Scott Presler has been exposed in using a BOT army, Paid Influencers, or Government Intelligence Network to manipulate the X platform in a TOS Spam Violation with the phrase “Scott Presler is a national treasure”. Many have seen the near identical propaganda posts that AI bots, paid influencers (think SNAP soda), or government intelligence networks can create (pushing propaganda for Kamala Harris or pro Ukraine/Russia messages). The below images appear to be created by Scott Presler bots, paid influences such as with Turning Point Action or his Early Vote Action App (which Turning Point funded company Superfeed Technologies created) , or which government intelligence networks may have posted:

Now think about the strangeness of calling someone a “national treasure” with their full name; with the majority of them all posted Feb 7th, Feb 8th and Feb 9th, 2025.
Look at these accounts and their profile posts. Many of them are exclusively repots or quotes, a strong signal of AI BOT ACCOUNTS.

Many X Users have Previously Questioned the Utilization of BOT Accounts or Government Intelligence by Presler in the Past:

@EmeraldRobinson said “Behold, the entire fan base of Scott Presler is in the comments section of my tweets day and night! Look at these DoD spooks screaming VOTE EARLY. Really makes you think.”

Others asked “Is this a Presler BOT account? Why are so many pro Presler BOT accounts being pushed”

“Whenever I question Scott Presler my account is attacked in the comments by bots”.

According to @Grok

“X uses the broader umbrella of “platform manipulation” to cover a range of prohibited behaviors. This includes things like coordinated inauthentic activity, spamming, artificially boosting engagement (e.g., through fake accounts or bots), or using misleading tactics to influence visibility.
Spotting a bot account on X can be tricky, but there are some common signs that might suggest an account is automated rather than human-run. Here are a few indications to look out for:
Repetitive Posting Patterns: Bots often post the same content, phrases, or links repeatedly, sometimes at regular intervals or in rapid succession. If an account seems stuck on a loop, it could be a clue.
Generic or Random Username: Many bot accounts have usernames that look like a string of random letters and numbers (e.g., @User12345678) or overly generic handles that don’t suggest a real person.
Low Follower-to-Following Ratio: Bots might follow thousands of accounts but have very few followers in return. This imbalance can indicate mass-following behavior to gain attention.
Lack of Personal Content: If the account’s posts are all promotional, retweets, or generic statements with no personal anecdotes, photos, or interactions, it might lean toward bot territory.
High Posting Volume: Bots can churn out posts at a rate no human could sustain—hundreds or thousands of tweets in a short time frame.
Suspicious Profile Details: A missing or default profile picture (like the egg avatar from X’s early days), no bio, or a bio filled with spammy links can be red flags.
Engagement Without Context: If an account replies to posts with generic comments like “Great point!” or “Check this out!” followed by a link, but the response doesn’t fit the conversation, it might be automated.
Creation Date: Newly created accounts with a flood of activity right off the bat can be suspect. Bots are often disposable and get spun up quickly for specific purposes.”

Take Action and Report these Accounts and Scott Presler’s as Spam and Platform Manipulation (The posts will likely quickly be deleted)

@elonmusk @x @support many of these accounts are likely bots, paid influencers, or government intelligence engaging in platform manipulation against TOS. Please take immediate action.

This Type of Swarm Used Recently by Paid Turning Point Action Employees in Attempt to Influence the Arizona GOP Chairman’s Election

Background on Scott Pressler: 

Scott Presler Denies Election Fraud as PAC Raises Nearly $7 Million – PA Senate Loss Held for 46 yrs

 

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