Sadly, airing grievances with the head of Twitter did little to quell President Trump’s social media angst. The president spent a large portion of Saturday re-upping concerns of alleged Facebook and Twitter bias against conservative figures, following a series of high-profile bans from either platform.

“How can it be possible that James Woods (and many others), a strong but responsible Conservative Voice, is banned from Twitter,” Trump questioned on Saturday, following numerous retweets of conservative outcry. “Social Media & Fake News Media, together with their partner, the Democrat Party, have no idea the problems they are causing for themselves. VERY UNFAIR!”

Trump’s concern appears timed to Facebook’s Thursday ban of numerous incendiary figures, including Infowars’ Alex Jones, Milo Yiannopoulos, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, Paul Joseph Watson, activist Laura Loomer and Paul Nehlen. Facebook stated of their decision, “We've always banned individuals or organizations that promote or engage in violence and hate, regardless of ideology. The process for evaluating potential violators is extensive and it is what led us to our decision to remove these accounts today.”

Woods, meanwhile, appears to have been suspended from Twitter over a Mueller report-themed tweet reading “‘If you try to kill the King, you better not miss.’ #HangThemAll.” Politico writes that a woman identified as Woods’ girlfriend shared a screenshot of Twitter’s email to Woods confirming as much. By Friday, Trump began likening the bans to censorship and vowed to investigate the matter:

Trump also took the opportunity to lump his favorite media targets into the mix. “When will the Radical Left Wing Media apologize to me for knowingly getting the Russia Collusion Delusion story so wrong,” he tweeted Saturday. “The real story is about to happen! Why is @nytimes, @washingtonpost, @CNN, @MSNBC allowed to be on Twitter & Facebook. Much of what they do is FAKE NEWS!”

Republicans have also held hearings over alleged bias against conservative media, though tech companies continually argue the difference between protected political speech and implicit threats of violence, or hate. Trump’s personal meeting with Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey last month reportedly concerned “Twitter’s commitment to protecting the health of the public conversation ahead of the 2020 U.S. elections and efforts under way to respond to the opioid crisis,” but was memorably reduced to the president’s dismay over losing bot followers.

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