The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)
Russia and the bots are invading minds of U.S. citizens
If you want to know whether Democrats will take back the House and/or Senate in November, just ask Russia.
Or rather, ask the Russian trolls who have triumphed in disseminating real “fake news” to influence U.S. elections. They credibly did so in 2016 by creating a more-favorable electoral environment for Donald Trump. And, reportedly, they’re determined to make trouble again in the 2018 midterms.
In the meantime, Russian “bots” — applications that perform an automated task — were helping Trump once again by creating momentum for the Feb. 2 release of the so-called “Nunes memo,” the four-page brief from the House Intelligence Committee chairman alleging surveillance abuses by FBI investigators.
To do this, Russian operatives created a #ReleaseTheMemo campaign on Twitter, which quickly went viral and created a sense of urgency and import to the committee’s findings — at least those by Republican members. Trump, who has final authority over such things, refused to approve release of a Democratic rebuttal.
Thus far, the memo has succeeded only in damaging trust between the FBI and Congress, possibly hindering future sharing of classified material. As Senate Intelligence Committee member Angus King, I-Maine, pointed out Tuesday on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” the Senate and House panels are the only watchdogs of U.S. intelligence agencies.
The extent to which Russia’s cyberantics have manipulated American thought is of no small concern or consequence.
But when nearly two-thirds of U.S. adults get at least some of their news from social media, the potential reach of bad actors is incalculable. Facebook and YouTube lead the pack in sheer numbers of users, according to a 2017 Pew Research Center study. Sixtysix percent of U.S. adults use Facebook, with 45 percent getting news on the site.
YouTube can boast that 58 percent of U.S. adults watch its clips, but only 18 percent rely on the video emporium for news. Relatively few adults use Twitter — just 15 percent — but nearly all who do (74 percent) get their news from the little blue bird. Although its base is far smaller than Facebook, its viral capacity is incalculable. One need only think of the global reach of the #MeToo movement that spread in a matter of virtual nanoseconds.
No one has better understood this infectious power than Trump. Crazy like a fox, he knows that he can imprint on the minds of his followers far more quickly than he could by traditional means — and without accountability.
Trump uses his account to advance his opinion, taunt his enemies, exact revenge and, strategically, to misinform. Sort of the way Russia does.
No wonder he admires Russia President Vladimir Putin, with whom he spoke on Monday. What do you suppose they talk about? The “Russia investigation?” Hashtags for future mind-melding ops? Midterm elections?
They’re just around the corner. Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats, testifying Tuesday before the Senate Intelligence Committee, warned that Russia considers its efforts to disrupt the 2016 election a success and likely sees 2018 as another opportunity. While congressional leaders are hoping to pressure social media groups into becoming more responsible, the burden for fail-safing our democratic election process falls to citizens.
Unfortunately, the minds of social-media users are likely becoming more, not less, malleable. Demographically, the largest increase in news users on social media has been among older, nonwhite, less-educated people, according to Pew.
Except for the nonwhite part, this would seem a boon to the GOP, whose constituents, though whiter than the DNC’s, tend to be older and slightly less educated than Democrats.
Trump once exclaimed, “I love the poorly educated!” Doubtless, Russia does, too.