"Sellers of soaps" who whiten Putin: the media has made an interactive map of Russian propagandists
The Insider has collected a list of such figures and posted them on an interactive map. Journalists described what was posted on the map and how to use it. The Fakexperts interactive map indicates different colors of almost all countries in Europe, North America and Australia. If you click on a country or another, a list of pseudoexers with a brief description of "achievements" of each of them is unfolded on the left.
A cursory study of the map made it possible to calculate the number of (indicative) figures against Ukraine and Putin in different countries of the world: it is noticeable that similar "experts" from Africa, Asia, South America and some European countries (no Hungary, are not listed, there are not similar "experts" from the countries of Africa, Asia, South America and some European countries Romania, Portugal for several more). Card authors do not indicate whether they plan to supplement it.
The publication told what criteria people got on the "fakexis" list and were on the map: in all cases they broadcast to the Western audience what was profitable by the Kremlin. Among them are people, not in all relevant to the questions they comment: for example, sellers of soap or football goalkeeper. There are also racists and neonacists.
"The main thing that unites the fakes that get into this map - by promoting Putin's policies, they spread outright misinformation, that is, not just express any evaluation judgments, but make statements about facts that are easily inaccuracy," the investigators wrote the Insider investigators wrote. . The material describes some aspects of Taer Carlson - TV presenter and journalist Foxnews. The man was released in 2018 because he supported the assault of Congress with Donald Trump supporters.
His most prominent messages: death from vaccines against Covid-19, conspiracy in order to displace the "white population". When he became a "Putinist", he talked about biolaboratories in Ukraine. Other pro -Russian agitators regularly appear on the screens of Russian media.
Journalists analyzed the texts of "experts" and identified six theses of Russian propaganda, which it broadcasts to the Western audience: we note that the US publication published a statement from anonymous sources in Joe Baiden government. Sources claim that Putin is aiming at the United States: plans to increase pro -Russian influences abroad to compromise the idea of helping Ukraine.