Twitter Calls Out Josh Hawley Celebrating ‘Tyranny of Big Tech’ Being an Amazon Best Seller: ‘Do You Even Irony, Bro?’ Mediaite 1 day ago
Senator
Josh Hawley is convinced that he is being censored, silenced, and canceled by both the liberal media AND what he derisively calls “Big Tech.” This, despite the fact he is a frequent guest on Fox News, is heard speaking publicly at many Senate hearings in which he participates, oh and he now has one of the best selling books on Amazon.
Tyranny of Big Tech was published on May 4th by Regnery Books, after Simon & Schuster opted not to publish the book following his role in the events of January 6th. The decision to pass on a book by the Missouri Senator seemed to give credence to Hawley’s argument to some, and perhaps even gave him a title for a follow up
Senator
Josh Hawley is convinced that he is being censored, silenced, and canceled by both the liberal media AND what he derisively calls “Big Tech.” This, despite the fact he is a frequent guest on Fox News, is heard speaking publicly at many Senate hearings in which he participates, oh and he now has one of the best selling books on Amazon.
Tyranny of Big Tech was published on May 4th by Regnery Books, after Simon & Schuster opted not to publish the book following his role in the events of January 6th. The decision to pass on a book by the Missouri Senator seemed to give credence to Hawley’s argument to some, and perhaps even gave him a title for a follow up
02/13/2021
“Having lived in Latvia for over a year…there is a selection of good things, ideas or their manifestations, which seem to pervade Latvia and/or which the United States either lacks or has forgotten.”
The heartbeat of Latvia is alternately slow and quick, depending on how one asks after it. And ask I have, since moving to the former Soviet state in the summer of 2019.
The process of acclimatizing oneself to a new culture and geography and landscape even or especially in the time of the Coronavirus (COVID-19), and even or especially when one goes into the experience thinking how similar or bridgeable the place will be to one’s longtime home, how uneventful the experience might be, how little, even, one may interact with the local culture is one of manifest and constant subconscious comparison and immersion as into a murky lake. Levels of analysis and intrigue one may not have accounted for, such as the way people cross the street, hail taxis, or laugh, accompany i