“Tonight, it's time, comrades. Tonight we say "F * n take the city" and move into residential areas ... the white areas ... and we take what is our #BlacklivesMaters # F ** kAmerica. "

So reads a Twitter post that appeared to have been published by Antifa. It quickly generated reactions from, among others, President Donald Trump's son Donald Trump Jr.

"Absolutely crazy," he writes to his 2.9 million followers on Instagram, "remember what ANTIFA really is. A terrorist organization! They don't even try to hide it anymore. "

A scam account

Twitter now assumes that the account is a scam created by white power group Identity Evropa, CNN writes.

- We acted after the account sent out a Twitter post that called for violence and violated our rules, the company says.

Andrea Liebman, senior analyst at MSB, is working on reviewing disinformation in social media. She explains that in the chaos around the rattles, groups with their own agendas can try to divide society by spreading disinformation and taking over popular hashtag.

- Then you can really push their questions and bring people along, she tells SVT.

Want to polarize

Liebman believes that this is something that countries also do.

- State actors are also jumping on the track, mainly to increase polarization in the United States. They have their own countries' agendas and use domestic actors to guide issues - then they can target more specific target groups.

Hot against democracy

It's not just scam accounts that can create problems. Even real images, but in the wrong context, can drive polarization.

- People share images that appear to come from the protests, but which have a completely different origin. For example, they can show fires or people being attacked, and they spread very actively, says Andrea Liebman.

Does disinformation constitute a threat to us in Sweden?

- Disinformation is actually created to disinform and is definitely a threat to democracy and other major issues in society.