That Was Fast: Twitter Suspends Ron Paul Institute's Account

The cucks are busy arguing about New York vs. Chicago pizza, and also about the right mix of conservative, market-based solutions to accomplish the left's goal of outlawing conservative speech.

Steven Green on Why He Supports InfoWars' Right to Speech: It's because BigTech is simultaneously attempting to deny a platform to Bill Whittle's site.

It's true that Facebook is a private company and can ban who they like. But if telecommunications regulations apply, then they either have to police EVERYbody (and be held liable for stuff they fail to police), or keep the platform open to ANYbody. Facebook has chosen the former, but I doubt they'll be held to account for it -- or for silencing so many other pages, almost all conservative and right-leaning. My other job is providing video commentary for BillWhittle.com, and YouTube has squeezed our traffic in half. Bill has about 120,000 subscribers, and only about 2% get his YouTube notices. We're still doing well on Facebook, but for how much longer? So if you want to know why I find myself standing alongside Alex Jones, it's because Facebook and the Electronic Left drove me there. This is indeed a culture war, and the other side is powerful enough that we no longer have the luxury of picking and choosing our allies. The Progressive Left has chosen them for us.

The cucks disagree, of course. They are currently negotiating the terms of their incorporation into the Democrat Party, as the controlled opposition, the pretend opposition that actually exists to provide an illusory alternative to progressive rule, and they believe that they have struck a deal they can live with:

If they assist the left in censoring all other conservative speech, the left will guarantee their speech rights alone, and also pay them to occasionally appear on MSNBC or to write an op-ed column for the racist New York Times.

