With days to go until election day, there are increasing signs of voter disinformation and suppression tactics targeting Black and Latino voters. Just this past week in Florida, numerous voters in a heavily-Democrat county received disturbing emails that threatened them if they donโt vote for President Trump.
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Now organizers in battleground states like Florida, Michigan, and Georgia are sounding the alarm that such scare tactics are likely to intensify in the coming week, and are flagging voters of color to recognize the misinformation as such.
โWeโve learned is that there was a bit of an education gap on what it really means to counter misinformation and disinformation,โ said Ashley Bryant, co-lead of Win Black/Paโlante, in a roundtable this week about the groupโs work to alert Black and brown communities to the many insidious efforts to dissuade them from voting.
In the absence of education about what is happening, Bryant says people of color are often inadvertently amplifying many of the false narratives meant to chill their participation this election.
And the narratives are pretty nefarious.
โSome have taken the form of robocalls that harkens to folks being put on a national registry, warrants being flagged, people having to take the coronavirus vaccine that doesnโt exist yet,โ Rai Lanier, an organizer with Michigan Liberation, said at the roundtable.
โThere are folks pretending to be government officials coming from Supervisors of Elections offices who go on Latinx or Haitian radio talking about absentee ballots, saying that if your ballot is absentee then you are throwing your ballot into a tomb โ so really saying that your ballot will never get anywhere,โ added Santra Denis, of the Miami Workers Center.
Alongside seeding distrust in absentee voting, disinformation in Florida is also taking the form of radio hosts leveraging tensions between the Black and Latino communities.
From NPR:
Carinรฉs A. Moncada claimed that a co-founder of Black Lives Matter practiced โbrujerรญaโ โ witchcraft.
โSo you ask yourself, โWhy are they destructive?โโ she said, referring to protesters who support the Black Lives Matter movement. โBecause they are vibrating with the devil. They are vibrating with negativity. They are vibrating with the dark.โ
โAnd whoever votes for Biden, unfortunately, is supporting that,โ she concluded.
By repeating the racist tropes on the radio, Ms. Moncada spread it beyond her 45,000 Twitter followers and into South Floridaโs mainstream broadcast media, a worrying circle of misinformation targeting Latino voters in the nationโs biggest presidential battleground state.
As is the case with last weekโs threatening email to Floridians, that purported to be from the Proud Boys but federal officials say originated in Iran, it isnโt clear if the disinformation is coming from foreign interlopers, domestic actors, or collusion between the two.
โWe are just having to contend with the content,โ says Nse Ufot, Executive Director of The New Georgia Project. โWe are having to contend with folks who are not plugged into this every day, and who donโt understand that Photoshop has gotten really good.โ
At this point, the main defense for voters in the lead up to election day on November 3 is to be aware of what is happening and to be more discerning about what comes in front of them and what they are sharing.
Basically: stay woke, yโall.
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