As we watch Twitter rapidly implode under the ethnocidal guidance of the world’s richest man, I keep on thinking about an awful essay written in 1968 that has tragically remained for me a recurring topic of discussion over the last three years, and especially the last handful of months.
And yet Musk gives you a censor free platform at the cost of $44 billion that he will probably never recover so you can be free to spew your racism. You should kiss the ground he walks on. Feel free to censor this post. I'll understand why.
Howard, you seem to have taken an interest in my blog, albeit an unfavorable one, but feel free to read and comment as much as you like, so long as you keep it civil. As for this comment specifically, Musk did not "give" me a censor-free platform. I already had a Twitter account long before he bought it. For example, if you have a job at a company and another company buys that company, would you say that this new company "gave" you a job and that you should kiss the ground that they walk on? Also, would it be considered out of line to question the business decisions and philosophy of this new company? Of course, it wouldn't. Basically, Musk overpaid for an unprofitable business, and now many people are questioning his business decisions as he runs Twitter. This isn't complicated.
And yet Musk gives you a censor free platform at the cost of $44 billion that he will probably never recover so you can be free to spew your racism. You should kiss the ground he walks on. Feel free to censor this post. I'll understand why.
Howard, you seem to have taken an interest in my blog, albeit an unfavorable one, but feel free to read and comment as much as you like, so long as you keep it civil. As for this comment specifically, Musk did not "give" me a censor-free platform. I already had a Twitter account long before he bought it. For example, if you have a job at a company and another company buys that company, would you say that this new company "gave" you a job and that you should kiss the ground that they walk on? Also, would it be considered out of line to question the business decisions and philosophy of this new company? Of course, it wouldn't. Basically, Musk overpaid for an unprofitable business, and now many people are questioning his business decisions as he runs Twitter. This isn't complicated.