Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Twitter Social Networks United States

Twitter Suspends Marjorie Taylor Greene's Account for One Week (cnn.com) 334

Twitter has suspended Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's account for one week following another violation of the platform's rules, the company said Tuesday. From a report: Greene tweeted on Monday that the Food and Drug Administration "should not approve the covid vaccines." She also claimed the vaccines were "failing" and that they were ineffective at reducing the virus's spread. In response, Twitter labeled the tweet as misleading and prevented Greene from tweeting for one week. The tweet, a company spokesperson said, "was labeled in line with our COVID-19 misleading information policy. The account will be in read-only mode for a week due to repeated violations of the Twitter Rules."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Twitter Suspends Marjorie Taylor Greene's Account for One Week

Comments Filter:
  • I guarantee (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @02:43PM (#61677101)

    That Mrs. Greene herself is vaccinated. When asked, she yells something about HIPAA. Not understanding that HIPAA does not apply to her or anyone outside the medical community.

    • Re:I guarantee (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @02:57PM (#61677155) Journal

      HIPA protects you from revelations of companies you give your medical info to. It does not stop you from blabbering it all over the Galacit Network.

      She's either a lying fraud or so ignorant she should be nowhere near an elected position, voting on laws like this.

      Or maybe some type of insane, but that doesn't help her case any.

      • by Lisandro ( 799651 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @03:01PM (#61677175)

        She's either a lying fraud or so ignorant she should be nowhere near an elected position, voting on laws like this. Or maybe some type of insane,

        Yes.

      • Her job is to represent the people of Georgia's 14th District.

        If you go to Walker County, Georgia, and talk to the people there, you will learn that she actually represents them well.

        • Re:I guarantee (Score:5, Interesting)

          by shanen ( 462549 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @03:38PM (#61677415) Homepage Journal

          That Mrs Greene claims she represents the voters who were picked for Georgia's 14th district.

          Don't forgot how modern and scientific and hyper-partisan gerrymandering works. There are two sides of it. First is to pick the most reliable voters until you have a safe margin for the district, somewhere around 55%. It doesn't matter what the voters want or believe as long as you can rely on them to vote for your party. It also doesn't matter what lies you have to tell en route to collecting their votes.

          Then the second half of gerrymandering is to concentrate the oppositions' voters into the smallest possible number of sacrificial districts. Obvious target is 100%, but there's still too much "mingling" to get there. (Perhaps better to consider them as simultaneous constraints?) In the resulting legislature, you can control a large fraction of the districts even if your party gets a much smaller fraction of the votes cast.

          My favorite solution approach was guest voting. That would let you vote in a neighboring district if you believe the winner of your district won't represent you. But now I'm leaning towards a twisted variation of ranked choice voting. How about voting for one candidate in your district and in each of the neighboring districts? The vote counting would involve two phases. In the first phase, the winner of each district would be determined by the voters residing in that district. Then in the second phase, your own representative would be determined by going down your list until you picked a winner. Then for the twisty part: Each representative would have a voting weight in the legislature based on the number of voters who WANT to be represented by that person. (But there would need to be post-runoff, too. Know why?)

          • Re:I guarantee (Score:5, Informative)

            by plate_o_shrimp ( 948271 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @04:37PM (#61677757)

            the second half of gerrymandering is to concentrate the oppositions' voters into the smallest possible number of sacrificial districts.

            An example is North Carolina:

            Rep. David Lewis, a Harnett County Republican and House redistricting leader, said at a meeting that he wanted the maps drawn “to give a partisan advantage to 10 Republicans and three Democrats because I do not believe it’s possible to draw a map with 11 Republicans and two Democrats.”

            https://www.newsobserver.com/n... [newsobserver.com]

          • Re:I guarantee (Score:5, Insightful)

            by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @04:40PM (#61677765)
            I think you are to be applauded for actively engaging in thinking about different ways that the problem of gerrymandering can be addressed.

            My suggestion would be that there isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution to the challenge.

            For national (i.e. Presidential) Elections, the simplest ways to eliminate gerrymandering is to eliminate the Electoral College and to implement a strict one-person-one-vote approach. That would be true democracy at a national level.

            To deal with gerrymandering at a state, city, or district level, the solution might be a little bit more difficult because of course our primary goal should be ensuring local representation. For this challenge I would favour the idea of allowing a state, district or city to have as many or few elected representatives as the wished [within reason] but have a national requirement that, across the entire scope of the voting entity (state, district, city, etc.) then the maximum difference between the largest district and the smallest [based on voter count] must be no more than “X%” of the voting population of the smaller district, where “X” is a number less than 5.

            This should offer just enough leeway to allow for imperfect district sizes - for example by adjusting a district boundary by a road or a city block, to keep districts approximately the same size - whilst simultaneously preventing the sorts of outrageous abuses we see in some states, where 40-something percent of voters determine 80-something percent of seats [is that one of the Dakotas that has that ratio?]

            The problem is that we have one national party that will fight this sort of basic democracy ‘tooth and nail’ because they know that if it were ever to come to pass they would be unlikely to get back in to power.
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              If the goal were democracy, that'd be a good solution... but the goal from the onset was a confederation of republican states. The 17th Amendment was one of many attempts to remove power from the states and has created this illusion that democracy was somehow intended. The masses are ignorant of where power is supposed to lie.
          • by cusco ( 717999 )

            There's a district in Texas that was nicknamed "the barbell" because (IIRC) there's a group of Democrats at one end in one county, a long narrow channel across the next county to another cluster of Democrats in the next county over. This was done to break up the Democratic voters in the two counties at the extremities to ensure two seats for Republicans, at the cost of a single district where the outcome wasn't guaranteed. One of the more blatant examples of gerrymandering in recent years.

      • Majorie Green not knowing about something. . . that's unpossible.
        • by gtall ( 79522 )

          Don't laugh too hard, if that whiny asshole becomes president again, Ms. Green will get a cabinet level position. She'll make a perfect head of the Justice Dept., whenever that witless wonder needs some storm troopers, she'll be right there to supply them. And she'll even give good "harrumphs" for Die Fuhrer (his hands are TOO small, hence he doesn't rate a "Der") during meetings at the White House.

      • She's either a lying fraud or so ignorant [...]

        Either should be grounds for not being elected.

      • HIPA protects you from revelations of companies you give your medical info to. It does not stop you from blabbering it all over the Galacit Network.

        She's either a lying fraud or so ignorant she should be nowhere near an elected position, voting on laws like this.

        I find this to be a really strange argument. Yes people are free to give away copies of their medical records and install Internet webcams in their bathrooms and blog to the world about literally everything they've ever said or done.

        Saying you don't want to because privacy and citing well known examples of regulations designed to protect your privacy in the same areas seems perfectly reasonable and rational to me. I don't really understand the problem with that at all.

        The fact that HIPPA does not cover wi

        • Re:I guarantee (Score:5, Insightful)

          by The-Ixian ( 168184 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @04:16PM (#61677641)

          false pretext.== lying

        • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

          People like her succeed because people like you are either not bright enough to recognize the difference between not wanting to answer a question and perpetuating a lie that absolves you of saying so, or not bright enough to recognize that the distinction matters.

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      That Mrs Greene doesn't believe 95% of what she says. But what if she does? That would be really scary.

      Good FP. We should start a series of guarantee guesses, but it's going to loop on "I guarantee she's nuts." (When I say "We", in this case it means I lack the wit to think of a good second joke.)

      How about a new diagnostic approach? I have here a copy of The Indispensable Calvin and Hobbes by the great Bill Watterson. I propose making suspected lunatics read the comic book on camera. They also have to wea

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        That Mrs Greene would frothily spit in the face of any constituent who accused Mrs Greene of causing a spouse (or child or parent) to die of Covid-19.

      • That Mrs Greene doesn't believe 95% of what she says. But what if she does? That would be really scary.

        Oh she absolutely believes everything she says.

        You can tell pretty easily who's a smart grifter and who's just actually that dumb. Ted Cruz is a slimy piece of shit, but he definitely knows what's up, he just doesn't care. MTG is, in fact, as stupid as she seems to be.

        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          Since so many of her beliefs are contradictory, then she would have to time-share her belief. Time to recap my ontology of lies:

          Level 0: Self contradiction. Nothing needs to be checked to know there's a lie. Even logically possible for both sides of the contradiction to be false.

          Level 1: Counterfactual. Any fool can check the facts.

          Level 2: Partial truth. Entry level of the basic professional liars such as lawyers and politicians.

          Level 3: Deframing. Where the great professional liars like Steve Bannon and w

    • While I think Greene is a despicable waste of human life. However HIPAA does apply to her, and to others outside the medical community.

      One doesn't isn't obligated to share their medical status with the press, even if they are a Representative, a Senator, the President or a Justice. However she doesn't have to keep it private if she chooses to let her medical status be known she can.

      Chances are she has the Vaccine, but rather kill everyone because she wants to to be the Roll Model of the Republican the part

      • HIPAA has nothing to do with her. People are free to ask and she is free to decline to answer. None of that involves HIPAA.

      • HIPAA applies to her in the sense that her nurse or doctor can't reveal any information about her. But anyone can ask her directly and HIPAA has nothing to do with that.

      • by suutar ( 1860506 )

        It is true that she is under no obligation to answer. However, HIPPA does not require that she not be asked, nor that she not answer, and is therefore not applicable to the circumstances described. Since it is not applicable, bringing it up is a red herring.

  • it seems like conservatives always get treated with much more leeway than anyone else by social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter. One has to wonder how many more times, or how much more egregious she'd have to be with her disinformation and bigotry, in order to make it permanent.
    • it seems like conservatives always get treated with much more leeway than anyone else by social media

      Can you name an elected liberal who has been banned?

    • social media [politico.com]. This means they're critical for engagement (read: advertising revenue).

      They also spend a ton of money on ads themselves. I get way more adds for Prager U and Daily Mail then... well I don't think there is a left wing equivalent to Prager U and I've never seen an ad for Mother Jones in my life.

      I can't find the article right now but one of their executives admitted that right wingers doom scroll way more than left wingers. And during the 2016 campaign there was an interview with one of t
  • This is why the practice of waffling so much early on and letting them slide bites you in the end.

  • I had no idea there were idiots in Congress. Thanks, Slashdot, for keeping me up to date on the important news.

    • She's a dangerous idiot at that. https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]

      If she wasn't vaccinated herself she'd be bragging about it.

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        Actually a funny paradox there. She would gladly claim that she hasn't been vaccinated, but she's afraid that someone ELSE will commit a HIPAA violation and reveal her vaccinated status.

        Not sure what's she afraid of. Not like she has any sense of shame or any hesitancy about lying. "My own medical records were hacked and faked!"

    • This is the queen bee of idiots.
    • Idiots aren't new in politics. What's rather new is, are populists that make use of idiots to get elected into comfy chairs where they don't really have to do much, since their dupes are already happy that they got elected.

      Want proof? What did she promise? Which of these promises did she keep? Which of these promises could she even keep if she wanted?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • as long as you acknowledge that as things are right now, as the extreme is approached, more permissive regulations on speech lead to more deaths.

      I do not acknowledge that. The opposite is true. Attempts to silence the anti-vax idiots strengthens the view that there is a conspiracy to silence them.

      Rep. Greene will claim "Banned by Twitter" as a badge of honor. The ban will give her greater credibility and a bigger megaphone.

      We should fight lies with the truth, rather than with bans and censorship.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • We should fight lies with the truth, rather than with bans and censorship

        While I agree with you in theory, in practice we've seen repeatedly that the truth isn't as fast as lies are. Greene and her ilk will claim 5 things about COVID/Vaccines that aren't true. While we're debunking numbers 1 and 2, they'll put in 5 more ridiculous lies. We debunk 4 and 5 but now there are 5 new lies that just came in and we haven't even started the second batch of lies. You can attempt to tackle all of the lies (and get fur

    • Look, you can have whatever opinion on corporate and government censorship, as long as you acknowledge that as things are right now, as the extreme is approached, more permissive regulations on speech lead to more deaths.

      History has established the denial of free speech leads to avoidable suffering and death. The solution to speech you don't support is more speech not using force against those with whom you disagree to shut them up.

      As for excessive censorship, yeah that's a problem too. So, draw a line somewhere between "this unrestricted speech causes too many problems" and "this excessive censorship causes too many problems".

      Absolutist policies are generally the policies of cowards.

      The only cowardice is in shutting people up just because you fear their message and ideology beating yours. You have a voice use it or step aside.

  • Instead of freezing her Twitter account, just delete her

  • reducing the virus's spread? Serious question. Would the virus spread any more quickly without the vaccines?
  • What's that?
  • That's just, like... uh... your opinion, ma'am! The vaccines don't prevent spread (entirely) but they reduce the chance of spread and reduce the severity of the illness. So a virologist would call them "effective". She's playing to an audience, but I don't see why she needs to be silenced. Twitter can de-platform anyone they want, as it's a private company, but they shouldn't. People who get their medical information from politicians on twitter... well, it sucks that there are stupid people in the worl
  • The dying will continue until average intelligence increases sufficiently.

  • Everything is sitting at 2 max.
  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @03:58PM (#61677533)

    According to numerous articles, the *vast* majority of people refusing the get vaccinated and/or wear masks are Conservatives / Republicans and, more specifically, supporters of people like Trump and Greene. By discrediting the vaccines and masks (etc), these politicians are encouraging continued unsafe behavior by their constituents -- the people that vote for them -- with the result being that many of these people get sick and die. They are actively harming / diminishing their own voter base. Even from a purely political standpoint, this seems counter-productive.

    In Texas and Florida, COVID cases and hospitalizations are soaring, yet their governors Greg Abbott and Ron DeSantis are still against vaccine and mask mandates and have even issue orders preventing localities from implementing them. As above, the people that vote (or voted) for them get sick and die.

    While I understand their arguments about personal responsibility, etc... this is more than that as, in this case, your lack of personal responsibility can affect others -- even others who are vaccinated and take other precautions as no vaccine is 100% effective and current vaccines weren't designed around the new(e)r variants...

    Unless... the goal is actually to have your base die off and you then can't get re-elected.

  • Just skip to the end (Score:5, Interesting)

    by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @04:56PM (#61677841)

    Best case this woman is just a massive attention whore who will keep trying to up the ante so Fox News and OAN keep inviting her on their air. Worst case, she has started believing her own bullshit and will keep trying to up the ante because she thinks she's some kind of savior or messiah, delivering the masses from whatever nonsense her addled mind has cooked up.

    Either way, she's going to keep doubling down every time this happens, so let's just save everyone some time and skip to the end where she's booted from the platform for good like Trump and plenty of other conservative assholes who decided that the rules don't apply to them.

  • by Goatbot ( 7614062 ) on Tuesday August 10, 2021 @05:35PM (#61677965)
    Watched "Mean Girls" one too many times. Honestly she doesn't deserve to share our Air, the way she mocks victims and just her general demeanor.

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

Working...