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Senate Report Shows Russia Used Social Media To Support Trump In 2016 (bbc.co.uk) 388

AmiMoJo shares a report from the BBC: Russia used every major social media platform to influence the 2016 US election, the report claims. New research says YouTube, Tumblr, Instagram and PayPal -- as well as Facebook and Twitter -- were leveraged to spread propaganda. Its authors criticize the "belated and uncoordinated response" by tech firms. It is the first analysis of millions of social media posts provided by Twitter, Google and Facebook to the Senate Intelligence Committee. Russia adapted techniques from digital marketing to target audiences across multiple channels, with a particular focus on targeting conservatives with posts on immigration, race, and gun rights. There were also efforts to undermine the voting power of left-leaning African-American citizens, by spreading misinformation about the electoral process.

"What is clear is that all of the messaging clearly sought to benefit the Republican Party -- and specifically Donald Trump," the report says. "Trump is mentioned most in campaigns targeting conservatives and right-wing voters, where the messaging encouraged these groups to support his campaign. The main groups that could challenge Trump were then provided messaging that sought to confuse, distract and ultimately discourage members from voting."

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Senate Report Shows Russia Used Social Media To Support Trump In 2016

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  • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @09:15PM (#57821218)
    I swear, I've never seen such a longrunning and ineffective damage control campaign for a losing candidate. Is this a sign they really are going to run her again in 2020?
    • by arbiter1 ( 1204146 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @09:22PM (#57821248)
      Russia attacked both sides, they had meme's that attack Both Clinton and Trump. They want people to think it was only Clinton they attacked and it was reason they lost. Last i checked Clinton didn't show up here in Michigan til Mon nov 7th's, 1 day before voting happened. It wasn't Russia that turned Michigan Red. It was Clinton's lack of doing anything to get out there to get people to vote for her on top of all the very questionable legal issues surrounding her and all the money they some how many since leaving the white house.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        It's clearly a false equivalence to suggest the Russians equally attacked both sides.

        They did not.

        They sowed dissension, but they knew the core republicans would vote for whoever the republican candidate was, regardless.

        They also knew that they could discourage and disenfranchise voters in the center and on the left by creating division among their ranks.

        And that's exactly what they did.

        A lot of people didn't vote because they were disgusted by the infighting and the mud-slinging and felt there wasn't a cle

      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @04:27AM (#57822632)

        Russia attacked both sides, they had meme's that attack Both Clinton and Trump.

        Yes they did. It has been reported on and was detailed in the Cambridge Analytica investigation.
        They targeted not just "both" side but many sides and found out that they got the most bang for the buck by riling up the right-wingers against Clinton.

      • It is kind of fishy since the only people who hated Trump more than Democrats were Republicans. He was not their candidate and so only backed him since no one else was interested in the usual suspects. The Democrats gave the election to Trump by allowing Hillary to be nominated. Not that the rank and file had a choice since Hillary's nomination was given to her as the result of a deal anyway. There were so many better candidates than Hillary that wee over looked. Bernie ran anyway but had to quit when he
    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Either that or Chelsea Clinton.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @09:25PM (#57821266)
      yes, Clinton could have won if she'd just taken Trump seriously. Also if she took notice of how badly beaten up the working class was. Her solution to everything was more education. For a woman who'd spent her entire life living large off the fruits of her education that makes sense. She's a classic left wing, elitest do gooder: she can't understand why folks don't just reach out their hands for all the money out there when it's all so easy. She's literally unable to comprehend that it's not so easy for most of us.

      But all that said:

      1. She still won the popular vote.

      2. She lost by a razor thin margin. So thin that all she needed was to focus a bit more on the rust belt but...

      3. By the same token that razor thin margin means that stuff that ordinarily shouldn't have mattered, mattered.

      TL;DR; I think Clinton could have won if she tried harder, but I don't think she'd have lost without Russian interference and that last minute Oct surprise from Comey pushing Trump over the edge.
      • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @10:27PM (#57821546)

        I don't think she'd have lost without Russian interference and that last minute Oct surprise from Comey pushing Trump over the edge.

        Isn't that a bit like saying "I don't think he would have died without that hangnail and the bullet piercing his heart." One seems slightly more likely to have affected the outcome in question than the other.

        People keep talking about "Russian interference", but if it was that easy to sway votes with a few anonymously-placed ads or astroturfing bots, it seems the campaigns are awfully incompetent with the $2.4 BILLION spent on the presidential race. I mean, surely the next presidential candidate who hires a Russian strategist is a shoo-in, since they apparently have some untapped genius for getting candidates elected without anyone even noticing.

        • it's more like saying:

          "I wouldn't have died from the hangnail if my immune system wasn't weakened by lead poisoning and constant illness from the bullet wound I got 30 years ago"

          Like I said, Hillary had a _lot_ of baggage, much of it manufactured by a multi-million dollar right wing apparatus that saw she was getting ready to run for president and so came at her like a ton of bricks. Now, as a presidential candidate it was her responsibility to defuse those attacks (as opposed to throwing fire on th
          • Grow the fuck up you fucking infant.

            This is the delusional garbage people end up spewing when they sit around in a informational echo chamber on social media instead of having a good cry in their pillow on election night because their candidate didn't win waking up and acting like a fucking adult.

          • by gtall ( 79522 )

            Politically, I think it is worse than this. That idiot is run what used to be the intelligent part of the Republican party out of the party. Now all that is left are Republicans who do not believe in founding American values and would be just as happy with a dictator.

            • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

              Which American value would that be? It couldn't be the concept of "innocent until proven guilty" or the right to face your accuser in a court of law, because you seem to be ok with Obama tearing those apart.

      • Uhhh, what? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Obfuscant ( 592200 )

        1. She still won the popular vote.

        There is no "popular vote" for the US President. Please refer to the Constitution if you are confused about the process the US uses to elect the President. I'm sure there is a Wikipedia page about it if the old words are hard.

        2. She lost by a razor thin margin.

        "She won ... she lost ...". What? Trump won the electoral college 304-227. That's not "razor thin".

        I think Clinton could have won if she tried harder, but I don't think she'd have lost without Russian interference

        Do you have evidence that any Russians voted illegally in the 2016 Presidential election? That would be a good argument for voter ID, you know.

        You do realize that lots of non-US people

        • There is no "popular vote" for the US President.
          Go obfuscate yourself with extreme prejudice, jackass.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        yes, Clinton could have won if she'd just taken Trump seriously.

        Whether she won or lost is largely irrelevant. An attack on our country's sovereignty occurred and our current leader supports those actions, going so far to do everything he can get by with to weaken and destroy key pillars of our democracy to save his own ass. He fosters tribalism because it benefits him, the same way Putin foster'd it in America because it benefits him. They both are perfectly fine with watching America burn if it helps them.

        "Also if she took notice of how badly beaten up the working

      • Her solution to everything was more education.

        Which is fine if you're 18 and living at your parents place. If you're pushing 40 and feel like an old dog who doesn't want to learn any new tricks, it comes across as condescending.

        Granted, Trump's "MAGA" was a bullshit snake oil pitch, but some people would just rather hear the fairy tale where you go back to work in the coal mine, rather than the one where you get to star in your own remake of Billy Madison.

      • TL;DR; I think Clinton could have won if she tried harder,

        I don't know if "try harder" is the way to put it. She basically put all her resources into it. You might say she should have allocated resources differently, visited different states, but I don't know if she could have tried any harder.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @04:55AM (#57822704) Homepage Journal

        The left is focused on basics like education and healthcare because those are the things that tend to keep people poor. Education opens up more opportunities, and that includes learning trades as well as purely academic study.

        Clinton's real problem was that she had too much baggage. Nothing was wrong with her policies really. She was an easy target for a populist promising to "drain the swamp" and offer a bunch of simplistic solutions to complex problems that in reality take many years of sustain effort to fix.

      • > 1. She still won the popular vote.

        Clinton did not win "the popular vote", because there was no popular vote.

        There was only an electoral vote. And people may or may not vote differently based on the type of vote.

        Some people lived in a very "red" or "blue" state, so perhaps they stayed home, because it did not make a difference. Or perhaps they voted for Johnson because they knew it did not make a difference in said red or blue state.
        Or perhaps they lived in a "swing state" and were unsure, so they vote

      • Clinton might also have won if she hadn't put that fake, wide grin on her face every time a camera was pointed at her. Really, not a single one of her PR advisers was able to tell her how creepy that felt, and that she could earn sympathy points -easily- by just looking serious for a second?

    • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @09:27PM (#57821272)

      The only people I hear bring her up are Republicans who keep going "Lock Her Up". Whether Trump worked Russia seems important because, you know, if he keeps working with Russia, that's really bad.

    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      This is what happens when you raise someone to the status of your own personal deity. It kind of sucks, hard, when you find out she isn't. I doubt they will run her again. Already the democrats are tossing her, and the rest of her family, under the bus. Their brand is to heavily damaged.

    • Yes, friend, she did. But understand this: The ENTIRE COUNTRY got ass-raped in 2016, not just Democrats. Russia? Know what they say? They say " " (mission accomplished) and break out the good vodka. They helped turn this country upside down. It'll be DECADES before we fix all the damage that orange haired sonofabitch has done -- and THEY HELPED regardless of being asked to or not.
  • by Rick Zeman ( 15628 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @09:19PM (#57821236)

    ...we can't just drop the Soviet Union, err Russia from routing tables.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @09:28PM (#57821278)
    no matter what he does or says or what comes out. Hell, he's mad that he took Pence as his VP because it turns out the Evangelicals will support him no matter what. These same Evangelicals just elected a dead pimp [pressherald.com]

    To me the Russian interference is like a vial of blood in a shark pool. It didn't take much, but without the vial there wouldn't have been a frenzy. And we shouldn't be surprised. Vlad Putin's specialty was information warfare for Christ's sake. It's not like we weren't warned. He saw a weakness (Hilary) and exploited it to weaken us further.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      The obvious problem being that this support was bipartisan, as several pieces of evidence now clearly showed. The "social media ads"?

      They supported both Clinton and Trump. The aim was clearly polarisation of the extremes of the supporting bases of each candidate, not supporting either of the candidates. You can see this in pretty much everything publicly released so far, from the facebook ads to the various reports.

      Trump's popularity on the other hand doesn't drop for a very simple reason. Political smear j

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by quantaman ( 517394 )

        The obvious problem being that this support was bipartisan, as several pieces of evidence now clearly showed. The "social media ads"?

        They supported both Clinton and Trump. The aim was clearly polarisation of the extremes of the supporting bases of each candidate, not supporting either of the candidates.

        Polarization was an objective, but so was Trump. To say the Russian interference "supported both Clinton and Trump" is to ignore overwhelming evidence to contrary.

        Trump's popularity on the other hand doesn't drop for a very simple reason. Political smear jobs based on misunderstandings, misrepresentations and lies have to take out their target quickly. If they don't, the audience of the target sees one lie, than another lie, and then they simply assume that everything else coming out of those sources is probably a lie.

        Virtually none of the attacks against Trump are "smear jobs", "misunderstandings", "misrepresentations", or "lies". The reason they don't hurt Trump's popularity is that virtually everyone except his base has abandoned him. And his base doesn't care about the attacks because they don't care if he's a corrupt businessman who colluded with Russia. T

        • by Jack9 ( 11421 )

          > Globalism is just robust international trade and institutions.

          The simplicity of this statement is misleading. It's relevant to recognize the distasteful relevant practical relationship between these terms. "Robust" encompasses the economically supported exploitation of labor by totalitarian states (eg Chinese Manufacturing, African Diamond Mines, Venezuela oil) empowering these organizations. "Globalism" is a soft term that encompasses the humanitarian/political forces across the "globe" that result i

        • Virtually none of the attacks against Trump are "smear jobs", "misunderstandings", "misrepresentations", or "lies".

          The ones that matter are.

          The idea that he's some sort of "white supremacist" is precisely a smear job, a lie. And it's really all you have.

          It's also ludicrous, as he's been in the public eye all his life. No, we really didn't just discover in 2016 that he's secretly a Nazi, lol. And people not blinded by partisanship know that.

          The reason they don't hurt Trump's popularity is that virtually everyone except his base has abandoned him.

          You kept saying that during his campaign too.

          Who knows, you might be right at some point, if you keep saying it. It's not a really great prediction record so far though.

        • And yet, France had protests that literally showed that Trump's paradigm shift clearly happened in France too,

          Yeah, no, that's just stupid. Trump is putting industry titans in charge of everything and getting rid of safety and environmental standards might make coal slightly cheaper but at the cost of the health of the people involved in it. He's too damn corrupt to represent anyone but the elite. And though China needs to be brought into line -- his hamfisted approach and alienation of allies who might have been engaged in forcing China to respect IP are going to work against him.

          Trump is just a dumpster fire and

      • by fatwilbur ( 1098563 ) on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @02:46AM (#57822402)
        Hear hear. This story is a couple of days old and amazingly for once, didn't get heavy coverage outside of the usual foaming-mouth anti-Trump sources. I have hope to believe it's because many news outlets rightfully laughed at the conclusions of the report.

        I don't live in nor vote in the United States, and I have to say I find much more objective coverage of Trump in my country. We still definitely have some of those same foaming-mouth outlets, but they are generally easier to spot for their heavy left-leaning bias. I think every politician and their policies should be heavily scrutinized, but I can't understand how people still live this "Russia hacked the election and colluded with Trump" given the actual evidence that has come out. If there was any "Trump support" from these online trolls, it was because they clearly hated Hillary vs. liking Trump. But the Senate wants you to believe some online trolls posting memes stole an entire election. Ridiculous.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          the usual foaming-mouth anti-Trump sources/quote

          Like the BBC?

          The coverage was a little muted because this is just the warm up. The Senate will now act on this report somehow, which is when the fun really starts.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @04:48AM (#57822678)

        > They supported both Clinton and Trump.

        The summary states the exact opposite. I'm not sure where you got this from. At best there were a handful of example supporting Hilary to create division compared to hundreds of thousands in support of Trump.

        > Trump's popularity on the other hand doesn't drop for a very simple reason. Political smear jobs based on misunderstandings, misrepresentations and lies have to take out their target quickly.

        This doesn't make sense as most of the attacks on Trump (such as his rapey comments) were factual, whilst the attacks on Hillary and the Dems (PizzaGate) were lies, so it doesn't explain how Trump survives, but Hillary didn't. If what you said was true then Hillary would be in the whitehouse because the smears against her were often lies, whereas those against Trump were factual (and continuously prove to be so).

        > it's genuinely hard at this point to take any critique of Trump without reacting "ok, show me the full context of this claim you have".

        Right, but that's not because of the reason you give, that's simply because you're a well known Trump supporter on Slashdot and are incredibly partisan. You won't believe negative news about Trump because you'll support him regardless. You're one of those supporters that would support him if, in his own words "I could shoot somebody and I wouldnâ(TM)t lose any voters".

        > Which is why you should be genuinely afraid of Trump if you're against his agenda. Not because of the contents of his agenda, or because of any of the smears. You should be afraid of him because there's one thing on which Bannon was completely correct in that Munk debate. Trump is the paradigm shift, where disenfranchised people actually found franchise, and where there are now too many people who have been disenfranchised by the globalist trend. To the point where it's not limited to the continent - Yellow Jackets was a part of the exact same paradigm shift in a country that is about as different as a country could be to US while still remaining a part of "Western" umbrella. Utterly different court system, literal codification of anti-theism into all government functions, very socialist policies. And yet, France had protests that literally showed that Trump's paradigm shift clearly happened in France too, and it reached a point where it cannot be simply dismissed as "those deplorable people that are beneath us that we will call names and dismiss as if they're irrelevant".

        An alternative world view is that we should be scared of Putin, because we thought we'd won the cold war in the early 90s and turned our backs and started to focus on sideshows like the Taliban and ISIS. Meanwhile, Putin spent 20+ years building up his intelligence apparatus to infiltrate Western society left and right, hence why people like Arron Banks in the UK have a wife who was exposed as a Russian spy, and who is also the person who illegally funded Brexit way beyond campaign spending laws with money that can't be traced back to his actual business because it comes from Russia. We saw the St Petersberg convention, where Russia hosted all of Europe's far right, and they all came away with millions of pounds in funding, some of it overt (France's NF) and some of it covert but now exposed (UKIP). In the UK we're seeing the same pattern repeat now with Tommy Robinson having Russian propaganda support on social media, and we've seen it across Europe with Hungary's Jobbik, Italy's Five Star, Greece's Golden Dawn, Germany's AfD, and so on. That's not to say it's restricted to the far right, though that's Russia's preference as it's the orthodoxy it now follows at home, but if no convenient far right actor exists, or is unlikely to succeed Russia will support the far left too (Podemos in Spain and Syriza in Greece for example).

        It's not some weird coincidence that Russia hosted all these parties and/or their key figures, and that clear links to Russia keep getting exposed to their financing and online propaganda support. It's not some conspi

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        They supported both Clinton and Trump.

        They did not. The report clearly says that the "support" for Clinton was only to the extent that it pushed her supporters to be more extreme and make her and the Democrats look bad, e.g. by attacking Sanders.

        In fact they did a lot of sabotage Clinton. Releasing those emails just before the vote, spreading misinformation to discourage or prevent her supporters from voting.

        "populism" is now considered a bad word

        It always was. It refers to politics that offers seemingly simple solutions to often largely invented problems for the sake of gaining pow

      • They supported both Clinton and Trump. The aim was clearly polarisation of the extremes of the supporting bases of each candidate, not supporting either of the candidates.

        "They" what? Ads in general or what the Russians were targeting? The entire report is covering them using sophisticated data and supporting Trump directly by targeting people who were susceptible to their messages -- usually based with fear and xenophobia.

        And we have seen so many lies about Trump and his purported actions that were just patently false on the face of it, it's genuinely hard at this point to take any critique of Trump without reacting "ok, show me the full context of this claim you have".

        The most damning critiques about Trump are based on his own quotes. I find "they" (the media) are cruelly representing him and his bullshit quite accurately. They still give most of the BS a pass that politicians spread seemingly still oblivious of the fer

  • When Obama started using data mining to target voters with tailored messages, it was smart.

    When Trump did the same, it was unfair.

    When Russia played that game, it was unacceptable.

    And when Israel our Saudi Arabia pour money to influence elections, it is not worth a paper.

  • by petes_PoV ( 912422 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @10:18PM (#57821506)
    So let's see what we have here.

    The americans created a software environment that allows people to influence the views and votes of others. Then they complain when someone else uses it for that purpose.

    What have I missed? Was it just that it was being used by the wrong sort of people?

  • It's embarrassing to Trump that the Russians very clearly considered him to be worse for the US national interest than Clinton (which is really saying a lot), but that's a long way from a crime.

    Though actual crimes wouldn't surprise me in any way.

  • by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @11:44PM (#57821870) Journal
    Find a candidate that is healthy and fit.
    Make sure they can give a speech that is filled with election winning ideas.
    Have experts map out the actual "states" needed to win an election.
    Got in person each state needed and give a great speech that is well liked by people in that state.
    Talk about jobs, local issues, some past connection with that state. Be happy and smile.
    Dont bring the same negative speech to each state and then go full negative about the state you are in.
    The locals who have to "vote" later kind of notice what is been said about them in person. They like happy words and political leaders who can give a "great" speech.
    A healthy, charming person with a winning message with new ideas and something "good" to say. In every state they have to win.
    Stamina, charm and the ability to have real time local knowledge.
    Have the "winning" political team ready to support the events in each and every state.
    People in that state who can get people out to vote in that state.
    Lots of people on each side of the USA do not will US election count. Many other states are needed to add up to "win".

    No "Russians" needed.
    A much better quality of political advice and the ability to stay "healthy" and "talk" to normal people will be noticed by all voters all over the USA.
  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @12:26AM (#57822036)
    Why was it wrong for Russia to try to influence the election in 2016? The reason I arrive at is because Russians aren't allowed to vote in our election, so it's wrong for them to try to influence it.

    But by that same reasoning, isn't it also wrong for the two political parties to influence elections for Senators and Congresscritters by shifting money to candidate's campaign that has been raised outside the state or district the candidate is running in? After all, that's money donated by someone who can't vote in that election being used to try to influence it.

    So if you carry this outrage over Russian interference to its logical conclusion, you end up with a ban on political parties' unrestricted use of donations. No using money raised in New York to try to influence a Congressional race in Arizona. Money raised in New York has to be used in New York. Only money raised in that Arizona congressional district can be used to influence the race there.

    Somehow I suspect the political parties aren't going to see it that way. And their stance is going to be that it's wrong for other people to try to influence races they can't vote in, but it's OK for them to do it.
    • Why was it wrong for Russia to try to influence the election in 2016? The reason I arrive at is because Russians aren't allowed to vote in our election, so it's wrong for them to try to influence it.

      Good to know!

      So it's wrong for illegal aliens who aren't allowed to vote to try to influence our elections too, right? They (supposedly) can't vote in them.

      It's wrong for the president of Mexico to try to influence our elections too, right? He can't vote in them.

      It's wrong for the "opinions of the world" (adjust monocles, sip brandy, look askance over eyebrows) to try to influence our elections too, right? They can't vote in them.

  • A wider problem (Score:5, Insightful)

    by peppepz ( 1311345 ) on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @02:20AM (#57822358)
    Don't reduce this to a "Hillary vs Trump" fight. The Russians influenced more than the last American elections: for instance, they facilitated Brexit in Britain, and supported Salvini in Italy. I don't think you should reduce the problem to a "Hillary vs Trump" fight. The problem is people being convinced by incendiary propaganda on social networks, and the control of this mechanism by malicious actors. And in this case it was the Russians, but in the future it could very well be others to take advantage of it.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The scale of what Russia has been up to is incredible. They even trolled against movies like The Last Jedi, knowing that it would create division and feed the "sjws are taking over" meme. And somehow it's taken us this long to even understand it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Everyone not retarded was scared shitless of Hillary ending up in the White house!

  • It was very clear at the time and since that the strategy was to split the Democratic vote by boosting Stein & Sanders in order to disenfranchise voters away from Clinton, while simultaneously inflaming the right on divisive topics like guns, immigration etc. to boost Trump.

    The strategy only has to be sufficient to tilt the scales by a few % to significant impact on the outcome. And clearly it worked.

    Funnily enough I suspect it worked TOO well as far as Trump was concerned. He was using the campaign

  • Let's see here... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Hillary Clinton spent nearly 2 billion dollars to Trump's approx $600 Million, and some of the money she spent was laundered through the Democrat-hack lawfirm Perkins Coie as "legal fees" to a British spy named Steele who bought anti-Trump propaganda from Russia in the form of the so-called "Steele dossier" which was funneled into the FBI and used without validation to get warrants to spy on Trump's campaign, effectively bringing the CIA and FBI into the election on Hillary's side...... but we're supposed t

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @07:30AM (#57823194) Journal

    The Clinton campaign admitted that early in the top primary process, they had identified Trump as the candidate they most wanted to run against, so where they were able they promoted him too.
    Are we considering that as pernicious as "Russian interference".

  • All this crap about Russia distracts from the fact that the US President is elected by an antiquated system of electoral collage voting which is free to - and does - ignore the voting pattern of the actual people. THAT'S what got Trump in, not some ineffective echo-chamber adverts from some Russians aimed at half-wits.

    No one who got less votes than their opponent is a legitimate president.

  • Seriously, have you seen what they produced? It's amateurish crap that looks like it belongs on some forum for angry people learning to use image editing tools. Like GifsByLonelyJerks.com.

    Laughably bad.

  • Maybe the Russians believed the American leftists (after all, they have such a long, long love relationship with each other) about how supposedly ineffective and awful Trump would be.

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Tuesday December 18, 2018 @10:02AM (#57824102) Homepage

    Russia tried to influence a US election. So what? This is standard stuff. Every country tries to protect its interests, and part of this is trying to influence other countries and their governments. News at 11:00.

    The US not only meddles in elections; they go farther: the US goes in and overthrows governments they don't like [williamblum.org] (that's a list of 57 publicly known incidents).

    If people want to get upset about something, how about prosecuting Bush and Obama for attacking sovereign countries without a declaration of war? While Trump hasn't ended any wars, at least he hasn't added any new entries to the list...

  • They supported Trump, who was expected to lose. Even in the primaries? Why would they support a bad candidate in the primaries? With all the ties that have been uncovered between the Clintons and the Russians, could it be that the Hillary team was coordinating with them to promote Trump over the more traditional candidates?

The truth of a proposition has nothing to do with its credibility. And vice versa.

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