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US citizens may "unwittingly" become Russian agents and spread "disinformation" about Joe Biden, Senator Mark Warner has warned, urging the intelligence community to be more vocal and tell the public what to do.
According to the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, one should be particularly vigilant about the Russian trolls, lurking around the social media feeds, as Kremlin is allegedly once again seeking to prop up President Donald Trump and help him secure re-election in November.
Speaking to NBC News' "Meet the Press" on Sunday, the Senator warned that if one is not careful enough, he can accidentally become a Russian "agent" partaking in the alleged smear campaign against Biden.
"My fear is there may be Americans that are unwittingly promoting that Russian disinformation campaign, and I think they need to be briefed so they don't become, frankly, agents in effect of this disinformation campaign."
"It's incumbent on the intelligence community to lay out more of the facts of what we know about that disinformation campaign," he said.
The Russiagate saga has been marred with controversies throughout the whole presidential term of Donald Trump, and after years of taxpayer-funded probes, failed to prove the thing it was originally designed to investigate - the Trump-Russia collusion. Severe lack of facts, however, did not interfere with the drive to frequently roll out new sanctions against Russia, as well as to produce more baseless accusations.
The latest batch of them arrived earlier in August, when the Senate Intelligence Committee released its fifth and final report on Russia's supposed interference. In the 1000-page report, word "likely" appeared nearly 140 times, while "almost certainly" - 21 times. In nearly every case, those words were used to make assumptions in place of actual evidence. Senator Warner has urged Americans to read the lengthy report for themselves.
"We were advised to have them in place for all residents. We acted in accordance with medical advice and resident wishes, not as advised by a directive to put in place for all by a clinical care group representative. We challenged this as unethical."
Comment: They've been talking about not having separate categories for best actor and actress for years, long before the rise of wokeness. While it seems an egalitarian move, the problem is that they will be going from having two actors awarded for their performance down to one. The complaint from actresses in days gone by is that they would end up winning no awards for outstanding performances because there are more opportunities for award-winning roles offered to men. In the age of political correctness, however, we may see the roles reversed, with actors always missing out on deserved awards due to the presence of external genitalia rather than being outshined on the screen.
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