Connect with us

Nation

‘End Jew Hatred’ blasts recordings of Holocaust denial tweets outside Jack Dorsey’s home

Published

on

Screen Shot 2021 01 12 at 10.18.17 AM

This story was first posted by The Dark Wire Investigation Foundation

A group of Jewish activists with grassroots civil rights movement “End Jew Hatred” drove by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey’s home Monday, blasting recordings of Holocaust denial tweets that remain on the social media site.

The move comes just after Twitter banned President Donald Trump and as it continues to crack down on conservative users.

End Jew Hatred argues the platform operates on a double standard, saying it fails to ban or take action against Holocaust deniers while combatting other forms of “misinformation.”

“Dorsey has been quick to ban content that he deems to be ‘misinformation’ when it comes to politics, the pandemic, or other issues of consequence. But when users on his platform spread harmful lies about the systematic murder of 6 million Jews, he does nothing,” the organization said in a Monday press release.

The organization says some of those tweets include the following statements.

“Holocaust – not real”

“the holohoax never happened but I want to do it again every single time”

“The holocaust is as fake as Jesus lmao”

TheDarkWire.com can confirm that the aforementioned tweets were still on the platform as of early Tuesday.

Follow Twitter’s banning of Trump, many have also questioned why Twitter continues to allow Iranian leader Ali Khamenei, who has himself tweeted messages of Holocaust denial.

International human rights lawyer and political analyst Arsen Ostrovsky recently asked Twitter in a recent post, “… how is it that President #Trump can be suspended from @Twitter, but the President of Iran, @khamenei_ir, who literally calls for genocide of Israel, violence to Americans and denies the Holocaust, is allowed to stay on?”

When questioned at a Senate Commerce Committee hearing in October, Dorsey admitted that the platform does not consider Holocaust denial to be “misinformation.”

“It’s misleading information, but we don’t have a policy against that type of misleading information,” Dorsey said at the time.

Dorsey’s statement came two weeks after the company reportedly pledged to ban posts “deny or diminish” that deny events such as the Holocaust.

Click here to read the original story.

You may like

Continue Reading

Nation

Biden Administration Proposes Rule to Fortify Federal Bureaucracy Against Republican Presidency

Published

on

Joe Biden

In a strategic move, the Biden administration has unveiled a proposed rule aimed at reinforcing the left-leaning federal bureaucracy, potentially hindering future conservative policy implementations by Republican presidents. This move has raised concerns about the efficacy of democratic elections when a deep-seated bureaucracy remains largely unchanged, regardless of electoral outcomes.

Key points of the situation include:

Presidential Appointees vs. Career Bureaucrats: Of the 2.2 million federal civil workers, only 4,000 are presidential appointees. The vast majority, made up of career bureaucrats, continue in their roles from one administration to the next. This continuity is facilitated by rules that make it exceedingly difficult to discipline or replace them, resulting in a bureaucracy that tends to lean left politically.

Union Political Affiliation: A striking 95% of unionized federal employees who donate to political candidates support Democrats, according to Open Secrets, with only 5% favoring Republicans. This significant political skew among federal workers raises questions about the potential for political bias in the execution of government policies.

Obstructionism and Challenges for GOP Presidents: Some career bureaucrats have been accused of obstructing Republican presidents’ agendas, leading to policy delays and challenges. For example, during the Trump administration, career lawyers in the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division declined to challenge Yale University’s discrimination against Asian American applicants, prompting Trump to seek legal counsel from other divisions. The case was subsequently dropped when Joe Biden took office.

Biden’s Countermeasures: President Biden has taken steps to protect the bureaucracy’s status quo. In October 2020, Trump issued an executive order aiming to reclassify federal workers who make policy as at-will employees, but Biden canceled it upon taking office.

Proposed Rule and Congressional Actions: The rule unveiled by the Biden administration seeks to further impede a president’s ability to reinstate Trump’s order. Additionally, some Democrats in Congress are pushing to eliminate the president’s authority to reclassify jobs entirely. This has been referred to as an attempt to “Trump-proof the federal workforce.”

Republican Candidates’ Pledge: GOP candidates such as President Donald J Trump, Vivek Ramaswamy, and Ron DeSantis have pledged to address this issue. According to reports from Fox News, Ramaswamy has gone further, advocating for the elimination of half or more of civil service positions, emphasizing the need for accountability.

Debate on the Merit of the Civil Service: While Democrats and their media allies argue that civil service protects merit over patronage, critics contend that the system has evolved into a form of job security for federal workers with minimal accountability. Federal employees often receive higher salaries and more substantial benefits than their private-sector counterparts.

In summary, the Biden administration’s proposed rule and broader actions to protect the federal bureaucracy have sparked a debate over the role of career bureaucrats in shaping government policy.

Republican candidates are vowing to address these concerns, highlighting the need for accountability and ensuring that government agencies work in alignment with the elected president’s agenda. This ongoing debate raises important questions about the relationship between the bureaucracy and the democratic process in the United States.

Information in this article was retrieved from Fox News.

You may like

Continue Reading

Trending