Quote:
Originally Posted by Vikingjunior
Well what I posted was 100% fact and well documented and the person in question did a interview on 60 minutes confirming what I posted. It doesn't matter if it's true or not it matters how it may make one side look. It's all nonsense and congress needs to make social media a public square.
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Congress doesn't even make its OWN website a public square. They decide when someone can and cannot post a comment, under what circumstances, on which topics.
"Social media" is a category, it's not an actual thing. Facebook, NextDoor, YouTube, Twitter, etc are all private property made available to public viewing, and membership-only participation. In order to post on them you must be a member. In order to be a member you must agree to follow the rules. You must accept that if they decide you aren't following the rules, THEY have the right to kick you off their platform. And you maintain the right to leave, if you don't like it.
NextDoor has a policy about not posting about politics, at all. If you comment about something you saw on TV, and that TV show was about politics, then by extension - you are talking about politics. Whether the information was factual or not, if it was about politics, then you violated NextDoor's policy.