‘How Election Was Stolen,’ ‘Funny How the Rest of the World Gets Different News Than Us’
A screenshot of a newspaper headline (“How Election Was Stolen”) was framed as political truth-telling from outside the United States.
A screenshot of a newspaper headline (“How Election Was Stolen”) was framed as political truth-telling from outside the United States.
More than six weeks after the 2020 election, fringe news organizations are being legally compelled to air statements about their extensive and baseless “coverage” of purported election fraud.
A December 17 2020 claim about “breaking news” from Georgia about a signature audit was neither “breaking” nor “news” — at least, not in the way disinformation purveyors were presenting it.
Yet another piece of election-related disinformation is circulating, this one centered on Executive Order 13848 — specifically, claims that it would keep Donald Trump in the White House despite his decisive loss to Joe Biden.
A suspicious “statement” attracted attention on Twitter in December 2020.
After a vulnerability in SolarWinds’ Orion software was disclosed in December 2020, conspiracy theorists claimed to have found Solarwinds source code on Dominion Voting Systems’ website.
As the Electoral College prepared to cast their votes on December 14 2020, Donald Trump claimed that a “water main break” was staged to somehow rig the election against him.
A state lawmaker lost his committee assignments after the alleged “Hail Mary.”
Claims that Seattle, Washington intended to “absolve” defendants under a “poverty defense” led to an international outcry.
Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Nancy Pelosi were among Democrats who opposed “$600 checks for Americans,” insisting upon more robust direct aid.