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Just found out about something pretty wild that went down with White House staff. Turns out this popular right-wing influencer account, the one pushing all that viral content, was actually being run by someone working directly in the rapid response team at the White House. They never disclosed this connection to anyone.
The account in question had been around since 2021 and was consistently pushing pro-Trump content while also heavily promoting NFTs. It gained traction because media outlets like Mother Jones and the New York Post were sharing posts from it, treating it like genuine grassroots sentiment when it was actually coordinated from inside government.
Reporters traced the phone number linked to the account and confirmed it matched someone on staff. The whole thing is a textbook example of astroturfing - faking grassroots support by making it look like organic public opinion when it's actually orchestrated.
What's crazy is that this apparently isn't even an isolated incident. The Defense Department has staffers running similar accounts too. There's this whole layer of undisclosed government influence happening on social platforms.
A media ethics professor from University of Pittsburgh made a good point about this - people have a right to know who's trying to shape their opinions. When government workers are secretly running influencer accounts without disclosure, that's a serious breach of trust. The Hatch Act is supposed to prevent this kind of political activity, but enforcement is basically nonexistent.
It's the kind of thing that makes you wonder what else is happening behind the scenes that we don't know about. The rapid response operation clearly understood how to leverage social media influence in ways most people weren't even aware of.