All they needed was an opening. And for the rich extremists at the helm of the Westâs social media, last Wednesdayâs riot gave them one. The purging of conservative expression has begun. We knew it was coming â just as weâve always known it will take every one of us to stop it.
Most Americans thought they understood censorship. Theyâve watched it evolve and expand this last decade, scooping up more people in its nets in the name of âtolerance,â âdiversity,â and ânon-violence.â But what happened this weekend was not a tweet blocked here or an account suspended there. No, this was much more ominous. What Twitter, Facebook, Google, and Amazon did by locking out the president wasnât just a heavy-handed punishment of Donald Trump and his supporters â it was a scorched-earth campaign against the tens of millions of people who dare to think differently than they do and the open forums that give our movement a voice.
AG Cameron urges Gov. Beshear to heed this warning of Supreme Court decision
By: Katherine Collins
and last updated 2020-12-18 07:15:27-05
FRANKFORT, Ky. (LEX 18) â The Supreme Court allowed Gov. Andy Beshear s temporary order on schools to stand Thursday, but Attorney General Daniel Cameron said the decision was not an endorsement of the mandate and its impact on religious schools.
The Supreme Court opinion noted the governor s order was set to expire by the end of the week with no indication it would be renewed.
In a statement, Attorney General Daniel Cameron wrote in part, While the court chose not to take immediate action because the Governor s order expires soon, the court in no way endorsed the Governor s unconstitutional targeting of religious schools.