Wednesday, October 21, 2020

The masters make their presence known

The social media platform is reportedly insisting the newspaper delete 'multiple tweets' sharing its exposé



The New York Post remains in "Twitter jail" one week after its account was locked down by the platform for sharing an explosive story about findings on a laptop purportedly owned by Hunter Biden, the son of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

The newspaper says Twitter has refused to restore access to their account until the outlet deletes multiple posts sharing their reporting of the topic, despite the social media company apologizing for censoring the story after it was first published.

What are the details?

On Wednesday of last week, the Post published a story titled, "Smoking-gun email reveals how Hunter Biden introduced Ukrainian businessman to VP dad." Facebook quickly suppressed the story and Twitter began shutting down the accounts of anyone who shared the story, sparking outrage.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey then apologized for how the situation was handled, and the company reversed its decision, allowing the Hunter Biden story to be shared again. But, the outlet that broke the story still remains locked out.

The Post's deputy politics editor, Emma-Jo Morris, tweeted Wednesday, "7 days have passed since the Post published the first story in our Hunter Biden laptop exposé. We still cannot access @nypost Twitter account, despite @jack's apology."

As of this writing, the last tweet sent out from the Post's account is from Oct. 14 — the day they were shut down by the platform.

The Washington Examiner reported that "when asked on Wednesday, Twitter declined to comment or provide updates on the status of the New York Post's account." Twitter told Fox Business earlier this week that the Post "has been informed what is necessary to unlock their account." According to the Post, they have been told by Twitter to delete multiple messages, but the newspaper refuses "to self-censor."

Anything else?

Meanwhile, Fox News asserted Wednesday that Alexander Hamilton, who founded the Post, "must be rolling over in his grave" due to Twitter's censorship of one of the nation's oldest newspapers while the platform still allows several highly controversial figures to tweet freely.

Fox noted that Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, white nationalist Richard Spencer, Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khameni, OJ Simpson, and Venezuelan socialist dictator Nicolas Maduro still enjoy active Twitter accounts — while the Post's remains shut down roughly two weeks before Election Day for covering stories pertaining to one of the two major U.S. presidential candidates.


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