Immediately Following Amtrak Derailment, the Conspiracy Theory Trolls Began Their Campaign

Cars from an Amtrak train lay spilled onto Interstate 5 below alongside smashed vehicles as some train cars remain on the tracks above Monday, Dec. 18, 2017, in DuPont, Wash. The Amtrak train making the first-ever run along a faster new route hurtled off the overpass Monday near Tacoma and spilled some of its cars onto the highway below, killing some people, authorities said. Seventy-eight passengers and five crew members were aboard when the train moving at more than 80 mph derailed about 40 miles south of Seattle before 8 a.m., Amtrak said. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Yesterday’s horrible Amtrak derailment on a track outside of Tacoma, Washington resulted in the death of at least 3 people, with over 70 people injured. At least ten of those who were injured are still in serious condition today, and at least one was medivacked to a trauma center in Seattle.

Advertisement

While it may take weeks to get the full report, news today is that the train was going 80 mph in a section of the track that was marked for 30 mph. The slower speed was to prepare for a bend in the track ahead.

Whether the cause for the increased speed was operator error or some mechanical malfunction is one of those questions we’ll have to wait on the answers to.

Whatever the case, the conspiracy theorists – Russian bot accounts and mindless purveyors of “fake news” – were out in force, cooking up social media tales designed to exacerbate the masses.

The good folks over at Reagan Battalion were on the case, and actually mapped out the birth and evolution of this particular conspiracy theory.

It begins with the notion that Antifa poured concrete on the tracks, in a deliberate attempt to create mayhem.

I’ll say right here that I have no doubt that the sniveling scumbags that call themselves Antifa are capable of such an act. I just don’t think they’re the boogeyman that should get to carry the blame/credit for everything.

Advertisement

I’ll also say the motives for blaming Antifa for everything need to be explored, as well.

The motives sound so innocent. Just asking a question, right?

They pointed out (rightly) how these Russian bot farms work, taking advantage of any tragedy, finding a scapegoat, and then working up the faithful, in order to heighten tension among citizens.

As you can see, it’s a campaign, pushing everything in the same direction, with no real proof. In fact, at the time the campaign began, there wasn’t much to go on for anybody, other than the fact that a train had derailed.

Advertisement

It was a concerted effort to connect Antifa and the train derailment linked on social media.

And then there were those who can’t help themselves. Their bread and butter is aiding in conspiracy theories and chaos.

And then there was this article on one of those FAKE NEWS sites, and OH, how quickly did they leap to spread it around!

For some reason, the original accounts that were tweeting were axed. Kind of like what happens when Twitter finds out an account is fake, or in recent months, linked to the Kremlin.

Advertisement

The folks at Reagan Battalion were soon overwhelmed, as the accounts pushing the Antifa-derailment conspiracy soon exploded into the 1,000s. You definitely need a team to keep up with the chaos work being perpetrated by the Russian bot farms.

And no, it doesn’t help when we have people here willing to help them out.

There is a true effort to spread misinformation through social media, to make Americans suspicious of their neighbors, and to keep us looking away from the real culprits.

Recommended

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Trending on RedState Videos