Just Like Every Other Platform, Parler Will Take Down Content And Face Impossible Content Moderation Choices
from the this-is-not-the-panacea dept
Like Gab before it, the hot new Twitter-wannabe service for assholes and trolls kicked off of Twitter is Parler. The President and a bunch of his supporters have hyped it up, and the latest is that Senator Ted Cruz (and Rep. Devin Nunes) have recently joined it, and like others before them they have hyped up the misleading claim that Parler supports free speech unlike Twitter. Cruz — who has been spewing blatantly false information about “anti-conservative bias” on various internet platforms — even announced his move to Parler… on Twitter, which does not seem to be moderating him at all. Cruz’s overwrought speech is full of nonsense that has come to typify his pathetic attempt to win fans among Trump’s base.
But, I did want to take a closer look at the claims that Parler supports free speech, because it does so in basically the same way every other platform — including the way Twitter, Youtube and Facebook do: by saying that they can remove your content for any reason they want. Their user agreement includes this:
Parler may remove any content and terminate your access to the Services at any time and for any reason or no reason, although Parler endeavors to allow all free speech that is lawful and does not infringe the legal rights of others. Any invitation made by Parler to you to use the Services or submit content to the Services, or the fact that Parler may receive a benefit from your use of the Services or provision of content to the Services, will not obligate Parler to maintain any content or maintain your access to the Services. Parler will have no liability to you for removing any content, for terminating your access to the Services, or for modifying or terminating the Services, at any time and in any way and for any reason or no reason. Although the Parler Guidelines provide guidance to you regarding content that is not appropriate, Parler is free to remove content and terminate your access to the Services even where the Guidelines have been followed.
Parler should be thankful that it has Section 230 of the CDA to make that possible. And it should probably be ticked off at Cruz, who has been among those threatening to revoke Section 230.
My favorite line is the last one, which says that it can remove content or terminate your account even where you have followed its Guidelines.
Under various proposals to reform Section 230, this would go against the law, but Parler is actually doing the right thing here. If you only limit your moderation powers to what is explicitly in your terms, then people will game those terms and cause problems on your platform. You need the flexibility to deal with bad actors — the flexibility that Section 230’s current structure provides.
And while Parler’s Community Guidelines are written in a manner that makes it look like they’re mimicking 1st Amendment jurisprudence, that’s a trick they’re playing, because the specifics do not match the reality. First, at the very top, they say that no spam is allowed:
Spam is repetitive content that does not contribute to the conversation. It often comes in the form of multiple posts of repeating content that offer little to no value to the community and platform at large.
And the guidelines tell users:
- Avoid repetition in the comment section of posts. Spam applies more heavily to comments then posts.
- Do not use language/visuals that are meant to take advantage of others on Parler.
- Avoid language/visuals that solicits advertisements on other?s posts.
Of course, all of that is 1st Amendment protected speech.
Parler also bans sharing “rumors about other users/people you know are false.” And while they couch this as being the same as defamation, the legal standards for defamation go way beyond that. Banning “rumors about other users/people you know are false” will create judgment calls by Parler in determining what stands and what doesn’t.
In the section meant to mimic the Supreme Court’s (mostly obsolete) “fighting words” doctrine, Parler again says that plenty of 1st Amendment protected speech is barred from its platform.
Any direct and very personal insult with the intention of stirring and upsetting the recipient
Of course, intention is subjective, meaning again that Parler would need to make judgment calls.
Parler, like Gab before it, bans pornography, falsely claiming:
Pornography is considered indecent according to clauses defined by the FCC.
The FCC polices public airwaves, which come from publicly owned, but corporate-held, spectrum. The FCC’s determination of indecency has no bearing on the internet (and does have some 1st Amendment issues as well). Parler’s definition of porn is… really weird.
Printed text description, or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity. Porn must meet ALL the following conditions:
- Porn does not require nudity
- Can be an image, painting, art, or description
- It must be morbid or degrading in nature (Prurient)
Of those “conditions” only the last one is actually a “condition.” If the others are conditions, does that mean if it does have nudity, it’s no longer porn?
There’s a lot more where this comes from, but almost all of it appears to be written by someone who did a Wikipedia search on exceptions to the 1st Amendment, but didn’t bother to talk to a 1st Amendment lawyer to understand what those exceptions actually meant.
Still, there is a larger point in all of this, which is something we’ve tried to explain to people over and over again. There is no such thing as not moderating content. First of all, some content moderation is required by law — especially things like child sexual abuse material and copyright infringement. Second, there are international issues that Parler will eventually need to deal with, even if it’s an American company. Already, some have pointed out how Parler’s user agreement might put users on the legal hook for international issues. Third, without content moderation, your site gets filled with junk, spam, and abuse. Even Parler seems to implicitly recognize this with its terms.
There have been plenty of sites that have sprung up over the years that first promise no moderation until they realize what that means in practice — and then suddenly they realize that some level of content moderation is a necessity. Now, Parler may take a more hands off approach than others, and that’s great. Different approaches and different levels of experimentation should be encouraged. But the idea that Parler is somehow taking a substantially different approach than a site like Twitter is nonsense.
On a related note, Parler’s sudden burst of attention and usage should serve to highlight another nonsense talking point from the world of Trump: that the existing large platforms (namely: Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram) and their content moderation decisions are somehow a form of censorship or control of the “public square.” The great thing about the internet is that it’s still (mostly) open for other entrants to try to build a better mousetrap. So the idea that the other platforms need to be hit with regulations over their content moderation practices seems odd when Parler itself has demonstrated that it’s totally possible to build competitors.
Filed Under: 1st amendment, content moderation, devin nunes, free speech, porn, section 230, spam, ted cruz
Companies: gab, parler, twitter
Comments on “Just Like Every Other Platform, Parler Will Take Down Content And Face Impossible Content Moderation Choices”
It’s like there are still no right-winger’s accusations that aren’t 100% projection or something.
Re: Re:
If you want to know what they are guilty of, you merely have to listen to what they are accusing others of doing.
Re: Re: Re:
How do you explain the banning of nearly every political influence that helped get Trump Elected?
Gavin Mciness, Milo, Stefan Molyneux. The list is LONG.
To wave this away as projection is a bold faced lie.
I, for one, am glad there is a place where all the assholes and idiots can gather. This will help identify them so the thinking world knows who to ignore. It’s like a self-imposed scarlet letter.
Re: Re:
That’s what Gab was supposed to be, but it didn’t keep them from still having Twitter accounts. If the TOS required them to delete their Twitter, then there might be a benefit.
Until then, there are blocklists.
Re: Re:
The problem is that once they realize that it’s just their asshole buddies over there they will come crawling back to the platforms that most people actually use, because what fun is being an asshole if you can’t force it upon a large audience?
That’s why they keep trying to force the main platforms to host their garbage instead of just making their own and posting it there, while they may think they want a platform than anyone can post on without penalties even more than that they want one that come pre-packaged with a large, semi-captive audience.
Re: Re: Re:
"The problem is that once they realize that it’s just their asshole buddies over there they will come crawling back to the platforms that most people actually use, because what fun is being an asshole if you can’t force it upon a large audience?"
That’s literally what happened with Gab. There’s more than one example of a bigoted troll complaining that they can’t make money when their only audience is similar bigots, and at least one story I can think of where one of them was whining that they were suffering abuse themselves.
"they want one that come pre-packaged with a large, semi-captive audience"
They want the ad dollars, but are too dumb to understand that the advertisers are the main reason why they were kicked off. Twitter/YouTube, etc. don’t really care that you’re an offensive idiot, they care that their real customers say they won’t benefit a site with that kind of content financially.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Imagine That
How did I know Mike wrote this before I even came here.
Gods forbid anyone seek out a place where their opinions are included, unlike those "inclusive" sites like facebook and twitter, which used to be about free speech and are now only for those who think like the other sheep.
Re: Imagine That
Username not accurate.
Re:
Yeah, see, here’s the thing. Even if Parler could promise unfettered free speech without moderation of any kind, its userbase wants two things:
But like Gab, Voat, and every other service of its ilk before Parler, the userbase can only have one of those things.
We don’t mock Parler users for wanting a platform where they feel their speech is valued. We mock them for thinking they can have that platform and attract anyone but themselves in the long run.
Re: Imagine That
Gods forbid anyone seek out a place where their opinions are included
Did you even read the post? I’m happy that Parler and other competitors exist. The more competition the better. And it’s great that people can seek out other places in which to speak their opinions. And I said as much at the end of the post.
The only thing I was pointing out is that Parler will take down speech just like every other platform does.
Re: Re: Imagine That
Parler will take down speech just like every other platform does.
Then they will probably complain,"Damned to the depths whatever muttonhead thought up PARLER!"
Re: Re: Re: Imagine That
"Then they will probably complain"
They will, because they’re too dumb to understand that the people who actually pay the free platform they use are the ones really getting them kicked off.
Re: Imagine That
How did the rest of knew you would come here and whine; Because we are geniuses. Once you saw Mike’s byline you went immediately to comments so you could show off your own inability to read.
Good for you! Low comprehension skills are a must for any GOP position, be that senator, or boot licker.
Re: Imagine That
"Gods forbid anyone seek out a place where their opinions are included"
Those being kicked off are usually anti-inclusive. Almost all examples I’m aware of are white supremacists, homophobes and/or conspiracy theorists who make their content as hateful and offensive as possible, then get shocked when normal people show them the door.
If you don’t want to be kicked out of a restaurant, you need to refrain from hurling abuse at the gay couple on the other side of the room. This is not controversial, until you idiots demand rights that don’t exist elsewhere.
A couple of days ago, #TWEXIT was trending on twitter on the UK, where a whole slew of right wing idiots were declaring they’re totally going to go to Parler because Twitter banned a particularly odious british rightwinger. Days on, I went back to the hashtag and the vast majority of the people who were leaving right away are still there, tweeting away about how the left have gone too far and they’re being censored and are leaving. I get the feeling I’ll still be seeing them tweet in a month, in a year, about how the left have gone too far and they’re leaving for real this time.
Re: Re:
Yes, because they’ll find Parler to be a lot more boring when they can’t spend their time whining about how oppressed they are, or "owning the libs" on Twitter.
Re: Re:
They probably mean "those who have left have gone too far".
Re: Re: Re:
Isn’t it more likely they didn’t find enough people listening on the new site? Or could it be they didn’t find enough people agreeing with them? Or could it be that that they missed the cacophony of voices in agreement or not?
Re: Re: Re:
Likely a mix of 1 and 3.
Re: Re: Re:
No, ‘The Left have gone too far!’ is the mating call of the wingnut pretending to be a centrist. The kind of people who totally believed in equality, human rights, free healthcare and eduction until that one right winger was banned from twitter so now they’re going to change all their views and move off to Gab and Parler where the right wing go to breathe their own farts.
Re: 'Look at me I'm leaving, I said look at me!'
Reminds me of a petulant child throwing a tantrum in a desperate attempt to get people to pay attention to them.
Good opportunities to mock them though for anyone who cares to by pointing out that for someone who is both being ‘censored’ and ‘leaving’ they sure are being noisy on the platform they claim they were leaving.
Re: Re: 'Look at me I'm leaving, I said look at me!'
So what the President does on a constant, minute-by-minute basis?
For many of us who see problems with social media censorship, we aren’t particularly interested in a platform that allows all speech deemed permissible by the 1st Amendment.
We don’t care about repetitive spam. We don’t care about commercial spam. We dont care about obscenity or pornography. Go ahead and ban that stuff.
Mostly what we don’t want banned is political speech. Simply because you disagree with something does not make it bannable. Being offended ought not allow you to take down the speech of others.
The real question is: can Parler do moderation without demonstrating political bias? Will they allow political speech, and show no favoritism to one side or the other if rhetoric becomes heated? I don’t know, and the odds of breaking the Twitter monopoly is quite the proverbial mountain to climb. But the idea that lip service is being paid is a step in the right direction. Defining offensive material in the TOS is not a dissuasion.
Re: Re:
The real question is: What political speech has been banned? We are still waiting for real examples of this.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:
In today’s example of social media bias against conservatives, an undercover watchdog group infiltrated Facebook’s content moderation division, and videotaped numerous admissions of bias:
"One of the content moderators was asked if she deleted every Republican item that came up on her queue, she said: “Yes! I don’t give no f*cks, I’ll delete it.”
The same moderator said she does not take down anti-Trump content, even if it did violate policy.
“You gotta take it down but I leave it up,” she said. “If you see something that’s not supposed to be up, it’s probably me.”
Another content moderator, Lara Kontakos, was asked what she did when she saw a posts supporting the president: “If someone is wearing a MAGA hat, I am going to delete them for terrorism.”
Then, Kontakos looked around at her colleagues: “I think we are
all doing that.”
Steve Grimmett, a content review lead, said it was Facebook’s culture to target the president and his supporters. “It’s a very progressive company, who’s very anti-MAGA.”"
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Today’s source for Koby’s lie: Project Veritas.
Re: Re: Re:2
Why, it’s almost as if Koby is making disingenuous arguments, using anecdotal experience as empirical evidence, citing known liars as sources, and running the fuck away when he’s faced with simple questions that (if answered) would lay bare his desire to force speech upon services like Twitter. Imagine that~.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
Why else would he try to hide the corrupt partisan nature of his claim by not linking his quote, and dishonestly mischaracterizing the source as just "an undercover watchdog group?"
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Just because you disagree with the politics of the content does not make it untrue. Watch the video.
Update: Facebook HR executive Leslie Brown, who was seen in the video making biased comments has been fired. Still think it’s just a hoax?
Re: Re: Re:3
Project Veritas has lied before. For what reason should we give them any credibility now?
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
Considering that not just that every claim from PV has been false, but also they’ve lied about this particular subject with their "twitter admits bias" and "Google admits bias" fabrications as well.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
[Projects facts not in evidence]
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
So a group with a LONG history of misleadingly editing videos to push their agenda and get innocent people fired in order to avoid the appearance of impropriety have claimed another scalp? Even if she was biased, she was A) In HR, not exactly in a position so set company policy and B) fired the moment it was brought to the attention of her superiors, not exactly proof of some grand anticonservative conspiracy. This isn’t about removing bias, this is about kicking and screaming until right wing voices are prioritised and given an exemption on following the rules that everyone agreed to when they signed up.
The thing that amuses me about all this, is groups like Veritarse are attacking a company that is very much on their side. Thiel is very much on team Trump, as is Zuckerberg, who’s had off the record meetings with Trump before declaring he won’t do much of anything about rightwing rulebreaking content, even going so far as to appoint Tucker Carlson’s website as fact checkers. By driving people out as part of a witchhunt, they’re drawing more attention to it’s pro conservative activities and accelerating the staff and advertiser rebellion that will lead to actual cultural change at the company, and when that happens, that sure won’t benefit conservatives as much as the status quo… Still, I’m sure a conservative con artist will be more than happy to set up a conservative alternative… Griftbook, perhaps.
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
I don’t have time to go through the exact wording of the bullshit, but this video was mentioned on the most recent episode of the Knowledge Fight podcast. They do a better job of dissecting it than I can here, but at least one of the quotes was edited to remove the end of it, where the person indicated that the reason why she was doing such things was that it was her last week on the job and thus didn’t fear consequences.
In other words, not only was she stating that she was deliberately not following policy, but that she knew that under normal circumstances she would face punishment for her actions. Basically, the opposite of what’s being claimed by the moron brigade.
It’s also mentioned that the people interviewed are not only employees of a contracted 3rd party, not Facebook themselves, but that the particular company they work for is ending its contract with Facebook at the end of this year.
That’s the problem with these idiots. They believe single sentences of bullshit that can have paragraphs written debunking the massive amount of lies within them, but they’re too stupid to check the facts.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
Just because you agree with the politics of the content does not make it true.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
Hint: project veritas is a fiction outlet. We don’t need to watch the video to know that it’;s full of shit.,
Re: Re: Re: Re:
"Facebook’s content moderation division"
You mean Cognizant, which isn’t a division of Facebook but a separate company. But don’t let facts get in the way of a good conspiracy theory.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Koby never has.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
So if I supply this quote from another source:
Does that mean that Facebook has a bias FOR conservatives and the political right?
Perhaps you don’t understand that Facebook actually have MANY moderation teams spread all over the world. For your viewpoint to be true; that some political speech is systematically moderated, all moderation teams must consistently make the same judgement – which my quote above refutes.
Now, one moderation team shit-talking doesn’t mean that every team work in the same way, and it especially doesn’t mean that ALL social media platforms do it too.
Conveniently enough, you didn’t actually answer my question: What political speech has been banned? We are still waiting for real examples of this. A moderation team shit-talking isn’t an example of what I asked.
Re: Re: Re:2
You have to remember, Koby doesn’t like answering questions that would require him to address his cognitive dissonance. He doesn’t want his head to asplode, after all.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
I have something to add for Koby’s and others sake:
When you (and by you I mean anyone reading this) go out looking for information supporting your argument, you also need to search for information that disproves it. If you don’t do that you become a slave to confirmation bias and your worldview will reflect this, and that worldview has very little to do with what is really happening.
Re: Re: Re: Re:
The sad thing is that I can immediately tell which particular outfit of liars you’re been stupid enough to believe.
Your main problem appears to be that facts are allowed and fiction masquerading as such is not.
Re: Re:
Tell that to the Republican congressmen and the Trump admininstration stooges that the only ones pushing for that then, and stop wasting electons projecting at social media.
Re:
White supremacist propaganda is legally protected political speech. Should the law force a service like Twitter to host it?
Re: Re: Silence can speak louder than words
Honestly at this point they might as well just come out and admit that their position is that yes, it should. It’s not like refusing to answer is making them look better, all it’s doing is leading people to conclude that they’re staying silent because they aren’t honest enough to own their own position, don’t want to defend it, or both.
Re: Re:
For many of us who see problems with social media censorship, we aren’t particularly interested in a platform that allows all speech deemed permissible by the 1st Amendment.
Lots of people have claimed otherwise. And Parler’s own marketing speaks to that point. So… yes, not everyone has the same opinion, but Parler is making those claims.
We don’t care about repetitive spam. We don’t care about commercial spam. We dont care about obscenity or pornography. Go ahead and ban that stuff.
Great, so you support content moderation!
Mostly what we don’t want banned is political speech.
What "political speech" is banned on Twitter that is not violating its policies?
We’ll wait.
And, Parler will almost certainly end up banning the same kinds of speech over time because every platform realizes it needs to do so to stay relevant.
Indeed, Twitter early on spoke much like Parler does today. Remember "the free speech wing of the free speech party"? That was Twitter’s unofficial tagline from its former General Counsel. But then reality hit.
And reality will hit Parler too. If it ever becomes big enough to matter.
Re: Re:
Narrator: It won’t.
Re: Re:
In which case you get the opposite effect, like 8chan, where only offensive people were left to offend each other. Everybody else when somewhere with saner moderation practices.
Re: Re: Re:
For someone who claims to be neutral, Koby sure enjoys breaking his own vertebrae carrying the water of Trumpsuckers.
Re: Re:
"Mostly what we don’t want banned is political speech."
Then why is it that you mostly complain about bigots, white supremacists and people trying their best to get others infected with preventable diseases being banned?
You’re free to provide any example of those who don’t fit into the above categories being banned, but you usually remain silent when asked for evidence.
Re: Re:
See… this is why nobody takes you seriously. Even when you’re given what you want in alternative platforms you still think you’re entitled to meddle in platforms you dislike.
They can build one, sure. But the real question lies in how long it’ll last when…
its primary userbase will be people who feel stifled by Twitter’s rules against things like homophobic/racist/sexist speech,
it won’t attract people who have issues with that speech (among other kinds), and
At this point, I give Parler six months — at best — before it becomes another shitpit that nobody talks about having used when they go back to Twitter or Facebook.
Re: Re:
…and
Re: Re: Re:
Isn’t that what happened to Facebook this week, all the big boys pulling there (sic) ads?
So where’s the alternative to Facebook?
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Gonna need a citation for that one to provide some context and details.
Re: Re: Re:
We call it Twitter. Or Instagram. Or Gab. Or…well, you get the point — any social media service competes with Facebook by default. That some services lack sizeable userbases when compared to Facebook doesn’t matter.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Instagram isn’t so much an alternative to Facebook when they’re owned by the same company. It’s like saying Fox Entertainment is an alternative to Disney.
'We're assholes sure, but even we have rules.'
Funny that, even sites that are willing to host the filth that gets kicked off of the platforms that people actually use have TOS’ that allow them to delete content on a whim so people can’t game the rules, in addition to having rules on what not to post… it’s almost as though even they know that it would be utter insanity to have a real ‘anything legal goes’ platform, putting them ahead of the politicians that are trying to force platforms to host speech they don’t want to and/or only moderate content that exactly violates the precise TOS.
Re: 'We're assholes sure, but even we have rules.'
Remember – these guys really support censorship. Almost every right-wing cesspool has rampant banning and deletion of posts that don’t fit their narratives and/or actually supports things like anti-racism, gay rights or science. You won’t find them whining about those, because their bigoted friends aren’t affected and they agree with the bans.
The good news is Devin Nunes’ Cow has followed him to Parler, so at least he won’t be lonely.
Re: Re:
Let’s hope he has mooved there permanently.
Re: Re: Re:
To greener pastures…
"the hot new Twitter-wannabe service"
But, wait, I was informed that once you got booted off Twitter there was literally no competition and the affected lost all ability to speak! Could it be that those people are just greedy assholes who only want access to all the ad money they lost by being too offensive for the advertisers to pay them?
"that’s a trick they’re playing,"
It’s all just a Parler trick.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Strange Times
The delusion is strong in this one named Mike.
As an asshole/troll I had to join Parler. Yeah, I read their stupid Community Standards statement.
It’s so sad to read a writer who thinks there is no censorship of conservatives on social media. It makes you wonder how someone could be so blind and stupid. I mean really. It’s stupid, Mike.
Not just blind. Willful stupidity. Oh well. Haters gotta hate.
Re: Strange Times
Do you ever get tired of projection?
Re: Strange Times
As an asshole/troll I had to join Parler. Yeah, I read their stupid Community Standards statement.
So you agreed to pay them if they get sued? Not very bright.
It’s so sad to read a writer who thinks there is no censorship of conservatives on social media.
I’ve been asking for evidence of this for years now. No one ever gives it.
Either way, what’s your opinion of Parler kicking off a bunch of users today?
It makes you wonder how someone could be so blind and stupid. I mean really. It’s stupid, Mike.
Believing what the evidence shows is stupid? Yeah. Okay.
You believe that conservatives are being censored. Prove it. I’ll wait.
Not just blind. Willful stupidity. Oh well. Haters gotta hate.
That’s just blatant projection.
Re: Strange Times
Then it should be easy for you to provide evidence of said censorship.
Yupp, then they get moderated or banned. After which they have a total meltdown and scream about bias against conservatives.
Re:
Three things.
This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.
Marvel Geospatial - a solution for accurate data mapping and man
We at Marvel Geospatial, provide an ultimate Geospatial Solution with accurate data mapping and management. Our service includes GIS, BIM and LiDAR mounted UAVs.
visit https://www.marvelgeospatial.com/
The problem with Twitter isn't they take down extremist hate
The problem isn’t that Twitter takes down content from NAZIs and white supremacists. The problem is that @Jack Dorsey’s Twitter Thought Police subtly skew what you read, by quietly shadowbanning, deboosting, and omitting from your feed tweets from responsible conservatives & Republicans… who happen to disagree with @Jack.
The Twitter Thought Police don’t usually delete the things with which @Jack would disagree. They just don’t show them to nearly as many people as they do the things which his fellow leftists tweet.
That’s how most leftists prefer to "debate" — by censorship, and well-poisoning. Their modus operandi is to silence other opinions, rather than refute them. It’s presumably because they’ve learned the hard way that that’s they only way they can "win" many arguments. Open dialogue and respectful argumentation don’t tend to work very well for them, because facts and evidence seem to have a conservative bias.
Unfortunately, such censorship is a dagger to the heart of democracy. Who needs Russians to hack our elections, when we have @Jack and his ilk?
Re: The problem with Twitter isn't they take down extremist hate
Sounds very much like you guys should be using one of the sites set up to deal with people like you, rather than whining that other people have different opinions (I will not that the things you complain about are just as prevalent in right-wing cesspools, but you don’t whine about those).
Yet, you people never do that, you wish to force others to bow to your will instead of letting the market decided. Why is that?
"Who needs Russians to hack our elections, when we have @Jack and his ilk?"
If a single private website is enough to destroy your elections, you have bigger problems than the identity of that website.
Fuck you
Re: Re:
Awww… did someone accidentally crawl out of their safe sapce?
mature russian mom
Why romantics love an extremely good ‘how we met’ story
LifestyleRelationshipsDatingJana Hocking on why romantics love a great ‘how we <a href=https://www.love-sites.com/10-simple-rules-of-dating-shy-asian-brides/>dating Asian brides</a> met’ storyPodcaster Jana Hocking thought she’d met the very best man a tall, Country boy products he opened his mouth. Here’s what went down.Jana Hocking3 minutes readAugust 12, 2021 8:13PM’Marry me’: Man’s amazed dating profile winI love a we met story. It like a drug to romantics like ourselves. The more ludicrous, dramatic or insane, the better!solutions that? You met after you got your heel stuck in a train track and he swooped in and saved you the day the train hit you. Amazzzzzing!But let be truthful, Most love stories start with unconsciously spilt his drink on me at a bar or swiped right on him on Tinder Snore.So when a truly awesome story gets here, I like take my full attention! hence, When Felicity Harley came onto my Kinda Sorta Dating podcast and shared the story plot of how she met her AFL legend husband, ben, I was simply addicted. It got me wondering about all the times I dared to be a little adventurous in my dating life, hoping of having an awesome we met story to tell at our wedding.The first time I thought I had stumbled into my own epic at first sight moment was when I went to a bar opening only a decade ago. I was dressed up to the nines and wanting a free cocktail. Across from me was a tall guy with blue eyes and a country look about him.You know why, All big, Rugged shoulders and a the heck am I doing within the center of the city on a Wednesday night kinda vibe.So when he not so subtly made his way from the other side of the bar to come stand next to me to order his drink and make very casual chatter, i believed, efficient on here!related: Two second test to tell if you should marryJana Hocking was dressed up to the nines and ready for ‘the one’.Turns out his family came from the minuscule town that my family also comes from.He too had moved to the city on a whim, And as the night went on and we discovered more and more in common against each other, We joked around that there’s a chance we had met our future husband/wife.It wasn until much further in the night, After one too a lot of those free cocktails that it took a turn for the worst.
[—-]