Government cannot fix Twitter when government is the problem

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Government cannot fix Twitter when government is the problem
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For the last half-decade, Republicans have begun to join Democrats in their crusade to discipline and punish Big Tech. While the intentions vary — each side simply wants the others' speech banned — the conclusions are largely the same: corporations such as Facebook and YouTube are too corrupt to be…

For the last half-decade, Republicans have begun to join Democrats in their crusade to discipline and punish Big Tech. While the intentions vary — each side simply wants the others' speech banned — the conclusions are largely the same: corporations such as Facebook and YouTube are too corrupt to be so influential, and as a result, the government has a responsibility to regulate the most popular social media platforms.

The FBI paid Twitter $3.4 million to process the agency's requests, which included the censoring of accounts they claimed were Russian bots sowing"disinformation." Disinformation, of course, is anything the professional war-mongering, domestic surveillance spooks decide it is. It's not as though Twitter should remain some sacred cow, immune to government critique or response. After all, the Twitter Files directly call into question whether the company directly violated FEC regulations or if Jack Dorsey lied under oath to Congress when falsely claiming that the site didn't discriminate and silence conservatives.

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