- Joined
- Apr 18, 2013
- Messages
- 110,643
- Reaction score
- 100,883
- Location
- Barsoom
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- Male
- Political Leaning
- Independent
5/26/20
“Please delete those tweets,” the widower begged in a letter last week to Twitter’s chief executive, Jack Dorsey. “My wife deserves better.” Yes, Twitter, Lori Klausutis certainly does deserve better, nearly two decades after she died in a tragic accident that has morphed into a macabre and continuing nightmare for her husband, Timothy Klausutis. The boogeyman plunging him and the family of his late wife into the very worst of memory holes is a conspiracy-theory-loving, twitchy-fingered and often shameless tweeter who also happens to be the president of the United States, Donald J. Trump. “President Trump on Tuesday tweeted to his nearly 80 million followers alluding to the repeatedly debunked falsehood that my wife was murdered by her boss, former U.S. Rep. Joe Scarborough. The son of the president followed and more directly attacked my wife by tweeting to his followers as the means of spreading this vicious lie,” wrote Mr. Klausutis, in a letter sent to Mr. Dorsey. “I’m asking you to intervene in this instance because the president of the United States has taken something that does not belong to him — the memory of my dead wife — and perverted it for perceived political gain.”
Tweeting misinformation is not new for Mr. Trump, who uses the service as his political cudgel to govern, campaign, wage petty digital wars and, more recently, peddle dangerous medical advice about Covid-19. All of this Twitter has allowed, because it has deemed even the most inane of the president’s utterances as “newsworthy.” The real issue is the very serious collateral damage of this fight, which is the post-mortem libel of Ms. Klausutis and the ensuing suffering of her husband and family. They are the victims, of Mr. Trump and of Twitter’s inability to manage its troubled relationship with him. The company tends to be hands-off when a Trump controversy erupts, relying on a tenet that he is a public figure and also that it cannot sort out what is truth and a lie and is therefore better off letting its community argue it out. “I have mourned my wife every day since her passing. I have tried to honor her memory and our marriage,” he wrote to Mr. Dorsey. It’s long past time to let Lori Klausutis rest in peace.
Twitter is a private platform. We are free to use it, not use it, and we can ignore it, too.Twitter Must Cleanse the Trump Stain | The New York Times
The president is spreading a vile conspiracy theory on the platform. Maybe Twitter should finally hold him to its rules.
Any of us would get banned from Twitter if we did what Donald Trump does with regularity. He abuses everything. Even the dead.
how about we do not let Silicon Valley control free thought on the internet
don't use Twitter until they ban him. easy enough.
But how will I get....oh wait, I don't use Twitter anyway.
Lies aren't free thought. Lies are just lies.
The missing ballots amount to nearly one in five of all absentee ballots and ballots mailed to voters residing in states that do elections exclusively by mail.
Twitter Must Cleanse the Trump Stain | The New York Times
The president is spreading a vile conspiracy theory on the platform. Maybe Twitter should finally hold him to its rules.
Any of us would get banned from Twitter if we did what Donald Trump does with regularity. He abuses everything. Even the dead.
But how will I get....oh wait, I don't use Twitter anyway.
Stifling speech is the first tool leftists reach for.
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