I will do neither
— NahBabeeNah (@NahBabeeNah) July 14, 2022
You won't be able to tyrannize me this time pic.twitter.com/UVr4fiast6
Saturday, July 16, 2022
"IT PUTS THE NEEDLE IN ITS SKIN OR ELSE IT WEARS THE MASK AGAIN" --THE SCIENCE OF THE LAMBS
Dr. Bostom’s reinstatement comes after @jlawrencenc and I threw a spotlight on Twitter’s unfair, arbitrary enforcement of its Covid-19 strike rules
1/ We all know the media will ignore what happened tonight, but let’s be clear - this is another huge victory for Twitter users. Dr. Bostom’s reinstatement came after @jlawrencenc and I threw a spotlight on Twitter’s unfair, arbitrary enforcement of its Covid-19 strike rules…
— Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) July 15, 2022
Twitter should restore all the covid rebel accounts it deleted and apologize to the world for impeding scientific and science policy discussion.
— Jay Bhattacharya (@DrJBhattacharya) July 16, 2022
In the comments, please list your favorite killed accounts where twitter violated its terms of service. https://t.co/FZSV5sCGpv
Pam Hemphill, a 69-year-old grandmother from Idaho has been sentenced to 60 days in prison for her role in the J6 protests. Ray Epps roams free.
Pam Hemphill, a 69-year-old grandmother from Idaho has been sentenced to 60 days in prison for her role in the J6 protests. Ray Epps roams free. pic.twitter.com/32nTAR4Ckh
— Robert Gouveia Esq. (@RobGouveiaEsq) July 16, 2022
What's a simple DUI when you're poised to earn millions on insider trading in the chip-manufacturing industry?
NEW - House Speaker Pelosi’s husband bought millions in computer-chip stocks ahead of vote on legislation to boost the chip-manufacturing industry. https://t.co/YDhQoOIwiG
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) July 16, 2022
Well, it's not Ukraine level of aid, but it's a start.
Sen. @BernieSanders (I-Vt.) on Wed. said a 107-member conference committee has been meeting behind closed doors to provide more than $50 billion in #corporate #welfare, w/ no strings attached, to the highly profitable microchip industry. #TheDefender
— Children's Health Defense (@ChildrensHD) July 16, 2022
https://t.co/HRQBwj5usU
NANCY PELOSI & LIZ CHENEY CURIOUSLY UNINTERESTED IN THE EPPS CASE
"We need to go into the Capitol. Into the Capitol!" He says it repeately. He's so emphatic about it, encouraging other people to commit a federal crime that the crowd around him decides that he must be a federal agent, and the crowd around him begins chanting, "FED! FED! FED! FED!"
Tucker Carlson Breaking Down The NYT Ray Epps Puff Piece & The Questions That Remain About Ray Epps
— The Columbia Bugle 🇺🇸 (@ColumbiaBugle) July 15, 2022
"This is highly strange, & if you're going to spend more than a year looking into January 6th & you ignore this, then it's more than strange. It's an indictment of your motives." pic.twitter.com/a5VlaumJeQ
The same paper
that cheered Ashley Babbit's death, the New York Times, but this same paper is weeping for Ray Epps
because people have been mean to him online? The New York Times author of the piece was Adam Goldman who's done work for the intelligence agencies. Wonderful. So the FBI and other assorted intelligence agencies are writing the narrative for the January 6th protest to keep the legal indictment against innocent people airtight, while allowing their agents, Ray Epps, to run free?
Have prosecutors reviewed Ray Epps's text to his nephew? The New York Times doesn't tell us. Nor does the NYT tell us whether or not Ray Epps had any contact with any federal agencies in the period before January 6th. But don't ask more questions, says the New York Times or Ray Epps may be killed by Mexican drug cartels. Good one, Tucker. But according to the paper, there are people who have heard, "some cartel members talking about killing Mr. Epps." Right, because the drug cartels are committed Trump voters and they feel betrayed by Ray Epps, maybe there are Q-Anon people too? Hysterical. Tucker does a great job of mocking the New York Times' farcical fiction. Wow!
This is the New York Times. Wonder why no one is ever surprised by their fiction. And it's fiction that lacks style.
Tucker is right: if you spend more than a year looking into the protest and you ignore Ray Epps's role in the protest and then run cover for him by saying that he's the victim of conspiracy theories and cartel threats, why then it's more than strange. It's an indictment of your motives.