Facebook
Censorship, Mad Ben Nimmo and the Atlantic Council
Craig
Murray
Facebook
has deleted all of my posts from July 2017 to last week because I am,
apparently, a Russian Bot. For a while I could not add any new posts
either, but we recently found a way around that, at least for now. To
those of you tempted to say “So what?”, I would point out that over two
thirds of visitors to my website arrive via my posting of the articles
to Facebook and Twitter. Social media outlets like this blog, which
offer an alternative to MSM propaganda, are hugely at the mercy of these
corporate gatekeepers.
Facebook’s plunge into censorship is completely open and admitted, as is the fact it is operated for
Facebook by the Atlantic Council – the extreme neo-con group part
funded by NATO and whose board includes serial war criminal Henry
Kissinger, Former CIA Heads Michael Hayden and Michael Morrell, and
George Bush’s chief of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff, among a whole list of horrors.
The
staff are worse than the Board. Their lead expert on Russian bot
detection is an obsessed nutter named Ben Nimmo, whose fragile grip on
reality has been completely broken by his elevation to be the internet’s
Witchfinder-General. Nimmo, grandly titled “Senior Fellow for
Information Defense at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research
Lab”, is the go-to man for Establishment rubbishing of citizen
journalists, and as with Joseph McCarthy or Matthew Clarke, one day
society will sufficiently recover its balance for it to be generally
acknowledged that this kind of witch-hunt nonsense was not just an
aberration, but a manifestation of the evil it claimed to fight.
There is no Establishment cause Nimmo will not aid by labeling its opponents as Bots. This from the Heraldnewspaper
two days ago, where Nimmo uncovers the secret web of Scottish
Nationalist bots that dominate the internet, and had the temerity to
question the stitch-up of Alex Salmond.
Nimmo’s
proof? 2,000 people had used the hashtag #Dissolvetheunion on a total
of 10,000 tweets in a week. That’s five tweets per person on average. In
a week. Obviously a massive bot-plot, eh?
When Ben’s great expose for the Herald was met with widespread ridicule,
he doubled down on it by producing his evidence – a list of the top ten
bots he had uncovered in this research. Except that they are almost
all, to my certain knowledge, not bots but people. But do not decry
Ben’s fantastic forensic skills, for which NATO and the CIA fund the
Atlantic Council. Ben’s number one suspect was definitely a bot. He had
got the evil kingpin. He had seen through its identity despite its
cunning disguise. That disguise included its name, IsthisAB0T, and its
profile, where it called itself a bot for retweets on Independence.
Thank goodness for Ben Nimmo, or nobody would ever have seen through
that evil, presumably Kremlin-hatched, plan.
No wonder the Atlantic Council advertise Nimmo and his team as “Digital Sherlocks”
Nimmo’s track record is simply appalling. In this report for
the Atlantic Council website, he falsely identified British pensioner
@Ian56789 as a “Russian troll farm”, which led to Ian being named as
such by the British government, and to perhaps the most surreal Sky News
interview of all time. Perhaps still more remarkably, Nimmo searches
for use of the phrase “cui bono?” in reference to the Skripal and fake
Douma chemical weapons attacks. Nimmo characterises use of the phrase cui bono as evidence of pro-Assad and pro-Kremlin bots and trolls – he really does.Most people would think to consider cui bono indicates a smattering more commonsense than Nimmo himself displays.
It is at least obvious cui bono from
Nimmo’s witchfinding – the capacious, NATO and CIA stuffed pockets of
Ben Nimmo himself. That Facebook allows this utterly discredited
neo-conservative charlatan the run of its censorship operations needs,
given Facebook’s pivotal role in social media intercourse, to concern
everybody. The freedom of the internet is under fundamental attack.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.