Trump ends isolation and returns to the Oval Office



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Facebook removes Trump’s anti-immigrant campaigns

The online network Facebook removed the election ads of the president of the United States, Donald Trump, with critical statements against the refugees. Facebook said Thursday that the platform did not allow people to be portrayed as a threat to the “safety, health and life” of other people because of their origin or immigration status.

The election announcements said Trump’s challenger Joe Biden of the Democratic opposition was “dangerous to the United States” because, as president, he would allow many more refugees from Syria and Somalia to enter the country. The countries are known as “terrorist hot spots” and reference is made to the current corona pandemic. This suggests that refugees could pose a risk to the health and security of the United States.

Facebook had already blocked ads from Trump’s campaign team in June that contained a symbol used in Nazi concentration camps for political prisoners. Trump’s team had warned about “radical left groups” with an inverted red triangle.

Ahead of the US presidential election on November 3, online platforms are under great pressure to address hate speech and misinformation online. Facebook has now announced stricter rules for paid content on the election process and outcome. Not only would advertisements proclaiming the winner of the presidential election be prematurely banned, but also advertisements intended to cast doubt on the election result.

This could be the case if an election method is described as particularly susceptible to fraud, or if “isolated instances of voter fraud” are used to cast doubt on the overall result, Facebook manager Rob Leathern said.

Trump has been raising doubts about the electoral process for months and claims without any evidence that the postal elections are being massively misled. Observers fear that the president, who is behind the polls, will not recognize a possible electoral defeat.

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