United States Capitol

Disinformation threatens global elections – here’s how to fight back

Retrieved on: 
星期四, 二月 15, 2024

Others think concern over disinformation is just a moral panic or merely a symptom rather than the cause of our societal ills.

Key Points: 
  • Others think concern over disinformation is just a moral panic or merely a symptom rather than the cause of our societal ills.
  • Given that nearly 25% of elections are decided by a margin of under 3%, mis- and disinformation can have important influence.
  • By contrast, among prior Obama voters who believed at least two fake headlines about Clinton, only 17% voted for her.
  • There are more indirect consequences of disinformation too, such as eroding public trust and participation in elections.

The power of prebunking

  • In contrast, “prebunking” is a new way to prevent false beliefs from forming in the first place.
  • Such “inoculation” involves warning people not to fall for a false narrative or propaganda tactic, together with an explanation as to why.
  • Misinforming rhetoric has clear markers, such as scapegoating or use of false dichotomies (there are many others), that people can learn to identify.
  • Like a medical vaccine, the prebunk exposes the recipient to a “weakened dose” of the infectious agent (the disinformation) and refutes it in a way that confers protection.
  • For example, we created an online game for the Department of Homeland Security to empower Americans to spot foreign influence techniques during the 2020 presidential election.
  • Lee McIntyre advises the UK Government on how to fight disinformation.
  • He also receives funding from Jigsaw (a technology incubator created by Google) and from UK Research and Innovation (through EU Horizon replacement funding grant number 10049415).

It may be too late to stop the great election disinformation campaigns of 2024 but we have to at least try

Retrieved on: 
星期五, 二月 9, 2024

Votes are scheduled in India, Pakistan, Mexico and South Africa, to name but a few.

Key Points: 
  • Votes are scheduled in India, Pakistan, Mexico and South Africa, to name but a few.
  • A hotly contested election will be held for the European parliament in June and the US presidential elections are on the horizon in November.
  • A general election is also due in the UK at some stage in the coming year.

AI, deepfakes and disinformation

  • We are already seeing parties use AI to analyse data on voting patterns and targeting voters in real-time with algorithmically-driven ad placements.
  • Deepfakes – false or manipulated texts, images, video and audio – are already being spread via the gaming of algorithms with the intention of manipulating voters.
  • There are allegations that deepfakes were used in an attempt to sway voters in Argentina, New Zealand and Turkey in the past year.

Bad actors

  • NATO and the European Union have also warned against the threats to democratic cohesion caused by Kremlin-fuelled disinformation campaigns.
  • Human Rights Watch reports increased attacks against ethnic and religious minorities including Muslims, as well as journalists and opposition leaders.

Taking action

  • Calling for action now is almost moot as it’s probably already too late.
  • The fact that there are so many elections happening simultaneously around the world in 2024 only exacerbates the problem.
  • An urgent global effort among nations is needed to set the ground rules for how the use of AI is to be regulated, particularly around elections.
  • The worry is that the pace at which the technology is advancing is outpacing efforts to safeguard the public.


Tom Felle does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Is America enduring a 'slow civil war'? Jeff Sharlet visits Trump rallies, a celebrity megachurch and the manosphere to find out

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 一月 16, 2024

Nor is its author, Jeff Sharlet, focused only on the ominous events of January 6, 2021, at the US Capitol.

Key Points: 
  • Nor is its author, Jeff Sharlet, focused only on the ominous events of January 6, 2021, at the US Capitol.
  • Sharlet believes that event is part of a “slow civil war” that threatens the future of the American republic.
  • Review: The Undertow: Scenes from a Slow Civil War – Jeff Sharlet (W.W. Norton)

American racism

  • Sharlet documents Belafonte’s lifelong struggle against racism, through a series of conversations.
  • Sharlet uses Belafonte to argue racism is at the heart of the American political and social malady.
  • Belafonte, a mainstream performer with cross-race appeal who still suffered intense discrimination, is Sharlet’s bearer of the bad news that racism resides in the core of American identity.
  • Read more:
    From sit-ins in the 1960s to uprisings in the new millennium, Harry Belafonte served as a champion of youth activism

‘The American religion of winning’

  • While race may be at the heart of a contested American identity, Sharlet believes evangelical religion is propelling the narrative of discontent and rebellion.
  • Or rather, a distorted branch within evangelical religion: the prosperity gospel, which teaches that faith and positive thinking attract health, wealth and happiness.
  • Wilkerson is portrayed as a very “cool” Christian, with a talent for grabbing headlines and fraternising with celebrity friends.
  • Prosperity follows him.” The American prosperity gospel is a materialist practice full of (sometimes unaware) poseurs, a bit like Trump himself.
  • His braggadocio at rallies appeals to his acolytes because it operates within “the American religion of winning”.

Evangelical religion and QAnon

  • As the apostle Paul wrote: “We walk by faith, not by sight” (KJV, 2 Corinthians 5:7).
  • Through QAnon, the pro-Trump conspiracy theory provides secular breadcrumbs for those seeking answers for the strange condition of the modern American nation-state.
  • QAnon is rooted in Gnostic philosophy, which held that reality is not what it appears (and was expelled from the mainstream of early Christianity’s canon).
  • QAnon adherents believe that, with the addition of the conspiracy theories supplied by QAnon, menacing forces and hopeful signs can be effortlessly revealed.
  • Read more:
    History repeats itself: From the New Testament to QAnon

A slow civil war


Hope cannot easily spring eternal, so grim are the signs of a slow civil war. Sharlet hints mass protest may be a democratic antidote to the American proto-fascism he fears.

  • In the end, Sharlet can only offer the slender hope that democratic practice, one small step at a time, might prevail through the will of sensible people.
  • But what if the problem went deeper than an internal culture war?
  • Read more:
    In Doppelganger, Naomi Klein says the world is broken: conspiracy theorists 'get the facts wrong but often get the feelings right'

Not unique to America

  • Certainly, Australia has experienced white racism – and violent, organised attacks on non-whites.
  • Alternatively, follow the unfolding story of the two policemen and a neighbour, gunned down in an ambush in Southern Queensland in 2022.
  • But it is harder to channel racist and religious fanaticism into an attack on the political state in Australia.
  • They will not be assured of America’s future role as a reliable world bastion of liberal democracy.
  • Nor can they be assured the United States will remain the politically stable centre of an increasingly unstable global economic system.


Ian Tyrrell received funding from the Australian Research Council's grant schemes on five occasions from 1996 to 2015.

Vivek Ramaswamy is the millionaire millennial running for US president. Is he running towards a career low?

Retrieved on: 
星期六, 十二月 30, 2023

The 38-year-old political novice is one of the America’s wealthiest millennials and made his fortune as a biotech entrepreneur.

Key Points: 
  • The 38-year-old political novice is one of the America’s wealthiest millennials and made his fortune as a biotech entrepreneur.
  • The Harvard-educated son of Indian immigrants with a successful business pedigree presents himself as an anti-establishment outsider.
  • Associated Press reporter Bill Barrow says that Ramaswamy wants to be the candidate that “can return Trump’s ‘America First’ vision to the White House without the baggage”.

Trump’s biggest fan

  • Ramaswamy is a huge admirer of Donald Trump, calling him the “best president of the 21st century”.
  • But in a clear attempt to differentiate himself from the former president, he has sought to put forward policies that are more extreme than Trump’s agenda.

No more support for Ukraine

  • Writing on the American Conservative website he proclaimed a desire to follow the foreign policy path of Richard Nixon’s “cold and sober realism”.
  • Ramaswamy provided an illustration of how this would manifest itself under his presidency.
  • Citing the war in Ukraine and how his administration would negotiate a deal to end the conflict he wrote: “A good deal requires all parties to get something out of it.

Republican supporters?

  • His nationalistic populist foreign policy agenda and deeply conservative positions are now the hallmarks of the modern Republican party.
  • Yet polling ahead of the Iowa Republican presidential caucuses on January 15 2024 is not positive for Ramaswamy.
  • He is struggling to resonate with Republican voters and has been languishing in the polls, far behind Trump and other challengers.

Following in Trump’s shadow

  • Some observers have stressed Ramaswamy’s difficulties rest with his inability to consistently embody the outsider image that he wants to project.
  • So it looks like he is heading out of the race, with egg on his face.


Richard Hargy does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Jenner & Block Elects Eight New Partners for 2024

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 十二月 19, 2023

"We are extremely proud of this talented group of new partners.

Key Points: 
  • "We are extremely proud of this talented group of new partners.
  • The 2024 partner class has demonstrated a tremendous commitment to our clients and to the firm's values of excellence, collaboration, and pro bono service," said Co-Managing Partners Katya Jestin and Randy Mehrberg .
  • "Our new partners have diverse specialties, perspectives, and backgrounds which reflect the increasingly complex legal and strategic needs of our clients.
  • We are delighted to welcome them to the partnership and excited to see their continued success."

Four Seasons Honours World Kindness Day with a Global Celebration of Art, Community and Acts of Love

Retrieved on: 
星期三, 十一月 8, 2023

TORONTO, Nov. 8, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- This World Kindness Day, Four Seasons is embracing its legacy of empathy and personalized service to inspire others to lead with genuine heart. Grounded in the core belief that kindness creates a meaningful sense of belonging, Four Seasons hotels and resorts are uniting in a celebration of kindness on November 13 and beyond through community and artistic collaborations and volunteerism.

Key Points: 
  • "Our World Kindness Day celebration is a natural extension of how we seek to leave a positive, enduring impact on our communities.
  • With a shared passion for the power of kindness, Four Seasons is collaborating with Lilly Singh to inspire kindness through her light-hearted warmth and humour.
  • To kick off the celebration, Lilly joined Four Seasons for an event on November 7 in advance of World Kindness Day at Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills .
  • Click here to see a full list of Four Seasons hotels and resorts around the world that are creating kindness in their communities.

New to The Street Announces its Four Corporate Interviews Airing on Newsmax and The FOX Business Network

Retrieved on: 
星期五, 九月 29, 2023

NEW YORK, Sept. 29, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- New to The Street , an FMW Media production, will air its four (4) corporate interviews on Newsmax and the FOX Business Network .

Key Points: 
  • NEW YORK, Sept. 29, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- New to The Street , an FMW Media production, will air its four (4) corporate interviews on Newsmax and the FOX Business Network .
  • New to The Street airs on Newsmax on Saturday, September 30, 2023, at 3:30 PM ET, and the FOX Business Network on Monday, October 2, 2023, at 10:30 PM PT, featuring the following interviews:
    1).
  • Randy provides more information about the Company's recently announced relationship with Stone Brewing , a prominent US craft beer company.
  • The interview will air on the FOX Business Network on August 21, 2023, at 10:30 PM PT.

With yet another indictment, Donald Trump takes us into 'unprecedented' territory once again

Retrieved on: 
星期三, 八月 2, 2023

Never before has a sitting or former president of the United States been indicted on federal charges.

Key Points: 
  • Never before has a sitting or former president of the United States been indicted on federal charges.
  • The latest charges relate to Trump’s concerted efforts to overturn the legitimate results of the 2020 presidential election.
  • Trump is scheduled to appear before a federal court in Washington, DC, on Thursday afternoon (Friday morning Australian time).

Federal charges on the campaign trail

    • The unprecedented nature of Trump’s second campaign for the Republican nomination blows all efforts to predict any outcomes out of the water.
    • Right now, Trump is following his familiar playbook – claiming this is all part of an extended conspiracy to keep him out of office by a “liberal elite”.
    • Vance, for example, claimed President Joe Biden would “rather throw Donald Trump in prison than face him at the ballot box”.
    • In a statement released after the indictment, his campaign insisted Trump “has always followed the law and the Constitution”.

Stake are high for the entire US

    • The Trump team is openly planning for a second term that would catastrophically undermine the institutions and processes of American democracy.
    • At the most basic level, that is what is at stake for the United States with these charges and in this election cycle.
    • Read more:
      For Joe Biden, the indictment of Donald Trump carries a heavy responsibility – and a risk

Conspiracy theories: how social media can help them spread and even spark violence

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 八月 1, 2023

For example, some conspiracy theories claim that the Covid-19 pandemic is a hoax or a plot by a secret cabal to control the world population.

Key Points: 
  • For example, some conspiracy theories claim that the Covid-19 pandemic is a hoax or a plot by a secret cabal to control the world population.
  • Such beliefs can lead to a rejection of vital health measures, such as wearing masks or getting vaccinated, and thereby endanger the public.
  • False narratives about the 2020 US presidential election having been “stolen” underpinned the attack on the US Capitol, on 6 January 2021.
  • Social media, including forums, enable such groups to form and have continuous and repeated access to information that reinforces their beliefs and helps them forge a sense of shared identity.

Why and how conspiracy theories grow

    • In our recent study, we set out to understand exactly why and how conspiracy theories persist and persevere over time on social media.
    • We found that social media can help breed a shared identity toward conspiracy theory radicalisation by acting as an echo chamber for such beliefs.
    • Online networks also enable individuals to replicate conspiracy theories easily by simply sharing or copy/pasting related content.


    These stages actually constitute a spiralling loop, reinforcing a conspiratorial shared social identity and enabling a potential escalation to radicalisation.

Prevention, not more information

    • More than ever, developing media literacy and critical-thinking skills that can help citizens assess the credibility and validity of online information sources has become a critical challenge.
    • It is also important to address the underlying social issues that can contribute to the spread of conspiracy theories.

Hindu Americans, Researchers and Lawmakers Discuss Rising Hinduphobia in CoHNA Event at Capitol Hill

Retrieved on: 
星期五, 七月 14, 2023

Washington, D.C.--(Newsfile Corp. - July 14, 2023) - The 2nd National Hindu Advocacy Day on the Hill, a historic event organized by the Coalition of Hindus of North America (CoHNA) at the US Capitol, saw lawmakers, community leaders, delegates, and researchers coming together in a packed room, to discuss the concerns Hindus living in the US face.

Key Points: 
  • Washington, D.C.--(Newsfile Corp. - July 14, 2023) - The 2nd National Hindu Advocacy Day on the Hill, a historic event organized by the Coalition of Hindus of North America (CoHNA) at the US Capitol, saw lawmakers, community leaders, delegates, and researchers coming together in a packed room, to discuss the concerns Hindus living in the US face.
  • More than 21 lawmakers (congressional reps and staffers) attended the July 11th events, which centered on Hinduphobia.
  • To view the full announcement, including downloadable images, bios, and more, click here .
  • Click image above to view full announcement.