The United States on September 13 said the Russian news outlet RT is taking orders directly from the Kremlin and working with Russian military intelligence to spread disinformation around the world to undermine democracies.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the United States has gathered new evidence that exposes cooperation between RT and four other subsidiaries of the Rossia Segodnya media group, and it intends to warn other countries of the threat of the disinformation.

In addition to RT, Rossia Segodnya operates RIA Novosti, TV-Novosti, Ruptly, and Sputnik, but the announcement on September 13 focused largely on RT. The outlet, formerly known as Russia Today, has previously been sanctioned for its work to allegedly spread Kremlin propaganda and disinformation.

  • @Carrolade
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    34 days ago

    Yeah, we’re not new to information warfare, this stuff goes all the way back to the Cold War at least.

    The point is that its on, and since its on, it’s a question of do you want to win or lose.

    • @[email protected]
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      -144 days ago

      Oh that’s some wild whataboutism. It’s OK for USA to do it because everyone else does. Man that’s some awful way to think.

      • @Carrolade
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        64 days ago

        Yeah, at no point did I say anything was okay. That’s a strawman you concocted.

        • @[email protected]
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          -94 days ago

          So yeah the head of a crime organization probably shouldn’t be pointing their fingers at other crime organizations. Just because crime exists historically doesn’t mean you should head a mafia group.

          • @Carrolade
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            84 days ago

            This is exactly what a whataboutism is. Let’s take an axe murderer who murders people’s families. If another axe murderer goes and murders that guy’s family, would it be smart to just ignore it?

            The question isn’t what has been done in the past or who deserves what. It’s what should be done now?

            • @[email protected]
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              -54 days ago

              You clearly do not understand whataboutism. It’s when someone uses someone else doing the same thing as an excuse. If Russia does it it’s OK for USA to do it. That’s whataboutism.

              And yes. Let the criminals kill themselves. That’s why USA doesn’t really do anything about gang wars.

              • @Carrolade
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                54 days ago

                No, that is not a whataboutism in general, perhaps it’s your personal definition to just reverse it like that. This is whataboutism:

                https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whataboutism

                Note, my example was not an axe murderer murdering another axe murderer. It was murdering the axe murder’s family. Not him, his family. Siblings, children, cousins, aunts and uncles, you know. People related to you that aren’t actually you.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -24 days ago

                  Your article agrees with me. But it’s clear I’m not going to be able to explain it to you.

                  Are all those involved in gang wars guilty? Probably not but it’s still wise of the police not to get involved.

                  And similarly, yes the axe murderer who just murdered the other guys family and is asking for help. I’m probably gonna ignore him.

                  • @Carrolade
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                    34 days ago

                    That family didn’t do anything wrong though. His kids are still just kids, yet you’re fine with them dying just for being born to the wrong father?

                    And no, the whataboutism article is sort of the opposite of your definition. Your definition says its a defense for an action. The article says it’s a defense for an accusation. These are not the same thing. The person doing an action, and someone else accusing them of their action, are not the same ones. That’s pretty key.

                    Why do I get the vague impression I’m arguing with a right winger?

    • Maeve
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      -54 days ago

      Spanish American war, and some *say the revolutionary war. We all lose with lies, especially when it’s done to a propagandist’s own people (except the billionaires and corporations).

      • @Carrolade
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        64 days ago

        Yeah I agree, I don’t like it when we push propaganda overseas. That does not mean, however, that we shouldn’t pay attention when its being done to us.

        Does that person want us to just shut up and take it? Let this happen to us without complaint or countermeasure? It’s a whataboutism, ultimately.

        • Maeve
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          -54 days ago

          It’s a whataboutism, ultimately.

          Critical assessment of all information we have available to us isn’t whataboutery, imo, and often means breaking down large chunks of information into digestible bits. If it’s not acceptable for them to do it to us or their own, it’s not acceptable for us to do it to ours, or our own, full stop. From my obviously limited perspective, there are very few who benefit from regular people infighting or fighting regular citizens of other nations, about this. The people benefitting from this aren’t us regular people.

          • @Carrolade
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            74 days ago

            When someone points out a wrong, and someone else points out a different wrong of the same sort with the intent of making an argument around hypocrisy, that’s a whataboutism.

            In this case it’s an article about Russia doing it, and a commenter essentially saying “what about when America did it?”

            I ask again, what decision do they want us to make right now, in the current moment? We can’t go back in time and undo what we did. So what is that commenter’s proposal, what do they think would be the best path forward concerning RT, today?

            • Maeve
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              -44 days ago

              I ask again, what decision do they want us to make right now, in the current moment? We can’t go back in time and undo what we did.

              We can stop pretending we didn’t, and aren’t still doing that.

              So what is that commenter’s proposal, what do they think would be the best path forward concerning RT, today?

              I can’t speak for that person. I also can’t raise Ed Bernays from the dead and lock him up, but guess who he worked for?

              • @Carrolade
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                94 days ago

                Nobody is pretending we didn’t. The articles linked were all in our news, right? And you and I are talking openly about it right now on the internet, yes? So, who is pretending it never happened?

                It’s about what next? What should we do concerning RT in your opinion then? Because I haven’t personally had any good ideas asides avoid overseas propaganda efforts in the future. But that’s not an idea about RT, and it won’t make RT go away.

                • Maeve
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                  -44 days ago

                  So we can enact criminal and financial penalties on untrue articles, and stop redefining terms when what is untrue when it becomes inconvenient for us, especially businesses and politicians. And redirect institutions away from retribution to rehabilitation. If a behavior is repeated, by domestic or foreign entities, they don’t get to operate here.

                  • @Carrolade
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                    44 days ago

                    So, we have a first amendment, we actually cannot prohibit or penalize someone for distributing propaganda to our citizens, that law would be illegal to make. We can make them register as foreign agents, that’s how the tenet media people got in trouble, that and being shady with where their money was coming from. We have no charges for propaganda distribution though, despite the very clear evidence of the behavior.

                    To your other question, like I said, I have no real good ideas on concrete steps we can take that might prove useful. Unless we want to repeal the first amendment or something, which I don’t think is a good idea.