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‘Crisis Actors’? Where Have I Heard That Before?

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‘Crisis Actors’? Where Have I Heard That Before?

Occasions Insider explains who we’re and what we do, and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes collectively.

After being condemned all over the world for bombing a maternity hospital in Mariupol, Ukraine, Russia superior a bogus conspiracy concept final month that was chillingly acquainted to me.

Utilizing unrelated photos from social media, dodgy “stories” and fixed repetition, the Russian Protection Ministry falsely claimed the airstrike was a “staged provocation” by Ukraine. The hospital, Russian officers falsely stated, was nonoperational and a base for Ukrainian fighters. Moscow’s ambassador to the United Nations dismissed Related Press images of the aftermath as “pretend information,” and the Overseas Ministry alleged that bloodied, pregnant ladies evacuated from the rubble had been disaster actors.

And so it has gone ever since. Ukrainian civilians killed whereas fleeing; discovered certain and shot in basements and mass graves or gunned down whereas standing of their entrance yards — all had been forged by Russia as actors in a “hoax” aimed toward bolstering Ukraine’s trigger. An evaluation by The Occasions rebuts claims by Russia that the our bodies of these executed by the Russian military in Bucha, a city on the outskirts of Kyiv, had been positioned there after the Russian retreat.

Early in my profession, I spent a decade as a correspondent in Jap Europe, together with three years in Russia. But it surely was due to my work for The Occasions during the last 4 years, protecting the defamation lawsuits filed by the households of 10 Sandy Hook victims in opposition to the conspiracy broadcaster Alex Jones of Infowars, that Moscow’s lies have resonated most strongly.

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Mr. Jones is a longtime fan of Vladimir V. Putin, a former common on RT, the Russian state-funded TV outlet at the moment amplifying Kremlin lies about Ukraine. Infowars has pushed Moscow’s bogus narratives and fabulist conspiracies, together with that America operates “bio-labs” in Ukraine, and that Russian assaults on Ukrainian civilians are staged by Ukraine.

For years, Mr. Jones lied in saying that the Dec. 14, 2012, capturing that killed 20 first graders and 6 educators at Sandy Hook Elementary Faculty in Newtown, Conn., was a hoax staged by the federal authorities and he labeled particular person mother and father as “actors.”

The time period “disaster actors,” utilized by Sandy Hook fabulists to imply folks pretending to be victims or survivors of the bloodbath, was used after the Sandy Hook capturing by James Tracy, a Florida Atlantic College professor and Infowars visitor whose facet hustle as a conspiracy blogger price him his job. Some believers of Infowars’ lies about Sandy Hook have tormented the kinfolk of the victims ever since. Late final 12 months, Mr. Jones misplaced 4 defamation lawsuits filed in Texas and Connecticut by victims’ households as a result of he had repeatedly failed to provide court-ordered paperwork and testimony; juries will subsequent determine how a lot he should pay the households in damages. Final week, days earlier than these trials had been to start, Infowars filed for Chapter 11 safety, delaying the trials. As well as, his position in organizing “Cease the Steal” occasions is underneath scrutiny by the Home committee investigating the Jan. 6 rebel.

It’s unimaginable to know whether or not Russia studied the language used on this specific conspiracy concept earlier than spreading lies round its invasion of Ukraine. However the similarity is eerie. Russia has lengthy used incidents of American gun violence to assist its propagandistic claims of cultural superiority. Now, throughout this battle, the Kremlin is adopting the language of American mass capturing deniers to disclaim towering proof of its military’s atrocities in Ukraine, together with calling injured and killed Ukrainians disaster actors.

In 2018, Elisabeth Bumiller, The Occasions’s Washington bureau chief and my editor, agreed that the Sandy Hook lawsuits mirrored the period. The households search society’s verdict, I wrote, “on ‘submit reality’ tradition by which extensively disseminated lies injury lives and destroy reputations, but those that unfold them are seldom held accountable.”

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In my latest e book, “Sandy Hook: An American Tragedy and the Battle for Reality,” I wrote that the Sandy Hook conspiracy theories — as soon as believed to be true by one-quarter of People — foretold the world of delusion that we reside in immediately. Via my reporting, I traced the by way of line from Sandy Hook to Pizzagate; to QAnon, and its claims that Democrats had been trafficking youngsters; to antisemitic tropes invoked by neo-Nazi marchers in Charlottesville; to coronavirus myths; and to the 2020 election lie that fomented the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. And now, to the battle in Ukraine.

Lenny Pozner, father of Noah, the youngest of the Sandy Hook victims, predicted this unfold of disinformation throughout my earliest interviews with him in 2018. Mr. Pozner is a expertise skilled who, by way of his nonprofit, the HONR Community, protects the victims of on-line abuse. He was the primary relative of a Sandy Hook sufferer to confront the conspiracy theorists, satisfied that their falsehoods represented a broader risk. Mr. Pozner, who was born in a former Soviet republic, stated he was unsurprised when Russia dismissed proof of its actions in Ukraine with phrases much like these Mr. Jones used to disclaim Noah’s demise.

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My first shut expertise with wartime disinformation was through the Balkan wars of the Nineties. In Belgrade, a Serbian international ministry official gave me an armload of books, all of them falsely claiming that victims of the area’s genocidal wars had fabricated proof of atrocities or dedicated the crimes themselves.

However immediately, as I watch Russia unfold disinformation in regards to the battle in Ukraine with phrases that developed in America, after which American conspiracy theorists regurgitating that disinformation, I’ve realized that these books should not the discredited relics I imagined they might be.

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New York Dem Laura Gillen ousts incumbent Republican Rep. Anthony D'Esposito in toss-up House race

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New York Dem Laura Gillen ousts incumbent Republican Rep. Anthony D'Esposito in toss-up House race

One of the first-term Republican lawmakers key to the House GOP winning the majority in the last election is projected to lose his seat.

Rep. Anthony D’Esposito, R-N.Y., a retired NYPD officer, was defeated by former local official Laura Gillen in New York’s 4th Congressional District on suburban Long Island, in the shadow of New York City, The Associated Press said Thursday.

Two days after Election Day, the balance of power in the House is still undetermined, with key races yet to be called in Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada and other states. Democrats and Republicans have now each flipped four seats.

The election was a rematch of the November 2022 race, when D’Esposito beat Gillen and flipped the seat from blue to red.

FORMER NEW YORK GOV. DAVID PATERSON, STEPSON ATTACKED BY GROUP OF SUSPECTS WHILE WALKING DOG

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Democrat Laura Gillen faced off against first-term GOP Rep. Anthony D’Esposito in a rematch of their 2022 race. (Getty Images/Laura Gillen For Congress)

Gillen is a former Hempstead town supervisor and previously worked as an attorney representing victims of domestic violence, according to her campaign website.

She was backed by the House Democrats’ campaign arm, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, through their “Red to Blue” program – an initiative pouring resources and funding into seats where Democrats saw an opportunity to grow their numbers in the House of Representatives.

Gillen was endorsed by sitting New York Democratic Reps. Dan Goldman, Grace Meng and Tom Suozzi, among others.

MOST NEW YORK CITY RESIDENTS WANT INDICTED MAYOR ERIC ADAMS TO RESIGN: POLL

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George Santos

Rep. Anthony D’Esposito spearheaded the ouster of ex-Rep. George Santos, pictured here. (AP Photo/Stefan Jeremiah)

D’Esposito’s election in 2022 came amid a wave of voter backlash against New York City’s progressive crime policies, when Republicans swept key districts in the suburbs of New York and New Jersey.

He later helped lead the push to expel former Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., after his criminal indictment related to fraud and other charges.

However, his campaign was rocked in recent weeks by allegations in a New York Times report that D’Esposito possibly violated ethics rules by previously having his affair partner and his fiancée’s daughter on his payroll.

Representative Dan Goldman during a House Oversight and Accountability Committee hearing

Rep. Dan Goldman was among the New York Democrats to endorse Laura Gillen. (Tierney L. Cross/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

D’Esposito denied all the allegations when asked by reporters on Capitol Hill in late September.

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“There was nothing done that was unethical,” he said at the time.

When asked if he would stay in his race, D’Esposito said, “Absolutely. And win.”

Fox News’ Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

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Newsom calls special session to fund California's legal defense against Trump

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Newsom calls special session to fund California's legal defense against Trump

Launching his first salvo less than 36 hours after former President Trump was again elected to the White House, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday convened a special session of the state Legislature to increase legal funding to defend civil rights, climate change, access to abortion, disaster funding and other California policies from a conservative federal agenda before the inauguration in January.

Newsom’s preemptive strike signals the return of the hostile relationship between Democratic-controlled California and the Trump administration that was a hallmark of the Republican’s first term.

“The freedoms we hold dear in California are under attack — and we won’t sit idle,” Newsom said in a statement. “California has faced this challenge before, and we know how to respond. We are prepared to fight in the courts, and we will do everything necessary to ensure Californians have the support and resources they need to thrive.”

The new special session provides an early look at Newsom’s plan to wage an aggressive and highly visible campaign to shield California from the Trump White House while leading Democrats in the culture wars against the Republican Party.

In an interview in Orange County on Sunday, the Democratic governor warned that California will be dealing with a different Trump than the politician who won the presidency in 2016.

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“This is the revenge and retribution 2.0 version,” Newsom said.

In his acceptance speech early Wednesday, Trump declared that America had given him “an unprecedented and powerful mandate.”

Newsom’s special session proclamation says his administration anticipates that the incoming president could seek to limit access to abortion medication, pursue a national abortion ban, dismantle clean air and water environmental protections, repeal the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and withhold federal disaster response funding, among other promises he made during the campaign.

As part of its effort to prepare for a potential Trump presidency, the Newsom administration completed an analysis of Project 2025, which has been described as a playbook for a new GOP administration that includes plans for replacing thousands of career federal workers with Trump supporters who will carry out a far-right agenda.

Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and Newsom’s office also reviewed more than 100 lawsuits California filed against the federal government during Trump’s first administration to pinpoint potential vulnerabilities for the state and map out the president-elect’s agenda.

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Bonta called a news conference for Thursday morning to “discuss implications for California and preparations for a second Trump Administration” — another sign that the state’s top Democrats are preparing for legal battle.

The governor is asking lawmakers to provide additional funding to the California Department of Justice and other agencies in his administration to immediately file lawsuits and defend against litigation from and against the Trump administration.

The governor’s aides said increases to the state’s legal defense would be paid for with income tax revenues that have exceeded projections in the current fiscal year, but the amount of funding will be determined in negotiations at the state Capitol.

Newsom has called a special session two other times to achieve a policy objective, in his political battle with the oil industry. This also marks the second special session since lawmakers adjourned for the year at the end of August.

The new proclamation set the special session to begin on Dec. 2, the day newly elected lawmakers are scheduled to gather in the Senate and Assembly chambers to be sworn in. Legislators typically leave Sacramento after the ceremony to spend the holidays in their districts before returning for the regular session at the start of the year. The schedule for special session hearings has not yet been determined, but could take place in early January at the same time as the regular session.

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Laws passed in a special session and signed by the governor typically take affect 90 days after the session adjourns. Urgency bills, which require support from two-thirds of lawmakers, become law immediately with the governor’s signature. Bills that appropriate funding also take effect with his approval.

Trump’s inauguration is Jan. 20.

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Iran 'terrified' of Trump presidency as Iranian currency falls to an all-time low

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Iran 'terrified' of Trump presidency as Iranian currency falls to an all-time low

After President-elect Trump’s victory, Iran must now prepare to contend with the man it’s been trying to assassinate for years.

Tehran had reportedly been interfering in the U.S. election on behalf of Vice President Kamala Harris. But with former Trump’s win, the regime will have to prepare for a U.S. leader who is, at the very least, a wild card. 

On Wednesday, the Telegram channel of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IGRC), its military force, posted a video threatening to kill Trump. It ended with footage of a bloodied Trump and the words “We will finish the job.”

Iran has long vowed revenge for Trump approving the 2019 killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani. 

IRAN-BACKED IRAQI MILITIA ATTACKS HAIFA, ISRAEL WITH DRONES

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President-elect Donald Trump and Iranian leader Ali Khamenei   (Getty Images)

“The Islamic Republic has to be terrified that the presidential candidate that they tried to kill has just won the election,” Behnam Ben Taleblu, an Iran expert at the hawkish Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) think tank, told Fox News Digital. 

“The regime knows it can ill afford more exogenous economic shocks. Even the return of maximum pressure alone to the Islamic Republic is going to cause major, major economic problems.”

Iran’s currency tanked to an all-time low Wednesday after Trump clinched victory, signaling its challenges are far from over in the Middle East as war rages on through proxies in both Gaza and Lebanon. 

Donald Trump smiles

After Tuesday’s victory, Iran must now prepare to contend with the man it has been trying to assassinate for years. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

The rial traded at 703,000 rials to the dollar, traders in Tehran said, breaking a record before recovering slightly later in the day to 696,150 to $1.

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In 2015, at the time of Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers, the rial was at 32,000 to $1. On July 30, the day Iran’s reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian was sworn in and started his term, the rate was 584,000 to $1.

And despite U.S. sanctions that critics claim have not been enforced, Iran has been able to export near-record amounts of oil, around 1.7 million barrels per day.  

At the same time, Iran could ramp up production to build a nuclear weapon in a matter of weeks by many estimates. 

“Tehran knows maximum pressure is set to return,” said Taleblu. “During this lame duck period, the nuclear saber rattling threat has to be taken seriously, particularly when its conventional deterrence has been so badly beaten.”

After the Trump administration pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal in 2018, it imposed harsh sanctions on the regime to stop its funding of proxies abroad, banning U.S. citizens from trading with Iran or handling Iranian money. 

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It also punished entities in other countries that did business with Iran by cutting them off from the dollar. 

Khamenei waves

Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has led the yearslong campaign to assassinate Trump. (Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Image)

President Biden often waived enforcement of such sanctions, keen to bring Tehran back to the negotiating table to prevent it from acquiring nuclear weapons and fearful of driving up global oil prices. 

Iran gained access to more than $10 billion through a State Department sanctions waiver that allowed Iraq to continue buying energy from Iran, which the Biden administration argues is necessary to keep lights on in Baghdad. 

White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby has insisted none of the funds go to the IRGC or Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei but are “for humanitarian goods.”

IRAN THREATENS TO USE MORE POWERFUL WARHEADS AGAINST ISRAEL IN NEXT ATTACK: REPORT

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Iran must also now factor an imminent Trump presidency into how it escalates war with Israel. Israel responded to Tehran’s strikes on Tel Aviv last month with attacks on Iranian military sites, and now Khamenei has vowed harsh countermeasures. 

“Trump’s victory will give Iran pause as it considers striking back at Israel in their tit for tat,” said Sean McFate, adjunct professor at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. 

“During Trump’s previous administration, he scuttled the Iran Nuclear Deal (JCPOA), strongly embraced Israel and sought to normalize Jewish-Arab relations in the region. I doubt he will support the Palestinians, and he will likely end the Biden-Harris dual policy of support to both sides in the Gaza conflict. None of this is good for Iran.”

Iranian General Qasem Soleimani

Trump ordered a drone strike on Iranian Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani, center, in 2019. (Press Office of Iranian Supreme Leader/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

But others predicted Trump may actually be less supportive of Israel, Iran’s No. 1 foe in the region, than the Biden administration due to his anti-interventionist tendencies. 

“There’s the unpredictability factor with Trump,” said Chuck Freilich, former deputy national security adviser in Israel. “They don’t know. They’ll be cautious from that point of view with him and more so than they would have been with Biden.”

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“Will they be willing to do what has to be done to prevent Iran from crossing, and that may include military action? The Republican Party has become isolationist.

“Biden sent aircraft carrier groups [near Israel] on four occasions in the last year. That’s an unprecedented deployment of American force, both in support of Israel and to deter Iran. Is [Trump] willing to do that?” he added. “I think he will be maybe even less inclined to use military force than Biden would have been.”

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Officially, Iran brushed off the suggestion a Trump presidency could inflict damage on the regime. 

“The U.S. elections are not really our business. Our policies are steady and don’t change based on individuals. We made the necessary predictions before, and there will not be change in people’s livelihoods,” government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani said, according to the semi-official Tasnim news agency.

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