On November 30, Chinese Communist Party diplomatic spokesman Zhao Lijian posted a drawing on Twitter showing an Australian soldier holding a bloody knife to the throat of an Afghan child, and tweeted that he condemned the massacre of civilians by Australian troops in Afghanistan. The move sparked an uproar, and Australian Prime Minister Samuel Morrison responded harshly, pointing out that the drawing was a fabrication and “disgusting,” and demanding an apology from the Chinese Communist Party. The Australian government also asked Twitter to delete Zhao Lijian’s post, which was rejected.
On December 1, Twitter responded to Australia by claiming that it had flagged Zhao Lijian’s tweets as “sensitive” and that comments on current affairs from official government accounts, or foreign policy statements that threaten force, do not normally violate its platform rules.
Twitter has chosen to side with the Chinese Communist Party’s “war wolves” and has shown great “tolerance” for fabrications, provocations, and violent messages, even though it has the audacity to offend the Australian Prime Minister. However, this “boldness” is not courage. Twitter knows full well that the Chinese Communist Party is taking the opportunity to act against Australia, not to defend human rights and justice; Twitter also knows full well that the Chinese Communist Party wants Australia to apologize, but it has never apologized to the Chinese people who have been persecuted and tortured by it, nor has it apologized to the world that has been attacked by the Chinese Communist Party virus. What “rules” does Twitter follow?
On March 12 of this year, Zhao Lijian made an astonishing “tweet” in English, saying that “the U.S. military may have brought the epidemic to Wuhan” and that “the U.S. owes us an explanation! This baseless and slanderous tweet was neither deleted nor flagged.
In addition, Party media mouthpiece Hu Xijin’s constant tweets satirizing and attacking President Trump and his executive team, and even sensationalizing when the Trumps contracted an epidemic, have passed unscathed. The Chinese ambassador to the United States, ambassador to the United Kingdom, and other diplomatic spokespersons are also quite active on Twitter, which has become an important propaganda platform for the Chinese Communist Party abroad.
Twitter has become an important propaganda platform for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) abroad. It has shown that U.S.-based Twitter does not mind irresponsible statements by foreign officials, nor does it care if they slander the President and the U.S. government, and it has been unusually harsh and hostile to the current U.S. President.
In the early morning hours of November 4, several swing states suddenly and simultaneously stopped counting with President Trump in the lead, and President Trump tweeted, “We have a big advantage, but they are trying to steal the election and we won’t let them. No more voting after the polls close!”
Twitter quickly deleted the president’s post, adding a note saying, “Some or all of the content shared in this tweet is controversial and may mislead about the election or other civic process.”
What makes a tweet “controversial” or “likely to mislead the election” when it is true what President Trump said?
On the morning of the 4th, President Trump tweeted and attached two screenshots, asking “What’s going on here? The chart shows the sudden addition of over 128,000 votes in Michigan, all of which went to Joe Biden. This is a statistical impossibility. This post was also deleted from Twitter.
Recently, many of President Trump’s tweets and retweets have been labeled “controversial,” most of which have to do with exposing election fraud.
What is the purpose of Twitter? This is similar to its previous efforts to shut down the Hunt “emailgate” scandal – to cover up information against Biden, to cover up the fact that the election was fraudulent, and to make the public accept the false impression that Biden had “won” the election. to bring Trump down as soon as possible.
California voter Tracy Cumming, formerly a Democrat, told New Tang Dynasty reporters that she didn’t like President Trump when he was first elected, but then she came across news about him filtered by the media and realized that “he was very presidential and very kind to the people. Ms. Cumming broke away from the Democratic Party and joined the pro-Trump movement, saying, “I love Trump. She said, “I love Trump, I love what he’s done for us.”
The election was marred by massive fraud, resulting in millions, if not tens of millions, of votes being stolen for President Trump, and alleged behind-the-scenes interference and manipulation by the Chinese Communist Party and other foreign powers, causing great outrage among voters. It is shocking that leftist media and social media giants are blocking the truth, releasing rumors, suppressing users, and working with fraudulent groups to undermine the U.S. Constitution and violate the voting rights of American voters in the process.
Companies such as Twitter have taken advantage of the inappropriate protection afforded by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA), which allows them to delete and block content at will while not being held liable for what they publish. They are doing whatever they want for their own personal gain, and this mess should be stopped.
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