Here's Why Iran's Government Has Gotten Away With Tyranny
Trump Says He Is Concerned About the Midterm Elections
Her Baby's Bruise Sent This Mom to the Hospital. What Happened Next Shattered...
Don't Let Cea Weaver's Tears Fool You
Inside the Massachusetts Prison Where Women Live in Fear of 'Transgender' Inmates
Mamdani Voters Shrug at Venezuelan Immigrant's Warning Against Socialism
Guess Who Has Become a Propaganda Tool in Iran As the Regime Shuts...
Over a Dozen Oil Executives to Meet the President Trump As Venezuelan Oil...
'We Support Hamas Here,' Antisemitic Protest Erupts Outside Synagogue Near Jewish Day Scho...
The Gift of America and the Gift of Life
Automakers Eat Billion-Dollar Losses on Electric Vehicles
Texas AG Ken Paxton Shuts Down Taxpayer Funded 'Abortion Tourism'
$500K Stolen, 20 States Targeted: Detroit Man Admits Wire Fraud and Identity Theft
DHS to Surge 1,000 Additional Agents Into Minneapolis As Protests Escalate
Oklahoma Chiropractor Indicted in $30M Health Care Fraud and COVID Relief Theft Scheme
Tipsheet
Premium

Conservatives on Edge After X's Latest Announcement

Patrick Pleul/Pool via AP, File

Republicans had high hopes with Elon Musk’s Twitter acquisition. Gone would be the days of shadow-banning, getting thrown in Twitter jail for telling the truth, and having speech labeled with ridiculous warnings. Musk, after all, was a self-described “free speech absolutist” and understood its importance to a "functioning democracy." When he spent $44 billion buying the social media giant, he described Twitter—now X—as “the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated.”

It's with this in mind that conservatives were stunned to see an announcement about some changes taking place on the site ahead of the 2024 election.  

In a blog post titled, “Supporting people’s right to accurate and safe political discourse on X,” the company announced that it’s expanding its “safety and elections teams to focus on combating misinformation, surfacing inauthentic accounts and closely monitoring the platform for emerging threats.” 

Additionally, X said its Civic Integrity Policy will be employed temporarily before and during elections, and posts that “potentially” violate this policy will be given “publicly visible labels," plus have their reach restricted (just like on pre-Musk Twitter). 

X will also lift its ban on political advertising that was put in place back in 2019 when Jack Dorsey was still CEO. 

Building on our commitment to free expression, we are also going to allow political advertising. Starting in the U.S., we’ll continue to apply specific policies to paid-for promoted political posts. This will include prohibiting the promotion of false or misleading content, including false or misleading information intended to undermine public confidence in an election, while seeking to preserve free and open political discourse. We’ll also provide a global advertising transparency center so that everyone can review political posts being promoted on X, in addition to robust screening processes to ensure only eligible groups and campaigns are able to advertise.  (X blog)

None of the announcements sat well with conservatives. 


Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos