Now Ye wants to waste money on a worthless social media company. |
Ignore the noise.
Vote.
Vote to save democracy.
Vote to make Coondace Owens, Kim Kardashian and Kanye West irrelevant.
The platforms for the noise of the extreme.
Rumble - A video streaming knock off of YouTube. Funded by former Paypal executive Karen Thiel and Republican senate candidate Moron Vance.
Gettr - A knock off Twitter founded by a deadbeat father and adulter. Irony, he still operates an account on Twitter and has been trying to court far right extremist to the platform.
MeWe - A platform that calls itself an alternative to Facebook. It allowed unfiltered noise to reign on its platform. Until the Jan. 6 attacks, MeWe did not care about the content being posted. Now it is slowly cracking down on the noise.
Gab - A social media platform that caters to alt-right and far right extremism. It calls itself the place for free speech. However, it is watched by the feds because it may have played a role in the Jan. 6 insurrection.
VK - Russian knock off of Facebook. Many on the far right often go there when Facebook suspends them. The U.S. is working on sanctioning the platform.
Truth Social - a struggling social media platform by Washed Up 45. It was supposed to be an answer to Twitter banning the former president. However, the Securities and Exchanges Commission is investigating the company after a whistleblower confirms the former president is unlawfully transfering funds.
Parler - The once thriving alt-tech social media platform that was booted from Google Play and the Apple Store. The platform at one time was growing in popularity. It was a place for plotters to plan and execute the attacks on the U.S. Capitol.
Stay irrelevant. |
There are other platforms the far right uses but I am done giving them promotion.
Embattled media mogul and rapper Ye is considering buying Parler. It is run by Coondace Owens' husband, alleged spooner, Karen Farmer.
“Parlement will be honored to help him achieve his goals,” Farmer said.
Ye also released a statement.
“In a world where conservative opinions are considered to be controversial we have to make sure we have the right to freely express ourselves,” Ye said.
Some believe Owens grifted Ye out of his money.
Parler’s parent company announced the deal on Monday morning, saying West had made “a groundbreaking move into the free speech media space and will never have to fear being removed from social media again.”
The acquisition comes after West, who has legally changed his name to Ye, had his account temporarily locked by Twitter this month over an antisemitic tweet.
Exact terms of the Parler deal weren’t disclosed, though Parler said it must still enter into a definitive agreement with West and expects to close in the fourth quarter. Parler’s parent, Parlement Technologies, would remain involved by providing technical services and cloud support.
No comments:
Post a Comment