Twitter is however dying, and that's... another debate I guess.
In 5 years Twitter will be absolutely nothing like what it was a year ago. But we're still in a transitionary period that's merely starting.
I don't buy in to the idea that twitter is censorship free, or neutral, there seems to be lots of exceptions. But at least it lets a different group of people talk. For a while it seemed like anything that wasn't ultra left coastal liberal views were socially unacceptable (which this article tries go insinuate) but in reality there are lots of perfectly normal perspectives people have.
> It's mostly just people with different political views than the establishment
Who is "the establishment" in this context?
> that are in general far less extreme than the lot of the left wing stuff you see.
Can you help me with some examples of "less extreme" and "left wing stuff" so I can understand your baseline?
> but in reality there are lots of perfectly normal perspectives
What are the "perfectly normal perspectives" here that we're contrasting against "ultra left coast"?
https://web.archive.org/web/20230523210556/https://www.theat...
We have given 6 months for Twitter to completely collapse and the hard truth is, it did not collapse as expected. The doomsters will never admit it and the Atlantic still won't leave Twitter either. In fact, they are still paying for Twitter. [0]
Articles like this, reads like complete cope since Twitter has always been the source of media outrage and attention and they keep resorting to using the platform regardless.