But I don't believe that the tech Nazis are invincible. This apparently worked, but its success wasn't inevitable:
In 2024, advisers to [Elon] Musk ran a $45 million false-flag campaign so precise in its cynicism that it deserves to be described slowly and disdainfully. Muslim voters in Michigan received pro-Israel ads designed to look like Harris campaign materials. Jewish voters in Pennsylvania received the opposite message from the same shop. Young liberals got videos about how Harris had betrayed the progressive movement. Working-class white men in the Midwest got warnings that Harris would institute racial quotas and take away their Zyn pouches. Four brand names, zero common origin, one coordinating strategy. They called it “false positives” internally. The goal was not persuasion. It was subtraction — push enough Democratic-leaning voters into confusion, disgust, or exhausted abstention. Harris dropped eight million votes from Biden’s 2020 total. Trump gained fewer than two million. The election was decided, as the architects intended, by subtraction.Kamala Harris's campaign raised more than a billion dollars. If this worked, it worked because not enough of that money was devoted to countering campaigns like it.
A nimbler Democratic campaign would have seen this messaging in real time and would have engaged in counter-messaging. The deployment of contradictory messages to Muslims and Jews offers a perfect example of how Harris's people could have countered this: by letting the targeted groups know what the other groups were seeing, by identifying the evil billionaire messengers, and by linking them to Harris's opponent.
It might be hard to do this for every message, but discovering and exposing the overall scheme -- or even just pointing out that unidentified Trump allies with lots of money were simultaneously accusing Harris of contradictary offenses -- would have weakened the potency of the messages.
In Chicago-area Democratic congressional primaries earlier this year, AIPAC ran stealth campaigns, as The Washington Post reported:
Democrats in [Illinois] say they have seen an influx of ads focusing on issues ranging from immigration to health care by groups named Elect Chicago Women and Affordable Chicago Now. None of the ads mention Israel, and none of the groups are publicly affiliated with AIPAC. But the ads benefit candidates favored by AIPAC donors....Two candidates in the primary in the 9th district of Illinois, Daniel Biss and Kat Abughazaleh, called AIPAC on its secret spending. They finished first and second. The intended beneficiary of AIPAC's campaign, Laura Fine, finished third. That's how you do it: you make the people running the attack ads the issue.
Elect Chicago Women uses a mail vendor that shares identifying information with a mail vendor used by AIPAC’s super PAC, United Democracy Project. UDP’s vendor for phone banking also has the same address as the vendor listed by Affordable Chicago Now.
I'm seeing this in my congressional district now. Alex Bores, a state legislator, used to work for Palantir, but is now a critic of Big Tech and a supporter of tech regulation. As Wired notes,
Bores is a vocal proponent of rigorous AI regulation and cosponsored New York’s RAISE Act, which became law in 2025 and requires major AI firms to implement and publish safety protocols for their models, among other guardrails.Early in the campaign, I began receiving a lot of mailers attacking Bores for his past work in tech. The mailers were financed by Big Tech itself -- the tech Nazis were trying to keep a tech critic out of Congress by pretending to be tech critics themselves.
It's backfiring. Bores is now a leading candidate in the race, in large part because voters know that Big Tech is attacking him. As Bores told Wired,
I literally just came from a call with a tenant leader. It was about housing policy. It had nothing to do with AI. This leader said, “I started paying attention to your campaign because of all these ads.”You can't stop stealth attack ads and disinformation -- and of course some candidates will be overwhelmed by big money. But if you've got the money -- as Harris did (and as does Bores, who was quite well paid when he was in tech), you should be able to attack the attackers.
... They've been wonderful partners in raising up the issue of AI regulation and AI safety.
The Farce story also tell us:
A rural organizing group found 58 percent of rural voters already believe Democrats are the most corrupt party. AI does not need to create that belief. It scales it with a hundred variations of the same message, each calibrated to a distinct psychological profile, none traceable to a common origin, arriving faster than any correction can travel.Have Democrats ever considered trying to make the case that Republicans are the most corrupt party? I say this all the time: Democrats seem to believe that it's unseemly to say, "The other party is bad and we're better." Democrats will attack Trump, and individual Democrats will attack their oppponents in a campaign, but the GOP as a party always seem to be off limits. That's crazy! You're a politcal party in a two-party system! You can say categorically that the other party is bad!
Attack politics, AI-enabled or not, can hurt Democrats. But it doesn't need to be fatal.

