Among the more than five dozen posts that Trump “re-verified,” his platform’s response to retweets, as of Tuesday morning were QAnon and 4chan theories, messages and memes. Facebook and Twitter have banned QAnon accounts for violating their terms of service prohibiting threats of violence. After the January 6 Capitol siege, Trump’s Twitter and Facebook accounts were permanently suspended. This led him and a group of investors to launch Truth Social, a social media platform that takes a more tolerant attitude towards content. This has been a factor in Truth Social’s ability to grow. Axios reported Tuesday that Google has restricted Truth Social from its app store due to concerns about posts containing threats of violence. The messages that Trump “reedited” included those that suggested Joe Biden and the Democrats are out to destroy the country. One meme featured Vice President Kamala Harris, Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with the words “Your enemy…isn’t…in Russia” emblazoned across their eyes. Media watchdog group NewsGuard reported this month that Truth Social has verified 47 accounts promoting QAnon, all of which have more than 10,000 followers. They found 88 users, verified and unverified, with more than 10,000 followers. More than a third were accounts that had previously been banned on Twitter. NewsGuard found that Trump had replicated QAnon by promoting accounts 65 times to his 3.8 million followers — but that was before his latest spree. The QAnon conspiracy theory claims that Trump and an individual known as “Q” are in a battle against the “deep state” and a ring of child sex traffickers. QAnon followers have been linked to political violence, including the January 6 Capitol siege. Trump on Monday demanded that he be reinstated as president or for “a new election, immediately.” He continues to claim the 2020 presidential election was rigged against him, but his attorney general, William Barr, found no evidence of widespread fraud. Trump allies also lost more than 60 lawsuits challenging the results, and an audit of Arizona’s results failed to show he would have won that state. Meanwhile, the Justice Department is expected to file a briefing Tuesday outlining its review of presidential material recovered earlier this month at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property. Federal prosecutors are responding to Trump’s legal team’s push to have a “special master” oversee boxes of documents. An FBI inventory of what was taken from the property included 11 sets of classified documents, including those classified “top secret.”


title: “Donald Trump Continues To Tear Up Social Media With Conspiracy Theories Deadline Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-05” author: “Peter Floyd”


Among the more than five dozen posts that Trump “re-verified,” his platform’s response to retweets, as of Tuesday morning were QAnon and 4chan theories, messages and memes. Facebook and Twitter have banned QAnon accounts for violating their terms of service prohibiting threats of violence. After the January 6 Capitol siege, Trump’s Twitter and Facebook accounts were permanently suspended. This led him and a group of investors to launch Truth Social, a social media platform that takes a more tolerant attitude towards content. This has been a factor in Truth Social’s ability to grow. Axios reported Tuesday that Google has restricted Truth Social from its app store due to concerns about posts containing threats of violence. The messages that Trump “reedited” included those that suggested Joe Biden and the Democrats are out to destroy the country. One meme featured Vice President Kamala Harris, Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with the words “Your enemy…isn’t…in Russia” emblazoned across their eyes. Media watchdog group NewsGuard reported this month that Truth Social has verified 47 accounts promoting QAnon, all of which have more than 10,000 followers. They found 88 users, verified and unverified, with more than 10,000 followers. More than a third were accounts that had previously been banned on Twitter. NewsGuard found that Trump had replicated QAnon by promoting accounts 65 times to his 3.8 million followers — but that was before his latest spree. The QAnon conspiracy theory claims that Trump and an individual known as “Q” are in a battle against the “deep state” and a ring of child sex traffickers. QAnon followers have been linked to political violence, including the January 6 Capitol siege. Trump on Monday demanded that he be reinstated as president or for “a new election, immediately.” He continues to claim the 2020 presidential election was rigged against him, but his attorney general, William Barr, found no evidence of widespread fraud. Trump allies also lost more than 60 lawsuits challenging the results, and an audit of Arizona’s results failed to show he would have won that state. Meanwhile, the Justice Department is expected to file a briefing Tuesday outlining its review of presidential material recovered earlier this month at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property. Federal prosecutors are responding to Trump’s legal team’s push to have a “special master” oversee boxes of documents. An FBI inventory of what was taken from the property included 11 sets of classified documents, including those classified “top secret.”


title: “Donald Trump Continues To Tear Up Social Media With Conspiracy Theories Deadline Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-15” author: “Bill Garcia”


Among the more than five dozen posts that Trump “re-verified,” his platform’s response to retweets, as of Tuesday morning were QAnon and 4chan theories, messages and memes. Facebook and Twitter have banned QAnon accounts for violating their terms of service prohibiting threats of violence. After the January 6 Capitol siege, Trump’s Twitter and Facebook accounts were permanently suspended. This led him and a group of investors to launch Truth Social, a social media platform that takes a more tolerant attitude towards content. This has been a factor in Truth Social’s ability to grow. Axios reported Tuesday that Google has restricted Truth Social from its app store due to concerns about posts containing threats of violence. The messages that Trump “reedited” included those that suggested Joe Biden and the Democrats are out to destroy the country. One meme featured Vice President Kamala Harris, Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with the words “Your enemy…isn’t…in Russia” emblazoned across their eyes. Media watchdog group NewsGuard reported this month that Truth Social has verified 47 accounts promoting QAnon, all of which have more than 10,000 followers. They found 88 users, verified and unverified, with more than 10,000 followers. More than a third were accounts that had previously been banned on Twitter. NewsGuard found that Trump had replicated QAnon by promoting accounts 65 times to his 3.8 million followers — but that was before his latest spree. The QAnon conspiracy theory claims that Trump and an individual known as “Q” are in a battle against the “deep state” and a ring of child sex traffickers. QAnon followers have been linked to political violence, including the January 6 Capitol siege. Trump on Monday demanded that he be reinstated as president or for “a new election, immediately.” He continues to claim the 2020 presidential election was rigged against him, but his attorney general, William Barr, found no evidence of widespread fraud. Trump allies also lost more than 60 lawsuits challenging the results, and an audit of Arizona’s results failed to show he would have won that state. Meanwhile, the Justice Department is expected to file a briefing Tuesday outlining its review of presidential material recovered earlier this month at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property. Federal prosecutors are responding to Trump’s legal team’s push to have a “special master” oversee boxes of documents. An FBI inventory of what was taken from the property included 11 sets of classified documents, including those classified “top secret.”


title: “Donald Trump Continues To Tear Up Social Media With Conspiracy Theories Deadline Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-01” author: “Devin Peters”


Among the more than five dozen posts that Trump “re-verified,” his platform’s response to retweets, as of Tuesday morning were QAnon and 4chan theories, messages and memes. Facebook and Twitter have banned QAnon accounts for violating their terms of service prohibiting threats of violence. After the January 6 Capitol siege, Trump’s Twitter and Facebook accounts were permanently suspended. This led him and a group of investors to launch Truth Social, a social media platform that takes a more tolerant attitude towards content. This has been a factor in Truth Social’s ability to grow. Axios reported Tuesday that Google has restricted Truth Social from its app store due to concerns about posts containing threats of violence. The messages that Trump “reedited” included those that suggested Joe Biden and the Democrats are out to destroy the country. One meme featured Vice President Kamala Harris, Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with the words “Your enemy…isn’t…in Russia” emblazoned across their eyes. Media watchdog group NewsGuard reported this month that Truth Social has verified 47 accounts promoting QAnon, all of which have more than 10,000 followers. They found 88 users, verified and unverified, with more than 10,000 followers. More than a third were accounts that had previously been banned on Twitter. NewsGuard found that Trump had replicated QAnon by promoting accounts 65 times to his 3.8 million followers — but that was before his latest spree. The QAnon conspiracy theory claims that Trump and an individual known as “Q” are in a battle against the “deep state” and a ring of child sex traffickers. QAnon followers have been linked to political violence, including the January 6 Capitol siege. Trump on Monday demanded that he be reinstated as president or for “a new election, immediately.” He continues to claim the 2020 presidential election was rigged against him, but his attorney general, William Barr, found no evidence of widespread fraud. Trump allies also lost more than 60 lawsuits challenging the results, and an audit of Arizona’s results failed to show he would have won that state. Meanwhile, the Justice Department is expected to file a briefing Tuesday outlining its review of presidential material recovered earlier this month at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property. Federal prosecutors are responding to Trump’s legal team’s push to have a “special master” oversee boxes of documents. An FBI inventory of what was taken from the property included 11 sets of classified documents, including those classified “top secret.”