Elon Musk runs poll on whether Twitter should grant mass amnesty to suspended accounts



Elon Musk may be poised to reinstate scads of previously banned Twitter accounts.

"Should Twitter offer a general amnesty to suspended accounts, provided that they have not broken the law or engaged in egregious spam?" he asked in a Twitter poll.

A majority of the votes so far have been cast in favor of the business tycoon's mass account amnesty proposal.

\u201cShould Twitter offer a general amnesty to suspended accounts, provided that they have not broken the law or engaged in egregious spam?\u201d
— Elon Musk (@Elon Musk) 1669225589

Since taking over the social media company, Musk has already reinstated some accounts.

He restored former President Donald Trump's Twitter account after running a poll in which a majority of the votes supported reinstatement. "The people have spoken. Trump will be reinstated. Vox Populi, Vox Dei," Musk tweeted, using Latin that means "the voice of the people (is) the voice of God."

\u201cThe people have spoken. \n\nTrump will be reinstated.\n\nVox Populi, Vox Dei.\u201d
— Elon Musk (@Elon Musk) 1668905605

Earlier this year, Musk said that if he owned Twitter he would reinstate Trump — Musk described the move to kick Trump off of the platform as "morally wrong and flat-out stupid." Trump was booted from the platform last year near the end of his White House tenure.

Musk has also already reinstated the personal account of Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia — that account had been permanently suspended in January.

In October, Musk tweeted, "Twitter will be forming a content moderation council with widely diverse viewpoints. No major content decisions or account reinstatements will happen before that council convenes." But on Tuesday, he wrote that "a large coalition of political/social activist groups agreed not to try to kill Twitter by starving us of advertising revenue if I agreed to this condition. They broke the deal."

Musk has agreed with conservative filmmaker and author Dinesh D'Souza that Twitter censorship has been targeting conservatives, but not leftists.

"We don’t hear much about Democrats and leftists being let back on Twitter. Why? Because they were never kicked off in the first place. Their lies and misinformation simply escaped all scrutiny. Censorship has been deployed as a one-way operation against conservatives," D'Souza tweeted on Monday, tagging Musk.

"Correct," Musk replied on Tuesday.

\u201c@DineshDSouza Correct\u201d
— Dinesh D'Souza (@Dinesh D'Souza) 1669070209

Elon Musk agrees with Dinesh D'Souza that Twitter censorship has been 'a one-way operation against conservatives'



Business magnate Elon Musk concurred with conservative filmmaker and author Dinesh D'Souza's assertion that censorship on Twitter has been a one-way street that targets conservatives, but not leftists.

"We don’t hear much about Democrats and leftists being let back on Twitter. Why? Because they were never kicked off in the first place. Their lies and misinformation simply escaped all scrutiny. Censorship has been deployed as a one-way operation against conservatives," D'Souza tweeted on Monday, tagging Musk.

"Correct," Musk replied on Tuesday.

\u201c@DineshDSouza Correct\u201d
— Dinesh D'Souza (@Dinesh D'Souza) 1669070209

Since purchasing the social media company, Musk has been reinstating some previously banished accounts, including the account of former President Donald Trump, who was kicked off of the platform last year during the waning days of his presidency. GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's personal Twitter account, which was permanently suspended in January, has also been restored.

"It is shocking how many journalists viscously [sic] attack free speech, but somehow think they’re the good guys!" Musk also tweeted on Tuesday.

\u201c@waitbutwhy It is shocking how many journalists viscously attack free speech, but somehow think they\u2019re the good guys!\u201d
— Tim Urban (@Tim Urban) 1669136302

"Imagine if @ElonMusk were actually the right-wing bogeyman these spoiled lefty journos pretend he is and he decided to turn the tables and ban all left-wing 'fake news' from @Twitter. There'd be nothing left for them to publish!" Kyle Becker tweeted.

"As is obvious to all but the media, there is not one permanent ban on even the most far left account spouting utter lie," Musk replied. "Not even Associated Press with their completely fictional report on Russian missiles hitting Poland that carried severe consequences for escalating the war," he added.

\u201c@kylenabecker @Twitter As is obvious to all but the media, there is not one permanent ban on even the most far left account spouting utter lies\u201d
— Kyle Becker (@Kyle Becker) 1669124834

Earlier this month, Musk urged "independent-minded voters" to back Republicans during 2022 congressional election contests.

"To independent-minded voters: Shared power curbs the worst excesses of both parties, therefore I recommend voting for a Republican Congress, given that the Presidency is Democratic," he tweeted on the eve of Election Day. "To be clear, my historical party affiliation has been Independent, with an actual voting history of entirely Democrat until this year," he wrote. "And I'm open to the idea of voting Democrat again in the future," he added.

In April, Musk tweeted that "today’s Democratic Party has been hijacked by extremists."

\u201c@waitbutwhy I strongly supported Obama for President, but today\u2019s Democratic Party has been hijacked by extremists\u201d
— Tim Urban (@Tim Urban) 1651195701

Chris Wallace's new Sunday show bombs in debut



The title of the new CNN Sunday show hosted by Chris Wallace, "Who's Talking to Chris Wallace?", might ask a remarkably appropriate question, though perhaps not in the way its creators and producers intended. "Who's Talking?" recently debuted to abysmal numbers, leaving some of Wallace's colleagues and supporters scrambling to spin the news favorably.

At 7 p.m. Eastern time last Sunday, Wallace's show premiered on the network. Even though CNN promoted the show heavily, it drew just 401,000 total viewers and a measly 44,000 viewers in the coveted 25-54 age demographic, according to Nielsen Media Research.

Comparing those numbers to the show's competition and to other CNN shows that previously aired in the same time slot demonstrates just how poorly the "Who's Talking" launch went. The numbers represent a 29% drop from the 7 p.m. overall network average in 2022 and a 64% drop among the 25-54 group. By contrast, "Sunday Night in America with Trey Gowdy" over at Wallace's former network, Fox News, drew a staggering 1.3 million total viewers, more than three times Wallace's audience. It's worth noting, however, that Gowdy's show debuted in June 2021, so it may already have established a core audience.

Still, Wallace has had difficulty finding his niche since he left Fox earlier this year after 18 years with the network. He signed with CNN for a hefty salary between $6 and $10 million a year. At the time, Jeff Zucker was still the president of CNN Worldwide, and Zucker and the network were eagerly anticipating the launch of CNN+, a new subscription-based streaming service on which Wallace was supposed to star.

But like Wallace's new show, CNN+ tanked. It debuted on March 29 and was canceled by April 28, leaving hosts and staff reeling. Meanwhile, Zucker resigned, and new president Chris Licht began to reshuffle the priorities at CNN. "Who's Talking," which was initially intended to air four days a week on CNN+, was then reworked into a Sunday evening show on network TV.

Despite the discouraging launch of "Who's Talking," CNN remains encouraged about its future. "We’re thrilled with the launch and Chris’s news-making interviews," a network spokesperson said. The unnamed spokesperson also noted that three episodes of the show, including the premiere, were made available for streaming on Friday, and streaming viewers would not have been included in the numbers.

"Live domestic TV viewers represent only a fraction of [the show's] intended audience," another source at CNN reportedly said, suggesting that ratings don't tell the whole story.

Still, CNN's optimism hasn't kept other media outlets and personalities from hammering the poor showing:

\u201cFormer Fox News host Chris Wallace suffered embarrassingly low ratings for the debut of his new CNN show. https://t.co/GPMXUoLvNi\u201d
— Newsmax (@Newsmax) 1664293337
\u201cNo one watched Chris Wallace's new CNN show.\n\nRatings:\nhttps://t.co/GN9EPGGgUT\u201d
— OutKick (@OutKick) 1664298763
\u201cHe's lost all of his fans.\nhttps://t.co/KUrFd11Vq0\u201d
— Dinesh D'Souza (@Dinesh D'Souza) 1664298040


\u201cFoxNews made Chris Wallace, didn\u2019t need him. Ratings don\u2019t lie. https://t.co/V5xQt7SWfQ\u201d
— Cernovich (@Cernovich) 1664245269

The next episode of "Who's Talking with Chris Wallace?" will feature an interview with former MLB slugger Alex Rodriguez.