Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 8, 2018
We didn’t suspend Alex Jones or Infowars yesterday. We know that’s hard for many but the reason is simple: he hasn’t violated our rules. We’ll enforce if he does. And we’ll continue to promote a healthy conversational environment by ensuring tweets aren’t artificially amplified.
— jack (@jack) August 8, 2018
If we succumb and simply react to outside pressure, rather than straightforward principles we enforce (and evolve) impartially regardless of political viewpoints, we become a service that’s constructed by our personal views that can swing in any direction. That’s not us.
— jack (@jack) August 8, 2018
Alex Jones exposed the illuminati plot to put fluoride in the water to dumb down the population.
He stopped Bill Gates’ plan to send vaccines to exterminate African children.
He resolved the secret behind the Georgia Guidestones.
He discovered that all media is secretly controlled by the “communist Chinese” (an anti-Semitic slur).
He sold pills that made men super-human, so they could commit mega-crimes.
He exposed chemtrails.
But @jack wants to defend this?
Thankfully, we’ve got former assistant press secretary for the National Security Council under Obama – who also happens to be the former Twitter communications director Emily Horne – who also happens to be a Brookings Institute fellow – out there demanding his fat, hatefilled ass be shut down.
.@jack, please don’t blame the current state of play on communications. These decisions aren’t easy, but they aren’t comms calls and it’s unhelpful to denigrate your colleagues whose credibility will help explain them 1/4 https://t.co/IKo5UiWiWH
— Emily Horne (@emilyjhorne) August 8, 2018
Also, FWIW I think this is the wrong call. Jones’ behavior isn’t a one-off. Twitter started examining offline behavior as a factor in verification last fall. If your policy doesn’t account for Jones-like activity on/offline then the policy isn’t serving a healthy conversation 2/4
— Emily Horne (@emilyjhorne) August 8, 2018
If I still worked for you I’d have advised you to frame this as a sign that if current Twitter policies permit verified accounts to encourage followers to harass/harm people offline, then the policies aren’t working as intended & Twitter is looking hard at the way forward 3/4
— Emily Horne (@emilyjhorne) August 8, 2018
Designing scalable policy on this is incredibly hard. No company will always get it right. But this is an opportunity to take a stand and commit to making and enforcing hard choices in service of promoting healthy conversation. I hope you revisit this decision. 4/4
— Emily Horne (@emilyjhorne) August 8, 2018
She may know how to suck a dick six ways to Sunday, but she also knows how to shut down a hatred or two.
Howard Dean, who you may remember from that video where he is screaming, also jumped into the hopped-up hysteria, calling for the madman Jones to be shut down.
On other words hate speech, nazism and advocacy of violence will continue to be aided and abetted by Twitter and by extensionJack Dorsey and everyone else who works for Twitter. https://t.co/3dfHNqEMOL
— Howard Dean (@GovHowardDean) August 8, 2018
It is shocking that @jack is enabling nazism and violence in this way.
But it isn’t surprising – he is going with the goyim flow. Playing to the crowd of evil goyim. An NYT poll showed that Twitter is mainly supported by evil, hatefilled goyim, who want to see Jews lampshaded or at the very least soaped.
Facebook, YouTube, Pinterest and Apple have removed Alex Jones and InfoWars from their platforms. Should Twitter follow suit?
— NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) August 6, 2018
I can’t help but realize that hipster @jack is the only goy among the tech company leaders.
Facebook’s Jew Zuckerberg shut down the madman Jones.
Google (YouTube) Jews shut him down.
I guess this is one of the many reasons so many people believe that all remaining goyim control of any kind of anything should be immediately handed over to the Jews.
They are more responsible.
They know right from wrong.
They know when it is time to shut it all down.