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As Kamala Harris faces racist and sexist online attacks, women's groups and Democratic operatives say they have her back - The Boston Globe

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  jbb  •  4 years ago  •  14 comments

By:   BostonGlobe. com

As Kamala Harris faces racist and sexist online attacks, women's groups and Democratic operatives say they have her back - The Boston Globe
Black women have become frequent targets of an onslaught of online hate from domestic and foreign perpetrators whose tactics have become more sophisticated and harder to trace, disinformation and media analysts said.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


By Jazmine Ulloa Globe Staff, Updated August 12, 2020, 7:51 p.m.

Senator Kamala Harris is the first Black woman and the first person of Indian descent to be a presumptive nominee on a presidential ticket by a major party in US history.ERIN SCHAFF/NYT

WASHINGTON — Not an hour had passed since Senator Kamala Harris made history as the first woman of color to land on a major party's presidential ticket when political strategist Adrianne Shropshire was already bracing herself for what was sure to come next.

"I am trying to hold on to the joy," she said, taking in the weight of the moment.

But the racist and sexist attacks on Harris's gender, identity, and appearance were already rolling in online. False information about her record and criticism of her running mate, presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden, was circulating, including the erroneous assertion that she is ineligible to serve as president because her parents were immigrants.

For women of color in politics, and specifically Black women, the Internet has been a powerful tool to tell their own stories and circumvent the traditional, predominantly white media establishment that too often ignores their campaigns or provides coverage that plays to racist or sexist stereotypes.

But in recent years, Black women have become frequent targets of an onslaught of online hate from domestic and foreign perpetrators whose tactics have become more sophisticated and harder to trace, disinformation and media analysts said.

This presidential election, Harris — whose committed fans refer to themselves as the "KHive" (a nod to Beyonce's "BeyHive") — won't be alone to fight her battles. An online campaign has emerged to defend her from the attacks: #wehaveherback.

"We are prepared and have been preparing for this moment," said Shropshire, founder of the political action committee BlackPAC. "We are preparing precisely because we think it's going to be very ugly."

The arrival of online communities and proliferation of social media have enabled new forms of virulent sexism against women that researcher Karla Mantilla has dubbed "gendertrolling."

Related: Yvonne Abraham: A moment of celebration at the prospect of Kamala Harris as vice president — before the ugly deluge

While trolling is the disruption of online conversations and spaces through inane or incendiary comments — often for laughs by white, somewhat privileged men — gendertrolling can be more destructive. It's coordinated, encompassing vicious language, gender-based insults, and credible threats, such as of rape or death. And it can shift into real life activity, including stalking victims, posting their personal information online, or sending fake pornographic images of women to their employers.

"The attacks are perpetrated by multiple men - sometimes hundreds of men - who keep on it in a sustained way," said Mantilla, author of "Gendertrolling: Misogyny Adapts to New Media." "This can go on for years and crosses many forms of media."

For Black women, the level of coordination is often greater, the attacks harsher, and the protections much fewer, said Shireen Mitchell, who as founder of the advocacy group Stop Online Violence Against Women has been tracking harassment against Black women and other women of color since 2013.

Tech companies often ban or suspend Black women from platforms when they comment on white people's behavior or attempt to expose bigoted and sexist posts, she and other researchers said. In many instances, Black women face higher chances of being removed from a service than their abusers or white people who use derogatory language against Black people, Mitchell said.

"We have documented that for years, and it is still happening," she said.

Related: 5 things to know about Kamala Harris

Long before the Gamergate controversy brought attention to the harassment of women online or reports surfaced of Russian agents impersonating Black activists and infiltrating Black civil rights organizations during the 2016 presidential campaign, Black female digital activists and researchers had been documenting such hate and tactics used to target and co-opt the voices of Black women in online spaces.

One of the most prominent cases of harassment that Black women helped bring to the fore — and likely the first in which Twitter took action to protect a Black woman — involved racist and misogynistic slurs against actress Leslie Jones after she starred in the remake of the 1984 movie, "Ghostbusters."

For women in politics, the attacks can be just as vicious, if not more, digital activists and researchers said. The terrain is difficult to navigate: The barrage of biased and prejudiced criticism can come from the dark corners of the web but also news coverage, Republican operatives, and President Trump himself.

Representative Maxine Waters, a Democrat from Los Angeles, has experienced it firsthand. She has garnered massive digital fame as "Auntie Maxine," hailed for her sharp wit, acerbic criticism of Trump and his allies, and her calls for impeachment. But after Trump launched attacks on her on Twitter, Waters received death threats, spurring her to cancel events in Texas and Alabama in 2018. Her own Republican opponent posted a fake allegation on Twitter that the company refused to remove.

Related: Kamala Harris crystallizes Trump's view of women: They're 'nasty' or housewives

But Waters said none of it has deterred her. "It is vicious and I understand that, but it does not unnerve me at all," she said of the vitriol. "It does not interfere with my progressive ideals and my ability to do my work."

The online ambushes on Black female politicians have ticked up as Black female mayors such as Lori Lightfoot of Chicago have emerged, steering their cities through a pandemic and economic downturn; and as Biden vetted vice presidential candidates, with some Black activists calling on him to pick a woman of color.

Enduring conspiracy theories that entangled former Obama national security adviser Susan Rice and former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton resurfaced, as did unproven information about Rice's role in the 2012 Benghazi terrorist attack and false accusations that she committed crimes.

Mitchell and other researchers noticed a spike in online attacks on Harris just weeks before she launched her presidential campaign in January 2019. On the left, the reductive narratives of "Kamala is a cop" blended with legitimate criticisms of her record as a prosecutor and California attorney general.

On the right, the attacks centered on her identity, appearance, gender, and birtherism, said Brian Friedberg, a disinformation researcher at the Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center. News of her selection on Tuesday immediately spurred right-wing online activist Ali Alexander to change his Twitter bio: "2020, is my greatest work yet. I took down Kamala Harris in the primary. Ready to again."

Alexander pushed initial birthplace claims against Harris during the primary.

"This is all a very standard playbook for trying to denigrate Black women," Friedberg said.

With November looming, longtime researchers like Mitchell and Mantilla worry that not enough online users are aware of the malicious perpetrators — both foreign and domestic, both Democrat and Republican — working to sow discord and exploit internal debates within Black communities. Others are concerned some have downplayed the impact of disinformation and online harassment.

And some digital advocates say they want Harris to be more vocal about the online attacks she has faced, particularly as a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee that released bipartisan reports on Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election. But Democratic political operatives, women's advocacy and civil rights groups, and digital activists say they aren't sitting back.

UltraViolet, Color of Change PAC, Planned Parenthood Votes, and Women's March have released a 32-page guide for reporters on how to fairly cover woman and people of color in politics.

Shaunna Thomas, co-founder and executive director of UltraViolet, said the group is focused on working to hold tech companies accountable, educating voters about digital disinformation, celebrating Harris's achievements, and finding ways to debunk claims against her without amplifying them.

"This is not about stopping critiques on the substance," Thomas said. "But what we can't let happen and what we won't let happen is to let racism and sexism to define who Kamala Harris is or who any woman of color running for office this year is."

Waters said she believed the coordinated vitriol is losing its potency as more people step up to protest and call out racism and sexism in politics. There was a time when the news media wouldn't even use the word "racism" — or describe Trump as having lied, even when it was clear he had done so, she said.

"We are witnessing something marvelous and extraordinary that is happening in our country," she said. "This is the change for good."

Reach Jazmine Ulloa at jazmine.ulloa@globe.com or on Twitter: @jazmineulloa


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JBB
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JBB    4 years ago

I've already seen Senator Harris called a "Tramp", a "Whore" and a "Slut" among other sexist pejortives...

No wonder US women voters are deserting the gop!

What is a wonder is who thinks that is acceptable...

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
1.1  Greg Jones  replied to  JBB @1    4 years ago

Who thinks that the 24/7 attacks on Trump and his supporters for the last four years is acceptable....

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
1.1.1  Tessylo  replied to  Greg Jones @1.1    4 years ago

What 'attacks' on tRump and his supporters?

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
1.2  Tessylo  replied to  JBB @1    4 years ago
     USNews         19 hours ago     1 min read

President Donald Trump’s son Eric Trump endorsed a tweet calling Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) a whore.  President Donald Trump tends to conflict with powerful women on the national stage. In the past several months he’s clashed with female reporters, he frequently calls women “nasty,” and when faced with the fact that women are abandoning his campaign, he called all women in the suburbs “housewives,” neglecting the work they do outside the home and as mothers.

Already, Trump has come out swinging after Harris became the official Democratic choice for Vice President, and his allies are as well.You can see the tweet Eric Trump “liked” in the photo below:

Screen-Shot-2020-08-12-at-5.11.46-PM.png

It's always 'monkey see, monkey do' with tRump and his supporters.  

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
2  Sparty On    4 years ago

Wow ..... didn't take long to play the racism and sexism cards.

Must be running scared already to resort to that already.

 
 
 
Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom
Professor Guide
2.1  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom  replied to  Sparty On @2    4 years ago
Wow ..... didn't take long to play the racism and sexism cards. Must be running scared already to resort to that already.

I'm hoping that you and your friends will find it in your hearts to stop doing it.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
2.1.1  Sparty On  replied to  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom @2.1    4 years ago

Ehhhhttt ... wrong ..... strike one

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2.1.2  Greg Jones  replied to  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom @2.1    4 years ago

Not a chance. Kamala is a big girl now and knew that accepting the offer would result in every last single rock in her personal and political life would be overturned and examined closely, in the search for any kind of dirt that can be used against her. Kinda like what the left did to Palin. Since she was selected pretty much because of her race and gender, it will be mentioned, much to the discomfort of the people who selected her...which wasn't Biden himself, by the way, but his radical handlers.

sbr081220dAPC20200812024650.jpg

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.1.3  JohnRussell  replied to  Greg Jones @2.1.2    4 years ago
 Kinda like what the left did to Palin.

As soon as Harris has an interview where she can't name what newspapers she reads you will have a point. Don't hold your breath. 

 
 
 
Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom
Professor Guide
2.1.4  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom  replied to  Sparty On @2.1.1    4 years ago
Ehhhhttt ... wrong ..... strike one

At least your buddy Greg is honest.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
2.1.5  Sparty On  replied to  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom @2.1.4    4 years ago

Strike two sister

And stop trying to make it personal .... that'll put a stank on your Karma ... or perhaps you like shitty Karma .... who knows.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
4  Trout Giggles    4 years ago

We've already seen the sexist remarks about her here on NT. 

 
 
 
Raven Wing
Professor Participates
4.1  Raven Wing   replied to  Trout Giggles @4    4 years ago

meh....yeah...that's all they have. Harris does not care what they think and neither do I. Their below ground  jrSmiley_76_smiley_image.gif   thoughts hold no interest for me. 

Nothing can be more putrid and/or disgusting than the immoral maggot that is now in the WH. And they DO know it as well. They just have to show their low life to the world as if it is something to be proud of.

 
 

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