
“We orchestrated an elaborate ‘false flag’ operation that planted the idea that the Moore campaign was amplified on social media by a Russian botnet,” an internal report on the project said, according to the Times. They also ran a scheme, according to the New York Times, “to link the Moore campaign to thousands of Russian accounts that suddenly began following the Republican candidate on Twitter, a development that drew national media attention.” The project’s operatives posed as conservative Alabamians on Facebook and tried to use the platform to divide Republicans, pushing them toward a write-in candidate and away from Roy Moore, the GOP’s nominee for Senate.
LINKEDIN CORPORATION REID HOFFMAN SERIES
He also funded a series of pro-Doug Jones ads in Alabama that were modeled on the much-decried Russian propaganda peddled on Facebook and Twitter in 2016. (Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)īut Hoffman’s shady political activity doesn’t end there. (L-R) Greylock partner Reid Hoffman, “Westworld” executive producers Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan, and writer Maureen Dowd speak onstage during Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit on October 4, 2017, in Beverly Hills, CA. He’s one part Soros, one part Michael Bloomberg, and one part Laurene Powell Jobs. Tactically, he embraces both the disingenuous and the censorious – as well as the Chinese Communist Party.

He is one of the key framers of the modern political infrastructure that is contouring the current American landscape by allowing the super-wealthy to use nonprofits and lenient disclosure laws to make large political contributions in relative obscurity. He has since fashioned himself into a Democratic mega-donor, though his activities are largely hidden from public view. Hoffman is a 55-year-old billionaire who helped launch PayPal before co-founding LinkedIn in 2002. is not only backed by far-left billionaire activist George Soros, but also LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman. What has been reported, however, is that Good Information Inc. Tom Fitton told me on our radio show, Breitbart News Daily, that the shadowy nature of this non-profit is not illegal, but it is “murky” and “unusual.” What’s more, they were founded recently so there is minimal publicly available financial information.

It is not readily apparent from their website who is running the organization they do not list board members, leadership, or key staff. Screen image of the “about” page on the Good Information Foundation’s website. The Good Information Foundation is, according to its website, the non-profit arm of Good Information Inc., which describes itself as “a public benefit corporation committed to restoring social trust and strengthening democracy by investing in solutions that counter disinformation and increase the flow of good information online.” This appears to be a violation of federal law that prohibits 501(c)(3) organizations from “directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign.” This case seems like such blatant abuse of our tax code, I was personally compelled to file a complaint with the IRS about the group. Moore told Breitbart News, “They wanted me to use fear to manipulate people into voting blue, or into voting not Trump… And when they’re giving examples of the things they wanted me to say - don’t say ‘Trump and his allies,’ say ‘Trump Republicans’ - it became really clear that this was about putting out information… to impact midterms.” Two weeks ago, attorney and legal commentator Preston Moore posted a video saying he was offered (but did not accept) hundreds of dollars from a group to attack Donald Trump and “Trump Republicans.” The group that solicited Moore is called the “Good Information Foundation,” and presumably, if Moore is telling the truth, this is common practice for them.
