This Racist SNAP Video Is Everywhere Online

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
In many of these videos that appear to be generated by the artificial intelligence app Sora, people with SNAP benefits are being demonized as people defrauding the government.

Mostly Black women are seen loudly arguing with retail employees over declining payments on electronic benefit transfer (EBT) cards. Some are seen stealing from grocery stores.

In others, AI-generated Black women boast about being “set” because of the public assistance they receive due to their children with multiple fathers.

That’s the appeal of racist online videos that blur the lines between fact and fiction to confirm people’s worst beliefs about people receiving public assistance.

But viral videos of AI-generated SNAP stereotypes are a growing kind of misinformation that adds to this confusion. The “welfare queen” stereotype of poor people gaming the welfare system to become wealthy originated in the 1970s and 1980s, but it’s alive and well online today –– and having wide-ranging effects on us all.

Here are the facts despite what these AI videos want you to think: According to the Pew Research Center, the majority of SNAP recipients are not Black, as these viral videos portray, but are actually white.

The reason this myth of “welfare queens” still persists today is because the idea of a Black woman “getting all this government aid that she does not need and then buying luxury items” is “a perfect storm for class resentment,” he said.

“If you hear a story that feeds that lingering, sometimes subconscious, sometimes very-conscious racial animosity, you’re going to latch on to it, and you’re going to share it, and you’re going to say, ‘Here’s proof. See, I knew it,’” Mould said.


 
Jeremy Carrasco, who is a go-to expert for spotting AI videos on social media, has debunked several of these videos that demonize people on public assistance. He considers them “rage bait” videos, because they are designed to get you “emotionally riled up” and comment. “So you actually have a role in its virality. And that’s basically how rage bait videos succeed,” he explained.

That’s why Carrasco is a fan of publicly shaming these accounts. He said he messaged a TikTok account behind “rage bait” videos of Black women complaining about EBT benefits being declined. He recalled messaging this user, “‘You are not going to get paid enough to make this worth it. The damage you’re doing is immeasurable.’ They didn’t respond, and then they deleted their video.”
 
In many of these videos that appear to be generated by the artificial intelligence app Sora, people with SNAP benefits are being demonized as people defrauding the government.

Mostly Black women are seen loudly arguing with retail employees over declining payments on electronic benefit transfer (EBT) cards. Some are seen stealing from grocery stores.

In others, AI-generated Black women boast about being “set” because of the public assistance they receive due to their children with multiple fathers.

That’s the appeal of racist online videos that blur the lines between fact and fiction to confirm people’s worst beliefs about people receiving public assistance.

But viral videos of AI-generated SNAP stereotypes are a growing kind of misinformation that adds to this confusion. The “welfare queen” stereotype of poor people gaming the welfare system to become wealthy originated in the 1970s and 1980s, but it’s alive and well online today –– and having wide-ranging effects on us all.

Here are the facts despite what these AI videos want you to think: According to the Pew Research Center, the majority of SNAP recipients are not Black, as these viral videos portray, but are actually white.

The reason this myth of “welfare queens” still persists today is because the idea of a Black woman “getting all this government aid that she does not need and then buying luxury items” is “a perfect storm for class resentment,” he said.

“If you hear a story that feeds that lingering, sometimes subconscious, sometimes very-conscious racial animosity, you’re going to latch on to it, and you’re going to share it, and you’re going to say, ‘Here’s proof. See, I knew it,’” Mould said.



Who knew racists were smart enough to use AI? I bet a lot of stuff that gets posted here by our resident racists is fake.
 
It is a major technological shift. We are seeing hundreds of easily generated fake videos in this group alone. It is weird.

It's not so much tech as it is failure to teach kids to think critically and to question what they are shown online, in movies/TV, and in print. Obviously this failure began long ago. MAGATs would not exist if critical thinking was a common trait.
 
It's not so much tech as it is failure to teach kids to think critically and to question what they are shown online, in movies/TV, and in print. Obviously this failure began long ago. MAGATs would not exist if critical thinking was a common trait.
It has gotten easier to make these fake videos. It used to be that you would have to hire a Black actor to make the fake video. Now a computer program will generate a realistic fake movie of a fake person saying whatever you want.

For instance, I got this sent to me by a friend. I find it offensive, but whatever:
View: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/OOPb0Rxvnog
 
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