Topic: U.S.A. Declares War On Russia & China News
no photo
Sat 03/19/16 02:41 PM
Edited by SassyEuro2 on Sat 03/19/16 02:43 PM
Part 1 of 2

The Propaganda Machine: Leaked Video Shows All of RT's Terrible Secrets

Well, finally we know the truth behind RT – the Russian TV channel is run by a Kremlin bear and a woman in military uniform, who keep their staff under the fear of death and their foreign employees locked in a prison cell to keep the "Russian propaganda" running smoothly.

Following continuous accusations from Western media and politicians over RT's work, the channel's editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan ordered the publication of a video revealing all the secrets used by the "Russian propaganda machine."

The hilarious self-mocking video shows it all: corruption, Gulag-style dungeons, fake reports made in studios, foreign correspondents chained to their desks, the channel's constant coordination with the Kremlin and of course Misha the bear, working as one of RT's directors.

Naturally, the clip went viral with Internet users loving the ironic way the channel dealt with the criticisms of Western media and politicians, some of whom seriously think RT uses methods shown in the video.

Well, of course they do!

Tags:
Russian propaganda, RT, Margarita Simonyan, Russia

http://m.sputniknews.com/art_living/20151214/1031733055/rt-propaganda-truth.html/
* Video on link *
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Part 2 of 2

US Senators Introduce Bill to Counter Russian, Chinese 'Propaganda"

http://m.sputniknews.com/us/20160317/1036449926/us-russia-china-propaganda.html/

George Orwell must be turning over in his grave: two US senators want to create an agency to counter what they deem to be "propaganda" from Russia and China.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) – US Senators Rob Portman and Chris Murphy introduced a new bill to the Senate on Wednesday to counter alleged Russian and Chinese propaganda.

"In order to improve our response to foreign propaganda and disinformation, we need a comprehensive strategy. We have to delegitimize false narratives coming out of Russia, China and other nations," Portman, a Republican senator from the state of Ohio, said in a speech at the Atlantic Council think-tank.

Murphy, a Democrat for Connecticut, contended that the United States was "too slow to adapt to the disinformation campaigns of our adversaries and competitors."

"Many nations today are bombarded by foreign propaganda and manipulated information. This disinformation is often intended specifically to undermine the United States, our allies, and interests," he argued.

The Countering Foreign Propaganda and Disinformation Act prioritizes three areas, including creating government agencies to "expose and counter" foreign propaganda, as well as engaging the private sector and local communities in the effort.

Portman contended that the efforts of Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) – funded by the US government Broadcasting Board of Governors agency – "pales in comparison" to that of the broadcasters RT and CCTV, that he claims are state-owned.

"Even with more funding and resources, the success of US foreign broadcasting would be hindered without a coordinated, whole-of-government strategy," he stressed.

Last fall, the European Union's External Action Service launched a task force to counter perceived Russian propaganda. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) maintains a section on its website claiming to "set the record straight" regarding its eastern expansion toward Russian borders that the alliance describes as "mythical."

Russia has maintained that Western and other foreign media outlets deliberately distort information regarding Russia, including its counterterrorist campaign in Syria, doping allegations in sports and many foreign policy initiatives.

Tags:
propaganda, Rob Portman, Chris Murphy, China, United States, Russia

Related:
NATO Ramps Up Anti-Russian Propaganda Just as Syria Reaches Peace

Moscow Dismisses NATO Claims of Russian 'Agressive' Policies as Propaganda

UK, Polish Prime Ministers Agree to Counter 'Russian Propaganda'

Germans No Longer Believe Anti-Russian Propaganda - German Publicist



no photo
Sat 03/19/16 02:48 PM
George Orwell must be turning over in his grave: two US senators want to create an agency to counter what they deem to be "propaganda" from Russia and China.


THIS ^^^^^^

Conrad_73's photo
Sat 03/19/16 03:16 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/russia-steps-propaganda-push-online-kremlin-trolls-060946758.html


Russia steps up propaganda push with online "Kremlin trolls"
Associated Press By IULIIA SUBBOTOVSKA
May 29, 2015 7:34 AM


ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) — Deep inside a four-story marble building in St. Petersburg, hundreds of workers tap away at computers on the front lines of an information war, say those who have been inside. Known as "Kremlin trolls," the men and women work 12-hour shifts around the clock, flooding the Internet with propaganda aimed at stamping President Vladimir Putin's world vision on Russia, and the world.

The Kremlin has always dabbled in propaganda, but in the past year its troll campaign has gone into overdrive, adding hundreds of online operatives to help counter Western pressure over its role in the pro-Russian insurgency in eastern Ukraine. The program is drawing Serbia away from its proclaimed EU membership path and closer to the Russian orbit, and is targeting Germany, the United States and other Western powers. The operation has worried the European Union enough to prompt it to draw up a blueprint for fighting Russia's disinformation campaign, although details have not yet been released.

Lyuda Savchuk, a single mother with two children, worked in the St. Petersburg "troll factory" until mid-March. The 34-year-old journalist said she had some idea of the Orwellian universe she was entering when she took the job, but underestimated its intensity and scope.

"I knew it was something bad, but of course I never suspected that it was this horrible and this large-scale," she said in an interview in her apartment, which has colorful drawings on the walls for her two preschool-age children.

She described how the trolls manage several social media accounts under different nicknames, such as koka-kola23, green_margo and Funornotfun. Those in her department had to bash out 160 blog posts during a 12-hour shift. Trolls in other departments flooded the Internet with doctored images and pro-Putin commentary on news stories that crop up on Russian and Western news portals.

In some departments, she said, the trolls receive daily talking points on what to write and what emotions to evoke. "It seems to me that they don't know what they are doing," Savchuk said. "They simply repeat what they are told."

She said most of the trolls are young and are attracted by relatively high monthly salaries of 40,000 to 50,000 rubles ($800 to $1,000).


Her descriptions of the work coincide with those of other former trolls who have spoken publicly, although Savchuk is one of the few willing to have her full name published. She quit after a little more than two months, after finding she couldn't stand being part of a propaganda machine.

The trolls are employed by Internet Research, which Russian news reports say is financed by a holding company headed by Putin's friend and personal chef. Those who have worked there say they have little doubt that the operation is run from the Kremlin.

St. Petersburg journalist Andrei Soshnikov, who was one of the first to report on the "troll factory," said about 400 people work in the building. A video he posted on YouTube this spring gave a rare glimpse inside the building; in one room trolls were shown sitting shoulder-to-shoulder at their computers. The operation moved into the building when it expanded in March 2014, the month Russia seized Crimea from Ukraine and provoked the first round of Western economic sanctions.

Soshnikov, a reporter at the weekly Moi Rayon, or My Region, said there has been a new push in recent months to hire more English-speaking trolls as part of an effort to sway public opinion in the United States.

"All of a sudden, (they) switch on Russia Today and realize that this is a holy land, Obama is a bloody dictator and true freedom of speech exists only in Russia."

In Serbia, trolls are recruited through several small right-wing parties that are both financially and politically supported by Russia, media analysts say.

When Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov was killed in Moscow in late February, the Serbian trolls were quick to react. "Who is to gain from this assassination but America? It must have been CIA," was the dominant mantra that took hold in discussions on Serbian news sites. "Likes" went into the hundreds, while comments such as "Putin is responsible" received widespread ridicule.

Serbs receive most of their information about Russia from Moscow-backed media, and the trolls reinforce the Kremlin line. The result is a widespread view in Serbia that the Kiev regime is neo-Nazi and that Putin was right to annex Crimea.

"One of the consequences is the fact that popular support for the EU integration has dropped below 50 percent for the first time since democratic change in Serbia in 2000," said Jelena Milic, a political analyst at the Center for Euro-Atlantic Studies, in Belgrade. "It is going to be very hard to recover this public support."

In Germany, the foreign ministry has tried to counter the propaganda by issuing a memo to its diplomats on how to debunk some of the standard Russian arguments about the Ukraine conflict.

For instance, the memo answers the statement that "fascists are in power in Kiev" by noting that radical and far-right groups made up only a small proportion of the demonstrators who ousted the Russia-friendly president, and that far-right parties did very poorly in subsequent parliamentary and presidential elections.

_____

Dusan Stojanovic in Belgrade, Serbia and Frank Jordans in Berlin contributed to this report.