How The Biden Administration Used A Counter-Terrorism Grant To Fund Anti-Conservative Propaganda | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the The Daily Wire. The author of this post is Luke Rosiak.

    The Department of Homeland Security paid an activist group $700,000 to create self-described propaganda that attacked conservatives, a new investigation found.

    DHS used a grant program intended to combat terrorists, called the Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention (TVTP) Program, to pay activists to write blog posts that criticized Donald Trump and other conservatives under the guise of "media literacy," the Media Research Center found through public records requests.

    In its funding application, the University of Rhode Island's Media Education Lab declared that "propaganda and misinformation concerning topics including immigration [and] racial justice" had become "disruptive." It asked DHS for funding to run "community-created counter-propaganda."

    "Propaganda can also be used for socially beneficial purposes. Indeed, because the public has long been recognized as being suggestible, the United States has long made use of beneficial propaganda during WWI, WWII, and the Cold War," the grant application said.

    The findings position the University of Rhode Island's Media Education Lab and a closely linked activist group, Media Literacy Now (MLN), at the center of a sprawling, government-funded campaign to run propaganda on Americans to create a mandate for increased censorship. The Daily Wire reported last week that the same groups were also paid by the State Department, which had them arrange for German anti-"disinformation" activists to train U.S. school teachers on the techniques used in that country, which has some of the most anti-free speech policies in the West.

    MRC said the grant shows that Congress must abolish all domestic censorship programs.

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    "The Biden administration is able to get something quite special with its $700,000 TVTP grant," the MRC concluded in its investigation. "Harnessing the Media Literacy Now 'network' and, ultimately, paying children to advocate for 'media literacy' mandates ensnares the whole of the American public school system in its agenda."

    "With just two grants - first from the State Department, and now from the DHS - the Biden administration has been able to artificially create a perpetual '[p]ublic demand for media literacy in public education,' supercharging a censorship industry devoted to an inherently anti-American philosophy hidden beneath the asinine monicker of 'media literacy,'" it wrote.

    The DHS grant led to an entity known as "Courageous RI," helmed by U-RI professor and leftist activist Renee Hobbs, which said that its program would use the funds to manipulate the public and policymakers into demanding policies to crack down on "misinformation."

    It said "media literacy" training was especially needed in Rhode Island because "the Southern Poverty Law Center identified several active hate groups in the state," and that some residents of the January 6 "insurrection that breached the Capitol Building" were from the state.

    The anti-terrorism grant program was created under the Obama administration, and Miles Taylor, the DHS chief of staff under Donald Trump who gained notoriety for writing a New York Times op-ed admitting to undermining Trump from within, maneuvered to ensure that it lived on despite his boss' wishes, according to a 2020 Politico article. By this year, the program was being used to explicitly liken people who believed that there is a "deep state" - the idea that unelected bureaucrats might behave like Miles - to Holocaust deniers.

    The Rhode Island Lab used the DHS money to pay people $250 each to write blog posts about "misinformation, disinformation, media literacy... and more!" The articles pushed for Left-wing policies, even though federal grants cannot be used to fund lobbying. The posts sometimes had less to do with "media literacy" than political opining, railing against the National Rifle Association and Stand Your Ground laws.

    "We are all living in a darker, scarier, angrier, less hopeful country thanks to Mr. Trump's influence. Are we on the verge of civil war?" one post said, complaining that Trump "was able to crawl into the safety of First Amendment protections."

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    "It won't be easy, but we really have to reduce Trump's influence," it pledged.

    "Content moderation decisions of digital platforms actually do not violate ordinary people's constitutionally guaranteed speech rights. That's because private social media companies are not bound by the First Amendment," another said, claiming that "the political right enjoys higher amplification compared to the political left."

    The DHS-funded entity served to bring together federal and state law enforcement officials, anti-speech activists, teachers, and Democrat advocacy groups.

    Rhode Island Secretary of State Gregg Amore, a Democrat, made his department an official partner of Courageous RI, and assigned his staff to ghost-write the program's "Manifesto." The Manifesto said that "anti-government theories... can lead to targeted violence and domestic terrorism."

    "We have become so focused on individual rights, we have forgotten about the collective good," Amore said at Courageous RI's launch event.

    The Rhode Island School Superintendents Association and the U.S. Attorney for Rhode Island, Zachary Cunha, are also among Courageous RI's "coalition" members, as is Moms Demand Action, a Left-wing anti-gun group.

    Though it was billed as teaching people how to identify propaganda and misinformation, the grant culminated in paying youth to create government-sanctioned messages. The "Statewide Community Creative Media Contest" gave cash prizes of up to $1,000 to students who generated "public service announcements ... with support from local state public safety experts as well as communications and public relations professionals."

    As part of its "Media Literacy and Civic Engagement Curriculum," it trained teachers to use the classroom to root out "misinformation," encouraging them to "address[] controversial current events." It said with DHS funding, it would train more than 6,800 educators and students to embed "media literacy and terrorism prevention in many different kinds of community programs."

    The final prong in the program was "Courageous Community Conversations." A June 2023 event pushed a video that said that the reason Hispanics tilted towards the Republican Party in 2020 was because of "disinformation" against Joe Biden in "Spanish-language media," with Russia possibly to blame. It called for social media companies like Meta to more aggressively censor information in response.

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    The conversations also included a podcast series. In one episode, DHS agent Robert Mahoney, the grant's administrator, appeared as a guest. "Somebody who has access to guns or has anti-government theories or has conspiracy theories, it doesn't necessarily mean that they're going to mobilize to violence, but it does mean in the sense of wanting to do interventions. If you're causing concerns among your friends and family, to have a way of reporting or maybe getting someone the help that they desperately need," he said.

    Courageous RI official Pam Steager asked how people could "help them before they get to the point where they could be radicalized so much that they turn to violence."

    Those precursors to theoretical extremism could include mainstream American positions. In another podcast episode, Hobbs promoted a lesson plan that had children listen to a podcast in which a Southern Poverty Law Center employee likened opposition to illegal immigration to Nazism.
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