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In wild late-night posting spree, Trump attacks Obama with imaginary quote and false conspiracy theories

Kraig Pakulski 0 8 Article rating: No rating

By Daniel Dale, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump was at it again.

On Monday night, Trump embarked on one of his periodic late-night social media posting sprees. As usual, his dozens of posts and reposts were littered with debunked conspiracy theories and other wildly inaccurate claims – many of them about past presidential elections and his Democratic foes, notably including former President Barack Obama.

Trump’s posting continued on Tuesday morning. So did his wrongness.

Here’s a brief fact-check breakdown of just some of the content to which readers of his Truth Social feed were treated between about 10pm on Monday and about 8am on Tuesday.

An imaginary quote attributed to a Republican senator

The president shared a pro-Trump commentator’s social media post that featured a supposed attack on Obama from Republican Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana. But the “Kennedy” quote is completely imaginary.

In the fake quote, “Kennedy” demanded that Obama return $120 million that the former president supposedly earned (but actually didn’t) in connection with his Obamacare health care law. The fact-check website Lead Stories reported in February that the fake quote “originated with a satire web publisher who baits conservatives into re-posting fake stories” and that the confusingly worded accusation about Obama that the post put in Kennedy’s mouth – “He allocated money under his own laws using taxpayer-generated prestige” – has also been baselessly attributed to various other public figures, from FBI Director Kash Patel to singers Vince Gill and Madonna.

Kennedy told the publication NOTUS after Trump’s post: “Somebody told me there was something floating around on the internet about me accusing President Obama of stealing $120 million or something. I didn’t say that. I don’t know the basis of it.”

Multiple false conspiracy theories about Obama

False conspiracy theories about Obama have long been a staple of Trump’s reposts on social media. This posting spree featured a bunch more.

Trump shared a post – from an account using the name and image of the late John F. Kennedy Jr. – that said, “Barack Hussein Obama wiretapping Trump Tower during the 2016 election was a million times worse than anything Nixon did during Watergate. It is time to arrest the Renegade.” (“Renegade” is Obama’s Secret Service codename.)

But there is no evidence anybody wiretapped Trump Tower during the 2016 election, let alone that Obama himself did so. In 2017, during the first Trump presidency, the Justice Department said in a court filing that it had no records to support Trump’s claim earlier that year of Trump Tower having been wiretapped in 2016.

During this posting spree, Trump also shared another false conspiracy post that included a link to a web page filled with lies about the Obama administration. These included false claims that former secretary of state Hillary Clinton had used her private email server to sell top-secret information to foreign entities, that Obama had ordered a coverup, and that nine of 13 New York police officers trying to expose the truth “committed suicide or died in suspicious circumstances.” For good measure, the p

Name Change for Calle Cesar Chavez Brings Out Several Options

Kraig Pakulski 0 19 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA , Calif. (KEYT) - The Santa Barbara Neighborhood Advisory Council has taken the first steps to change the name of Calle Cesar Chavez Street in Santa Barbara.

It got that name in 2000 with community support to change a portion of Salsipuedes Street, south of Gutierrez to Cabrillo Blvd. to Calle Cesar Chavez.

Recently, it was revealed the late United Farm Workers leader was accused of committing rape and having sex with underaged girls. Many cities and counties have since removed the name Cesar Chavez from schools, government buildings and other places where he was once honored.

In Santa Barbara, Chavez has history and visited the region often, event assisting in teaching at UC Santa Barbara about the farmworkers union efforts and Chicano culture.

At Monday's meeting, historian Michael Montenegro presented some background on Salsipuedes street.

The council decided to forward options to the Santa Barbara City Council for a full discussion. If the street is renamed it could be: Si se Puede, Calle Dolores Huerta or a name chosen by the Coastal Band of Chumash Indians.

The tribe has not been contacted but outreach will be taking place.

The city council can also come up with its own name. No date for that meeting has been set at this time.

Some business owners in the area were not happy with the proposed change because of the cost to replace signs and business materials with the current address in place.

One suggested the street return to its original name Salsipuedes and not be changed again.

(More details, video and photos will be added here later today.)

The post Name Change for Calle Cesar Chavez Brings Out Several Options appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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