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They Paid Me 400 Bucks for THIS Trump J6 Claim?

In the beginning of this post, I want to be absolutely clear about something.

I’ve never met this dude.

Secret government manifestation pill šŸ’Š?

I haven’t talked to him yet.

What he says cannot be independently verified by me.

I’m assuming he is telling the truth and taking everything he says at face value.

Ok?

Now, this is a significant admission if he is telling the truth!

Find out who is supporting the anti-Trump social media teams, and whether Soros cash or funding from other Far Left sources is involved.

But now we could have evidence.

And it’s far worse than we had anticipated.

Not only to make it seem like Biden is more well-liked than Trump on social media, either.

What this individual is describing is essentially making up evidence to support criminal accusations.

WATCH: Church Leaders PRAYED you’d never see this…

Or maybe charges from four indictments?

Educating the general public?

The thing that interests me the most is that this man claims to be an attorney, and if that is the case, it seems to me that he has a moral and ethical obligation to disclose the truth about this incident.

And because it seems like that’s precisely what he’s doing here, I take him at face value.

The video was also reported by The National Review:

An attorney with a well-known TikTok account claims that the Good Information Foundation, a non-profit devoted to combating misinformation, offered to pay him $400 to make an argument against misinformation. ā€œAnti–Donald Trump propaganda post related to the January 6 investigation that is completely not true.ā€

ā€œI should start out this video by saying I am not a Donald Trump supporter so that should give a little bit of context to where I’m coming from,ā€ In a video he shared on TikTok over the weekend, Preston Moore made the claim while showing screenshots of the purported contact.

Get $400 for a January 6th Instagram post! a statement from the Good Information Foundation, which is headed by Rick Stengel, a former assistant secretary of state under President Obama.

He claims that after expressing an interest in working together, the group sent him an email with “important notes” and “key messaging” that were to be included in the article.

ā€œRemind your followers about the images and scenes from the January 6th insurrection,ā€ the email said.

Then it gave an illustration of what he may say: ā€œYou probably saw this [greenscreen of Jan 6th violence] happen but what a lot of people don’t know is that the violence on January 6 was actually planned and paid for by Trump Republicans.ā€

The email added: ā€œTalk about the many aspects of their plan and the broad involvement of Trump officials, members of Congress [redacted] . . . ā€

As an illustration, the email provides: ā€œThe Trump campaign paid literally millions of dollars to make January 6th happen.ā€

In the email, Moore is advised to provide the following “key messaging” for his followers: ā€œIt’s important to know that this wasn’t a one day thing—there is an ongoing threat of political violence or MAGA Rebublicans trying to overturn elections.ā€

Moore stated that the foundation’s assertion was “most importantly” ā€œmust channel all of this on to the manipulation of voter agencies so that I could turn their anger around this event into defiance that would make people more likely to vote in midterms.ā€

Introducing the entire list of stuff he insists on include in the film. It’s vital to note that the individual being paid to make these assertions seems to have no respect for their veracity, which poses a serious problem.

Let’s view the video now.

Additionally, a backup on Rumble

Additionally, I think the following BBC title is fascinating since it appears to support the man in this video: Payed propaganda movies are being published by anti-Trump social media influencers, and there are reportedly so many of them that it warranted a whole BBC article:

Anti-Trump TikTok users who fail to disclose sponsored material

More from the BBC piece is provided below:

Secretly funded anti-Trump videos on TikTok were removed after a BBC investigation exposed covert marketing strategies.

Introducing Bigtent Creative, a revolutionary company that uses funny skits and memes to revolutionize voter registration. Imagine combining Cardi B’s well-known WAP song with a stirring call to action to vote. Join the movement right away!

Find out what’s really going on in the videos that have been paid for. While some take a neutral approach, others vehemently advocate for President Trump’s impeachment. As we reveal the hidden objective in these riveting video, hold on tight.

Less political advertising and stronger guidelines for paid content. The firm removed some TikToks that had amassed enormous popularity as a result of our finding.

Disclosure of compensated relationships is required by US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulations! Include the hashtag “#ad” in your captions to increase viewer trust.

Marketers and influencers take note: Even with purchased content, TikTok expects you to abide by the FTC rules!

ā€œWe remove paid influencer content that’s not disclosed as such as we become aware of it and are now taking action on this.ā€

What do you think, then?

Is this man being honest?

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