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FBI Twitter Files Corruption Is ‘Tip of the Iceberg,’ Warns GOP Senatorlol. ron johnson? hahahahhahahThe New York Times noted last March that Republican Sen. Ron Johnson "has become the Republican Party's foremost amplifier of conspiracy theories and disinformation now that Donald Trump himself is banned from social media." The Wisconsin senator has spent an inordinate amount of time proving the assertion true.And while Johnson has peddled nonsense about a great many subjects — Russian disinformation, the Jan. 6 attack, the 2020 presidential election, et al. — his most dangerous rhetoric has focused on Covid-19 and vaccines.Take this week, for example, when the GOP senator — who's up for re-election this fall — appeared on a radio program to discuss his ideas about the pandemic in more detail.Johnson began by noting that he was infected, but didn't have symptoms. "How do you explain that?" he asked, as if this were evidence of an important larger point. Of course, explaining this is pretty simple: Some people have asymptomatic infections. One need not be an epidemiologist to understand such a simple concept.But as HuffPost noted, the confused lawmaker didn't end there.what a ***** he is.
lol. ron johnson? hahahahhahah
The New York Times noted last March that Republican Sen. Ron Johnson "has become the Republican Party's foremost amplifier of conspiracy theories and disinformation now that Donald Trump himself is banned from social media." The Wisconsin senator has spent an inordinate amount of time proving the assertion true.
And while Johnson has peddled nonsense about a great many subjects — Russian disinformation, the Jan. 6 attack, the 2020 presidential election, et al. — his most dangerous rhetoric has focused on Covid-19 and vaccines.
Take this week, for example, when the GOP senator — who's up for re-election this fall — appeared on a radio program to discuss his ideas about the pandemic in more detail.
Johnson began by noting that he was infected, but didn't have symptoms. "How do you explain that?" he asked, as if this were evidence of an important larger point. Of course, explaining this is pretty simple: Some people have asymptomatic infections. One need not be an epidemiologist to understand such a simple concept.
But as HuffPost noted, the confused lawmaker didn't end there.
what a ***** he is.