萝莉视频

Boris Johnson praises Kingdom鈥檚 rapid transformation at Saudi Media Forum

Boris Johnson praises Kingdom鈥檚 rapid transformation at Saudi Media Forum
Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks at the Saudi Media Forum 2025 in Riyadh, discussing 萝莉视频鈥檚 rapid transformation under Vision 2030 and its growing global influence. (AN photo/Loai Ali)
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Updated 20 February 2025

Boris Johnson praises Kingdom鈥檚 rapid transformation at Saudi Media Forum

Boris Johnson praises Kingdom鈥檚 rapid transformation at Saudi Media Forum
  • Former PM commends crown prince as a 鈥榣eader with courage鈥
  • Compares rapid development in 萝莉视频 with UK鈥檚 sluggish progress

Riyadh: 萝莉视频鈥檚 bold leadership and rapid transformation under Vision 2030 should serve as a model for other nations, former UK prime minister Boris Johnson said today at the Saudi Media Forum in Riyadh.

Comparing the Kingdom鈥檚 accelerated economic and infrastructure development to the UK鈥檚 sluggish progress, Johnson highlighted 萝莉视频鈥檚 ability to execute large-scale projects efficiently, crediting its decisive leadership for the shift.

鈥淚 visited NEOM eight years ago, and there was absolutely nothing there. Now, 萝莉视频 has built world-class resorts, with 12,000 hotel rooms under development,鈥 he said. 鈥淢eanwhile, in the UK, we still struggle to complete one railway.鈥

Johnson praised Vision 2030 as the foundation of 萝莉视频鈥檚 progress, highlighting its role in economic diversification, infrastructure expansion and social reforms. 鈥淔ifty percent of the Saudi economy is now non-oil,鈥 he said, citing the Kingdom鈥檚 shift toward tourism, technology and renewable energy as key indicators of success.

Women鈥檚 empowerment also featured prominently in his remarks. Johnson highlighted that Saudi women鈥檚 participation in the technology workforce now surpasses that of Silicon Valley and Europe. 鈥淟ook at the speed of change,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e in the UK need to learn from this.鈥

Beyond economic reforms, Johnson acknowledged 萝莉视频鈥檚 rising diplomatic and geopolitical influence. He referenced its role in global discussions and peace initiatives, calling the Kingdom a key player in shaping the region鈥檚 future.

On the crisis in Gaza, Johnson called for strong leadership and reconciliation, urging the need for leaders with the courage to push for peace. 鈥溌芾蚴悠 is playing a historic role in bringing long-term peace and prosperity to the region,鈥 he said.

Johnson contrasted 萝莉视频鈥檚 ability to execute large-scale projects quickly with the bureaucratic delays plaguing infrastructure development in the UK. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e spent $68 billion on these projects, and we still can鈥檛 complete one railway,鈥 he said, referencing the UK鈥檚 stalled High Speed 2 rail project.

鈥溌芾蚴悠 is a country where things are happening with incredible speed and decisiveness. Frankly, we need to learn that in the UK,鈥 he added.

Shifting focus to media and public perception, Johnson criticized the role of social media algorithms in shaping biased narratives. He said that platforms like YouTube and Twitter often reinforce pre-existing beliefs rather than providing balanced perspectives. 鈥淲e need to ensure the media presents balanced facts, rather than reinforcing pre-existing biases,鈥 he added.

Reflecting on his own career, Johnson discussed his transition from journalism to politics, and said that he wanted to shift from critiquing policy to actively shaping it. 鈥淎s a journalist, you throw rocks. As a politician, you build,鈥 he added.

Johnson also pointed to the difficulty of leadership in a social media-driven world, where political figures face instant scrutiny and polarized opinions.

Concluding the session, Johnson praised Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman鈥檚 leadership, quoting Winston Churchill: 鈥淐ourage is the most important virtue, and this country is fortunate to have a leader with courage.鈥

The Saudi Media Forum 2025, held in Riyadh from Feb. 19-21, brings together global media figures, policymakers and industry leaders to discuss the future of media, governance and international relations.


Trump says his negative media coverage is 鈥榠llegal鈥

Trump says his negative media coverage is 鈥榠llegal鈥
Updated 20 September 2025

Trump says his negative media coverage is 鈥榠llegal鈥

Trump says his negative media coverage is 鈥榠llegal鈥
  • 鈥淭hey鈥檒l take a great story and they鈥檒l make it bad. See I think it鈥檚 really illegal, personally,鈥 he said
  • Trump has sued multiple major news organizations this year for being critical of his governance

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Friday bashed US media coverage that he claimed was unduly negative and therefore 鈥渋llegal,鈥 stoking a debate over free speech following the suspension of comedian Jimmy Kimmel鈥檚 TV show by ABC.

鈥淭hey鈥檒l take a great story and they鈥檒l make it bad. See I think it鈥檚 really illegal, personally,鈥 Trump, who has sued multiple major news organizations this year, told reporters gathered in the Oval Office.
The 79-year-old Republican, an avid television watcher, chiefly focused his diatribe on US television networks, reiterating a claim that coverage of him and his administration is 鈥97 percent bad.鈥
He also defended the head of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Brendan Carr, whose threats against broadcasters have sparked a national debate over free speech and caused some unease even among Republicans.
Carr on Wednesday criticized Kimmel鈥檚 remarks on the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk and threatened broadcasters who carry his show with possible sanctions.
Hours later, ABC announced Kimmel鈥檚 show was suspended indefinitely.
On Friday, Trump called Carr 鈥渁n incredible American patriot with courage.鈥
Texas Senator Ted Cruz, a close Trump ally, meanwhile said he believes it鈥檚 dangerous for a government to put itself in a position to say what speech it may or may not like.
Commenting on Carr鈥檚 threat to fine broadcasters or pull their licenses over the content of their shows, Cruz referenced a Martin Scorsese gangster movie.
鈥淚 got to say that鈥檚 right out of 鈥楪oodfellas鈥,鈥 Cruz said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 right out of a mafioso coming into a bar going, 鈥楴ice bar you have here. It would be a shame if something happened to it.鈥欌
Trump himself faced a setback in his personal anti-media crusade, with a federal judge issuing a scathing ruling and tossing out his $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times.


Killing of 31 Yemeni journalists by Israel is 鈥榙eadliest global attack in 16 years,鈥 says media watchdog

Killing of 31 Yemeni journalists by Israel is 鈥榙eadliest global attack in 16 years,鈥 says media watchdog
Updated 20 September 2025

Killing of 31 Yemeni journalists by Israel is 鈥榙eadliest global attack in 16 years,鈥 says media watchdog

Killing of 31 Yemeni journalists by Israel is 鈥榙eadliest global attack in 16 years,鈥 says media watchdog
  • They were killed by Israeli strikes that targeted a media complex in Yemen鈥檚 capital, Sanaa, on Sept. 10
  • Incident confirms pattern of Israeli authorities in labeling media workers as terrorists, says Committee to Protect Journalists

DUBAI: An Israeli attack on media offices in Yemen鈥檚 capital, Sanaa, on Sept. 10 that killed 31 journalists and media workers was the deadliest strike of its kind anywhere in the world in 16 years, according to media watchdog the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Thirty of those who died worked for one of two newspapers, 26 September and Yemen. The offices for both were in the headquarters of the Moral Guidance Directorate, the media arm of the Houthi-controlled government, the CPJ said.

The Houthi health ministry said 35 people in all were killed in the attack, and 131 injured.

Nasser Al-Khadri, the editor-in-chief of 26 September, the Yemeni army鈥檚 official media outlet, told the watchdog: 鈥淚t is a brutal and unjustified attack that targeted innocent people whose only crime was working in the media field, armed with nothing but their pens and words.鈥

A child who had accompanied a journalist to work was among the dead, and 22 media workers were among the injured, he added.

The strikes occurred at around 4:45 p.m. as staff were finalizing publication of the weekly newspaper, Al-Khadri said. The attack destroyed its 鈥渇acilities, printing presses and archives,鈥 he added, resulting in 鈥渄eeply painful鈥 losses.

The CPJ described the incident as the 鈥渟econd-deadliest single attack on the press鈥 it had ever recorded, after the 2009 Maguindanao massacre in the Philippines in which 32 journalists were among 58 people killed. It added that the attack on Sanaa 鈥渕arks deadliest global attack in 16 years.鈥

Abdulrahman Mohammed Mutahar, a journalist who lives in the neighborhood where the strikes took place, told the CPJ that the assault caused 鈥渕assive explosions unlike anything Sanaa had seen since 2015.鈥

About eight missiles reduced the headquarters of the Moral Guidance Directorate to rubble, underneath which the bodies of some of the journalists were buried, he added.

On Sept 16., the funerals of those killed on Sept. 10 were interrupted by additional Israeli strikes.

Yemeni journalists say they live in fear of both international and domestic aggressors. Yousef Hazeb, head of the National Organization of Yemeni Reporters, told the CPJ they were 鈥減aying a double price for their work,鈥 at the mercy of 鈥渄eadly Israeli airstrikes targeting journalists and media outlets,鈥 as well as local forces, including the Houthis, 鈥渨ho use the war as a pretext to expand repression.鈥

Within hours of the Israeli strikes on Sept. 10, Yemen鈥檚 public prosecutor issued a ban on the publication of photos or videos taken at the scene of the attack.

In a message posted on social media platform X, the Israeli army said the strikes on Sanaa, and others in the northern province of Al-Jawf, were in 鈥渞esponse to repeated attacks by the Iranian-backed Houthis.鈥

It added that the targets included the 鈥淗outhi Public Relations Department, responsible for distributing propaganda messages in the media, and psychological terror.鈥

The CPJ has classified the killing of the 31 media workers in Yemen as 鈥渕urders鈥 arising from the 鈥渄eliberate targeting of journalists for their work.鈥 The watchdog said Israel has been responsible for the killings of one in six journalists globally since 2016. It has documented the murders of 227 journalists globally in the past decade, and found Israel to be responsible for more than 16 percent of them through attacks on Gaza, Lebanon, Iran and Yemen.

The latest strikes confirms the long-standing pattern of Israeli authorities in 鈥渓abeling journalists as terrorists or propagandists to justify their killings,鈥 said Sara Qudah, the CBJ鈥檚 regional program director.

It also marks 鈥渁n alarming escalation, extending Israel鈥檚 war on journalism far beyond the genocide in Gaza,鈥 she added.

Qudah, like representatives of other press groups and human rights advocates, said strikes on news outlets and media workers violate the principles of international law.

Radio and television facilities are civilian objects and cannot be targeted, Human Rights Watch said. They cannot be considered military targets 鈥渟imply because they are pro-Houthi or anti-Israel鈥 because this does not directly contribute to military operations, it added.

The CPJ said that journalists, as civilians, are protected under the rule of international law, including those who work for state-run outlets or are affiliated with armed groups, unless they play a direct part in hostilities.

The strikes on Yemen show the continuous and repeated failure of Israeli authorities to 鈥渄istinguish between military targets and journalists, justifying its assassinations by smearing journalists as terrorists or propagandists, without credible evidence,鈥 the CPJ added.


Taliban blocks fiber-optic internet 鈥榯o prevent immoral activities鈥

Taliban blocks fiber-optic internet 鈥榯o prevent immoral activities鈥
Updated 19 September 2025

Taliban blocks fiber-optic internet 鈥榯o prevent immoral activities鈥

Taliban blocks fiber-optic internet 鈥榯o prevent immoral activities鈥
  • Government offices, businesses, public institutions, and homes have been left without internet access
  • Rights groups warn of catastrophic, far-reaching consequences for Afghan society, economic crisis

LONDON: Taliban authorities have blocked fiber-optic internet across northern provinces of Afghanistan, claiming the move was necessary 鈥渢o prevent immoral activities.鈥

Local media report that as many as 10 provinces 鈥 including Kunduz, Badakhshan, Baghlan, Takhar, and Balkh 鈥 have been affected, leaving government offices, businesses, public institutions, and homes without fiber-optic access.

The ban applies only to connections via fiber-optic cable, while mobile internet remains available, according to officials.

鈥淭he measure was taken to prevent immorality, and an alternative will be developed inside the country for essential needs,鈥 said Haji Attaullah Zaid, a Taliban provincial spokesman.

He added that the ban was ordered by Afghanistan鈥檚 Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada.

No explanation was given for why Balkh was among the first provinces targeted, or for how long the restrictions would remain in place.

Local news outlet Afghanistan International reports that the fiber-optic ban could be extended nationwide, with further provinces such as Kandahar, Uruzgan, Helmand, and Nimroz already experiencing disruptions.

Rights groups have expressed alarm, urging the Taliban to reverse the block due to far-reaching consequences for Afghan society.

Many nongovernmental organizations say the measure has especially affected women and girls, who rely on online education following Taliban bans on school and university attendance.

Fiber-optic internet is a vital resource for companies, banks, and government agencies, and its loss risks deepening the country鈥檚 existing economic crisis.

Beh Lih Yi, regional director at the Committee to Protect Journalists, called the blockade 鈥渁n unprecedented escalation of censorship that will undermine journalists鈥 work and the public鈥檚 right to information.鈥


Trump applauds Jimmy Kimmel鈥檚 suspension and seeks to punish critical broadcasters

Trump applauds Jimmy Kimmel鈥檚 suspension and seeks to punish critical broadcasters
Updated 19 September 2025

Trump applauds Jimmy Kimmel鈥檚 suspension and seeks to punish critical broadcasters

Trump applauds Jimmy Kimmel鈥檚 suspension and seeks to punish critical broadcasters
  • ABC pulls 鈥楯immy Kimmel Live鈥 amid regulatory threats
  • Trump says Kimmel has no talent, poor ratings
  • Writer, actor unions say suspension attacks free-speech rights

LOS ANGELES: US President Donald Trump on Thursday celebrated the suspension of talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel from the airwaves and said TV broadcasters should lose their licenses over negative coverage of his administration, adding fuel to a national debate over free speech.
Kimmel has been embroiled in the effort by Trump and his supporters to punish critics of assassinated right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, who was shot while speaking to a crowd at a Utah university on September 10. Since then, allies of Trump and Kirk have warned Americans to properly mourn the divisive figure or face the consequences.
The Walt Disney-owned broadcaster ABC announced on Wednesday that it was yanking the late-night comedy show 鈥淛immy Kimmel Live鈥 indefinitely following conservative uproar over his Monday monologue. Writers, performers, former US President Barack Obama and others condemned Kimmel鈥檚 suspension, calling it capitulation to unconstitutional government pressure.
About 150 demonstrators gathered on Thursday outside the Hollywood studio where 鈥淛immy Kimmel Live!鈥 is recorded to protest the decision to suspend the show. Some raised signs saying, 鈥淒on鈥檛 Bend a Knee to Trump,鈥 鈥淩esist fascism,鈥 鈥淒ouse the mouse鈥 and 鈥淐ancel Disney+.鈥
The debate followed Trump on his state visit to Britain on Thursday.
While standing alongside British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Trump called Kimmel untalented and denounced him for saying a 鈥渉orrible thing about a great gentleman known as Charlie Kirk.鈥

Kimmel, a comedian who frequently lampoons Trump, said during his nine-minute opening monologue on Monday that allies of Kirk were using his assassination to 鈥渟core political points.鈥 He also poked fun at Trump after the president turned a question about his personal mourning of Kirk into promotion for his new White House ballroom.
鈥淭his is not how an adult grieves the murder of someone he called a friend. This is how a four-year-old mourns a goldfish,鈥 Kimmel said.

A 22-year-old technical college student from Utah was charged with Kirk鈥檚 murder on Tuesday.
Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has used his office and the courts to attack unflattering speech about him that he has called defamatory or false.
Throughout both his terms, Trump has threatened to rescind licenses for local broadcast affiliates of the national networks 鈥 licenses that are approved by the Federal Communications Commission, a nominally independent regulatory body.
Kimmel鈥檚 suspension came after FCC Chair Brendan Carr threatened to investigate Kimmel鈥檚 commentary about Kirk, and owners of local TV stations had said they would stop broadcasting his celebrity-filled late-night show.
Trump, speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned to the US, complained about receiving bad publicity from broadcasters, saying, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something that should be talked about for licensing. ... All they do is hit Trump.鈥
鈥淚 would think maybe their license should be taken away,鈥 Trump said. 鈥淚t will be up to Brendan Carr.鈥

 

Federal law prohibits the FCC from revoking a broadcaster鈥檚 license for negative coverage or other speech disliked by the government.
In the week since Kirk鈥檚 murder, Kimmel is the most famous American to face professional blowback for comments condemned by conservatives as disrespectful of Kirk, alongside media figures, academic workers, teachers and corporate employees.
Prominent Democrats said Trump was mounting an assault on free speech rights guaranteed in the US Constitution鈥檚 First Amendment. Republicans have said they are fighting against 鈥渉ate speech鈥 that can spiral into violence, and accuse some Kirk critics of trying to justify his murder.

Obama joins chorus of critics
Obama urged media companies not to capitulate to government coercion.
鈥淎fter years of complaining about cancel culture, the current administration has taken it to a new and dangerous level by routinely threatening regulatory action against media companies unless they muzzle or fire reporters and commentators it doesn鈥檛 like,鈥 Obama said in a statement.

 

Writers鈥 and actors鈥 labor unions called the targeting of Kimmel an unconstitutional attack on the right to disagree. The American Civil Liberties Union called it an unconstitutional attempt by the Trump administration to 鈥渟ilence its critics and control what the American people watch and read.鈥

At the Hollywood demonstration, motorists honked their horns in support as protesters spilled out from the busy sidewalk and into the streets.
鈥淭his country is going in a really wrong direction,鈥 protester Laura Brenner said. 鈥淲hen people can鈥檛 make fun of the administration, you know that we鈥檙e really going down a dark road.鈥
Kirk鈥檚 death spurred an outpouring of grief among fans who saw him as a staunch advocate for public debate and conservative values. Others have challenged or derided Kirk鈥檚 support for right-wing politics and Christian nationalism and his derogatory comments about immigrants, African Americans and transgender people.

 

Hours before Kimmel鈥檚 suspension, Carr, while speaking on the Benny Johnson podcast, urged local broadcasters to stop airing the show.
Two of the largest owners of local broadcasters 鈥 Nexstar and Sinclair Broadcast Group, both of which have merger deals pending before the FCC 鈥 responded by announcing they would stop airing Kimmel鈥檚 show.
ABC said it was suspending Kimmel鈥檚 show indefinitely. ABC owns eight local TV channels subject to FCC licensing, including broadcasters in the major markets of New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston and Philadelphia.
Disney CEO Bob Iger and Disney Entertainment Co-Chair Dana Walden made the decision to suspend Kimmel鈥檚 show, a source with knowledge of the matter said.


Foreign disinformation about Charlie Kirk鈥檚 killing seeks to widen US divisions

Foreign disinformation about Charlie Kirk鈥檚 killing seeks to widen US divisions
Updated 18 September 2025

Foreign disinformation about Charlie Kirk鈥檚 killing seeks to widen US divisions

Foreign disinformation about Charlie Kirk鈥檚 killing seeks to widen US divisions
  • Russian voices have tried to tie Kirk鈥檚 death to US support for Ukraine, spreading a conspiracy theory that the Ukrainian government killed Kirk聽
  • Pro-Iranian groups took a different tack, claiming Israel was behind Kirk鈥檚 death and that the suspect was set up to take the fall
  • Bots linked to Beijing claimed that Kirk鈥檚 death shows that the US is violent, polarized and dysfunctional

WASHINGTON: Russia moved to amplify online conspiracy theories about Charlie Kirk鈥檚 killing just hours after it happened, seeding social media with the frightening claim that America is slipping into civil war.
Chinese and pro-Iranian groups also spread disinformation about the shooting, with those loyal to Iran鈥檚 interests backing antisemitic conspiracy theories while bots linked to Beijing claimed that Kirk鈥檚 death shows that the United States is violent, polarized and dysfunctional.
America鈥檚 adversaries have long used fake social media accounts, online bots and disinformation to depict the US as a dangerous country beset with extremism and gun violence. Kirk鈥檚 killing has provided another opportunity for those overseas eager to shape public understanding while inflaming political polarization.
鈥淐harlie Kirk鈥檚 Death and the Coming Civil War,鈥 tweeted Russian ultranationalist Alexander Dugin, whose influence earned him the moniker 鈥 Putin鈥檚 brain,鈥 referring to Russia鈥檚 president.

Pro-Russian bots blamed Democrats and predicted more violence. Russian state media published English-language articles with headlines claiming a conspiracy orchestrated by shadowy forces: 鈥淲as Charlie Kirk鈥檚 Killer a Pro?鈥
Foreign disinformation makes up a tiny fraction of the overall online discussion about Kirk鈥檚 death, but it could undermine any efforts to heal political divisions or even spur further violence.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen multiple Russian campaigns attempting to exploit鈥 Kirk鈥檚 killing, said Joseph Bodnar, senior research manager at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. In many cases, the campaigns aren鈥檛 adding new claims but are recycling ones that emerged from American users. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e picking up domestic actors and amplifying them.鈥
Adversaries tailor disinformation
In each case, those spreading the disinformation have tailored it for their own ends. Chinese propaganda has focused on the violent nature of Kirk鈥檚 death, painting the US as a nation of violent gun owners and political extremists.
Russian voices have tried to tie Kirk鈥檚 death to US support for Ukraine, even spreading a conspiracy theory that the Ukrainian government killed Kirk because of his criticism of that aid.
Pro-Iranian groups took a different tack, claiming Israel was behind Kirk鈥檚 death and that the suspect was set up to take the fall. This conspiracy theory caught on with white supremacist groups in the US, showing how corrosive claims can easily spread online despite oceans and linguistic and cultural barriers.
The influence campaigns come as the US has rolled back government efforts to expose foreign disinformation.
On Wednesday the State Department announced it was ending its remaining efforts to counter foreign disinformation, following a decision earlier this year to shutter the Global Engagement Center, an office that had called out Russian, Chinese and Iranian disinformation in the past. Republicans had targeted the center and its mission because of what they said was its censorship of conservative ideas.
False and misleading claims can spread quickly following big news events as people go online to look for information. Artificial intelligence programs that can create lifelike video and audio can make it even harder to find the truth, as can AI chatbots that routinely offer up false information.
It happened again following Kirk鈥檚 killing, when misinformation about the shooting and the suspect quickly spread online.
In recent years, groups looking to spread confusion or distrust have seized on hurricanes, wars, the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, the COVID-19 pandemic and other disasters, as well as the attempted assassinations of President Donald Trump.
The details vary, but the conspiracy theories pushed by foreign adversaries all suggest American institutions 鈥 the government, the media, law enforcement, health care 鈥 are failing and can no longer be trusted, and that more violence is likely.
Calls for social media companies to crack down
Regardless of the source of the information, social media companies should do more to stop both foreign disinformation and domestic calls for violence, said Imran Ahmed, CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, which tracks online disinformation.
Posts calling for retaliatory violence following Kirk鈥檚 death have been seen 43 million times on X alone, according to the center鈥檚 research, though it can鈥檛 say which posts came from foreign sources.
Platforms like X 鈥渁re failing catastrophically to limit the reach of posts that celebrate murder and mayhem,鈥 Ahmed said.
Russia, China and Iran have all denied targeting Americans with disinformation. Officials in China have pushed back on claims that Chinese social media bots are being used to amplify false claims about the Kirk shooting.
鈥淐hina condemns all unlawful and violent acts. That said, we firmly oppose some US politicians accusing China of 鈥榠nstilling disinformation and encouraging violence,鈥欌 a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry posted on X.
Russia likewise rejected the accusations of spreading misinformation about Kirk鈥檚 death. A.V. Bondarev, a spokesperson for Russia鈥檚 embassy in Washington, wrote in an email to The Associated Press that 鈥淩ussia does not interfere and does not intend to interfere in the internal affairs of other states, including the United States.鈥
鈥淲e consider it unacceptable that this tragedy is being used as a pretext to fuel anti-Russian hysteria,鈥 Bondarev wrote.
For authorities trying to keep the public informed, the false claims about Kirk鈥檚 death are a potentially dangerous effort to hijack American discourse.
鈥淭here is a tremendous amount of disinformation we are tracking,鈥 Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, a Republican, said at a recent press conference about Kirk鈥檚 killing. 鈥淲hat we are seeing is our adversaries want violence. We have bots from Russia, China, all over the world that are trying to instill disinformation and encourage violence.鈥
Cox urged people to ignore bogus claims that seem designed to elicit fear 鈥 and suggested that Americans log off social media and spend time with family instead.