Losing his Twitter and Periscope accounts will not remove Alex Jones from the internet, as his websites and apps continue to be available. Among his supporters, whether Twitter banned him now at some point in the future or had done it years ago, it would probably have little impact on their response. Censorship! Bias! Authoritarianism! -- the list of what it always will be when such decisions go against their chosen leaders. But there's another group that can't ignore the circumstances: everyone targeted by InfoWars.

For years, Jones and those aligned with his network have seen little, if any, pushback on their vitriol and bigotry -- as it was directed at bereaved parents, or any other victim they could find on the "wrong" side of politics. Around 80,000 people activated a list blocking all Fortune 500 companies in protest of Twitter allowing InfoWars to use its megaphone, but that wasn't enough either.

InfoWars' Alex Jones yells at Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey as he left the Senate hearing on foreign electioneering on social media.



Jones, known for spreading baseless conspiracy theories, alleges that tech companies are biased against conservatives. https://t.co/0GzlTKME9W pic.twitter.com/eRPCuYKQUF — POLITICO (@politico) September 5, 2018

The inescapable truth, is, that once Twitter's CEO got within reach of the conspiracy theorist, the violations -- which Twitter had already admitted broke its rules -- became a bannable offense. If only it had the same response when it was someone else at risk of being doxxed, assaulted or threatened by that very same crowd.

The sadly predictable ending to this mess gives little satisfaction to anyone, and tees up Twitter for another round of criticism at the hands of "conservative" politicians who want to increase government regulation. I don't know how Dorsey will try to counter any charge that his personal experience with Jones outside the Senate building influenced this ban. But I do have ideas about how he could've avoided it in the first place, and what is necessary to make Twitter "freer and healthier for all to participate."

Enforce your rules, even and especially when it may anger some of your powerful friends. Line up a few tough questions for people who argued against taking a moral standard on issues like white supremacy, or at least ask them to provide evidence that "martyrdom" is the inevitable outcome of ejecting an outspoken critic.

Twitter isn't the town square Dorsey calls it, and it never was. As the actress Felicia Day tweeted "A coffee shop would be expected to throw out racist abusers and harassers for the benefit of their customers." Social networks have the same responsibility, and an outsized level of potential positive impact -- if they're ever brave enough to take action.