Department of Homeland Security
DHS' Crusade Against Misinformation Is Another Example of Anti-Terror Mission Creep
While the Department of Homeland Security pressured tech companies to censor their users' posts, it also branded election deniers as potential terrorists.

On Monday, The Intercept published an article on the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) efforts to combat misinformation and disinformation. Drawing on a combination of leaked and public documents, the outlet detailed how the DHS pressured major tech companies to police false election information on their respective platforms.
Twenty-four hours later, ProPublica published an investigation of its own, titled: "How the Biden Administration Caved to Republicans on Fighting Election Disinformation." It makes the case that as local election officials have begged federal agencies for help countering disinformation, "current and former [DHS] employees are frustrated that the agency's efforts have been hobbled in response to political pressure."
At first glance, these would seem to be contradictory reports. But taken together, the articles tell a consistent story of a federal agency with misplaced priorities.
The Intercept's article focused on DHS and FBI efforts to influence tech companies' moderation decisions. It cited internal documents and communications to show that starting before the 2020 election, the DHS and the FBI began holding regular meetings with representatives from each of the major tech companies, including Meta, Twitter, and Microsoft. The meetings, which have continued on a biweekly basis through at least August of this year, were intended to assess each firm's responsiveness to reports of misinformation and disinformation on its platform. Government agents also reported thousands of social media posts, many of which the platforms removed or flagged as a result.
The ProPublica article, on the other hand, concerns DHS initiatives to "counter the influence and impact of dangerous conspiracy theories that can provide a gateway to terrorist violence," specifically theories regarding U.S. elections. Election officials have asked the DHS for assistance regarding threats from conspiracists: Many supporters of former President Donald Trump, spun up by his long-debunked allegations of fraud, have spent the last two years harassing officials who administer local elections.
Earlier this year, the DHS' Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) planned to roll out a new initiative from the Election Infrastructure Information Sharing & Analysis Center (EI-ISAC), which is within the Center for Internet Studies, a nonprofit partly funded by CISA. EI-ISAC is geared toward providing cyber defense for state and local election officials. According to ProPublica, the initiative would have "allowed elections officials to sign up for a service to protect them from having their identities and personal information exposed on the internet," as well as "created a system to track and alert elections officials who were subject to serious threats on social media, including from foreign actors."
The initiative stalled amid criticism from Republican lawmakers as well as bad press over the botched rollout of the DHS' Disinformation Governance Board. In response, election officials from Colorado and Florida sent a letter to DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and CISA Director Jen Easterly, asking them "to approve and fund" the program "to support us and help us protect ourselves." The ProPublica story cites several current and former DHS officials bemoaning the agency's "retreat" from disinformation enforcement.
Harassment of election officials is a very real issue. While most political rhetoric is protected free speech, the Supreme Court has recognized a "true threats" exception to the First Amendment. Since 2020, some people have been convicted for threatening election officials with violence or death.
But tasking the DHS, whose primary initial purview was directly related to the threat of terrorism, with adjudicating politically motivated threats against local officials has a high potential for abuse. In February, in a National Terrorism Advisory System Bulletin, the DHS referenced a "heightened threat environment" fueled in part by misinformation and disinformation "introduced and/or amplified by foreign and domestic threat actors." And in the letter to Mayorkas and Easterly, the Colorado and Florida officials contended that "doxing, threats, and intimidation faced by election personnel" fell under the definition of terrorism.
Fears of domestic terrorism often form the basis for calls to increase government surveillance and harassment of citizens. Last year, the National School Boards Association (NSBA) demanded a federal response to reports of threats and violent rhetoric against school board members by aggrieved parents, deeming it "a form of domestic terrorism." While not using the term domestic terrorism, Attorney General Merrick Garland did issue a memo in response, directing the FBI and U.S. Attorneys to coordinate with local officials in each of the nation's 14,000 school districts to "facilitate the discussion of strategies for addressing threats against school administrators, board members, teachers, and staff." All this, despite the fact that reports of actual violence and threats against school board members were significantly overblown.
Federal and state laws already exist against both voter intimidation and poll worker intimidation. If the DHS is declining to treat such threats as terroristic in nature and leaving enforcement to agencies better equipped, then so much the better.
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"DHS' Crusade Against Misinformation Is Another Example of Un-Constitutional Treason"
FTFY
Everybody associated with this program should receive a trial and a death sentence. This isn't complicated. It's the first fucking amendment.
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If people recognized the number of lies they are told daily and currently believe to be true, compelling them to make decisions in the liars interest instead of their own, they wouldn’t be terrified, they’d be angry.
DHS can’t be looking very hard.
You replied to a bot. I would think a Grupenfuhrer, such as yourself, would pick up on that.
“Ted AKA Teddy Salad, CIA/US Ballet Force 1 day ago
His posts were getting too long. Had to mute him.”
Promises promises. You’re a liar through and through.
Here is the Kol Nidre text. The holiest Jewish prayer on the holiest Jewish day. Clearly a plan to lie.
“All vows, obligations, oaths, and anathemas [curses]which we may vow, or swear, or pledge, or whereby we may be bound, from this Day of Atonement until the next we do repent. May they be deemed absolved, forgiven, annulled, and void, and made of no effect: they shall not bind us nor have any power over us. The vows shall not be reckoned vows; the obligations shall not be obligations; nor the oaths be oaths.”
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All I can say about "election deniers" (I don't like the term denier because it intentionally compares the person to someone who denies the Holocaust, but I digress) is that Ron White is correct.
Having said that, there MAY be a legitimate role for government in detecting and reporting "misinformation" and "disinformation" threats to society in the same way that the CDC might have a legitimate role in early detection and warnings about incoming viral epidemic threats to public health.
Yeah because the government would never use that role to suppress truthful information it didn't like.
There is no government role in that. The way you handle misinformation is putting out the truth. If the misinformation wins out, it is because no one trusts you and that is your fault for lying so much in the past.
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"Congress shall make no law..."
fuck off, slaver
>>there MAY be a legitimate role for government
defend the fake lines on the map and point the guns outward. only.
In a utopic world, maybe. But in a utopic world you wouldn't need this.
In this world, there is no one I trust in government to regulate and classify speech to any degree.
Well said. A reckoning is coming and it’s Red!
I don’t like the term denier because it intentionally compares the person to someone who denies the Holocaust
As the term was designed to do
Poland begins work on 130-mile fence along its border amid fears Russia is planning to orchestrate an influx of migrants from Africa and the Middle East
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11381465/Poland-build-wire-fence-border-amid-fears-Russia-planning-migrant-influx-Kaliningrad.html
Finally somebody listens to Trump. Gotta keep them dirty furners out.
They don't want their country overwhelmed by refugees. How dare they.
You really are a broken toy, aren't you?
Calling people names is how to impress people around here. You’re doing good. If you really want to impress people you need to call me an alcoholic and say disgusting things about me and my child. That’s how you make friends.
Russia is using the threat of refugees as a weapon of war. And your bitching about Poland defending itself against that. If refugees are so great, why is Putin trying to send so many of them to Poland. Is Putin just a nice guy and we don't know about it?
Again, you really are a broken toy.
Lighten up Francis. I was making a joke that Poland might do what Trump could not.
You’re as bad as the rest here. You see a sentence and read a whole book.
If I missed the joke, my apologies. It is hard to tell on here.
No worries. Unlike many here, I don't think you intend to act as if you'd look like a penis with ears if you shaved your head.
So, paraphrasing the gist of the DHS mission creep: Voters cannot be trusted to make informed decisions about candidates for public office; voters cannot tell the difference between ridiculous conspiracy theories and actual conspiracies; and, therefore, democracy doesn't work. How can anyone possibly square that with the narrative that ridiculous conspiracy theories represent existential threats to "our democracy?" The ability to hold two or more mutually exclusive concepts in one's mind simultaneously is supposed to describe some pathologic human condition. And yet this is a perfect example of a self-denying narrative. For democracy to be a better system than any other alternative requires the acceptance that the people can do a better job of choosing their representatives than any other method; and that the resulting (constitutionally limited) government will be better than an anarchy, a monarchy, a dictatorship, a kleptocracy, an oligarchy and so on. If you don't believe that the voters are competent, then you don't believe in democracy in the first place and protesting against threats to democracy are self-serving nonsense.
This is their attitude. Just look at what happened when the idiot public dared vote for Truss over the latest WEF stooge.
Epstein didnt kill himself.
Voters cannot be trusted to make informed decisions about candidates for public office; voters cannot tell the difference between ridiculous conspiracy theories and actual conspiracies; and, therefore, democracy doesn’t work. How can anyone possibly square that with the narrative that ridiculous conspiracy theories represent existential threats to “our democracy?”
You have to read between the lines. When they winge about "existential threats to our democracy," they're not talking about democracy as a general term for a system of government, they're talking about "Our Democracy." The difference between democracy and "Our Democracy" is that democracy is, in general, a system where people vote in fair elections for who they want to represent them while "Our Democracy" is similar, but the results are only recognized as legitimate as long as the peasants vote the way they're supposed to.
^+1000000000000 on both posts...
Democrats has used their "Our Democracy" to describe their Nazi-Empire taking over the CONSTITUTIONAL Republic USA.
Addressing Stossel’s point about terrorism threats separately: there is almost certainly a legitimate role for government to try to detect the planning of imminent crimes as long as they do so within the original Constitutional limits. Reasonable suspicion, probable cause, application for a warrant and due process should govern such activities as wiretaps and their more modern electronic equivalents and punishment of officials for violating procedures all would safeguard the rights of the innocent and the guilty.
Where's Sqrlsy? This is exactly what everyone was saying was happening and he insisted wasn't:
" It cited internal documents and communications to show that starting before the 2020 election, the DHS and the FBI began holding regular meetings with representatives from each of the major tech companies, including Meta, Twitter, and Microsoft. The meetings, which have continued on a biweekly basis through at least August of this year, were intended to assess each firm's responsiveness to reports of misinformation and disinformation on its platform. Government agents also reported thousands of social media posts, many of which the platforms removed or flagged as a result."
This isn't "Muh private company". This is the federal government using pressure tactics to illegally order companies to censor citizens.
This is Stasi level stuff, about as bad as it can get in a supposedly free country.
If Reason were still a libertarian magazine the Intercept story would be taking up all the oxygen here since it came out.
Notice how the problem isn't the Biden Administration being totalitarian assholes. No, the problem is "mission creep". The Biden Administration are just bystanders or something.
One thing about reason that you can always depend; it is never the Democrat's fault. It is either the Republican's fault or just something that happened like "mission creep".
Not just sqrsly. Jeffy did the sophistry song and dance number that he does for every horrible travesty against personal liberties.
Harassment of election officials is a very real issue.
Sure, people shouldn't be making threats against others. But when the person is a public official whose name and information are public, there's a free speech question. One of the cases cited is an Iowa man who called an election official in Arizona, leaving two voicemails on her work number. There's no evidence he ever left the state of Iowa or took any actions other than saying "You're gonna die, you piece of shit. We're gonna hang you. We're gonna hang you."
This is a publication that has defended the free speech of people who have offered to feed a judge into a woodchipper feet-first. I think there's somewhere to go beyond taking "Well yes, these threats are serious and must be stopped" in stride. There's questions to ask. Is it a threat because it's directed at the person in question? Would Reason feel the same about a BLM crowd shouting about burning down a police station with the cops inside? Should those people be prosecuted for issuing true threats? That's even people who are in the same general vicinity and in a position to follow through.
How much protection from public outrage is appropriate for public officials? I think it's a fair question to explore.
Would Reason feel the same about a BLM crowd shouting about burning down a police station with the cops inside? Should those people be prosecuted for issuing true threats? That’s even people who are in the same general vicinity and in a position to follow through.
That is totally different, because reasons.
It's only "mission creep" if you buy that anti-terrorism is the actual mission, and that "anti-terrorism" is not just a cover for full totalitarian control.
+10000 well said.
So we finally seem to be getting past “They’re private companies, you see, and aren’t covered by the first amendment”. Good, it’s about time.
Can we openly call for criminal prosecution of the motherfuckers who have knowingly violated our 1A rights? POS’ like Chris Wray, Alejandro Mayorkas, and of course Merrick Garland. You know, the fuckers that authorized the US government’s censorship of major media outlets.
And (honest question) who is it that enforces the law and prosecutes the top law enforcement officials when they’re obviously corrupt? Congress?
This is what special counsels were made for. There needs to be a special counsel appointed to investigate this with an eye towards criminal indictment of everyone involved. At the very least the three you mention should be looking at years in the fucking can and felony convictions.
*works bolt on .416 Barret rifle*
"Ego custodiet, motherfucker."
After 9/11, it seemed to me the problem with the intelligence was that there was way to much bureaucracy and turf wars that led to the missed signs. I was for reform of the intelligence gathering services. What I didn't want was more bureaucracy. So, what did the feds do? Create more bureaucracy and a new federal agency. The exact opposite of what was needed, and now we hear that, surprise, surprise, the new agency has expanded far beyond it's original purview. Like that never has happened in the past? For a hint, the FBI was originally founded to investigate the supposed white slave trade, which rarely actually occurred, and by extension abductions that cross state lines. So get that, the FBI was originally a federal vice squad.
It reminds me of something my freshman world history prof taught us, I believe it was Adam Smith he was quoting (it's been nearly 30 years so you'll forgive me if the details are a bit hazy) that bureaucracies will endeavor to further bureaucracy.
I think it was Oscar Wilde who said, "The bureaucracy must expand in order to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy."
Is it "a very real issue" though? I'm going to need to see a lot more receipts before I accept any of their claims as rising to the level of "true threats." But then again, I don't believe anyone's claims at face value anymore, least of all government officials looking to justify a power grab.
"DHS and the FBI began holding regular meetings with representatives from each of the major tech companies, including Meta, Twitter, and Microsoft."
How... (looks both ways) reassuring... = )
And JPMorgan was there too.
You know, for fun.
i can understand the argument for helping suppress misinformation, but there are several huge problems.
one, there is a difference between terrorism and civil unrest. when you slap a "terrorism" label on everything, you cheapen the word.
two, the potential for abuse is too strong. when you start to crack down on messages that are political in nature it is a given that you will be violating the first amendment at some point. you will be going after content that is outside the scope of just preventing violence.
third, those gone the farthest down the rabbit hole (and with most potential to act on misinformation) already have migrated to less police-able platforms and see censorship by the major platform as evidence the lies are true.... so you can't actually stop anything this way.
fourth and probably biggest.... when you start working behind the scenes to try and silence people you destroy the very trust you need to use YOUR freedom of speech to explain why they are wrong. nothing makes a conspiracy seem more plausible than a shadowy government organization trying to suppress it.
https://simulationcommander.substack.com/p/were-all-terrorists-now
------------
"Key factors contributing to the current heightened threat environment include:
The proliferation of false or misleading narratives, which sow discord or undermine public trust in U.S. government institutions:
For example, there is widespread online proliferation of false or misleading narratives regarding unsubstantiated widespread election fraud and COVID-19."
------------------
Nobody has done more to undermine public trust in US Government instructions more than those institutions themselves. Their complete failure is the entire reason that people are looking elsewhere for information that matches reality. I certainly didn’t want to spend two years of my life digging into the official data that directly contradicts the official narrative, but here we are.
Nobody has done more to undermine public trust in US Government instructions more than those institutions themselves.
Bingo. Misinformation is only a problem if people believe it. And they will only believe it if they don't trust the government. It is why conspiracy theories are so rampant in the Middle East; no one there trusts the government. And it is why they are becoming so rampant here; no one trusts the government. That is entirely the fault of the government for lying so much.
The odd thing is that Reason was nowhere near as worked up over the government censoring speech as they were about states outlawing abortion.
One is a slightly more fundamental right than the other, which is not a right at all.
yeah.... fuck anyone who thinks they have any right to control their own body.... did you line up for your mandatory vaccine?
Two bodies in each abortion, ghoul. 99.9% of the times lazy sluts put the second one there themselves through choices they made.
You paraphrased, "Hang the sluts!!!"...
When a non whack-job would simply say; FREE the bodies.
The USA doesn't need even MORE love for Gov-GUN dictation.
Only if you believe that Gov-GUNS role should dictate every healthcare worker into 'saving life' (breaking down their doors and forcing them to labor -- i.e. !!!-SLAVERY-!!!) can you honestly say it's Gov-GUNS role to force women into reproducing.
If you cannot support ?baby? freedom (i.e. fetal ejection)
UR supporting Gov-GUN forced reproduction.
Reality really is that simple.
"yeah…. fuck anyone who thinks they have any right to control their own body…. did you line up for your mandatory vaccine?"
Pro-choicers are, by and large, quite pro-forced vaccines.
Never-mind the complete contradiction being spilled. 🙂
All lives matter!
So long as Gov-GUNS are poked at them on every corner. /s
This place needs more libertarian intellectual diversity, both left and right. Currently it's a bunch of hivemind bien-pensant blue checks spouting JournoList talking-points.