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Author Topic: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2  (Read 420273 times)

Offline Tom Scully

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #216 on: July 18, 2020, 12:51:07 PM »
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People need to remember that Steele, himself, said his "dossier" was 70% to 90% accurate, which is pretty darn good for raw intel of this sort.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/nov/15/christopher-steele-trump-russia-dossier-accurate

Whatever shortcoming it may have had don't vitiate Mueller's findings that the Kremlin interfered on the side of Trump in our election.

--  MWT  ;)

From Putin's lips to his "poodle's" collar?



Quote
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/2018/02/13/was_christopher_steele_paid_by_russian_oligarch_deripaska_434204.html
Was Christopher Steele Paid by Russian Oligarch Deripaska ..
.
Among Waldman's clients is Oleg Deripaska, a Russian aluminum magnate with close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin. In a text dated March 16, 2017, Waldman texted Warner, "Chris Steele ...

Or :
https://www.justice.gov/storage/120919-examination.pdf
.....




« Last Edit: July 18, 2020, 12:55:39 PM by Tom Scully »

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #216 on: July 18, 2020, 12:51:07 PM »


Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #217 on: July 18, 2020, 12:58:34 PM »
Everybody with half a brain knows what the plan was for the Durham investigation; dig up as much dirt as possible and publish a report a couple of months prior to the election, so that the Republicans and Trump can attack the Democrats with something, just like they did with Hillary Clinton and her "e-mail scandal" in 2016.

The Durham investigation is basically nothing more than a replacement for the bogus Hunter Biden/Burisma/Ukraine that blew up in Trump's face.

In recent days the Republicans have begun talking about the possibility that Durham may not finish his report on time and they it might not be ready until after the election. The reason for this delay seems obvious to me. Durham most likely hasn't found anything major, or significant, putting the entire Republican strategy at risk. If he publishes his report on time, we may all learn that except for some minor stuff there really isn't anything there and that of course would not only be a major embarrasment for the Republicans but also leave them with nothing to attack Biden with.

By postponing the publication until after the election, which is what will likely happen, they will avoid that embarrasment and at the same time still be able to make all sorts of vague false insinuations....

Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #218 on: July 18, 2020, 01:00:25 PM »
Agreed Mark. Could be his false flag operation in late October to stop the election taking place.

Do you really think Putin will allow Trump to start a war with China? Really?

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #218 on: July 18, 2020, 01:00:25 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #219 on: July 18, 2020, 01:06:21 PM »
Everybody with half a brain knows what the plan was for the Durham investigation; dig up as much dirt as possible and publish a report a couple of months prior to the election, so that the Republicans and Trump can attack the Democrats with something, just like they did with Hillary Clinton and her "e-mail scandal" in 2016.

The Durham investigation is basically nothing more than a replacement for the bogus Hunter Biden/Burisma/Ukraine that blew up in Trump's face.

In recent days the Republicans have begun talking about the possibility that Durham may not finish his report on time and they it might not be ready until after the election. The reason for this delay seems obvious to me. Durham most likely hasn't found anything major, or significant, putting the entire Republican strategy at risk. If he publishes his report on time, we may all learn that except for some minor stuff there really isn't anything there and that of course would not only be a major embarrasment for the Republicans but also leave them with nothing to attack Biden with.

By postponing the publication until after the election, which is what will likely happen, they will avoid that embarrasment and at the same time still be able to make all sorts of vague false insinuations....

All these scams are red meat for the kool aid drinking base. There's nothing to them. This is another "Hillary's emails" 2.0.

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #220 on: July 18, 2020, 01:18:06 PM »
People want 4 more years of death and virus with a failed loser like Donald Trump who does nothing? Hell no they don't. COVID-19 is worse now than  it was in March. Other countries have gotten the virus under control. The USA is supposed to be a leader setting an example for the world. The USA is the worst in the world and Americans are banned from traveling to other countries.  The USA is no longer looked up to as a leader. Other countries have taken the lead and we have lost our standing in the world. We are a failed nation under decline with Donald Trump. Our economy is in shambles, people are weak, sick, and dying. Hospitals are at full capacity and sick people are not going to be able to get critical care. Refrigerator trucks are being used for temporary morgues. Do people want to live this way with a president who tells you "it will magically go away when its hot"? It's hot now and more people are dying. Donald Trump is a disgrace.


It's not only coronavirus cases that are rising now COVID deaths are too
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/its-not-only-coronavirus-cases-that-are-rising-now-covid-deaths-are-too/2020/07/17/193006e8-c868-11ea-8ffe-372be8d82298_story.html

Texas Hits More Record Highs in COVID-19 Cases, Deaths Friday
Texas reported a single-day record of 174 new deaths related to the coronavirus Friday

https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/texas-news/texas-hits-more-record-highs-in-covid-19-cases-deaths-friday/2408850/

Portable Morgues On The Way To Arizona As Coronavirus Surges
Refrigerated trucks are on the way to Phoenix as coronavirus cases and deaths surge in Maricopa County, the epicenter of Arizona's outbreak.
https://patch.com/arizona/phoenix/portable-morgues-way-phoenix-coronavirus-surges

Arizona reports 3,910 new coronavirus cases, 91 more deaths
https://ktar.com/story/3403725/arizona-reports-3910-new-coronavirus-cases-91-more-deaths/

California’s coronavirus infections are skyrocketing. Is this the time to reopen schools?
https://www.sacbee.com/podcasts/article244258612.html

Tennessee flagged as a ‘Red Zone’ for COVID-19 cases
https://www.wkrn.com/community/health/coronavirus/tennessee-flagged-as-a-red-zone-for-covid-19-cases/

Arkansas logs largest daily increase in COVID-19 hospitalizations
https://wreg.com/news/coronavirus-in-arkansas-governor-hutchinson-state-leaders-give-update-on-covid-19-response-in-conway/

Oklahoma sees 1,075 single-day increase in COVID-19 cases; 4 more deaths
https://www.enidnews.com/news/covid19/osdh-oklahoma-sees-1-075-single-day-increase-in-covid-19-cases-4-more-deaths/article_df6046d4-c6b5-11ea-a86e-fb292f97ef73.html

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #220 on: July 18, 2020, 01:18:06 PM »


Offline Paul May

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #221 on: July 18, 2020, 04:06:53 PM »
Fox News peddled misinformation about the coronavirus 253 times in five days: study

Roger Sollenberger

A new study finds that Fox News peddled misinformation about the coronavirus pandemic 253 times in only five days. The documented instances included claims which undermined science and faith in experts, as well as demands that schools and businesses reopen at the risk of public health.

Primetime host Laura Ingraham, who has no medical or scientific background whatsoever, led the pack with about a quarter of the claims — 63 total, or just more than 12 per show. Additionally, the network's "straight news" programs contributed about 35% of the misinformation.

The study, published Thursday by media watchdog Media Matters for America, was conducted from July 6 to 10 — the week after a Yahoo News report proclaimed that Fox's coronavirus coverage had taken a "remarkable turn" for the better.

However haltingly and incompletely, the president's favorite news outlet has started to acknowledge, across various programs and its news site, that the coronavirus is a far graver threat than even [President Donald] Trump himself will acknowledge.

That report cited two articles on the network's website and two instances of Fox News personalities Sean Hannity and Steve Doocy making remarks about masks that, while stopping short of endorsements, did not mock them outright.

The article also pointed out that Fox News requires its employees to wear masks at work most of the time. Additionally, the network appears to have canceled a Fox Nation show about the pandemic hosted by coronavirus conspiracy theorist Alex Berenson, though extant episodes remain available.

The data in the Media Matters study flatly contradicts the isolated examples from the Yahoo report. Here is a quick breakdown:

About half the incidents — 115 claims — challenged scientific consensus and undermined official government recommendations, such as social distancing and masking guidelines.
"The Ingraham Angle" was the clear leader of the pack, pushing misinformation 63 times, more than half of which came from Ingraham herself, who undermined science a staggering 21 times in five days.
"Fox & Friends" took second place with 45 instances; "Hannity" and "Tucker Carlson Tonight" finished in a dead heat for third, clocking 21 and 20 instances, respectively.
Straight news programs delivered more than a third of the misinformation, led by Martha MacCallum's "The Story" with 20 claims.
Eight claims defended or endorsed unproven remedies such as hydroxychloroquine, days after the FDA told people not to take it outside of hospitals or clinical trials.
The network politicized the pandemic 63 times, including 51 claims that regulations requiring masks and closing businesses were rooted in politics and 10 false claims linking recent racial justice protests to a surge in new infections.
Hosts advocated 34 times to disregard public health concerns in favor of reopening the country's more than 100,000 K-12 schools.
The misinformation and the seeming coordination with official White House talking points has raised alarm among experts.

For instance, in a "Hannity" interview July 10, the last day covered in the study, Trump responded to a question about the nation's top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, by saying "he's made a lot of mistakes."

That interview fed an ongoing White House effort to discredit Fauci, who pushed back by calling such efforts "bizarre."

"Ultimately, it hurts the president," he said.

Then there is the matter of schools. The network and the administration, including Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, for weeks trumpeted an American Academy of Pediatrics statement advising a measured reopening of schools.

The misinformation's momentum eventually compelled the academy — together with with the two largest educators' unions in the country and the School Superintendents Association — to clarify its statement. It now says that reopening "will clearly require substantial new investments in our schools and campuses," and calls on Congress and the administration "to provide the federal resources needed" to safely educate and care for students.

In an earlier Media Matters audit of the cable network, Fox News posted a 20% decline in its coronavirus coverage between March and May.

But this unrelenting misinformation campaign comes amid a massive surge in COVID-19 infections, which has ravaged healthcare resources in Sun Belt states such as Arizona, California, Florida and Texas. In recent weeks, the U.S. has set seven records for daily new cases, topping 68,000 on July 10, the same day which Trump, who said on numerous occasions that the virus would "miraculously" disappear in April, told Hannity that Fauci had "made a lot of mistakes."

Now, many states are walking back reopening measures. California closed restaurants, movie theaters and bars. Arizona also shuttered movie theaters and bars, plus gyms and water parks.

On July 13, Fox Business host Lou Dobbs wondered "what in hell is going on" as closures increased. Dr. Marc Siegel, a Fox medical expert, criticized the policies as "not consistent," "punitive" and "draconian."

However, there are some fractures within the network. A study from April showed that viewers of Hannity were more likely to die of COVID-19 than Carlson's viewers. Now, the two seem neck-and-neck in misinformation.

Carlson, who in June broke Hannity's all-time ratings record, recently claimed there was "no evidence" that masks help constrain the pandemic, in contradiction of guidance from the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Hannity, meanwhile, took the opposite view.

"I went to my grocery store every week. Guess what?" the host recently asked. "They wore masks. Nobody at my grocery store, thank God, got coronavirus."

"I think they work," he added.

Offline Thomas Graves

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #222 on: July 18, 2020, 04:28:59 PM »
Fox News peddled misinformation about the coronavirus 253 times in five days: study

Roger Sollenberger

A new study finds that Fox News peddled misinformation about the coronavirus pandemic 253 times in only five days. The documented instances included claims which undermined science and faith in experts, as well as demands that schools and businesses reopen at the risk of public health.

Primetime host Laura Ingraham, who has no medical or scientific background whatsoever, led the pack with about a quarter of the claims — 63 total, or just more than 12 per show. Additionally, the network's "straight news" programs contributed about 35% of the misinformation.

The study, published Thursday by media watchdog Media Matters for America, was conducted from July 6 to 10 — the week after a Yahoo News report proclaimed that Fox's coronavirus coverage had taken a "remarkable turn" for the better.

However haltingly and incompletely, the president's favorite news outlet has started to acknowledge, across various programs and its news site, that the coronavirus is a far graver threat than even [President Donald] Trump himself will acknowledge.

That report cited two articles on the network's website and two instances of Fox News personalities Sean Hannity and Steve Doocy making remarks about masks that, while stopping short of endorsements, did not mock them outright.

The article also pointed out that Fox News requires its employees to wear masks at work most of the time. Additionally, the network appears to have canceled a Fox Nation show about the pandemic hosted by coronavirus conspiracy theorist Alex Berenson, though extant episodes remain available.

The data in the Media Matters study flatly contradicts the isolated examples from the Yahoo report. Here is a quick breakdown:

About half the incidents — 115 claims — challenged scientific consensus and undermined official government recommendations, such as social distancing and masking guidelines.
"The Ingraham Angle" was the clear leader of the pack, pushing misinformation 63 times, more than half of which came from Ingraham herself, who undermined science a staggering 21 times in five days.
"Fox & Friends" took second place with 45 instances; "Hannity" and "Tucker Carlson Tonight" finished in a dead heat for third, clocking 21 and 20 instances, respectively.
Straight news programs delivered more than a third of the misinformation, led by Martha MacCallum's "The Story" with 20 claims.
Eight claims defended or endorsed unproven remedies such as hydroxychloroquine, days after the FDA told people not to take it outside of hospitals or clinical trials.
The network politicized the pandemic 63 times, including 51 claims that regulations requiring masks and closing businesses were rooted in politics and 10 false claims linking recent racial justice protests to a surge in new infections.
Hosts advocated 34 times to disregard public health concerns in favor of reopening the country's more than 100,000 K-12 schools.
The misinformation and the seeming coordination with official White House talking points has raised alarm among experts.

For instance, in a "Hannity" interview July 10, the last day covered in the study, Trump responded to a question about the nation's top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, by saying "he's made a lot of mistakes."

That interview fed an ongoing White House effort to discredit Fauci, who pushed back by calling such efforts "bizarre."

"Ultimately, it hurts the president," he said.

Then there is the matter of schools. The network and the administration, including Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, for weeks trumpeted an American Academy of Pediatrics statement advising a measured reopening of schools.

The misinformation's momentum eventually compelled the academy — together with with the two largest educators' unions in the country and the School Superintendents Association — to clarify its statement. It now says that reopening "will clearly require substantial new investments in our schools and campuses," and calls on Congress and the administration "to provide the federal resources needed" to safely educate and care for students.

In an earlier Media Matters audit of the cable network, Fox News posted a 20% decline in its coronavirus coverage between March and May.

But this unrelenting misinformation campaign comes amid a massive surge in COVID-19 infections, which has ravaged healthcare resources in Sun Belt states such as Arizona, California, Florida and Texas. In recent weeks, the U.S. has set seven records for daily new cases, topping 68,000 on July 10, the same day which Trump, who said on numerous occasions that the virus would "miraculously" disappear in April, told Hannity that Fauci had "made a lot of mistakes."

Now, many states are walking back reopening measures. California closed restaurants, movie theaters and bars. Arizona also shuttered movie theaters and bars, plus gyms and water parks.

On July 13, Fox Business host Lou Dobbs wondered "what in hell is going on" as closures increased. Dr. Marc Siegel, a Fox medical expert, criticized the policies as "not consistent," "punitive" and "draconian."

However, there are some fractures within the network. A study from April showed that viewers of Hannity were more likely to die of COVID-19 than Carlson's viewers. Now, the two seem neck-and-neck in misinformation.

Carlson, who in June broke Hannity's all-time ratings record, recently claimed there was "no evidence" that masks help constrain the pandemic, in contradiction of guidance from the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Hannity, meanwhile, took the opposite view.

"I went to my grocery store every week. Guess what?" the host recently asked. "They wore masks. Nobody at my grocery store, thank God, got coronavirus."

"I think they work," he added.

Dear Gentlemen,

What does a porous-to-tiny-droplets but breath-and-sneeze-blocking mask protect more -- the wearer, or the people around the wearer?

D'oh

--  Mudd Wrassler Tommy  ;)

Offline Paul May

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #223 on: July 18, 2020, 04:32:36 PM »
For those (Storing) believing Donald Trump in 2020 is running against Joe Biden, he’s not. Poll numbers? Who cares. Trump has one opponent he cannot scream at or demean on Twitter. It’s an opponent who will not debate. It’s an opponent who will have the last word.

We haven't even gotten into Trump's cratering poll numbers. Wanna? Listen up Storing. He is down by double digits nationally, down by double digits in most battleground states, and even down in double digits among his own Republican base when it comes to his performance in handling the coronavirus. And then there are the worst numbers of all: almost 140,000 dead, with the CDC estimating 170,000 by Aug. 8. A record 77,000 people were diagnosed with the virus on Thursday, and 926 died. The numbers keep going up almost every day.

Trump likely could run unopposed.....and lose.

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #223 on: July 18, 2020, 04:32:36 PM »