly exploiting) the network. That donor is William Millis, a fundraiser and board member for the 2016 Presidential campaign of Ben Carson.

Facebook’s terms of use forbid “coordinated inauthentic behavior.”

Why is this important?

  • The network serves to influence public opinion by presenting the views of a small group of activists as representative of a much broader swath of the American populace.
  • Their strategy amplifies and offers a veil of legitimacy to hatred and conspiracy theories.
  • In spite of these strategies awash in misinformation, the pages within the network have attracted the financial backing of well-heeled political donors who exploit these pages and groups to disguise the origin of political Facebook ads. 

Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone., the good news is that you don’t need to do anything. An update from Snopes states that all 24 of the pages they identified as being in the Kullberg network have been taken down. It’s true that Facebook has not directly responded to any of Snopes’ requests for comment. It’s also true that there may be more pages in the network than Snopes was able to identify. It’s also true that there are other “networks” out there preaching the same hate. But I don’t know enough to send you after any of them. And Snopes seems to be doing a pretty good job.

My original link to the investigation was to the summary article. If anyone wants to dig deeper into the subject, the full background is HERE.

The Furies and I will be back.

Cross posted to Care2 HERE.

Share

  9 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #168”

  1. Very nicely done, JD.  I’ve depended on Snopes as reliable truth-tellers for years.  In fact, I’m using s clip of theirs today. 04

  2. Great post!
    Snopes has been my friend for several years now, and right at my fingertips if I have a question. 
    Nowadays, it’s more frequent checking, then has been in the past too. 

    Thanks, Joanne for your detailed explanation(s), and why this is so important to fact check these days

  3. Interesting post. I had heard of Snope before, but thought it was a site about gossip.
    I appreciate you complete explanation about it.
    I bookmarked it and it will become a site that I can visit often.

  4. I also appreciate your reporting on the reporting!  
    What a damned shame!  It seems that evangelical Christians have no problem stooping to the lowest levels they can in pushing their very Un-Christian hatred. It reminds me of Hitchens’ “Religion Poisons everything.”

  5. Yet another reason to avoid Facebook like Chernobyl. A lot of people set up “sock puppet” accounts that they pretend are other individuals who just happen to agree with them. Glad to see Facebook eliminated Kullberg’s hateful network. People like him inspire the worst people to do the worst things. Unfortunately, there are plenty more Kullbergs out there spreading their vile poison all over the Internet.

  6. i would rather do my own fact checking, which always takes lots of searching. Relying on one site to check your facts, prepare to be duped.
    “A lot of people trust the website Snopes.com and use it to fact-check things they hear on the internet. For no reason whatsoever, this mom-and-pop website has been put on a pedestal as if they are the be-all and end-all of truth on the internet.
    Facebook recently teamed up with Snopes, allowing them become an arbitrator of fake news circulating on their network, essentially elevating them as an authoritative source of information. I find this development alarming on many levels:
    While there is some fake news on the internet, this opens up the possibility that op-ed’s and independent journalism will get labeled as “fake news” if Snopes doesn’t agree with an opinion.
    Articles can be deemed “false” if Snopes conducts sloppy fact checking. When it comes to the topic of food, it is imperative that everyone understands that this field is rampant with corrupt paid-off scientists and front groups that are working to protect profits of corporations at the expense of our health. You can not always trust information coming from self-proclaimed independent experts, and sources must be vetted extensively.
    We all have the ability to use critical thinking skills while reading news on Facebook or any other online platform – and should determine for ourselves what is false and what is the truth – instead of relying on the work of websites like Snopes to do that for us.
    Everyone should feel empowered to seek out the truth on their own. Especially when it comes to our health, we need to be our own advocates and investigate the food that we are eating.
    This is treading too close to the line of censorship and can stifle our freedoms to express our ideas.”
    More here & on the net;
    https://foodbabe.com/do-you-trust-snopes-you-wont-after-reading-how-they-work-with-monsanto-operatives/

  7. Animae, you sure can pick the winners.  LOL!  Food Babe is primarily a marketing site and Hari has neither a science or nutrition degree.  She rakes in big bucks using a Republican tactic: fearmongering to scam her readers. 35

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.