Twitter users are claiming the social media platform censored the #StopIslam hashtag after it began trending in the wake of the terrorist attacks in Brussels earlier today.

Users tweeted with the tag to express their frustration with another terrorist attack as well as the politicians who refuse to link the extremism with Islam, and the hashtag spawned a huge wave of tweets from around the world.

https://twitter.com/EscapeVelo/status/712320232568688640

https://twitter.com/DavidJo52951945/status/712277203959021568

https://twitter.com/Nero/status/712313167028756480

https://twitter.com/MrNashington/status/712309604340928513

Due to Twitter’s notorious history of censoring and removing things that are against the platform’s political agenda, user’s started to joke that it was only time before the hashtag was removed.

https://twitter.com/BenedictKMiller/status/712274738480070656

https://twitter.com/CalebHowe/status/712310383696961536

And then it disappeared for some users; it is no longer trending in the “Worldwide” or United States trend lists, though the hashtag is still at the top of the list of trending topics for many European countries including the UK, Germany, France, and Belgium.

https://twitter.com/MrNashington/status/712319698449408000

https://twitter.com/Crisprtek/status/712313628733612032

How can #StopIslam be #1 UK trend yet vanish from USA? Surely not Twitter censoring the hashtag? pic.twitter.com/xNBBipG0jc — Martin Daubney (@MartinDaubney) March 22, 2016

https://twitter.com/Nero/status/712315729211580416

https://twitter.com/fedupwithpccrap/status/712327252239785984

The commissars at the Twitter "Truth and Safety" council have now censored #StopIslam from worldwide trends. pic.twitter.com/zKyREsMcmr — Tom (@LokiXY) March 22, 2016

@twitter @Support just censored the #StopIslam hashtag, which was trending in the USA. — Ron f(n) Swanson (@SwansonNation) March 22, 2016

Twitter may have attempted to incorrectly auto-complete the hashtag when it is searched or typed, some users have highlighted.

.@MrNashington Charlie – I just saw this. They have changed the #StopIslam autocomplete to a typo. pic.twitter.com/FXl1PtgSew — Just Lyle🎮🐊 (@Lyde15) March 22, 2016

This is a common trick used by Twitter to quickly slow down and diminish a hashtag, and has been used with numerous controversial hashtags before. The result is users being tricked into using a completely separate misspelt hashtag that means the original hashtag gets cut off from new additions without the mistake being entirely noticeable to the poster. In this case Islam has been auto-changed to Isalm, a subtle difference.

Journalist and Broadcaster Martin Daubney also highlighted the fact that Twitter’s display of “top tweets” for the hashtag weren’t actually the top tweets. Only tweets that fit the political narrative were displayed at the top.

The "top tweets" on #StopIslam aren't actually the top tweets, but the ones that fit the narrative pic.twitter.com/MANIAmwIuf — Martin Daubney (@MartinDaubney) March 22, 2016

As of writing this story, the hashtag has since returned to its number one position for “Worldwide” trends. This may intersect with Daubney’s discovery that tweets expressing condemnation of the hashtag are practically pinned to the top whenever you search for it, regardless of how many likes less they have than their pro-#StopIslam counterparts.

Twitter has become so erratic and unpredictable, with their frequent censorship and anti-free speech rhetoric, that it is causing users to distrust the platform. They’re afraid to be shadow banned for displaying the wrong political affiliation, and they’re afraid of being suspended for making innocuous jokes to the wrong person. Users are even afraid about what features Twitter will introduce, regardless of whether anyone wants them, because as evident in the past CEO Jack Dorsey has not been entirely truthful with his userbase. There is no trust anymore, and they’re spending their time making birthday “like” animations instead of addressing these problems.

Charlie Nash is a frequent contributor to Breitbart Tech and former editor of the Squid Magazine. You can follow him on Twitter @MrNashington.