Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Michael Moore said the Vegas odds had him at 4-1 surviving the first six months. I wonder if they changed the odds after the press conference?
Michael Moore correctly warned based on his intimate knowledge of MI blue collar voters that Trump would end up winning the election. But since then his pronouncements have been bizarre ranging from Trump not taking the oath of office even though he won the election, faithless electors, etc to not lasting in office for more than six months. He really has gone off the reservation.
Unfortunately, some stuff that he does say receives little attention though it deserves more focus like his statement yesterday that the Democrats need to junk their leadership and have a new group of younger leaders who have not failed take the helm.
Anonymous wrote:I did my part to back the press by purchasing annual subscriptions to The Washington Post, The NY Times, and the Wall Street Journal.
The press has my support to report the truth!
Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty sure he was trying to call them out on their misrepresentation and attempts to portray him in a negative light. I've heard lots of talk about the numbers, but has anyone mentioned how the Time reporter suggested that Trump removed the MLK bust from the Oval Office? That was a ridiculous accusation to tweet out and be wrong about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No he was was angry about the MLK bust--shame on media for trying yet again to manipulate
Ouch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did my part to back the press by purchasing annual subscriptions to The Washington Post, The NY Times, and the Wall Street Journal.
The press has my support to report the truth!
The NYTimes and WSJ are Trump enablers.
Anonymous wrote:I did my part to back the press by purchasing annual subscriptions to The Washington Post, The NY Times, and the Wall Street Journal.
The press has my support to report the truth!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Michael Moore said the Vegas odds had him at 4-1 surviving the first six months. I wonder if they changed the odds after the press conference?
Michael Moore correctly warned based on his intimate knowledge of MI blue collar voters that Trump would end up winning the election. But since then his pronouncements have been bizarre ranging from Trump not taking the oath of office even though he won the election, faithless electors, etc to not lasting in office for more than six months. He really has gone off the reservation.
Unfortunately, some stuff that he does say receives little attention though it deserves more focus like his statement yesterday that the Democrats need to junk their leadership and have a new group of younger leaders who have not failed take the helm.
Anonymous wrote:No he was was angry about the MLK bust--shame on media for trying yet again to manipulate
Anonymous wrote:Michael Moore said the Vegas odds had him at 4-1 surviving the first six months. I wonder if they changed the odds after the press conference?
Anonymous wrote:Just visited fox news page on facebook. Scrolled down to their post from Spicer's briefing - almost all the comments are "finally someone telling us the truth" and "glad he's a strong speaker." and "the liberal media was lying." Feels like an alternate universe.
Anonymous wrote:Just visited fox news page on facebook. Scrolled down to their post from Spicer's briefing - almost all the comments are "finally someone telling us the truth" and "glad he's a strong speaker." and "the liberal media was lying." Feels like an alternate universe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:f you are puzzled by the bizarre "press conference" put on by the White House press secretary this evening (angrily claiming that Trump's inauguration had the largest audience in history, accusing them of faking photos and lying about attendance), let me help explain it. This spectacle served three purposes:
1. Establishing a norm with the press: they will be told things that are obviously wrong and they will have no opportunity to ask questions. That way, they will be grateful if they get anything more at any press conference. This is the PR equivalent of "negging," the odious pick-up practice of a particular kind of horrible person (e.g., Donald Trump).
2. Increasing the separation between Trump's base (1/3 of the population) from everybody else (the remaining 2/3). By being told something that is obviously wrong—that there is no evidence for and all evidence against, that anybody with eyes can see is wrong—they are forced to pick whether they are going to believe Trump or their lying eyes. The gamble here—likely to pay off—is that they will believe Trump. This means that they will regard media outlets that report the truth as "fake news" (because otherwise they'd be forced to confront their cognitive dissonance.)
3. Creating a sense of uncertainty about whether facts are knowable, among a certain chunk of the population (which is a taking a page from the Kremlin, for whom this is their preferred disinformation tactic). A third of the population will say "clearly the White House is lying," a third will say "if Trump says it, it must be true," and the remaining third will say "gosh, I guess this is unknowable." The idea isn't to convince these people of untrue things, it's to fatigue them, so that they will stay out of the political process entirely, regarding the truth as just too difficult to determine.
This is laying important groundwork for the months ahead. If Trump's White House is willing to lie about something as obviously, unquestionably fake as this, just imagine what else they'll lie about. In particular, things that the public cannot possibly verify the truth of. It's gonna get real bad.
Well thought through post. I agree with your explanation. This is typical disinformation campaign. This is step 1 of Russification of American propaganda. It will get worse BUT unlike Russia he can't corral the press here and every American has a camera so the truth will eventually win out. In the age of twitter , periscope and FB you can't get away with patently false info and lies easily. They will quickly lose credibility but they can't quickly rebuild it.
I agree with all of the above but Trump is also behaving like a classic, controlling narvissist. Ask anyone who ever divorced one. They lie, exaggerate, project, make up facts, praise them self, tear down whomever they are divorcing, etc. oftentimes they are surrounded by enablers who walk on eggshells and help the narcissist wreak havoc and go after others. Anyone who has ever had a high conflict diborce knows this is how narcissists like Trump behave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:f you are puzzled by the bizarre "press conference" put on by the White House press secretary this evening (angrily claiming that Trump's inauguration had the largest audience in history, accusing them of faking photos and lying about attendance), let me help explain it. This spectacle served three purposes:
1. Establishing a norm with the press: they will be told things that are obviously wrong and they will have no opportunity to ask questions. That way, they will be grateful if they get anything more at any press conference. This is the PR equivalent of "negging," the odious pick-up practice of a particular kind of horrible person (e.g., Donald Trump).
2. Increasing the separation between Trump's base (1/3 of the population) from everybody else (the remaining 2/3). By being told something that is obviously wrong—that there is no evidence for and all evidence against, that anybody with eyes can see is wrong—they are forced to pick whether they are going to believe Trump or their lying eyes. The gamble here—likely to pay off—is that they will believe Trump. This means that they will regard media outlets that report the truth as "fake news" (because otherwise they'd be forced to confront their cognitive dissonance.)
3. Creating a sense of uncertainty about whether facts are knowable, among a certain chunk of the population (which is a taking a page from the Kremlin, for whom this is their preferred disinformation tactic). A third of the population will say "clearly the White House is lying," a third will say "if Trump says it, it must be true," and the remaining third will say "gosh, I guess this is unknowable." The idea isn't to convince these people of untrue things, it's to fatigue them, so that they will stay out of the political process entirely, regarding the truth as just too difficult to determine.
This is laying important groundwork for the months ahead. If Trump's White House is willing to lie about something as obviously, unquestionably fake as this, just imagine what else they'll lie about. In particular, things that the public cannot possibly verify the truth of. It's gonna get real bad.
Well thought through post. I agree with your explanation. This is typical disinformation campaign. This is step 1 of Russification of American propaganda. It will get worse BUT unlike Russia he can't corral the press here and every American has a camera so the truth will eventually win out. In the age of twitter , periscope and FB you can't get away with patently false info and lies easily. They will quickly lose credibility but they can't quickly rebuild it.