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Twitter Temporarily Suspends Account of US Representative (cnn.com) 358

CNN reports: Twitter on Sunday temporarily suspended the account of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene for repeated violations of new rules the social media platform put in place following the violent U.S. Capitol riot earlier this month, a company spokesperson told CNN.

"The account referenced has been temporarily locked out for multiple violations of our civic integrity policy," the spokesperson said. As a result, the congresswoman will be locked out of her account for 12 hours.

CNN also notes that Greene is a QAnon supporter, and that during her 12-hour suspension she'd complained that conservative Americans "shouldn't have to fear being cancelled by American corporations where they work, do business, and use services.

"They shouldn't be scared into submission by Socialists who want to end their way of life."
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Twitter Temporarily Suspends Account of US Representative

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  • ah, yes (Score:5, Funny)

    by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:03PM (#60957092)

    All those corporate socialists, oh my!

    • Re: ah, yes (Score:5, Interesting)

      by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:43PM (#60957228)

      You laugh. Until you realize that VW actually themselves suggested a union for American VW workers. And were very surprised when they rejected it and preferred to not balance the market by giving themselves a voice.

      But maybe Americans would first have to realize that social democracy, socialism and communism are three distinct philosophies. ;)

      • Re: ah, yes (Score:5, Insightful)

        by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:49PM (#60957266) Journal

        But maybe Americans would first have to realize that social democracy, socialism and communism are three distinct philosophies. ;)

        Americans can't even tell the difference between their, there, and they're. I wouldn't bet the farm on them learning distinctions between 20th century economic philosophies, even though European schoolkids can grasp the difference by the fifth grade.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        VW only did that because they wanted to maximise profit. They have strong unions in Germany and they work well, resulting in good productivity and low turnover. So naturally they wanted to use what works at their US factories.

        The Japanese do the same, they bring things like kanban to their overseas factories. In the name of profit.

      • Volkswagen simply doesn't give flying fig because they're used to dealing with labor councils in Germany, which have far more power than American unions. Tennessee Republicans, however, lost their -expletive- minds when someone said union and threatened to take away the plant's tax incentives. So, in other words, the Republicans hate unions so much they'd prefer to have a plant close costing thousands of people their jobs rather than let the VW employees have a union.

        You saying that without mentioning th
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Conservative Americans shouldn't be afraid to speak their mind. They shouldn't have to fear being cancelled by American corporations where they work, do business, and use services. They shouldn't be scared into submission by Socialists who want to end their way of life.

      At some point we're going to need a far-right-to-English phrasebook [wikipedia.org] to untangle this level of gibberish.

      • Re:ah, yes (Score:5, Interesting)

        by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @10:21PM (#60957418)

        Conservative Americans shouldn't be afraid to speak their mind. They shouldn't have to fear being cancelled by American corporations where they work, do business, and use services. They shouldn't be scared into submission by Socialists who want to end their way of life.

        These people are constantly raging about language police because tumblr teens get grumpy over certain words, meanwhile they go crazy at people for using words like "inclusion" or "accessability".

        Its really the cult of conservative persecution. You've got right wing politicians raging about censorship because a social media company puts them on gag for 24 hours for breaking the rules, which then gets reported in a few hundred newspapers. Meanwhile Rebekah Jones get arrested because she worked to get around the florida govts attempt at covering up the real extent of covid deaths.

        Can we blame a (private!) company for deciding they've had enough of this shit.

        • Re:ah, yes (Score:5, Insightful)

          by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @05:59AM (#60958726)

          I'm not in any way a conservative but I'm frankly quite sick of seeing fuckwits attempt to speak on behalf of "conservative Americans". I've met conservative Americans. I work with conservative Americans. Largely they are a group of nice people who are not in any way afraid of being "cancelled". That's reserved for a particular special flavour of conservatives.

          So can we stop lumping them together and just call it like it is: If you feel like you're at risk of being cancelled and feel the need to actually use phrases like "cancel culture" to defend yourself, there's a very good chance that you are in fact a fuckwit and not just a conservative American.

          • Re:ah, yes (Score:4, Interesting)

            by robsku ( 1381635 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {ekusiadekusbor}> on Monday January 18, 2021 @06:44AM (#60958898) Homepage

            I may have to steal this comment....

          • Re: ah, yes (Score:4, Insightful)

            by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday January 18, 2021 @09:11AM (#60959310) Homepage Journal

            I've met conservative Americans. I work with conservative Americans. Largely they are a group of self-entitled white people afraid of losing their privilege, and ridiculously angry at anyone who gets anything for free that they had to work for, even though they got things for free that those people didn't. They aren't all bad, but they all have a massive disconnect from reality. They think that if you don't earn it you don't deserve it, but they think they deserve to be treated better because they are whatever it is they are. (Usually, white.)

      • Re:ah, yes (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @10:49PM (#60957536)

        The fact that this person actually got elected is baffling. Maybe the alt-right is actually the new mainstream in some voting districts, or else the insanity was kept under tight watch until after the election. Her platform was basically about right to open carry loaded guns anywhere you want, nutty enough as it is, and the goofball Qanon and commies want to steal your babies shit was left out of most of the public speeches.

        • Re:ah, yes (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @11:05PM (#60957578)

          The fact that this person actually got elected is baffling.

          No, it isn't baffling at all. It is called gerrymandering.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

          They draw the lines around the cities to "pack" the educated urban and suburban people into one big district, and then the district next door has a bunch of squiggles so that it is 65% Republican. That way they can create 2 Republican districts and 1 Democratic district even when the voters are equally divided between the parties.

          This district, Georgia 14, is mostly rural, but with a bunch of squiggles on one side around "certain areas." Not the weirdest shape district, to be sure, but a shape you can account for other than by politics.

          • Ahh, yes, the results of Project REDMAP. Where you can get greater than 50% of the votes in the state, but still have less than 40% of the representation.

            All gerrymandering (regardless of party) is anti small "d' democratic and should be a felony punished by life in prison without parole. Any politician who engages in gerrymandering should be barred from holding any elected, appointed, or direct hire government employment. Treat them like someone who has been dishonorably discharged, if they ever get out
    • Re:ah, yes (Score:5, Funny)

      by Linux Torvalds ( 647197 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:56PM (#60957292)

      First they came for the Qtards, but I said nothing because I wasn't a Q or a Tard.
      Then they came for the white supremacists, and I said nothing because I'm not a racist.
      Then they came for the rest of the Trumpers, and I said nothing because fuck those guys.
      Finally they didn't come for me, because I'm not an asshole who incited a coup attempt.
      Then everything went back to normal.

      • Re: ah, yes (Score:4, Funny)

        by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @10:22PM (#60957426) Homepage

        Then everything went back to normal. *applause*

    • Let's see. A person complaining about being shut down for spreading lies, conspiracy theories and hate? Hmmm. I see no problem here at all, not even a slight tiny little bit.
  • by olsmeister ( 1488789 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:06PM (#60957102)
    Then they can put whatever the fuck they want on it, and be responsible for it.
    • by DaHat ( 247651 )

      Na, Twitter just needs to make their own Uganda: https://qz.com/africa/1956188/... [qz.com]

    • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:38PM (#60957200) Homepage

      Who modded this as “funny”? This is how the web used to work before some folks got it into their heads that they have some sort of God-given right to have their thoughts hosted on a machine they don’t own, on someone else’s dime.

      And don’t give me that town square shit. That analogy only works in meatspace where real estate is limited. It costs gas and time to drive outside of a company town, it costs absolutely nothing to point your browser at www.myvapidrealmofstupid.com instead of Twitter.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by cheekyboy ( 598084 )

        yes it does cost ISP connection bandwidth, if you get 10000/hits second, you need a god damn $2m IBM router, not a home POS netgear.

        The townsquare was owned by the TOWN, so I guess in these modern times, we NEED a public.townsquare.gov area.

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          That's not a bad idea. Zero filtering of any kind. I doubt it would cause any kind of problems because batshit insane politics would just get lost amongst the non-political batshit insane, and the spam.

          • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

            You simply put the filtering in the hands of the users...
            All the content is available, you can choose what you want to read and what you want to ignore.

        • by dryeo ( 100693 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @10:38PM (#60957500)

          The town square is the internet, it's why net neutrality is important, so you can access the town square, which the right wingers hated as your ISP should be able to kick you off for your politics was the argument the Trumpers made.
          Meanwhile your demanding the coffee shop fronting the town square where everyone hangs out to push your viewpoint. Just because a property is besides the town square doesn't mean they aren't private property.

    • then you can have 1st amendment protections on a hosted site.

      But honestly, it's not speech these people want, it's an audience.
  • by CanadianRealist ( 1258974 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:10PM (#60957122)
    Conservatives are all for the free market and small government until some company does something they don't like then all of a sudden it's "we've got to do something about this!"
    • by DaveyJJ ( 1198633 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:25PM (#60957156) Homepage

      Yup. This is what the right has wanted for the past four decades. Diminished "nanny state government", free market of ideas, corporations policing themselves and always able to do better than the public sector. And when they get it, and those same (psychopathic) corporations actually flex their muscle and do something these so-called free-market lovers don't like, they whine like the leftie snowflakes they complain about all the time. Twitter's decision is Orwellian only to those who have never f0ing read Orwell. Hypocrites, the lot of them. Deal with it. Twitter's house, Twitters rules. Don't like it? Build your own Twitter.

      As a recent article on Alternet said, "The ideological zeitgeist of the Reagan-Thatcher era was that the privately owned corporate sector was better qualified and better structured to have control over the flow of news and information in society. This shift was framed as more than just an issue of policy, it was framed as an issue of morality: to empower the human spirit by allowing it to break free of the repressive shackles of state control, reveling in the natural democracy and common sense of consumer choice.

      Sucks when you get what you wish for, huh?

      P.S. I've never met a real libertarian in my entire life, at least not one who remembers what the *fourth* institution is that sniffles an individual's freedom. And iif they do know the history of social libertarianism, (France, 1850s) they conveniently forget. :)

      • And when they get it, and those same (psychopathic) corporations actually flex their muscle and do something these so-called free-market lovers don't like, they whine like the leftie snowflakes they complain about all the time.

        People only like the invisible hand when it's punching someone else in the nuts.

    • Conservatives are all for the free market and small government until some company does something they don't like then all of a sudden it's "we've got to do something about this!"

      This only demonstrates you don't understand conservatives.

      • This only demonstrates you don't understand conservatives.

        In which way? Are you saying that conservatives are not all for the free market and small government, or are they currently not saying "we've got to do something about this" (eg. calls for revoking Section 230)?

        Or do conservatives think that saying "you don't understand" or "fake news" is enough to discredit anything said that is inconvenient?

    • I seem to recall conservatives yelling something during the 2016 election, let me try and recall the phrase. Oh yeah it was FUCK YOUR FEELINGS.

  • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:17PM (#60957134) Homepage

    Oh, the schadenfreude of seeing conservatives get hoisted by their own petard.

    • That's a false equivalence. Twitter is hosting, they are not doing any creating.
      • Moderating crazy Qanon tweets goes against my religious beliefs.
      • by Somervillain ( 4719341 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @10:34PM (#60957478)

        That's a false equivalence. Twitter is hosting, they are not doing any creating.

        OK. If Donald Trump has no obligation to host an AOC fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago, Jack Dorsey has no obligation to host anyone's content. Do you like that one better?

        I think you forget, Twitter is an ad service, not a public service. They're not there to be the town square. They're there to sell ads so companies can sell you crap...and once you get linked to a violent insurrection, you're bad for business. People like her ruin the party.

        People who wave confederate flags in the capitol building and murder policemen don't inspire happy thoughts in most of us. They don't motivate most of us to buy things being sold on the ads on Twitter. Not only are these people insurrectionists and cop murderers, they're buzzkills. They're unwanted guests at the party. No one wants you around.

        If you're getting banned from Twitter, it's not because we can't understand your brilliance or handle your truth. It's because no one wants you. You're bad for business. You make us miserable and not want to go onto Twitter and buy things. If you want to shake up the system either find a platform that's into it or find a way to make your opinions profitable to your hosts, like Twitter. You're not getting banned in the name of leftism. You're getting banned in the name of capitalism. Big Tech is a bunch of sociopaths. They only care about money and you're interfering with their ability to earn it...fix that and maybe they'll host you.

  • If I can't expect no repercussions if I walk into the TSA screening area at an airport and say I have a bomb in my luggage, then a member of Congress shouldn't be able to get away with spreading conspiracy theories and riling up the crazies. That's not cancel culture or whatever the conservatives complain about...it' about a private company not wanting to be seen as enabling these people. Similar to bakeries not wanting to bake gay wedding cakes, right?

    I'm glad the social media companies at least have some

    • Similar to bakeries not wanting to bake gay wedding cakes, right?

      Nope.

    • Why dont you rephrase it....

      Walk in to the TSA area, and start screaming, I have a theory that 1% of these bags has a 3% chance of a bomb, its just a theory.

      If there is zero chance of a bomb, then why do you have a TSA screening bags at all ? If you are screening, then you surely must believe that at least 1% of these bags, has a 99% chance of having a bomb.

      Oh and a theory is a theory that needs testing, not just saying "Youre full of shit, fuck off, we 're not hearing na na na na, ears shut, nya nya im not

    • At a simpler level, if I went in public and accused a Republican of a crime, and it alarmed the community, and there was no evidence they had committed the crime, I would be arrested and charged with criminal mischief.

      They don't comprehend what life is actually like for the "leftists" they're yelling at, and crying about.

      Try walking down the wrong street with long hair. Or with dark skin. These whiners have no concept of which supposed freedoms were denied, and to who.

  • Gee, I wonder why the word Qanon didn't appear anywhere in the summary.

  • by Seranfall ( 680430 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @09:41PM (#60957220)
    It's not conservatives that are being censored. It is right-wing extremists who believe in crazy Q conspiracies. Continuing to spout baseless election fraud claims is sedition. The people who are losing their jobs are spouting hate and violence.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by peppepz ( 1311345 )
      This is the problem. Even after all that happened, Conservatives will not distance themselves from the alt-right. They value too much having someone who does the dirty work for them, just like when they supported fascisms in the 1920s because they kept Communists at bay. This is an extremely serious issue because it can lead to enduring fractures in society, even civil war.
  • You might be cheering now for Twitter censoring people you don't like, but make sure you understand that you are not and never will be one deciding what is going to get banned next.
  • Americans "shouldn't have to fear being cancelled by American corporations where they work, do business, and use services."

    "They shouldn't be scared into submission by Socialists who want to end their way of life."

    Yes, they should. Fear your masters. Or they'll pull your plug.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @10:49PM (#60957534) Journal
    Why the hell is it temporary?

    Make it permanent. These QAnon dimwits deserve no sympathy.

  • Believing Q means that person is so extremely degenerate they WANT to believe in a 4chan larp. Q doesn't trick decent people, it outs idiot monsters.

    Q is a way to irrefutably prove both autsperger trolls (4chans "weaponized autists") who compulsively believe in Q and their idiot boomer "normie" standard issue bigots to be what they always were all along, and THEY do the legwork.

  • Vindicated (Score:4, Informative)

    by CoolDiscoRex ( 5227177 ) on Monday January 18, 2021 @12:13AM (#60957802) Homepage

    For as long as I can remember, I’ve talked about the myth of freedom. My position is that the majority of humans want nothing to do with freedom. It’s too scary and uncertain, and worst of all, it gives people that I don’t like the same voice that I have.

    Humans are hardwired to detest this scenario,

    What we actually want, what we call “freedom”, is the freedom to oppress people that we don’t like, while remaining free from oppression ourselves. For 95%+ of humans, this is the ideal scenario. It’s the ideal scenario for me to, but I’ll likely never get it because the people that I don’t care for people with enough power to keep oppression at bay.

    At least Democrats had the good sense to pick the right side, It feels somewhat ironic that they’re in the same ideological group as people like Zuckerburg and Bezos, but when the opportunity presents itself ...

    At this point, they’re just living the dream, and most of my hatred is probably just envy.

    Good for you, guys, I don’t know how long it will last ... all oppression eventually sees a backlash, but if you play your cards right, you should be able to ride it for another decade or do.

    Well played.

    • I think you misunderstand. Humans do want freedom. *Their* freedom. They want so much freedom that they will do anything to force other people to give them that freedom.

      What humans don't want is their freedom to end where another's freedom begins.

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