The Norwalk Hour

Trump’s harsh words on ‘squad’ reinforce dark posts online

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WASHINGTON — Long before President Donald Trump turned up the heat on four Democratic congresswo­men of color, saying they should “go back” to their home countries, hateful rhetoric and disinforma­tion about the selfdescri­bed squad was lurking online.

Racist, inflammato­ry and inaccurate content has circulated on far right blogs, news sites and social media accounts about Rep. Ilhan Omar, of Minnesota, and her three freshman colleagues since they ran for public office. With his tweets and harsh comments, Trump has elevated that rhetoric, playing into a conspirato­rial feedback loop that reared its head repeatedly during his campaign and presidency.

Trump rose to conservati­ve prominence by falsely claiming former President Barack Obama, the first black president, wasn’t born in the country. Since then, he has promoted claims and memes that originated in the darkest corners of the internet while fueling new ones of his own.

His latest targets are Omar and Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of New York, Ayanna Pressley, of Massachuse­tts and Rashida Tlaib, of Michigan.

In his Sunday tweets , Trump claimed, without identifyin­g the women by name, that the minority legislator­s “originally came from countries whose government­s are a complete and total catastroph­e.” He suggested they should “go back” to those “totally broken and crime infested places,” even though three of the four were born in the U.S. and all are U.S. citizens. He has since questioned the women’s allegiance to their country, accusing them of hating America and promoting terrorism while suggesting they should leave America if they’re unhappy here.

For some, the Republican president’s tweets were shocking. But for others, they were just an average day on Facebook or Twitter, where allegation­s that Omar was not legitimate­ly elected, is not a U.S. citizen and committed immigratio­n fraud have festered in far right chatrooms, blogs and social media sites since she was elected to the Minnesota House of Representa­tives in 2016.

“This is the agenda of white nationalis­ts, whether it is happening in chat rooms or it’s happening on national TV,” Omar said this week. “And now it’s reached the White House garden.”

Omar was born in Somalia and immigrated to the U.S. as a refugee in 1995 when she was a child. She became a U.S. citizen in 2000 at age 17.

The rumors about her have been spread by dozens of conservati­ve social media figures and bloggers, including Michelle Malkin and Laura Loomer, the latter now banned from Facebook. In February, selfdescri­bed far right social media influencer­s Jacob Wohl and Loomer flew to Minneapoli­s, where they provided live updates on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook of their trip to “investigat­e” Omar’s past and immigratio­n status. Even seemingly everyday citizens have taken to social media to upload their own theories on Omar’s background, with one Minnesota woman posting a video months ago on Facebook sharing “proof ” Omar is not a U.S. citizen. The video has been watched more than 50,000 times.

Trump also repeated a contested claim, characteri­zing as “fact” that Omar had married her brother, before acknowledg­ing that he really didn’t know.

Omar has described such allegation­s as “disgusting lies.” She has declined to provide access to immigratio­n records, birth certificat­es or other documents that could verify her family history.

Omar, the biggest target of online vitriol among the four legislator­s, has made comments that raise eyebrows, including a remark this spring in which she referenced the Sept. 11 attacks by saying that “some people did something.” She was also criticized for asking a judge in 2016 to show leniency toward a man accused of trying to join the Islamic State.

But other allegation­s have been provably false.

Before they took office, for instance, Omar and Tlaib, the first Muslim women elected to Congress, were dogged by false online allegation­s that they were so antiAmeric­an they did not intend to take the oath of office. Others tried to delegitimi­ze Omar in memes that falsely claim Obama resettled 70,000 Somali refugees in Minnesota in an effort to ensure her election. In fact, the state received 6,320 Somali refugees during the Obama administra­tion. A similar inaccurate claim was later floated online about Iraqi refugees in Tlaib’s home state of Michigan.

Other comments by the women have been taken widely out of context. Around February, social media users and fringe sites began circulatin­g an edited 2013 clip that they said showed Omar “laughing” at alQaida and admitting to taking a “terrorism” class.

The full context of the 28minute interview, originally broadcast on a local Minneapoli­s TV station, shows she was talking about a U.S. college course and was making a point about how the Arabic language had been hijacked by extremist groups to mean something negative.

In the 2016 presidenti­al election, Russians relied on a similar online playbook, deploying antiimmigr­ant and antiMuslim rhetoric on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter in an effort to boost Trump’s prospects.

Negative sentiment about the four congresswo­men has migrated into more mainstream outlets recently. Last week, just days before Trump’s incendiary tweets, Fox News host Tucker Carlson described Omar on his show as having “undisguise­d contempt for the United States.”

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