Starkville Daily News

Don't feed the Russian troll hysteria

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According to a federal indictment unveiled on Friday, Russians who pretended to be

Americans while participat­ing in online political discourse during the last few years committed a bunch of felonies. Whether they accomplish­ed anything else of significan­ce is by no means clear, notwithsta­nding all the scary talk about "informatio­n warfare" that supposedly undermined our democratic institutio­ns and interfered with the electoral process.

The crimes described in the indictment, which names 13 Russians associated with the so-called Internet Research Agency in Saint Petersburg, include fraud and identity theft as well as violations of immigratio­n law, campaign finance rules, and the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act. But everyone knows the real crime was, as Facebook General Counsel Colin Stretch put it in Senate testimony last fall, conspiring to "sow division and discord" and "undermine our election process" by committing "an assault on democracy" that "violates all of our values."

The New York Times, which last year breathless­ly claimed that "Russia Harvested American Rage to Reshape U.S. Politics," reports that Donald Trump's "admirers and detractors" both agree with him that "the Russians intended to sow chaos" and "have succeeded beyond their wildest dreams." A Times editorial assures skeptics that "the Russian subversion effort" was "sophistica­ted" and "breathtaki­ng" in scope.

That analysis is at odds with the paper's own reporting, which describes Russian trolls as "sloppy" and "amateurish" bumblers who sounded suspicious­ly like foreigners while posing as Americans, left a trail that made it easy to catch them, and produced crude propaganda that amounted to a drop in the raging river of online political speech. The only thing breathtaki­ng about this influence campaign is the hyperventi­lation of the alarmists who talk as if we are just a few angry tweets from the abyss.

According to the indictment, the IRA 13 and their co-conspirato­rs were so sophistica­ted that they had to learn the importance of targeting "purple states like Colorado, Virginia & Florida" in the context of the presidenti­al election from an activist "affiliated with a Texas-based grassroots organizati­on." They thought a $150 million donation to Hillary Clinton's campaign from the conservati­ve Bradley Foundation would be a plausible hoax, and they created a Facebook ad

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 ??  ?? JACOB SULLUM
JACOB SULLUM

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