Nice going, Andy Ngo. You went and got yourself in Twitter jail. Must’ve done something pretty bad, we reckon.
So … what’d you do?
Our Editor-at-large @MrAndyNgo has been locked out of his Twitter account for “posting people's private information”
The private information? An obviously fake email address which was attached to a death threat. We censored it because @TwitterSupport is doubling down. pic.twitter.com/rWafiW6i6W
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) February 17, 2022
Should’ve known better, Andy. You can’t just post things like that and expect not to be punished.
Wait … why can’t you post things like that and expect not to be punished?
Twitter has suspended Andy Ngo again for telling the truth. pic.twitter.com/YYusiAlpeK
— Landlvr (@Landlvr) February 17, 2022
Twitter seems to have this weird thing about accounts that share screenshots of crazy stuff lefties say.
I was forced to delete the tweet that showed the death threat I was sent. @TwitterSupport’s appeal team determined it was a violation of the death threat sender’s privacy. https://t.co/oOd4crIhue
— Andy Ngô 🏳️🌈 (@MrAndyNgo) February 17, 2022
For those of you keeping score at home, last August, Andy Ngo shared a screenshot of an email he purportedly received telling him to “Die motherf*cker,” Twitter locked him out of his account for violating the sender’s privacy, and Twitter wouldn’t restore Ngo’s access to his account until he deleted the tweet with the offending screenshot.
Clown shit https://t.co/Ox2dpFVVVo
— Jon 🔬 (@JonnyMicro) February 17, 2022
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This is indeed some clown sh*t. Twitter’s entitled to have rules, of course, but enforcing them arbitrarily is not a good look. Particularly when the victim of the actual offense is falsely framed as the offender.
Particularly when Twitter’s concern about users’ private information only ever seems to flow in one direction.
Andy Ngo has been suspended from Twitter for reporting on a death threat he received.
Strange how journalists and Antifa can post dox of all the people on the hacked GiveSendGo database, though. pic.twitter.com/Z3bLQAbb2C
— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) February 17, 2022
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