There Are No Girls on the Internet - DISINFORMED: In Georgia, disinformation is now law
Episode Date: March 30, 2021Georgia’s massive new voting law is a response to lies, distortions and disinformation about the 2020 election.Independent journalist Anoa Changa breaks down what this means for Georgians and what c...omes next.Follow Anoa on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheWayWithAnoaCheck out Anoa’s amazing podcast: https://thewaywithanoa.simplecast.com/Read Anoa’s piece ‘That’s the Failsafe’: Georgia’s New Voting Law Does What Trump Couldn’t: https://newsone.com/4118173/georgia-new-voting-law-does-what-trump-couldnt/#.YGEQW48mUPE.twitterDonate to the New Georgia Project: https://newgeorgiaproject.org/VOTE FOR DISINFORMED TO WIN A SHORTY AWARD: TANGOTI.COM/VOTE Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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You're listening to This Informed, a mini-season.
from there are no girls on the internet.
I'm Bridget Todd.
We've talked a lot about disinformation this season.
But what happens when lies and distortions actually become law?
Well, that's exactly what's happening in Georgia.
Trump's big lie that he won the election and it was being stolen from him
is being used to fuel a sweeping new law that many advocates say creates barriers to voting
that will make it harder for all Georgians to vote.
But it doesn't start there.
I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have, because we won the state,
and flipping the state is a great testament to our country.
On January 2nd, Trump had a now infamous phone call with Georgia Secretary of State, Brad Raffensberger,
where he falsely maintained that he'd won the election in Georgia and pressured Raffensberger to, quote,
find more votes in an attempt to make that fiction a reality. In the end, Raffensberger certified
the election results because there wasn't a reason not to. After a statewide audit of the 2020
election results, Raffinsberger himself said that Georgia's historic first statewide audit
reaffirmed that the state's new secure paper ballot voting system accurately counted and reported
the results. So according to him, the election was secure. And yet, last week, the so-called election
Integrity Act of 2021, was signed into law by Governor Brian Kemp.
This law makes massive changes to how and when folks can vote in Georgia.
Now, Kemp said this law was necessary to boost confidence in, quote, secure, accessible,
and fair elections.
But if his own Secretary of State says the Georgia election results were accurate,
then what's really going on?
Well, this is an example of what happens when disinformation becomes codified into law.
Despite what Trump said in that phone call, there was no voter fraud or election.
in Georgia. But that didn't stop the Georgia legislature from passing this bill that voting
rights advocates say will overwhelmingly create barriers that keep black and brown Georgians
from voting. And it was all based on a big lie. It's so important that we talk about this law
for what it is and the impact it will have on Georgians, which is something Annochanga knows firsthand.
It was really rooted in self-determination for me. In 2017, Georgia was facing a closely watched
Democratic primary for governor between Stacey Abrams, a black woman, who, if she had won,
would have become the country's first black woman governor, and Stacey Evans, a white Georgia
state representative. Both candidates were speaking at Netroots Nation, the largest gathering of
progressive political organizers in the country, which was being held in Atlanta. Now, something to
know about Netroots is that there is always a protest. It's basically expected at this point,
and speeches always get interrupted by shouting. It's happened to Bernie Sanders, Joe Biden,
Elizabeth Warren and Martin O'Malley.
It's a thing.
In 2017 at NetRoutes, I was a part of a group of folks who, you know, led a protest to shut down
a speech that was being given by Stacey Evans, who was at the time running against
Stacey Abrams for governor.
And a lot of people thought it was just a bunch of old Stacey Abrams supporters who were
shutting down this white woman.
But that, like, at the time, I wasn't even like a Stacey fan.
I wasn't even, I was like, I'll probably vote for her.
But it wasn't anything.
And so many folks, what it was was really about Stacey Evans was trying to be positioned as like the more progressive choice.
And she had a bunch of votes, including some along education, which were extremely problematic, which she was not being held accountable on.
And that day at that route, she was speaking before Becky Pringle, who was then the vice president of the NEA, the National Education Association.
So you're someone who has been pro-charter school, pro, you know, removing money out of education.
You voted against the interests of teachers, students, families, unions.
And you're speaking ahead of like this prominent national black woman that has been this advocate for education.
That's a NOAA alongside a group of black women interrupting Stacey Evans' plan speech.
They're chanting, trust black women.
The incident came up in a tense debate between Evans and Abrams,
with Evans maintaining that what happened at NetRutes was not a peaceful protest,
and kind of implying that the group was affiliated with the Stacey Abrams campaign.
And I support the right of folks to peacefully protest.
That wasn't what happened at NetRutes.
And if something like that had happened to my opponent,
whether the group was affiliated, unaffiliated, slightly affiliated, not affiliated at all,
I would have stood up and said that it was wrong.
But remember, Anoa says she wasn't even a big Abram supporter at the time.
Reporters just didn't really bother to talk to her or the group
or find out more about their motivations or message and why they interrupted the speech.
They just kind of ran with whatever.
And this was hugely instructive for Anoa.
Now, that didn't translate the way we thought it would, unfortunately,
because no one in the media even cared to talk to us,
to ask any of us about what happened, the way media reacted,
it, like especially local media here in Georgia ran with a particular narrative.
I mean, you even had like one article written that just because I knew someone who was on
staff, senior staff at Stacey's campaign, we had worked together previously that because of that
previous work relationship, they put me up to it.
Without understanding that also when you're talking about black progressive political work,
there's so few people in these spaces, whether you're working in black or white led orgs.
It's just not that many of us.
We all end up either knowing each other.
directly or having people in common. So that experience really taught me about the power and necessity
for telling our own stories, making sure our voices were being heard. Today, Anoa is a pretty
prolific independent journalist who covers elections and local politics in Georgia. But instead of
covering them like a horse race between two politicians, she centers the people impacted by the
policies, people whose stories are often overlooked in favor of stories about political point
scoring and posturing. And when it comes to the new voting legislation,
in Georgia, this also means pointing out a lot of lies and distortions.
When we're looking at what's happening here in this law, like I was saying, yes, you have the
lies from the different state representatives and state senators. You have the lies from
the various election officials, you know, in varied capacities. But you have also
our governor, who was the former Secretary of State, who is known for his own shenanigans
and foolishness. But, I mean, he's someone who actually
lied ahead of his own election for governor. The weekend ahead of his election for governor,
he lied and said that Stacey Abrams campaign and Democrats were trying to hack the state of Georgia,
which was not true. An investigation later revealed that it was not true, and he has never been held
accountable with that. So we know Brian Campbell lies on the regular. Brad Raffensberger also has fell
into this whole of trying to appease his party and placating and twisting, you know, rhetoric.
It's one thing to deal with and be able to point out a bold-faced lie, which we've seen in the testimony from Rudy Giuliani when he was in these various hearings in Michigan and here in Georgia, which we've seen, unfortunately, even in some of the testimony or some of the conversations happening in chambers in the passage of these bills by Republican elected officials.
And I often harp on the Secretary of State because everyone has, in terms of national media, has like lionized him and made him this very important figure.
but at the same time, he gives credence and he finds ways to give legitimacy even though he has certified
the election, even though he has acknowledged there's no widespread fraud, even though he acknowledged
that this is the most secure election Georgia's ever had, all these other things, he will still
say things that leave open the door that act like there is legitimate concern. I mean, just even the
widespread reporting of fraud that was happening, it was an issue. At some point, it's not
simply that people don't know the process and don't understand what's going on, and people are being
willfully obtuse. As I have for more than 25 years, I will stand with my fellow Georgians in pursuit
of fairness. You see, I did so as a college student, speaking in the shadow of Abraham Lincoln and
Martin Luther King Jr. I did so as Democratic leader of the House of Representatives, and now I will
do so as a private citizen. In the 2018 gubernatorial election in Georgia, Stacey Abrams acknowledged that
her opponent Brian Kemp would be the next governor of Georgia.
I watched her speech from Atlanta, where, full disclosure, I spent time in the state knocking
doors for her campaign. During the election, Brian Kemp was Georgia's Secretary of State,
which meant that he was in charge of overseeing his own election.
As Secretary of State, Kemp purged over 1.4 million in active voters with low-income and
Black Georgians being the most likely to have their registrations canceled.
He also oversaw 53,000 voter registrations being put on hold,
thanks to Georgia's exact match policy,
that flags registrations from voters
with any kind of name discrepancy in state databases.
So if you registered for your first learner's permit
with your first and middle name
and then registered to vote with just your first name,
you would be flagged.
According to the Associated Press,
nearly 70% of those voter registrations on hold
were black voters,
despite the state's population only being about 32% black.
Now, because of all this,
Abrams has said the 2018 gubernatorial election
was stolen from the Georgia voters.
After the race, she formed Fair Fight,
an organization aimed at increasing voter turnout
and ensuring that all votes are accurately counted.
It was hugely successful,
and their work is often credited
with securing the historic Democratic wins in Georgia this past election.
But here's where things get tricky.
Current Secretary of State Brad Braffensberger
has compared what Abrams did
to Trump's refusal to concede
and pressuring officials to, quote, fine votes.
In a recent USA Today op-ed, he calls Trump's refusal to concede a page out of Stacey Abrams's playbook,
writing Abrams's refusal to concede at her dogmatic conviction that her election was stolen,
had done significant damage to trust an election integrity in Georgia.
You have Rapinsberger recently writing an op-ed in the USA Today and imparted from him and one of his staffers, Gabe Sterling,
blaming Stacey Abrams and saying that her fight around the 2018 election and the ongoing
lawsuit and the work of fair fight is the same as Donald Trump, right, that false equivalency.
And so while that's not like this exactly the same as the outright bold face lying,
like saying like, oh, there was massive fraud happening in Fulton County or whatever,
at the same time, it still lends credence.
It still gives legitimacy.
And because they did have the one brave stand, which really was a matter of, I don't
want to go to jail because that's hella illegal.
Like, I mean, let's just be real.
like Brad, Brad did not, Brad did everything else in his power.
Brad didn't want to go to jail because that's like telling someone to go find some votes.
This ain't scandal.
Like that's jail, right?
Like, this is real life.
And so, but they will, they will still craft narratives.
They still will shift things that still give support.
And then people who are like, oh, well, he's a secretary of state.
He's an elected official.
He should get some deference.
We'll cover and report what he says and does as if it's legitimate concern when, in fact,
is really just also in the furtherance of the Republican agenda, which we have seen very clearly
over this past year. But I mean, you and I, you know, as folks who have been digging in and
focusing and looking at the scourge that is disinformation, have seen how deeply entrenched
and widespread it has been, particularly over the past several years and the very deep
digital networks that already exist and like, you know, liberals in the left and progressives,
are way behind the eight ball.
We react, unfortunately, to things
where these people are very strategic.
I mean, even I was reading an article this morning
about one of the lawyers
that was representing Trump
with all that nonsense.
She was actually one of the lawyers
on that infamous phone call
is now heading up
or at least co-leading
one of the efforts to attack HR1.
And so it's not just Georgia, right?
You see this coordinated GOP attack on voting rights
And really on democracy at this point, when we are having people lie and having those lies enshrined into law.
And I mean, folks can say it happens in other capacities, but what's happening right now in terms of elections and election reform and how we are treating false allegations as valid considerations for passing law?
It's a very scary precedent that's being set right now.
I mean, it's so sad, but that's really been Trump's legacy, you know?
After the election, I saw this poll from our street that said that two-thirds of Republicans
say the 2020 presidential election was invalid.
And I think that's kind of the point of this kind of disinformation to make people really
distrust our democratic process to the point where they just sort of check out.
Even in states where Trump won, right, we're still seeing that happening unfold, right?
Like in Iowa, we're still seeing a Republican person.
majority in Iowa, even though Trump won that state. Let's take a quick break.
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At our level, at this scale, like being able to fail in front of the entire world.
Like, I can do anything.
I can do anything.
Because resilience isn't just about winning.
It's about showing up, even when it's hard.
Listen to Hurtle with Emily Abadi on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHart Women's Sports.
And we're back.
Democrats have their own legislation to expand voting rights called HR1, which would expand access to voting by making Election Day and National Holiday,
offering online and automatic registration for anyone who wanted it,
and prohibit the kind of voter purges that we saw before the 2018 governor's race in Georgia.
from taking place less than six months before an election.
Now, even though we're talking about voting rights,
Anoa says it's about much more than that.
She says it's about a coordinated right-wing attack on democracy,
like the waves of anti-trans and anti-abortion bills we've seen in some states.
And any attack on identities is a direct attack on democracies.
Like, we're still seeing them push through these types of laws.
We're seeing it in Mississippi and Missouri.
Like, we're still seeing in areas that even, like,
they're seizing. This isn't just about like, oh, we're upset because this happened. This is a real
opportunity point for them. And this is like, I really do think that we ignore, we forget. Like,
there's so much, with so much focus on Trump and resistance and getting Trump out of office,
that these state legislatures, these state, you know, capitals and governor seats, we've ignored
the way in which that very and deeply entrenched rhetoric has permeated at the state level and is backed
and funded by some of the usual suspects that we've been talking about over the last,
you know, however many decades that fund and get behind these types of work.
And what was really interesting, someone sent me an article recently.
They talked about like some of the major anti-abortion folks are also getting in the fight
behind HR1.
Like so we also see, I had an article a couple weeks back in Troufout, just talking about how,
like when we're talking about voting rights and we're talking about what's happening in these
fights, it literally isn't, we're talking about saving democracy. It's not just about voting rights,
right? Like, it's about all these other opportunities and entry points. And we're seeing some of the
worst legislation that is really denying people's humanity and rights to exist when we see
like the trans sports bills being passed in various places. When we see these various attacks
on, you know, reproductive rights and freedom. And so we really have this much broader attack happening
on democracy, and there are these various levels of lives. I mean, just thinking about the way
the anti-abortion stuff happens, like, so much of that is based on fear mongering around
mistruths and disinformation as well, right? So, like, it permeates across so much. In conversations
about disinformation, it's tempting to focus on foreign bad actors like Russia, but sometimes that can
lead us to overlook the massive coordination of domestic bad actors right here in our own country
and the powerful networks of online distortions they have at their disposal.
We spent so much time in 2017 post-election focusing on Russian interference, right,
and Russian amplification of disinformation, but never looking at the disinformation itself,
the domestic information.
And I think now, and I really appreciate, like, what you've been doing.
Like, so many people have been, like, sounding the alarm on the danger of what is happening
domestically.
I think now maybe folks are starting to understand,
but it's still being limited to Trump's big lie, which Trump's big lie is really having a grip on our national politics right now.
But part of the reason why it's able to do so is because these networks have been able to thrive and have existed for so long and they're so deep and intense.
And so like it's a it takes, it's a lot to like peel back those layers.
I don't think people understand about like how people get targeted with disinformation, particularly when they come after black, Latifference.
and other folks of color through the various mediums.
Like I know, you know, Latino folks have talked to me about like the use of WhatsApp.
I think some Asian folks, too, have talked about the use of WhatsApp groups,
which are very common with both communities in terms of how they share and disseminate information.
So what you end up happening is you might have somebody's auntie or whoever who sees like this post or sees this thing.
It's like, oh, my God, did you see this?
And then it spreads like wildfire.
But like that information is not actually accurate, right?
So there are these other ways that is very insidious in infiltrating trusted spaces that somehow we have to figure out how do we help people become, you know, better sharers of information and really like see through.
Because there are some things that might kind of make sense.
That's like what's really tricky too, right?
People will say things that might make sense.
Like let's take first step of the voter ID stuff, right?
So in the Georgia law, you know, there's a new voter ID requirement for folks who are voting absentee ballot.
And it would be like, well, what's wrong?
You need ID for everything else.
You need ID when you do this.
Yes, you need ID.
You need to prove who you are when you register.
But once you've registered, like, why do I have to keep showing you the picture itself, right?
Like, you need ID.
You need ID.
So people will do this thing.
They're like, well, that makes sense.
But the rhetoric, the rationalization has.
to do with fraud when the fraud has never been proven to be an actual issue, right?
Like, so they, I remember, I remember doing some research during the election and like in Alabama,
when Alabama was adapting its voter ID law, the NDACP Legal Defense Fund looked back 12 years
prior to the year when they were trying to enact the law, trying to see how many fraud cases
there were.
There was only like one or two in a 12 year period, right?
And so, like, they will use the presence of like one or two.
and they'll be like, well, see, there's an issue because this one or two happened.
Or someone made a comment about people changing, you know, ballots,
but it was a Republican postal man in West Virginia that was changing people's request ballots.
But it was caught, right?
That's the other thing, right?
The very rare instances where things happen, the people doing it are caught like almost right away, right?
Because of the mechanisms already built into the system.
So media frustrates me, too, because of how they're.
report these things as if they're valid considerations on all sides, when really the only side we
need to be thinking about is like democracy, right? And what does it mean to uphold and protect democracy?
And how could you ever justify in rationalism and say you're protecting democracy by keeping people
out? Yeah, I mean, you can't, you know, in a democracy, you want to expand voting access.
You want to make it easier and get rid of barriers that people have to vote, not enact more. And it was really
disingenuous to see a statement today, I think, from Kemp, who was like, you know, oh, we're widening
the ability for people to vote. We're expanding it. And it's just a lie. I mean, you, you,
there is just not a way that you can look at that and see the, see the kinds of barriers that this
legislation puts in place and try with a straight face to say that you're actually trying to make it
easier for people to vote. If that's the case, why are you threatening souls to the polls?
why have you made it so to make it harder for people to give water to folks standing in long lines, right?
Like, it's part of it to me is shocking how they can seize on something that might have a nugget of truth
to try to paint a wider, a wider, you know, portrait of what's happening.
To your point earlier about the networks and how coordinated this is, before you and I got on this call,
I was just doing a little search about like, what's the, you know, what am I seeing in like Republican or right-wing spaces?
like what's the conversation online?
And what you said about, like, oh, you need an ID to go buy liquor.
You need an ID to do X, Y, Z.
Why is it bad to have to need an ID to vote?
It was interesting to me that in some large Facebook groups that are not even necessarily, like,
explicitly political, I saw a bunch of memes this morning kind of making that point.
And they make the point in a way that seems to make sense.
You're like, okay, you know, I get the point that's being made.
It seems non-controversial.
But when you think about it, you're like, oh, wait, in context, that's actually really messed up.
And then, you know, it's just interesting to me how there are these networks online that are ready to echo and amplify the distortions of folks on the right about voting and disseminate them into groups of people who might not even be necessarily primed to be looking at like politically charged content.
But this is exactly how we saw the stop.
steel stuff spread, right? And the J. racist insurrection. Like we, these people have been primed
and right. This is why you have so many quote unquote normal mild-mannered folks. They've been all
wrapped up in the Q&N and whatever because again, this stuff is overlooked. It's not seen as
important to engage with. I just remember some years ago, just nonsense that would happen on Twitter.
And then people would be like, why do you even waste time debunking that? Like, what's the point?
Like, I've learned there are probably more effective ways to do things than having one-on-one arguments with dumb folks on Twitter.
But at the same time, like, when you have people with large platforms who are engaging in some of this, you know, both sides or these red herrings and stuff, it is dangerous because they are then informing and engaging so many other people.
But like with these various groups, I mean, I've seen people talking about like the yoga groups, like some of them, even more like just basic spiritual type places that unfortunately end up.
being places where there was a lot of widespread COVID-19 misinformation being spread as well.
And not necessarily because the people sharing it themselves are malicious of trying to fool people.
Like, some of it made sense to people.
But, like, whoever's putting it out there and creating it, knowing that people are going to pick it up.
Like, I think it was earlier this year, there's actually someone being charged by the FBI,
which I don't really know how I feel about this.
But at the same time, it is a very interesting conversation to have.
There was someone being charged by the FBI in part of it was because they were disseminating
misleading information targeting predominantly black and I think voters of color, but they were
sending out what made it seem like you could vote by using a text code if you couldn't
get to the polls.
And think about it, right?
Like people were doing innovative things to help people vote in the middle of a pandemic.
So if you're someone who's not very politically savvy who doesn't know that you can't vote
by text or by tweeting at someone, I mean like to me and you that might seem like,
of course you can't do that.
But to somebody who doesn't know any better,
who actually thinks that that could be a real legitimate option
and their way of also engaging the process
in the middle of a pandemic, that's kind of fucked up.
And so like this person, I guess, got investigated
and the other folks in this like group chat they were in also got investigated,
but they literally had a chat.
They were surveilling these multiple different groups in different spaces
and coordinating and releasing these memes and stuff, right?
And so, like, I mean, that type of stuff has been happening. And so to my point about the Russia stuff, like, what was happening with the Russia stuff in its place in the conversation, it really overshadowed the mass volume of what was happening domestically. And so people had years now unchecked to perfect that domestic system. And we're really seeing it rear its head in coordination with just the regular conservative, you know, legislative.
or organizing that already happens.
Like, you know, people used to talk about like you would see the Alec bills that basically
was the same boilerplate language in multiple states across the country.
They're a little bit more savvy now because we're seeing similar things happening across
the country and it's clearly not a coincidence.
Can you tell us some of what's in this law?
Some of the most insidious parts of the law here in Georgia, it removes the secretary
of state as the head of the state board of elections.
State Board of Elections is a five-person body.
The General Assembly appoints two of those people.
The General Assembly will now appoint a majority three of the five with the removal of the Secretary of State as the chair.
So our Republican-controlled legislature will now, in effect, control the State Election Board, which the State Election Board sets down election, you know, per view regulations for the entire state, which is how we select our members of a General Assembly.
And, you know, there's a brilliant lawyer here that I follow and really look to for guidance, Sarah Tyndall Gazal.
And she was just pointing out in one of the hearings, like how ridiculous it is.
One of, you know, the proponent, Bill's proponents, Barry Fleming was like, well, I mean, the governor appoints the entire board of regions.
The governor appoints the transportation board.
And she's just like, okay, I guess I got to explain this to you.
But that's fine.
The governor appoints those bodies.
but you all appointing the people who set the rules for how you all hold office isn't really like you're appointing your own referees and then we're expecting them to hold you accountable.
Like it's just a wild proposition.
Here's how one voter described her voting experience in Georgia.
I don't feel like this is happening at all polls.
I'm in a 30331 zip code and I feel like most of the problems that occurred and this is what we were told that.
certain polling locations have problems.
And I do believe it's, I think it's targeted.
Another thing they did that directly targets Fulton County in particular is forbidding the use of mobile vans for voting, mobile voting.
This was also something that was done in Harris County in Texas.
And so like that helps because, you know, Fulton County, Gwinnett County, the Metro Atlantic counties in particular, are often burdened with the very long lines.
And so mobile voting was something that was implemented to help.
alleviate some of that. So it's basically setting up a mobile polling site. So that was that helped
alleviate some of that. So like when they're talking about oh, we're making it easier. How are you
making it easier when you're restricting the time period within which people have to request an
absentee ballot and return it? Because if you really want to make it easier, you could have
adopted a policy that several states have where you return the absentee ballot as long as it's
postmarked on election day or the day before election day, as long as it's received in a
particular time period, it would still count. They could have went that wrong. So there
are things that they could have done, but they chose more restrictive means.
Now, a lot of the headlines about this bill have pointed out that it puts new restrictions
on how volunteers can do things like give water or snacks or a chair to people waiting in
long lines to vote. But it's even more worrisome than it sounds. So for folks who might not be
familiar, like line warming is what it's, you keep in the line warming, you keep people comfortable
who are standing in line. I remember in 2018, the New Georgia Project in some of their
Electric Protection folks. They literally sent a mariachi ban to one line to keep people
entertained because they're waiting in line so long. And so because we have these long lines,
because depending upon the weather, if it's in like, you know, spring, because we have very worn
spring time here in Georgia or if it's very cold for whatever reason or raining, you know,
people have handed out ponchos, people have handed out hand warmers, food, like snacks. I mean,
you have pizza to the polls. You have the chef for the polls with chef Jose Andreas started the
chef to the polls this past cycle too. So you have these other things that people are doing,
and they have tried to compare it to a partisan electioneering in the past. And you even had
Brad Raffesberger telling media that it was, in fact, illegal and a felony. So before the state
actually made it illegal, you had the Secretary of State telling people that it was illegal,
and you had people being harassed accordingly because of his misinterpretation, misstatements
of law. So now that it is illegal to be within 150 feet, that's the same.
to say why that that hundred to feet feet why I keep harking or not is because that is the same
distance that if you're representing a party or a candidate, you have to be away. So they have
compared nonpartisan activity to partisan activity. And that's a very real attack on black and brown
and other organizers of color who have been trying to help alleviate what we see. You know,
we don't want people to be discouraged. So I will also note that because there's not anything clear
cut in law and like voting rights law, period, the way people have tried to kind of just protect
themselves and make sure they don't end up being accused of violating any type of federal laws,
because it has been a law, I think since the 40s, that you cannot give anyone of something
of value for their vote. And so, unfortunately, because of the discretion involved and are
interpreting, you know, a secretary of state like Brad Raffersburg could interpret that as, you know,
giving something someone of value because they're in line to vote, which it's like whatever.
It's a stretch, but whatever.
So how a lot of folks have dealt with that is like anyone in the vicinity, whether it's the
poll workers, if you're at someplace that has security, if there are other people passing
through the general community, anyone can get anything we're giving out no matter what, right?
Like, it's a service.
And, you know, when I got some quotes when I was writing the article, like from a piece of the
poll folks, one of the things they said was, we see this as a way of incentivizing civic
engagement in the general community. So we'll provide it to anyone, right? And I know that several lawyers
have advised people that that was the best way to handle it as well. But now it doesn't matter
who you're giving it to, regardless, just the very act of being close to the polling location,
they have now decided to criminalize. And that is a very clear attack on a very real way at
something that is very commonly known to be seen as an added value and benefit to communities.
And so we're seeing this a very real attack, not just simply on democracy, but on our participation as, you know, people of color who are exercising and leveraging that power. And, you know, a lot of folks are comparing this to Jim Crow. And I'd really be interested in talking to some historians just to learn more about that post, that early, the pre, you know, 50, 60 civil rights era. So like, you know, the late 1800s to like the 1940s, 1950s, because it seems like in some ways we're really in that period, like post-reconstruction, where we're,
we saw very blatant, active attempts to strip black political power from communities.
This attempt to stripped black communities of power via curbing access to voting is nothing new.
After the Civil War during Reconstruction, black folks were attacked by racist poll taxes and literacy tests
and other barriers to make it harder for us to vote.
According to the Brennan Center, even though these laws are over a century old,
as recently as 2012, 46 states allowed for voter challenges, laws that allowed any
private citizen to challenge the eligibility of prospective voters on or before election day.
Now, these kinds of barriers to voting have never gone down without a fight.
Organizations like Black Voters Matter, led by Cliff Albright, have already challenged Georgia's
new law on the grounds that it will unfairly hurt Black and Brown voters.
So it's going to be interesting about like how some of this stuff even stands up in court,
New Georgia Project, Black Voters Matter Fund and Rise all filed, they file the joint suit.
the same night that Kemp signed the bill.
So it's going to be interesting to see how that moves forward and unfolds.
But the voter challenges.
So basically, and this is like something that used to happen in the old days too.
Like you could just go in or really white people could just go in and be like, no,
that person can't vote for whatever reason or whatever.
And you would literally have to have like a white person like someone come vouch for you.
And so it's something very similar.
Like they can come in and just challenge anyone for any reason.
And that is very intimidating.
is very stressful.
That is something that actually is very insidious.
It also kind of feels like an attack
on some aspects of the black way of life.
I know I have older women in my life
who I call Auntie and drop off mail
and groceries and prescriptions for
who are not actually my blood relatives.
And I wouldn't be able to touch their ballots.
You can't have other people
collecting your ballots for you.
And again, that might even sound logical to people,
but you have some folks.
What about people who can't?
get around and get out, right? Like, we all know folks. So, like, if I know people in my general,
like, life, unless I'm directly related in a household with them, I can't touch their ballot
for them, right? But if they don't have anyone, and a lot of us live in families and community
like that, right? Where we have Ms. So-and-so who, no, I'm technically not related to her,
but she's still my auntie or she's still my grandma or whoever. And it's not anything nefarious.
For Inoa, the root of this is so obvious.
It's racist.
The root of it all is they are afraid that they won't win elections unless they do this.
It's not like, hi, I should adopt better policies or maybe I need to not be so extremists in our positions.
It's like, no, we just need to do whatever we came to retain and maintain power and make sure them darkies don't.
Because that's really what it is.
That's really what it is.
Like, we talk about it, but it's like you and I both know what's up.
Right?
It's so clear.
No, like, no one wants to come out and say it.
They don't say it.
They dance around it.
But it's clear that's what's happening.
Anybody, anybody can see it.
More after a quick break.
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Me.
Is there anything to the idea that because you're from Harvard,
you only got in because your parents made a huge donation.
The group.
The yard birds, right?
That's the name.
The Harvard yard, but they're open.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
Since you guys are middle aged.
One erection.
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Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending, opinions are flying,
and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise.
Breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athlete themselves.
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Life throws hurdles big and small.
The question is, how do you conquer them?
On Hurtle with Emily Abadi, we sit down with the most inspiring women in sports and wellness,
professional athletes, coaches, and Olympic champions to talk about the challenges that shaped them
and the mindset that keeps them going.
From the WNBA standout Kate Martin and rising hockey star label.
Edwards. If a boy can do it, I don't see why a girl can't. Like, I've never understood that.
Like, it didn't make sense in my brain. It's hard to be in spaces that no one looks like you,
but don't ever feel like you don't belong. Don't let that be the reason you don't do it.
An Olympic champs Gabby Thomas and Katie Ladeke. The ability to show a gold medal to someone
have their face light up and smile, that means the world to me. And that's what motivates me
to win more gold medals. At our level, at this scale, like being able to fail in front of the
entire world. Like, I can do anything. I can do anything. Because resilience isn't just about
winning. It's about showing up, even when it's hard. Listen to Hurtle with Emily Abadi on the IHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Presented by Capital One, founding partner
of IHart Women's Sports. Let's get right back into it. Kemp, flanked by a bunch of white male
Georgia state legislators, sign the law under a painting of a slave plantation.
When folks are pointing to Kemp signing that bill under a picture of not just any plantation, right?
Like what someone, several folks have just pierced out the history of the plantation that's depicted,
a very brutal, atrocious, you know, that held, like, I think upwards of a hundred slaves.
Like that with, and then, I mean, also you have him flanked by six white men, which I believe,
just take a quick glance, and that's like six people who are above House and Senate leadership.
I mean, the fact that, you know, the leadership of our government is all white men in a rapidly
diversifying state like Georgia is quite telling. I mean, that's the other thing, right?
Like, there is this real fear that they are losing power, and that's at the heart of it.
But we know what happens when white fear controls policy, right? We've seen it. We've seen, you know,
folks can act like, oh, the KKK or white supremacy is just some white national, that's some extreme
outside thing. But unfortunately, a lot of those same tenants, a lot of those same attitudes influence
when we're looking at the way in which people are charged with various crimes, or we're looking at
the decisions that are being made. We're looking at the way in which our children are treated in
public schools. We see the very deep, rooted nature of white supremacy across so many facets of society.
So you can't just, you know, it's not enough to just say this is Trump's big lie.
Like it's so much more than that happening.
And I'm just really, like, excited for the work that you're doing and the conversations
you've been having around disinformation because we really need to understand how these systems
are operating and what role do we all have to play.
And we really should take that role seriously.
I really do believe that we all have a role to play in fighting against disinformation.
It doesn't matter if you are aligned ideologically.
very conservative, if you're someone who believes in more moderate or conservative values,
you should want people telling the truth.
Like, you just, you should want facts.
You should not want to exist with people distorting information and blatantly lying.
It's a wild time we're in.
Bridget, like, this is a wild time.
It's a wild time.
I guess that's one of my last questions for you.
What do you think is next for the state of voting in Georgia?
Like, what's next?
Where do we go from here?
we keep doing what we've been doing.
Like I keep reporting what I've been reporting.
I'm sure organizers.
Like I just finished interviewing Cliff Albright and some other folks.
Simone Bell is a former state rep.
And we were just talking about like what's next, right?
In conversations with folks are just like, so now what?
And so folks are, you know, working through like what does it look like possibly as an economic boycott strategy
or continuing the corporate accountability strategy as a pressure point to paraphrase Cliff,
just thinking about like the Georgia law has been passed, it's now that's up,
now that, for that specifically, that's up to the lawsuit, right, the legal strategy.
There's always still the organizing strategy and working within the confines of the new limitations
that exist.
We see folks continuing to, you know, strategize, organize, and just get more people in the process.
But that corporate accountability strategy, you know, folks are all hyped up about boycotting
Georgia, and I personally tend to object to boycotts unless they are called directly by people
themselves. As soon as the legislation was signed into law, people on social media began calling for
boycotts of Georgia-based corporations, like Delta Airlines and Coca-Cola, until they came out
against the law. Now, boycotts like these have been effective in the past. In the 80s,
organizers called for a boycott of Coca-Cola and other U.S. companies if they didn't divest from
South Africa to help end apartheid. But the difference is, those boycotts were, you know, and the
were led by local folks on the ground, not outsiders on Twitter.
Aenoa thinks any calls for boycotts should be led by organizers in Georgia,
not people who don't live there.
But also, like, with a boycott, and, you know, I had folks like, well, you know,
they did it in the 80s with Coca-Cola.
That was a part of a very strategic effort around divestment from South Africa, right?
And I do remember as a kid, we did not drink Coca-Cola or wear Reeboks because of divestment.
That's, like, the only thing, like, I really remember, you know,
being a young child in the 80s.
That and then by the early 90s,
a different world episode where one of the characters had to give up
or chose to give up a scholarship because the company
had not divested from South Africa,
economic accountability, economic corporate boycotts,
that stuff can work, but it's strategic.
It has to be led by impacted people
who are very clear on what the goals are.
I think Senator Warnock actually said this really well
in an interview recently.
You know, they're so busy asking Democrats about why the, you know, the filibuses and the filibuster.
It's like, why aren't you asking Republicans about why they're not protecting voting rights?
Like, why they don't care.
I think that's what, but where we all go, I think we need to have a very clear commitment and understanding that democracy is not just some stagnant thing that just exists.
It is really an active process that requires us to play a very clear, consistent role.
So whether that's just being involved in, you know, even if it's being involved,
and your kids, like, if there's like a local school council or something for your district or your
school or if it's, you know, when you can and have the time. Because I also, I mean, I've been a single mom my
entire adult life. I had my daughter when I was 20, almost my entire adult life. I'm not going
discount the years their dad was around. But like I, you know, so I get being busy, right? Like I get
having multiple competing things. You know, I've taken care of other people in addition to my kids.
So I understand having other things pressing on us. But we can.
can still find a way to write off that letter to, you know, now they, now with the technology
is so easy. You can automatically send out the texts to do stuff, the autopopulate, the
emails. I mean, we, we can, we can follow and support the work of black and other organizers
of color, not just here in Georgia, because yes, they're amazing people, Georgia, but you know what?
There are awesome folks throwing down all over the south and really all over the country.
I think between Georgia and the Midwest, not to exclude anyone else, the south and the Midwest,
I've met some of the most prolific organizers really grinding and working at multiple intersections
of crisis right now because we still do, we're still in the middle of a pandemic, and we have
the democracy issues. And then just the regular issue-based work that people are doing.
So I think about folks like Mississippi Votes, who are the People's Advocacy Institute, led by Rukia Lumumba,
and Mississippi voses Zerica Bennett.
I think about work over in Louisiana.
I mean, up in Wisconsin, you have lit leaders igniting transformation
and block black leaders organizing communities.
And those are both organizations that have worked around multiple issues
as well as elections and civic engagement while at the same time holding space for community
in a middle of a pandemic.
And so these types of groups exist all over.
Some of them may be smaller and may not be as well funded.
And that's definitely where you like your support.
I mean, like, we act like, you know, donations don't matter.
But like financial freedom writers are a thing, in my opinion.
It's definitely necessary.
Not all of us can get there and be there physically in person.
Not everybody has to be on the front line.
That's one of things I appreciate about the pandemic too, I think,
that folks have learned there are different ways that you can contribute
and being like literally on the front line is not the only thing of value you can do.
Can you feed some folks every once in a while?
That's also really valuable.
So, I mean, I just think as we're wrapping up, like, you know,
and just thinking about where to go next, also sharing good information,
sharing podcasts and, you know, like yours, sharing articles, like the ones I write,
like that goes a long way because we don't necessarily have the same distribution
networks that the other side does.
And so we need to get our information out there.
I'll just share a real quick personal story.
Like, I've had these conversations with my mother about sharing bad information about COVID,
it, whether the vaccine or whatever.
And it's the same thing.
They target black folks.
It sounds kind of right, right?
Like it makes kind of sense.
They get you hooked in.
But I had to walk through with my mom.
I had to point her to black doctors she should be following.
And one thing she said was, well, if they're saying such good information,
why isn't their information being shared everywhere?
I said, unfortunately, because the way these algorithms work, the way the sharing systems work,
she was like, oh, well, so taking the time to just talk to our folks.
right? Like that's that's super critical.
A lot of people have said the black vote saved us from Trump.
Now it's time for all of us to help protect it.
If you're fired up and ready to get involved,
check out the New Georgia Project,
a group that works to protect voting access in Georgia
at the new Georgiaproject.org.
If you enjoyed this podcast, please help us grow by subscribing.
Got a story about an interesting thing in tech
or just want to say hi.
We'd love to hear from you at hello at tangoadie.com.
Disinformed was brought to you by
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Jonathan Strickland is our executive producer.
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Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guy, not quite.
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Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
week, my guest, S&L's Mikey Day and headwriter, Streeter Seidel, help an
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Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
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Life is full of hurdles, so how do you keep going?
On Hurtle with Emily Abadi, we're talking with the most inspiring women in sports and
wellness, from professional athletes, coaches, and Olympic champions.
about the challenges that shape them and the mindset that keeps them moving forward.
At our level, at this scale, being able to fail in front of the entire world.
Like, I can do anything.
I can do anything.
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Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHart Women's Sports.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
And nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo, in every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the biggest moments in sports and giving you the real story behind the headline.
And we're going straight to the source, the athletes themselves, their locker room stories, their reactions in the moment, and the stuff nobody gets to hear.
Listen to Sports Slice on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
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Imagine an Olympics where doping is not only legal, but encouraged.
the enhanced games. Some call it grotesque. Others say it's unleashing human potential. Either way,
the podcast's Superhuman documented it all, embedded in the games and with the athletes for a full year.
Within probably 10 days, I'd put on 10 pounds. I was having trouble stopping the muscle growth.
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This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
