Stand up for the facts!
Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.
I would like to contribute
Hoax websites republish made-up article about protesters, George Soros
If Your Time is short
-
The story is made-up. It was stolen from a website run by a man named Christopher Blair, who publishes false stories and labels them satire.
-
Scam news websites frequently republish articles from Blair’s websites without satire disclaimers in order to fool people into believing them.
-
There is no evidence that liberal financier George Soros is paying violent protesters in the United States.
A recent article that was widely shared on Facebook is a trifecta of misinformation: a recurring hoax about paid protesters, liberal financier George Soros and a junk website registered in Pakistan.
The article, which was published on a site called Englishwire.today on June 12, claims that "163 paid protesters have filed a lawsuit against none other than George Soros for screwing them out of bail money."
"According to the ad Soros placed on Craigslist, protesters would be fully compensated for all of their time and expenses," reads the article. "They found out that the money dried up the moment they got arrested."
The article was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)
The story has been widely shared in conspiratorial and conservative Facebook groups. One link to the article hosted on MailChimp, an email newsletter service, includes a photo of protests with the Guardian’s logo so that, when Facebook users share the Englishwire.today story, it’s posted with the image.
Sign up for PolitiFact texts
(Screenshot from MailChimp)
But the photo shows Yellow Vest protesters in France in 2018 — and the Englishwire.today article is bogus. It was copied from a website that claims to publish satire.
The source of the story about paid protesters and Soros is a website called Taters Gonna Tate. It’s part of "the ‘America’s Last Line of Defense’ network of parody, satire, and tomfoolery," which is run by a man named Christopher Blair.
Blair has been publishing made-up stories for years. He claims the articles are satirical, and that his goal is to trick conservatives into sharing false claims on social media.
While Blair’s stories have disclaimers asserting that they’re satirical, scam news websites frequently copy and paste the articles without any context to fool people into believing them.
Featured Fact-check
Public domain records indicate that Englishwire.today was registered June 11 using NameCheap, a popular web hosting platform for online scammers. A nearly identical website called Iolgue.xyz — which was registered May 2 in Punjab, Pakistan — published the same article about paid protesters on the same day as Englishwire.today. Like the MailChimp link, it includes the lifted Yellow Vests photo from the Guardian.
Republishing Blair’s stories is a common tactic among online scammers looking to make a buck from disinformation. We previously wrote about how a network of more than 100 hoax websites used AdSense, Google’s advertising service, to profit from clicks on the stolen, made-up stories. That network also appeared to be based in Pakistan.
Hoaxes about paid protesters have circulated on social media for several years. More recently, conservative commentators have falsely claimed that Soros, through his Open Society Foundations, has paid people to violently protest against police brutality and racism in the United States.
There is no evidence to support that assertion. Open Society Foundations has not given grants to organizations to support violent protesting.
The article is inaccurate and makes a ridiculous claim. We rate it Pants on Fire!
Our Sources
CrowdTangle, accessed June 18, 2020
Englishwire.today, "163 Paid Protesters Just Filed A Lawsuit Against George Soros For Not Paying Their Bail," June 12, 2020
Facebook post, June 16, 2020
Google reverse image search, accessed June 18, 2020
The Guardian, "Paris police fire tear gas as gilets jaunes protests turn violent," Dec. 19, 2018
Iolgue.xyz, "163 Paid Protesters Just Filed A Lawsuit Against George Soros For Not Paying Their Bail," June 12, 2020
MailChimp link, accessed June 18, 2020
PolitiFact, "How a disinformation network exploited satire to become a popular source of false news on Facebook," Jan. 23, 2020
PolitiFact, "If you're fooled by fake news, this man probably wrote it," May 31, 2017
PolitiFact, "No evidence that protesters are paid to disrupt Republican town hall meetings," Feb. 27, 2017
PolitiFact, "No, George Soros and his foundations do not pay people to protest," June 1, 2020
PolitiFact, "No, someone wasn't paid $3,500 to protest Donald Trump; it's fake news," Nov. 17, 2016
Taters Gonna Tate, "163 Paid Protesters Just Filed A Lawsuit Against George Soros For Not Paying Their Bail"
Whois, accessed June 18, 2020
Browse the Truth-O-Meter
More by Daniel Funke
Hoax websites republish made-up article about protesters, George Soros
Support independent fact-checking.
Become a member!
In a world of wild talk and fake news, help us stand up for the facts.