COLUMBUS(Ohio): The reports of hateful and violent posts on Facebook started pouring in on the night of May 28 last year, soon after then-President Donald Trump sent a warning on social media that looters in Minneapolis would be shot.
It had been three days since Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin kneeled on the neck of George Floyd for more than eight minutes until the 46-year-old Black man lost consciousness, showing no signs of life. A video taken by a bystander had been viewed millions of times online. Protests had taken over Minnesota's largest city and would soon spread throughout cities across America.
But it wasn't until after Trump posted about Floyd's death that the reports of violence and hate speech increased "rapidly" on Facebook across the country, an internal company analysis of the ex-president's social media post reveals.
"These THUGS are dishonoring the memory of George Floyd and I won't let that happen," Trump tweeted at 9:53 p.m. on May 28, in comments he repeated on his Facebook account a few hours later. "Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts the shooting starts!"
The former president has since been suspended from both Twitter and Facebook.
Leaked Facebook documents provide a first-hand look at how Trump's social media posts ignited more anger in an already deeply divided country that was eventually lit "on fire" with reports of hate speech and violence across the platform. Facebook's own internal, automated controls, meant to catch posts that violate rules, predicted with almost 90% certainty that Trump's message broke the tech company's rules against inciting violence.
Yet, the tech giant didn't take any action on Trump's message.
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Offline, the next day, protests — some of which turned violent — engulfed nearly every U.S. city, big and small.
"When people look back at the role Facebook played, they won't say Facebook caused it, but Facebook was certainly the megaphone," said Lanier Holt, a communications professor at Ohio State University. "I don't think there's any way they can get out of saying that they exacerbated the situation."
Social media rival Twitter, meanwhile, responded quickly at the time by covering Trump's tweet with a warning and prohibiting users from sharing it any further.
Facebook's internal discussions were revealed in disclosures made to the Securities and Exchange Commission and provided to Congress in redacted form by former Facebook employee-turned-whistleblower Frances Haugen's legal counsel. The redacted versions received by Congress were obtained by a consortium of news organizations, including The Associated Press.
The Wall Street Journal previously reported that Trump was one of many high-profile users, including politicians and celebrities, exempted from some or all of the company's normal enforcement policies.
Hate speech and violence reports had been mostly limited to the Minneapolis region after Floyd's death, the documents reveal.
"However, after Trump's post on May 28, situations really escalated across the country," according to the memo, published on June 5 of last year.
The internal analysis shows a five-fold increase in violence reports on Facebook, while complaints of hate speech tripled in the days following Trump's post. Reports of false news on the platform doubled. Reshares of Trump's message generated a "substantial amount of hateful and violent comments," many of which Facebook worked to remove. Some of those comments included calls to "start shooting these thugs" and "f—- the white."
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By June 2, "we can see clearly that the entire country was basically 'on fire,'" a Facebook employee wrote of the increase in hate speech and violence reports in the June 5 memo.