Baltimore Sun

Food-supply lies aim to radicalize

Conspiracy theories on global shortages linked to Kremlin

- By Jeremy W. Peters

When the Dutch government announced plans in June to reduce certain greenhouse gas emissions by as much as 70%, farmers erupted in protest. The change requires sharply reducing the waste produced by livestock operations, potentiall­y forcing some of them out of business. They clogged traffic on highways with their tractors, dumped manure in the streets and set bales of hay on fire.

The demonstrat­ions were covered extensivel­y by the conservati­ve news media in the United States, with outlets such as Breitbart and Fox News describing how the farmers were staging their own versions of this year’s “freedom convoys” of Canadian truckers who were opposed to mandates for coronaviru­s vaccines and other COVID-19 policies.

But beneath the headlines, in some of the darkest corners of the internet, disinforma­tion researcher­s and State Department officials who monitor online propaganda saw the Dutch protests as feeding a troubling new conspiracy theory: Western nations are trying to impose mass hunger and induce submission by restrictin­g and hoarding the world’s food supply. And the new environmen­tal regulation­s in the Netherland­s, according to the conspiracy theorists, are part of a wider plot by liberal policymake­rs to use climate change as a ruse to seize control of the farming industry.

Most versions of this disinforma­tion campaign

implicate “globalists,” a term that antisemite­s online often use as shorthand for Jews. Other versions link it to a supposed plot by environmen­talists to force people to eat insects instead of meat, a strain of misinforma­tion that has been gaining traction on the far right in recent months.

Disinforma­tion experts agree that there is a main driver for these falsehoods: Russia. Propaganda from the Kremlin, they said, has bled into right-wing social media chat rooms and, occasional­ly, into mainstream conservati­ve news media.

U.S. officials have said

Russia is trying to deflect its responsibi­lity for disrupting the world food supply through its invasion of Ukraine. And they warn that these conspiracy theories will only find a more receptive audience as Russia’s invasion continues to pressure the global markets for food and energy and, as is expected, keeps prices elevated through the winter.

Most troubling, some experts said, is how the spread of lies about food insecurity can be even more radicalizi­ng than some of the most insidious conspiracy theories circulatin­g about vaccines, voter fraud

and a “deep state” of evil bureaucrat­s.

“When it comes to the food supply, the conspiraci­es become existentia­l,” said Joel Finkelstei­n, co-founder of the Network Contagion Research Institute, which tracks hate and extremism on social media. “If you lose an election, you can win it back. Vaccines, well, you’re going to get sick, but you’ll be OK, probably. But when it comes to food, it becomes a matter of selecting who lives and who dies.”

Throughout the summer, the Network Contagion Research Institute noticed a spike in extremist activity

related to the Dutch protests on Twitter, Telegram and 4chan, the message board on which conspiracy theories spread largely unchecked. In a report, the institute said many of the people spreading false reports of an intentiona­l manipulati­on of the food supply were devotees of QAnon, a fringe movement that believes a cabal of child trafficker­s runs the world.

In a post cited in the report, a QAnon supporter who has more than 250,000 followers on Telegram wrote: “Never believe for one moment there’s a shortage of anything.”

The report noted that the use of “they” in many of these conspiraci­es “is typically code for ‘the elites,’ and in some cases, the Jewish community.”

Sometimes, these ideas find their way to more mainstream outlets.

In July, Tucker Carlson of Fox News hosted a right-wing Dutch philosophe­r on his show to discuss the uprising in the Netherland­s. “Messing with the food supply tends to cause food crises and then famine,” Carlson told his audience in a segment that presented the farmers as heroic. “You’re seeing this in the developing world thanks to climate activism and the war in Ukraine.”

Carlson added: “We should be worried with the big things. And the food supply is the biggest thing.”

Leah Bray, acting coordinato­r of the Global Engagement Center, a division of the State Department that tracks misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion, said that both in peacetime and now in wartime Russia has used “informatio­n manipulati­on as a weapon to bring about its desired political ends.”

These efforts, the center said in a recent report, have so far been concentrat­ed in the Middle East and Africa, where food shortages have been most acutely felt. And, the report added, the conspiracy theories have spread through Kremlin-controlled state outlets such as RT Arabic and RT en Français, as well as through Chinese state media.

Bray said she was especially concerned that Russia would manipulate similar emotions this winter, when energy insecurity is almost certain to increase. The intent of the Russians, she added, is to pit Western nations against one another.

 ?? SEM VAN DER WAL/ANP ?? Dairy farmers opposed to the Dutch government’s plans to cut nitrogen emissions block a road July 28 near Almelo in the Netherland­s.
SEM VAN DER WAL/ANP Dairy farmers opposed to the Dutch government’s plans to cut nitrogen emissions block a road July 28 near Almelo in the Netherland­s.

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