Emma González's arresting speech at the March for Our Lives is cat3movieone we won't forget for years to come.
But, as González and millions of people marched to demand legislation to prevent gun violence, fake images of the activist ripping the U.S. Constitution were being circulated by self-professed NRA supporters.
SEE ALSO: Emma Gonzalez's March For Our Lives speech will go down in historyThe image was debunked by Don Moynihan—professor of government at University of Wisconsin—who tweeted the doctored image alongside the original image, which showed González tearing up a gun-range target. The original image is a screenshot of a video produced by Teen Vogue to accompany an op-ed penned by the 18-year-old, entitled "Why This Generation Needs Gun Control.
According to Moynihan, the doctored image was one of the first images to appear after searching for the #EmmaGonzalez hashtag on Twitter.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The fake image was tweeted out by an account named "Linda NRA Supporter" and gained over 65K retweets. Moynihan wrote in a Twitter thread that the self-professed NRA supporter could well have been a "Russian troll seeking to sow division."
Moynihan later added that the eight digits in the account's Twitter handle suggested that "Linda NRA Supporter" was likely a bot. Twitter subsequently suspended the account.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Linda" wasn't the only account responsible for distributing the fake image of González.
According to The Washington Post, Gab—a "popular refuge for the alt-right"—also posted a GIF showing the activist ripping up the Constitution, gaining 1.5K retweets and nearly 3K likes. This GIF is still live on Twitter.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Hours later, Gab posted a follow-up tweet to state that the GIF was "obviously a parody/satire."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But, by the time Gab posted its second tweet informing its 100K followers that the GIF was a "comedic reflection of reality," scores of users had already taken the GIF at face value and believed it to be true.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Nothing says 'I am NOT a fascist' like tearing up the greatest symbol of freedom that the world has ever known," replied one Twitter user.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best gaming laptop deal: Save $400 on the HP Victus 15 with Ryzen 5 and Radeon RX 6550M
Sean Spicer is Trump's dad in a 'Daily Show' parody of that BBC video
Vudu offers 'rental redos' in case you hate a movie
Look! No hands (or feet) needed to fly this autonomous helicopter.
Trump administration to allow African elephant trophies back into U.S.
14 things we learned from Ewan McGregor's glorious Reddit AMA
Chris Hemsworth goes full beast mode in intense workout video
'Color Chat' app lets you DM with colored rectangles instead of words
Alienware M16 Gaming Laptop deal: Save $560
Apple iPad Pro Smart Folio is the best damn keyboard on the go
How to Settle Down with Dystopia
Comedian shuts down racist audience member in the most beautiful way
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。