Common Knowledge

Thanks to our allies, the Ukrainians, and in no small part to our own State department, Russian influence campaigns are now common knowledge in the attention economy.

I was recently easily able to end the comments of several pro-Trump sock puppets in a live chat by typing this phrase: “Trump belongs to Putin, his influence seems to affect the dimwitted.”

To a sock puppet, the illusion of credibility depends in large part in the immediate flash of an idea in a few lines. The sock puppets were silenced temporarily, because they understood Putin’s connection to Trump. Also, had they continued to crow for Trump, they would have been the dimwitted ones. Again, because Russian influence is now common knowledge in the attention economy.

There are memes that rip across our awareness, and we superficially accept them as if we had always lived by them. How sophisticated we are, with all of these memes whipping about! Of course, the understanding is shallow, and rarely evaluated. But in this case, it doesn’t matter. What would have been considered conspiracy theory only a few months ago, is now accepted as obvious to any critical observer. I wish it had happened sooner!

Every time Donald Trump associates himself with Putin, remember what I said to the children. Trump belongs to Putin, his influence seems to affect the dimwitted. And remember how they fell silent in their adoration of Trump.



Please find the sketch above read by a digital voice.  The words are always my own.

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