U.N. recruited 110,000 'information warriors' to police internet

PROPAGANDA

by Art Moore  WND

The United Nations recruited 110,000 "digital first responders" during the pandemic to battle "misinformation" on social media platforms and internet forums, according to the global body's communications director.

The U.N.'s Melissa Fleming made the disclosure in an October 2020 episode of a World Economic Forum podcast called "Seeking a Cure for the Infodemic." But Fleming's remarks resurfaced Thursday on Twitter.

"So far, we've recruited 110,000 information volunteers, and we equip these information volunteers with the kind of knowledge about how misinformation spreads and ask them to serve as kind of 'digital first-responders' in those spaces where misinformation travels," she said.

On Wednesday, the Facebook and Instagram accounts of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Children's Health Defense Fund were shut down, the Gateway Pundit reported. CHD has filed a lawsuit against the parent company Meta that charges Facebook has colluded with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to censor COVID "misinformation."

With nearly a half-million followers for the two pages combined, Kennedy's organization has been a leading critic of the experimental COVID-19 vaccines. Kennedy's book "The Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health" was a No. 1 bestseller.

CHD noted the deplatforming came after the CDC "quietly walked back many of their previous COVID-19 policies that CHD has criticized since the beginning of the pandemic."