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Elon Musk Files Lawsuit, Turns Tables On Censorship-Industrial Complex


Here’s an excellent rule of thumb: if you must rely on censorship to get your point across, not only are you wrong, but you’re on the wrong side of history as well.

Zionists must rely on censorship to win the narrative war. They must rely on tactics of intimidation, getting people fired from their jobs, passing anti-free speech laws (looking at you DeSantis), colluding with the state to censor speech, and other slimy tactics.

Where have we seen these smear tactics before? That’s right: the manufactured Covid pandemic.

Groups like the ADL and Media Matters only serve to undermine the First Amendment, and, by extension, America herself. We must ask ourselves why groups like this even exist.

Where is the profit motive in acting as a ‘non-profit group’ for the censors? These groups only exist to push the racial or ethnic supremacy of certain minority groups, as censors for the state, and as a shield for select corporations.

I have yet to find a single one that is America First or justified in its causes.

The ADL and Media Matters have attacked Elon Musk and the X social media platform since day one. They’re upset that the mainstream media and all the sordid groups that control it no longer have a monopoly on speech.

Media Matters is responsible for the latest coordinated attack against advertising revenue on X and has gotten several notable companies to pull their advertisements from X altogether.

This time, the boy-cried-wolf charge of ‘antisemitism’ has been lodged against America’s most pro-freedom billionaire.

In response to this, Elon Musk has filed a lawsuit against Media Matters. Investigative Journalist Kanekoa The Great broke down the evolution of Media Matters:

“Initially, the organization operated as a tool to undermine analog TV-era conservative voices, such as Glenn Beck
and Bill O’Reilly, using tactics like advertiser boycotts and economic pressure.

After the 2016 election, David Brock, the founder, recognized the significance of social media in shaping political narratives.

Brock’s assessment led to the conclusion that Trump’s popularity was largely an internet-driven phenomenon. In response, he launched initiatives to artificially boost Clinton’s social media presence, realizing the power of online influence.

He ran “Correct the Record,” a Super PAC supporting Hillary Clinton, which aimed to counter the online influence driving Trump’s success.

Following Clinton’s defeat, Brock published a 49-page memo in 2017 outlining a strategy to bring economic coercion and de-platforming tactics into the digital age. The goal was to dismantle the institutional capacities of opposition media and stifle their messages by targeting their funding sources.

This plan was developed at a summit in Florida in January 2017, with the involvement of around 120 major political backers, not limited to Democrats.

Brock, initially a Republican, represents a broader coalition of political interests united against populism, both in the U.S. and globally.

Mike Benz uses the Yankee-Cowboy Alliance concept that explains the economic and political collaboration between two historically opposed factions in American politics.

The “Yankees” represent the traditional Northeast Corridor power base, associated with Democrats and old money, including finance and transatlantic connections.

On the other hand, the “Cowboys” are primarily Republicans, centered around Houston, Texas, and historically California. The Cowboy faction merges energy and military industries, symbolizing the Republican stronghold.

Historically, these factions were in tension, with differences in ideology, taxes, and corporate interests. However, they found common ground in the face of a common enemy: populism.

The alliance solidified when both the Bush dynasty (representing the Cowboys) and the Clinton dynasty (representing the Yankees) were defeated by Trump in the 2016 election.

This unexpected outcome led these once-opposed power bases to unite against the perceived threat of domestic populism in the U.S. embodied by the Trump movement.

In reality, Trump supporters and populists are mostly working-class individuals opposed to a corrupt elite who had subjected them to decades of endless wars, trade agreements that eroded the U.S. manufacturing sector, and levels of wealth inequality not seen since the 1930s.

Media Matters exploits its network, using advertiser connections with corporations reliant on government or DNC support to organize ad shakedowns, suppressing these populist voices and undermining free speech on the internet.”

NBC News provided some context to the newly filed lawsuit from Musk:

The lawsuit is a major escalation of a fight involving Musk, his critics and X’s shaky relationship with advertisers.

Musk set off a firestorm last Wednesday when he published comments on X embracing a conspiracy theory that many consider antisemitic, and Media Matters published its report the next day saying Nazi posts had run next to ads from Apple, IBM and other companies.

Many of those advertisers have paused their spending on X in response to the report. (They include Comcast and NBCUniversal. Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of NBC News.)

Collin Rugg shared this recent clip of Timcast IRL in which Tim Pool argued that influencers on the X social media platform should join Musk’s lawsuit and turn it into a class action.

Pool went on: “CNN published a story about Elon musk being sued by a jewish man immediately following his suit against media matters. This is coordinated. They had this story waiting.”

Politico reports:

Musk’s lawsuit is the latest of his battles with regulators, advocates and advertisers, which have pointed to a rise in hate speech on the platform since he bought it last October and hollowed out its content moderation staff.

The tech billionaire also sued the Center for Countering Digital Hate in August after it reported a rise in hate speech on the platform.

Musk also threatened to sue the Anti-Defamation League a month later amid an ad slump for which he placed blamed on the group’s “pressure on advertisers.”



 

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