Twitter exec in charge of effort to fact-check Trump has history of anti-Trump posts, called McConnell a 'bag of farts'
Twitter's "Head of Site Integrity" Yoel Roth :-)
Twitter's "Head of Site Integrity" Yoel Roth boasts on his LinkedIn that he is in charge of "developing and enforcing Twitter’s rules," like the one that led Twitter to slap a new "misleading" warning label on two of President Trump's tweets concerning mail-in balloting on Tuesday. However,
Roth's own barrage of anti-Trump, politically charged tweets seemingly
calls into question whether he should be creating guidelines for the
president and other Twitter users, especially when Twitter is under fire for its alleged left-wing bias. Commentators have argued that Trump's tweets on the risks of mail-in voting were not misleading,
and the president accused Twitter of seeking to "interfere" in the
upcoming election under the guise of a supposedly neutral
"fact-checking" policy. Roth has previously referred to Trump and his team as "ACTUAL NAZIS," mocked Trump supporters by saying that "we fly over those states that voted for a racist tangerine for a reason," and called Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., a "personality-free bag of farts." (Last August, Twitter suspended McConnell's Twitter account, prompting the GOP to threaten to cut off advertising on the site until Twitter relented.) In September 2016, Roth tweeted,
"I’ve never donated to a presidential campaign before, but I just gave
$100 to Hillary for America. We can’t fu-k around anymore." When Trump won the November 2016 election, Roth dejectedly chalked the development up to "[Bernie] Sanders protest voters, and racism," before sounding more optimistic notes. "I’m almost ready to stop dwelling on how my friends are complicit in the election of Donald Trump," he said on Jan. 7, 2017. "Almost." "Massive anti-Trump protest headed up Valencia St," Roth wrote on Jan. 20, 2017, followed by a "heart" emoji and the words "San Francisco." Indeed,
Roth sometimes opened up about his heart on the social media platform.
"'Every time a cute boy uses an Android phone, I die inside' is the new
'Every time a cute boy tells me he's a Republican, I die inside,'" he said in 2011. "I occasionally worry that my mother WASN'T joking all those times she told us she was voting Republican," he wrote in 2012. For the most part, though, Roth urged his followers to unite, especially after Trump's inauguration. "The
'you are not the right kind of feminist' backlash to yesterday's
marches has begun," Roth wrote on Jan. 22, 2017. "Did we learn nothing
from this election?" Also on Jan. 22, 2017, Roth compared senior Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels. Exacerbating
matters, Roth previously authored a slew of posts bluntly referring to
what he calls "trannies." In 2010, he wrote: "It wouldn't be a trip to
New York without at least one big scary tranny." In 2012, he tweeted: "A
10 block cab ride can seem so much longer when the driver tells you
about that time he thought a tranny hooker was a 'real girl.'" "Tranny
hookers in Birkenstocks. Philadelphia: a city of contradictions," he
mused on July 24, 2011. "All the fags took him to heart," Roth wrote on March 21, 2009, referring to Christian Siriano of "Project Runway" fame. When another user criticized his language,
Roth held his ground. "Trans is a category worth being linguistically
destabilized in the same way we did gay with 'fag,'" he wrote. "Sorry,
but I don’t subscribe to PC passing the buck. Identity politics is for
everyone." Yoel says on his personal website that
he received his PhD in Communication from the University of
Pennsylvania by "studying privacy and safety on gay social networks." "These are the kids that are fact checking the President of the United States," remarked Heather Champion, a commentator on social media. Several of Roth's tweets were first resurfaced by The New York Post's Jon Levine early Wednesday morning. Roth's most polemical and political posts, which do not carry any warning label, were under extra scrutiny as Trump accused Twitter of "interfering
in the 2020 Presidential Election" by again acting out of apparent
left-wing bias. The president vowed to take unspecified action. Earlier
Tuesday, Trump wrote: "There is NO WAY (ZERO!) that Mail-In Ballots
will be anything less than substantially fraudulent. Mailboxes will be
robbed, ballots will be forged & even illegally printed out &
fraudulently signed. The Governor of California is sending Ballots to
millions of people, anyone living in the state, no matter who they are
or how they got there, will get one. That will be followed up with
professionals telling all of these people, many of whom have never even
thought of voting before, how, and for whom, to vote. This will be a
Rigged Election. No way!!" Within hours, Twitter then appended an
unprecedented label to the bottom of the tweet reading, "Get the facts
about mail-in ballots." Clicking that label brings readers to a
paragraph reading in part: "Experts say mail-in ballots are very rarely
linked to voter fraud. ... Fact-checkers say there is no evidence that
mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud." Twitter's
warning label was placed on Trump's tweets even though a Twitter
spokesperson acknowledged to Fox News that Trump's tweet had not broken
any of the platform's rules, and despite the fact that severalexperts have called mail-in balloting an invitation to widespread fraud, as Trump said in his tweets. Indeed, bipartisan panels of experts, as well as journalists, have found that absentee balloting increases the risk of voter fraud. "Absentee ballots remain the largest source of potential voter fraud," read the
conclusion of a bipartisan 2005 report authored by the Commission on
Federal Election Reform, which was chaired by former President Jimmy
Carter and former Secretary of State James Baker. "Twitter 'fact-checkers' really suck," wrote Dan Bongino, a Fox News contributor. He linked to a 2012 article in The New York Times headlined,
"Error and Fraud at Issue as Absentee Voting Rises." The article states
that "votes cast by mail are less likely to be counted, more likely to
be compromised and more likely to be contested than those cast in a
voting booth, statistics show." A Twitter thread
Tuesday by White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany highlighted
numerous recent stories documenting fraud concerns over mail-in ballots
across the country, including a Fox News piece. The brouhaha erupted just two months after Twitter flagged a video uploaded by the Trump campaign as "manipulated media," only to rebuff the campaign's efforts to have the platform flag a similar video uploaded by the Biden team. Roth and Twitter did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment early Wednesday. In March, Roth sat for an interview with NPR, in which he emphasized that he was working to combat "election disinformation." "I
think in 2020, we're facing a particularly divisive political moment
here in the United States, and attempts to capitalize on those divisions
amongst Americans seem to be where malicious actors are headed," Roth
said. "This is a similar pattern to what we saw in 2016 and 2018, but
one of the things that we've seen from not only Russia but a wide range
of malicious actors is an attempt to capitalize on some of the major
domestic voices that are participating in these conversations and then
double down on some of those activities." On May 25, Roth took a
seemingly cavalier attitude towards criticism, tweeting, "Somehow,
regularly being told by internet strangers that I’m a soulless corporate
shill is still less harsh feedback than I got from anonymous peer
reviewers in my past academic life." The Trump campaign, however, was less amused. "We
always knew that Silicon Valley would pull out all the stops to
obstruct and interfere with President Trump getting his message through
to voters," Trump 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale said in a
statement. "Partnering with the biased fake news media 'fact checkers'
is only a smoke screen Twitter is using to try to lend their obvious
political tactics some false credibility. There are many reasons the
Trump campaign pulled all our advertising from Twitter months ago, and
their clear political bias is one of them.“ And late Tuesday, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla, noted on Twitter that "The law still protects social media companies like @Twitter
because they are considered forums not publishers. But if they have
now decided to exercise an editorial role like a publisher then they
should no longer be shielded from liability & treated as publishers
under the law." That was a reference to Section 230 of the
Communications Decency Act, which broadly protects online content
platforms from liability. For example, a defamatory comment posted by a
Twitter user would not ordinarily lead to liability for Twitter, even if
the platform allows the defamatory content to remain online after
becoming aware of it. Calls to reform the law have largely gone
unheeded in recent years, even as sites like Twitter take on a more
dominant role in national discourse. (Copyright law, which has a strong
constitutional foundation, ordinarily does require sites like Twitter to
remove offending content, or face liability.) Reaction to Twitter's actions among commentators was almost uniformly negative. The Wall Street Journal's James Taranto pointed out that
Twitter hadn't fact-checked Trump's charge that the platform was
interfering improperly in the election. "Hmm, no fact check on this so I
guess it must be true!" he wrote. Others observed
that Twitter had not fact-checked a false claim on police shooting
statistics that was shared by New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez.
"It wouldn't be a trip to New York without at least one big scary tranny." — Twitter "Head of Site Integrity" Yoel Roth
Separately, GOP chairwoman Ronna McDaniel wrote that
Alabama's secretary of state, John Merrill, told CNN earlier in the day
that five of the six voter fraud convictions during his tenure related
to absentee balloting. In a post retweeted by the Trump campaign, The Daily Caller's Logan Hall noted that Twitter has not appended a warning label on tweets from Chinese government representatives engaging in a propaganda campaign to
blame the U.S. for the spread of coronavirus. "The deeper problem: many
of the big tech companies that people hold near and dear to their
hearts have no actual allegiance to America or American values," Hall wrote. "Wow,"
wrote Michael James Coudrey, the CEO of Yuko Social, a social media
engine for politicians and organizations. "Look what Twitter is doing to
the President of the United States [sic] tweets. They are attaching a
link then saying according to CNN and Washington Post, what he is saying
is unsubstantiated. This is insane."
President Donald Trump speaks during a Memorial Day ceremony at
Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine, Monday, May 25,
2020, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
A Twitter spokesperson told Fox News earlier Tuesday
that Trump's tweets "contain potentially misleading information about
voting processes and have been labeled to provide additional context
around mail-in ballots," and that "this decision is in line with the
approach we shared earlier this month." Twitter
acknowledged Trump's tweet "is not in violation of the Twitter Rules as
it does not directly try to dissuade people from voting — it does,
however, contain misleading information about the voting process,
specifically mail-in ballots, and we’re offering more context to the
public." Twitter
did not respond to Fox News' inquiries about whether consideration was
given for The Washington Post or CNN's political leanings, or why its
warning label appeared to be contradictory -- saying both that there was
"no evidence" that mail-in balloting leads to fraud, and at the same
time, that there was indeed evidence that mail-in balloting had been
linked to fraud, although only "very rarely." However, Republicans
have long argued that many states fail to adequately clean up their
voter rolls. Last year, California was forced to remove 1.5 million ineligible voters after a court settlement last year when California's rolls showed a registration of 112 percent. And, data from
the U.S. Election Assistance Commission indicates that roughly 28
million mail-in ballots have disappeared in the past decade. “Elections in 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2018 saw more than 28.3 million 'unaccounted for' mail ballots,” a report from the Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF) recently assessed. “Putting
the election in the hands of the United States Postal Service would be a
catastrophe. Over the recent decade, there were 28 million missing and
misdirected ballots,” PILF President and General Counsel J. Christian
Adams said in a statement. “These represent 28 million opportunities for
someone to cheat. Absentee ballot fraud is the most common; the most
expensive to investigate; and can never be reversed after an election.
The status quo was already bad for mail balloting. The proposed
emergency fix is worse.” Election integrity has become one of the
upcoming election's most prominent issues. On May 20, Trump threatened
to withhold federal funds from Michigan if it pursued mail-in balloting
-- a questionably constitutional move, given general prohibitions
against the federal government forcing state action on matters
ordinarily within states' jurisdiction. "Michigan sends absentee
ballot applications to 7.7 million people ahead of Primaries and the
General Election," Trump wrote. "This was done illegally and without
authorization by a rogue Secretary of State. I will ask to hold up
funding to Michigan if they want to go down this Voter Fraud path!" The Republican National Committee (RNC) earlier this month launched ProtectTheVote.com,
a digital platform that the GOP says is part of its all-hands-on-deck
effort to "protect against the Democrats' assault on our elections" as
progressives push for sweeping changes, including vote-by-mail and more
ballot harvesting, amid the coronavirus pandemic. The launch came after the RNC and Trump campaign doubled their legal budget to $20 million after an initial commitment of
$10 million in February, saying they wanted to "fight frivolous
Democrat lawsuits and uphold the integrity of the elections process." That
was a message echoed by Trump in a tweet last month: "GET RID OF BALLOT
HARVESTING, IT IS RAMPANT WITH FRAUD. THE USA MUST HAVE VOTER I.D., THE
ONLY WAY TO GET AN HONEST COUNT!" Suspicion of big tech has reached a critical mass in recent months. Also on Tuesday, Oculus VR founder Palmer Luckey discovered that
YouTube was censoring comments critical of the Chinese government.
YouTube called the censorship a mistake, but offered no details;
Republicans, in turn, sought a closer look. "Is
Project Dragonfly going global?" wrote Indiana Republican Rep. Jim
Banks, referring to Google's since-scrapped search engine that would
have censored results to appease the Chinese government. "Google must
stop imitating #CCP censorship practices now. "
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