U.S. media outlet Gateway Pundit reported Sunday that the chief executives of several top 100 companies participated in the first such conference call over the weekend to discuss how to respond to proposed changes in U.S. state voting laws.
Sources familiar with the meeting told CNN that participants included top leaders from the airline, media, legal and investment communities. Including, but not limited to, American Airlines, United Airlines, Atlanta Falcons, Levi’s, Walmart, Viacom-CBS, Ariel Investments, Link, Twitter and AMCT Theatres.
Discussed at the meeting was the Georgia voting law recently signed by Governor Kemp, which requires voters to show a photo ID in order to vote. More than 70 percent of Americans, including black Americans, support voter ID laws.
Every country in the world, except the United States, requires voters to show a photo ID or similar document in order to vote.
In 2020, seven big tech companies reaped $3.4 trillion in market value while hundreds of thousands of small businesses closed and millions more struggled. They government and big business want to consolidate power, and they are doing so.
On Monday, a person who works for a big company chatted with the company’s chief executive about plans to subsidize the difference in fares between JetBlue and its other competitors, so that the company’s employees can later fly only on pro-Democratic airlines.
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