To accurately understand the depth of the left’s depravity and death cult mentality, which is currently on full display in the wake of the assassination of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson, we have to pull the thread a bit.
Long before Elon Musk came along and bought Twitter, turning it into the free speech platform now known as X, the social media site was the left’s sandbox and they just assumed they had the right to say who could play in it. When conservatives balked at the unfair treatment they received, they looked for alternatives, such as Parler and Gab.
Oh, how the left laughed at conservatives for both prizing free speech and despising the attempts to silence voices on the right. They mocked the rise of alternative social media and the determination of the right to find a more level playing field away from Twitter.
Then Elon Musk bought Twitter, and then Donald Trump won the second term he wasn’t supposed to win.
Cue the leftist outrage, tantrums, and drama-filled exits from X. Where did they all go? To their own little deranged utopia at a site called Bluesky. As RedState’s Brandon Morse recently reported, that went just as well as you thought it would, with users reporting each other for abuse and any slightly sane posts, such as saying there are only two genders, being immediately flagged and deleted. Here’s more from Brandon:
Months ago I needed blood sugar test strips. I went to the pharmacy to get them after my physician called in the needed prescription. The pharmacist informed me united health care had not yet approved my test strip prescription, and to come back later. I leave 12 miles away from the pharmacy. I went back the next day and still couldn’t get them. I called my physician and was told they would straighten it out. On the third visit to the pharmacy I was denied the test strips again, so fine, they can keep them and I have not tested for months. I have paid into social security for this service 3/4 of my life and this is the treatment I get. No sympathy here for Delay, Deny, Defend, brian thompson. You can guess how I feel about his soul.