This Court Case Just PROVED Trump Cheated
Every American should know about this but legacy media is censoring it.
Everybody’s talking about the Supreme Court decision that lets Trump cut off food benefits for Americans. But nobody’s talking about the other court case, the one that just proved Trump cheated and used psychological warfare to win the 2016 election.
Facebook just admitted, in court, that it let a private company steal your data and use it to manipulate an American election. This is a legal fact.
Here are the court documents proving this.
And somehow? It’s not headline news.
No wall-to-wall coverage. No prime-time hearings.
Just a quiet payout. And a collective shrug.
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I found out because thirty dollars randomly showed up in my bank account.
That $30 came from Facebook’s $725 million settlement, the one over the Cambridge Analytica scandal. You probably got one too.
That’s when it hit me: the biggest election manipulation operation in U.S. history was quietly settled and we all got paid hush money for it.
$30 for the greatest psychological mind fuck in US history.
If you’ve ever watched The Great Hack on Netflix, you already know.
If you haven’t, go watch it tonight, it’s a crash course in how your own data can be weaponized against you.
Those fun little Facebook quizzes? “Which superhero are you?” or “What kind of dog matches your vibe?”
Yeah, those weren’t harmless. They were data traps.
When you took one, Cambridge Analytica didn’t just collect your answers, they collected everything about you and all your Facebook friends.
Every click, like, video you watched, and comment you posted, you’re ENTIRE social media imprint.
Even if you never actually took the quiz yourself, if one friend did, BOOM! They had your data too.
They built psychological profiles on millions of Americans: what you fear, what makes you angry, what makes you feel powerless.
As the Attorney General’s complaint states:
“Cambridge Analytica used the data (that was collected by Facebook) ... to target digital political advertising during the 2016 United States Presidential Election… receiving millions of dollars from the Ted Cruz and later the Donald Trump campaigns.”
So this wasn’t just bad privacy policy, it was political strategy.
They took stolen psychological data and turned it into a weapon.
Trump didn’t just buy political ads. He bought access to your mind.
Are you getting flashbacks to who was sitting behind Trump during his inauguration? Big Tech.
The Data War
Here’s the part most people don’t know: Cambridge Analytica wasn’t just some random firm. It was founded by Steve Bannon, funded by billionaire Robert Mercer, and run out of an office in San Antonio under a project code-named Project Alamo.
Before joining Trump’s campaign, Bannon served as vice president of Cambridge Analytica’s and during that time, the company openly bragged about its ability to suppress the Black vote. That’s not speculation, a whistleblower told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the firm literally offered “voter disengagement” as a service.
They built an algorithm that sorted voters into categories like Core Trump, Persuasion, and Deterrence. That last one, “Deterrence,” meant you were seen as likely to vote for Hillary Clinton, and their goal was to make sure you didn’t show up at all.
And they tested it right here in America’s most diverse counties, starting in Miami-Dade.
The Miami Experiment
In Miami-Dade, more than 116,000 Black voters were flagged for “deterrence.” Almost half of all Black voters in the county, according to the Miami Herald and Channel 4 News, which obtained the 2016 Trump campaign’s internal data.
The pattern was undeniable: the darker your ZIP code, the higher the “deterrence” level.
Neighborhoods like Miami Gardens, Little Haiti, Opa-locka, areas already hit by decades of voter suppression, were once again being targeted. Only this time, it wasn’t with burning crosses or cops at polling stations.
It was with algorithms and Facebook ads.
Miami-Dade “Deterrence” hotspots from the 2016 Trump database obtained by Channel 4 and analyzed by the Miami Herald. Darker red = higher share of voters flagged for deterrence, especially along the I-95 corridor from Little Haiti to Miami Gardens.
These voters weren’t targeted to be persuaded. They were targeted to give up.
The Trump campaign called it what it was: a “voter suppression operation.”
Psychological Warfare
Trump’s team used those profiles to run targeted propaganda designed to manipulate emotions and control behavior.
They didn’t try to convince everyone though. They heavily focused on two groups.
1. Black Americans
Black voters were hit hardest, especially black women.
Memes mocking Hillary for “pandering.”
Old racist photos making both parties look the same. Fake posts pretending to be Black voters saying, “Neither side cares about us.” But perhaps the most outright fraudulent were “Vote Early” memes encouraging people to text to vote. Which obviously you can’t do.
The goal wasn’t to flip votes. It was to make people so disheartened they wouldn’t vote at all.
That’s how you suppress the vote without changing a single law. No ID requirements. No polling closures. Just algorithms feeding despair until people gave up.
Let that sink in. The Republicans and MAGA movement knew they couldn’t win if Black folks came out to vote. They spent tens of millions to spread memes as deterrents. They wanted Black Americans to lose faith in Clinton and persuade them them not to vote.
And it worked. In Miami-Dade, turnout among Black voters tagged for deterrence dropped 8.2 percentage points from 2012.
2. White Men
The second target was white men, especially the ones already feeling powerless or left behind. You know the type, the men who feel emasculated because women want equality. The ones listening to Andrew Tate and being told everyone but them are the root of their problems and loneliness.
They were flooded with memes about “real men,” “FEMINAZI’S!!!” “liberal women ruining society,” and “fighting for your country.”
It wasn’t random. It was engineered to make them vote with their emotions.
Those posts turned frustration into pride. Insecurity into anger. And anger into loyalty.
They sold the idea that voting Republican made you strong, that it made you a man.
And who was behind it?
Steve Bannon.
A man who built a company that could hijack male insecurity and sell it back as patriotism.
They branded the GOP as the party of masculinity, and men bought it - hook, line, and sinker. It wasn’t politics anymore. It was identity. And it worked.
3. Everyone Who Felt Hopeless
Then there were the posts claiming Trump couldn’t win. That the system was rigged, that voting didn’t matter.
Those were aimed at people who were already exhausted, already tuning out.
Because apathy is the easiest way to control a population.
The Great Hack Was Real
When I first watched The Great Hack, I remember thinking: There’s no way they got away with this.
But they did.
And now it’s confirmed, through a $725 million settlement and a $30 check in your account.
Trump didn’t win because he ran a better campaign. Or had better policy ideas.
He won because his campaign that was built by Steve Bannon and funded by billionaires, bought our minds, hijacked our emotions, and turned data into a weapon.
The Great Hack wasn’t a theory.
It was a blueprint.
And they used it to cheat.
This is not over, it’s just begun.
If you made it this far, please consider sharing this story.
Because this shouldn’t be buried under headlines about food stamps or partisan spin.
This should be front-page news.
- CFH Out.






Every American should know this!
He admitted he or they cheated. With the help of Muskrat and other pedo supporters! 🤮