Baseless attacks by online trolls — whether anonymous or by well-known public figures — have created a cascade of hate, “underpinned by dangerous misinformation and outright lies against the LGBTQ+ community,” research says.
That’s the finding of a new report, released by the Center for Countering Digital Hate and the Human Rights Campaign, that calls on social media giants Twitter and Meta (which owns Facebook and Instagram) to act on hate speech, even as they profited from LGBTQ users during Pride Month observances and at other times of the year.
The report finds that online hate has reinforced offline violence, with, for instance, members of the far-right Proud Boys launching a verbal assault during a “drag queen story hour” at a Bay Area library in June, employing many of the same slurs found online.
“After decades of hard-won progress, the recent surge in violence and anti-LGBTQ+ hate serve as a reminder of how fragile that progress might be, and that there remain determined and capable opponents,” Imran Ahmed, the CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, wrote in the report’s introduction.
Much of the hate focuses on the claim that LGBTQ individuals “groom” children — a line of attack that’s also been used to undermine the teaching of sex education in schools across the country.
The data underscores how common that slur has become in some quarters of social media.
Researchers found that:
•Tweets mentioning the “OK groomer” slur surged by 2,465 percent.
•The Walt Disney Co. was targeted with 345,152 tweets about “grooming.”
•The 500 most influential hateful “grooming” tweets were seen 72 million times.
•“Grooming” tweets from just 10 key figures were viewed 48 million times.
•Twitter is failing to act on 99 percent of hateful “grooming” tweets.
Looking at conversations about LGBTQ people between January and July, researchers found that tweets using the “grooming” slur shot up by 406 percent in the month after Florida passed its “Don’t Say Gay” bill.
Republican Congresswomen Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Lauren Boebert of Colorado were among the top purveyors of hate speech online, the analysis says.
The report further notes that hate speech is not exclusive to Twitter, but also was spread on Facebook, where researchers found 59 ads, viewed more than 2.1 million times, promoting the “grooming” narrative.
The ads were purchased and ran between March and August during the height of the “Don’t Say Gay or Trans” bill controversy and often focused on Disney’s opposition to the bill, with language that claims opponents are protecting pedophiles, or that teaching about LGBTQ+ issues in schools amounts to “radical sexual grooming,” the report says.
“Having spoken out against the bill, Disney became a target in this narrative and was the subject of over half of the Facebook ads in this study. The company has also been targeted on Twitter, where 345,152 tweets mentioning Disney appear alongside slurs like ‘predator,’ ‘pedophilia,’ and ‘grooming,’” Ahmed noted.
In July, Twitter, Meta and TikTok said slandering LGBTQ people as “groomers” violated its policies, the Los Angeles Blade reported.
But “as social media companies fail to crack down on the posting and sharing of content that violates their own policies, politically motivated extremists are becoming increasingly unfettered and unhinged online — further inflaming and radicalizing their followers, emboldening extremists to focus their ire on LGBTQ+ people, and doing so with virtually no boundaries or limitations,” Joni Madison, the interim president of the Human Rights Campaign, wrote in prefacing remarks.
As the midterm elections approach, social media companies are obligated to “recognize their responsibility to stop the spread of extremist and hateful misinformation, including the grooming narrative,” Madison wrote. “These companies must act swiftly and transparently, providing clarity on how they’re interpreting their own policies. And given their lack of action thus far, we also ask lawmakers to hold these companies to higher standards,” Madison concluded.
The 2022 contests already are a pressure cooker. Anything social media companies can do to turn down the heat can’t come soon enough.
Copyright 2022 John L. Micek, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. Micek is editor-in-chief of The Pennsylvania Capital-Star in Harrisburg, Pa. Email him at jmicek@penncapital-star.com