Through decades of antitrust amnesty and Section 230 immunity, our federal lawmakers and law enforcers enabled trillion-dollar Big Tech monopolists — like @Google, @Amazon, @Facebook, and @Apple — to collude to destroy free speech.
And the angry (deranged), intolerant (woke fascist), ignorant (but think they're right) comments from the "enlightened liberals" & other Democrats responding to my tweets are quite amusing.
They truly believe that cancelling people with whom they disagree is socially acceptable.
Dear Big-Tech Defenders:
Do you think @Facebook *should* be able to de-platform:
- Black Americans or other racial minorities?
- Muslim Americans or other religious minorities?
- Women?
- LGBTQ members?
- Democrats?
- Their political supporters, like white #BLM fans?
Why?
Back on June 1st, during the explosive George Floyd riots, @KamalaHarris helped raise $35 million for a leftwing group for the purpose of bailing out (suspected) rioters, looters, arsonists, and other violent criminals (“mostly peaceful protesters”).
"Those close to Breyer are infuriated by the retirement pressure from Demand Justice and others, even though they think he will still make his decision based on concern for the well-being of the institution and not because of pressure from liberal groups." cnn.com/2021/05/06/pol…
Apparently, she hasn’t recused herself from matters involving President Trump, the election, and impeachment.
It is very amusing that Democrats suddenly care about signature verification (for @GavinNewsom’s recall election) and ballot security (for the Arizona audit of the 2020 elections).
Google Promised Its Contact Tracing App Was Completely Private—But It Wasn’t – The Markup themarkup.org/privacy/2021/0…
“But The Markup has learned that not only does the Android version of the contact tracing tool contain a privacy flaw, but when researchers from the privacy analysis firm AppCensus alerted Google to the problem back in February of this year, Google failed to change it.”
“Serge Egelman, AppCensus’s co-founder and chief technology officer, however, said that Google had repeatedly dismissed the firm’s concerns about the bug until The Markup contacted Google for comment on the issue late last week.”