Trump Campaign ‘Antifa Alert’ Diamond Club Text Message
Screenshots making the social media rounds showed a purported text from the 2020 Trump re-election campaign warning of “antifa attacks” if supporters didn’t join his “Diamond Club.”
Screenshots making the social media rounds showed a purported text from the 2020 Trump re-election campaign warning of “antifa attacks” if supporters didn’t join his “Diamond Club.”
The reporter’s cell phone captured video debunking the claims by Los Angeles County authorities.
A purported news story about a Louisiana man dying immediately after insulting a woman spread virally on social media platforms in September 2020.
A viral video of a purported attempted abduction fed into the 2020 child trafficking panic, but it was often spread without context.
A right-wing page post misconstrued an upcoming study by the social media platform.
A fake Fox News article spread in screenshot form, falsely claiming that a Kenosha car dealer had died by suicide after sustaining $2.5 million in damages during recent protests in Wisconsin.
Circulating Facebook posts claim that thousands of California Christians made a pilgrimage to the state capitol, but the media refused to report the gathering.
The jeering was captured on videos that quickly spread online.
Twitter accounts — many of which were very new — claimed that “members” of “antifa” were caught setting fires in Oregon in September 2020; shady sites quickly padded out the speculation for a multilayered disinformation attack.
The figures listed in a graphic spreading online match those in a document sent to union leadership.