people have the right to the information that they need to make decisions for the future of the country. congressman jamie raskin, thank you so much. we look forward to seeing more from the committee. i appreciate it. thank you so much. the question now really is what does a january 6 rioter do after being sentenced for their role in trying to block the election certification? well, the man who learned his fate today also happens to be a county commissioner. and this afternoon, he tried to stop yet another election certification back home. now, there are guardrails for democracy. you heard the congressman speak about those very issues. and we re going to talk about one of those guardrails next.
portion of his post presidency to combatting disinformation, to strengthen democracy. and as he said, look, we know people can die from disinformation. this is something you and i talk about all the time on reality check. the disinformation wars that we re in, and crucially also how we pivot to a solution. and while he didn t claim to have a single solution or silver bullet, one thing he focused on is the need for algorithm reform. it is the algorithm, stupid. he can do a lot by elevating the conversation, and forcing people to confront what is happening. and how it is a global problem, not just here in america, but we need more transparency algorithms. there is computers and social media, the window we look on the world, we don t know that the window is blurred, it has been distorted and we need that information to make us smarter consumers of information. it is the battle of ur our t. john avlon, thanks so much. the candidates in pennsylvania s democratic senate primary facing of
can you talk about the evidence gathering aspect of this to combatting disinformation and what russians will say the ukrainian rebels are fighting us, that was legitimate warfare. what happened, that could be a tactic that they re taking. can you walk us through the evidence gathering, who is doing it on the ground. how long does that take to build a case and what does that look like. i will directly answer your question but it s important for our team at the state department to give you fully elaborate answer to this question in technical detail so everybody understands how this process works. but with that being said, there s four main sources of information that we will develop in an effort to help build the case for war crimes. the first is the information we and our allies and partners gather through intelligence
gathering aspect. that will be crucial to combatting disinformation and bha russians will say that ukrainian rebels are fighting that was legitimate wearfare. can you walk us through the evidence gathering on the ground, gathering evidence. how long does that take to build a case and what does that look like? so, i will directly answer your question but i also think it s important for our team at the state department which will take the lead on this, including our global war crimes coordinator to give you a fully elaborate answer to this question in technical detail so everybody understands exactly how this process works. there s four main sources of information we will gop. first is information we and our allies and partners gather including through intelligent
aspect that s going to be crucial to combatting disinformation and what russians will say that ukrainian rebels are fighting us, that was legitimate warfare, what happened, that could be a tactic they re taking. so can you walk us through the evidence gathering, who s doing it, are people on the ground gathering it? how long does it take a build a case and what does it look like. i will directly answer your question, but i also think it is important for our team at the state department, which will take the lead on this, to give you a fully elaborate answer to this question in technical detail so that everybody understands exactly how this process works. but with that being said, there are four main sources of information that we will develop in an effort to help build the case for war crimes. the first is the information that we and our allies and partners gather through intelligence sources. and we within our intelligence community had previously stood