Free Speech

Open discussion forum about NESARA, Dove of Oneness, Patrick Bellringer, Truth Warrior and all the others spinning the NESARA tale. Includes the latest rumors about the Galacticans comings to Earth and Jennifer's blood ozonation machine.

Moderator: Deep Knight

Deep Knight
Posts: 5397
Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 4:42 am
Location: Washington DC

Free Speech

Post by Deep Knight »

Not about internet fraud, but about an American right I use daily here "for effect" and to follow and inform you about the case of Sam Seder.

First, a little of my history here. I started posting pretty normally, but soon found Dove's NESARA stuff so silly I couldn't resist pretending it was true and then taking that to its logical end. So, I invented "Deep Knight," originally an agent of the New World Order undercover with the "White Knights" who were working to announce NESARA and UPS everybody $billions in gold. For example, when she noted that St. Germain would suddenly appear from thin air to give some government official some spine and move the announcement forward, I had the same scene with the official getting a heart attack from the surprise, thus delaying things instead. You get the idea. This morphed into Deep Knight simply being an evil agent of the Illuminati, partly due to Dove herself. She revealed that Quatloos was an Illuminti mouthpiece, and that I was working for Military Intelligence out of Ft. Benning, GA. I, of course, confirmed these immediately, and started to riff on this. Dove also called me "perverse" and I took that to be in a sexual way, mostly because of 60's secret agent movies like James Bond. You know, Bond gets in a jam, has sex with some woman, and comes out smelling like a rose. Great work if you can get it. Combined with Dove's penchant for impossibly-big numbers (in her case, in dollars, in mine, supermodels), Deep Knight suddenly had millions of 'em, which of course required lines, conveyor belts, and a suspension of disbelief to maintain this impossible "piece rate."

Add to this the fact the the person who is really Deep Knight is both silly and uninhibited, and over the years you get thousands of statements that taken in or out of context look really bad. Terrible, indefensible things. I mean, Deep has killed thousands of innocents callously, often using their hideous deaths as a prop for some sick joke. Even worse, he's promiscuous (technically "loose," Playboy's Unabashed Dictionary more-accurately defined it as "having more sex than you do," which in his case holds for the populations of Wyoming and Montana combined), and his prose about this degrades both of the sexes and several species of animals.

What does this have to do with vineyards in Greenland? Sam Seder got into trouble for the following:


In 2009, many mainstream voices, notably Washington Post columnists Anne Applebaum and Richard Cohen, defended Roman Polanski against rape accusations, arguing that he was the victim of judicial misconduct and noting that the victim (who was 13 years old at the time of rape) had forgiven Polanski. The broader defense of Polanski, in Hollywood and beyond, also seemed partly out of respect for the director’s artistic genius. Thus, Seder tweeted:

Image

[Never having took a class in film, I had to look up mise en scene which is "the process of setting a stage, with regard to placement of actors, scenery, properties, etc."]

Seder’s tweet is clearly a sarcastic jibe directed at Polanki’s apologists. But Cernovich and his allies ginned up a controversy, writing to advertisers at both Seder’s podcast and at MSNBC. The campaign against Seder was clearly done in bad faith ... Corporate fear prevailed, and MSNBC cut ties with Seder.

https://newrepublic.com/article/146117/ ... ree-speech

That was 2 days ago. But this story has a happy ending (I love those), as just today:

... Sam Seder will be offered his MSNBC contributor job back and plans to accept, according to multiple MSNBC sources.

Seder and MSNBC were set to part ways when his contributor contract expired next year, with reports indicating the departure had to do with a 2009 tweet from Seder surfaced by the ... Mike Cernovich. After initially caving in to ... internet outrage over the tweet, MSNBC reversed its decision to not renew Seder’s contract.

“I appreciate MSNBC’s thoughtful reconsideration and willingness to understand the cynical motives of those who intentionally misrepresented my tweet for their own toxic, political purposes,” Seder said in a statement to The Intercept. “We are experiencing an important and long overdue moment of empowerment for the victims of sexual assault and of reckoning for their perpetrators. I’m proud that MSNBC and its staff have set a clear example of the need to get it right.”

“Sometimes you just get one wrong,” said MSNBC President Phil Griffin in a statement to The Intercept, “and that’s what happened here. We made our initial decision for the right reasons — because we don’t consider rape to be a funny topic to be joked about. But we’ve heard the feedback, and we understand the point Sam was trying to make in that tweet was actually in line with our values, even though the language was not. Sam will be welcome on our air going forward.”

Kudos.
"Follow the Money"
Deep Knight
Posts: 5397
Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 4:42 am
Location: Washington DC

Re: Free Speech

Post by Deep Knight »

Late Yesterday, NESARA News was kind enough to spread the follow-up attempt. LOTS redacted, not to hide anything, but to avoid politics as much as possible. If you're interested, it's all over the internet today ("#1 trending," according to this one site) as conspiracy-friendly sites are pumping it.

Wednesday, December 6, 2017
RURAL AMERICA A 'CORE THREAT' TO DEMOCRACY?

MSNBC HOST JOY REID CALLS RURAL AMERICA A 'CORE THREAT' TO DEMOCRACY?

WHAT? The farmers, milk producers, cattlemen, coal miners , loggers and military recruits are a 'core threat'? TO WHAT? The libturbs and traitors??!!
...
Unsatisfied with being able to bully and abuse these groups by dominating state-level government and the House of Representatives, they demand more power.
...
Without rural America, they wouldn’t have the raw materials to live their clueless, sheltered lives. And yet, they rail against every reasonable policy and approach that empowers the producers of our nation to succeed.
...
[BTW, the last 2/3 of the text was an ad for the cut 'n paster's book, which has nothing to do with this "incident"]

Posted by Olive Oyl at 7:55:00 PM

What the @#$! is this about? On Nov 25, as part of a long discussion about changing demographics, Kyle Griffin Tweeted:

By 2040, about 70% of Americans are expected to live in the 15 largest states. They will have only 30 senators representing them, while the remaining 30% of Americans will have 70 senators representing them - Link to WSJ article on this.

Many, many responses, most "this is good/bad for my political party so I love/hate it." Joy Reid joined in with:


This is the core threat to our democracy. The rural minority -- the people @JYSexton just wrote a long thread about -- have and will continue to have disproportionate power over the urban majority.

The referenced "long thread" appears to be musing about the 3rd Tweeter's rural family and their acceptance of authoritarianism as long as it was "on their side," and how that ultimately would turn on them.

Pretty strong stuff. But is any of what I consider an obvious meaning communicated to the citizen who uses NESARA News to be informed? Nah, instead you get "rural" and "core threat to democracy." But there's more, another keyboard warrior went way back into Joy's 2007-9 Blogging past and found:


The Twitter user noted Reid repeatedly referred to Crist as "Miss Charlie" in her posts and speculated that his 2008 marriage to a woman was a fraud and part of a “veep marketing strategy.”

During the time she wrote those blog posts, Reid was a morning talk radio host and blogger covering Florida politics.

"Among the frequent subjects of my posts was then-governor Charlie Crist, at the time a conservative Republican, whose positions on issues like gay marriage and adoption by same-sex couples in Florida shared headlines with widely rumored reports that he was hiding his sexual orientation," Reid wrote in her apology.

"At no time have I intentionally sought to demean or harm the LGBT community, which includes people whom I deeply love. My goal, in my ham-handed way, was to call out potential hypocrisy," Reid added.

Crist, who served as Florida’s governor from 2007 to 2011, supported a state constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage in 2008.

I will be interested to see how this plays out.
"Follow the Money"
Jeffrey
Admiral of the Quatloosian Seas
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Re: Free Speech

Post by Jeffrey »

While we’re on the topic, I did some more research and it appears the consensus of the forum was correct (as usual) regarding the discussion about Stormfront. Was not able to find case law supporting the view that the government should protect free speech from intervention by private parties. Closest I could find was a case that said mall owners could not prevent the handing out of pamphlets at the mall but that was a narrow case and apparently there have been subsequent cases saying the opposite.