Big Tech deplatforms anti-deplatforming conference



Under the glaring Las Vegas sun, a conference called RePlatform took place last Friday at the Horseshoe Casino. The conference showcased companies fighting the trend of giant corporations de-banking and deplatforming dissenting views. In an ironic twist, the conference was deplatformed by a Big Tech company.

Stripe, one of America's major payment processors, has withdrawn its services from the freedom economy conference RePlatform Vegas. Despite this setback, the conference proceeded as planned Friday, March 8, to Sunday, March 10, in Las Vegas. The event aimed to connect companies, investors, and consumers within the parallel economy in response to the deplatforming efforts of corporate America.

During the preparations for RePlatform, the organizers encountered multiple attempts at cancellation. The organizers allege that Stripe withheld tens of thousands of dollars essential for the conference's production, thereby jeopardizing the efforts of this new startup.

David Ragsdale, RePlatform's chief executive officer, spoke with Blaze News to recount the conference’s challenges.

“During our heaviest marketing blitz, Stripe sequestered our funds on the basis of one refund request, forcing us to pause sales to switch to GabPay and changing the entire nature of our conference into a B2B networking event. The fact that most of Stripe’s competitors are at RePlatform is interesting,” Ragsdale explained.

“This is why we need the parallel economy to grow faster, proving the point of RePlatform.”

Fortunately, a featured company at the conference was able to step up and handle payment processing. GabPay is an alternative payment service offering online, real-time transactions; credit card merchant processing; and banking services.

GabPay COO Dan Eddy explained why what happened to RePlatform is emblematic of a larger trend in the financial services sector: Companies and individuals can lose access to financial networks at the arbitrary whim of Big Tech.

“Stripe’s growth and technology offering is nothing short of amazing. However, its seemingly arbitrary process closing accounts for community guidelines violations is crushing small businesses,” Eddy told me.

While it was a massive inconvenience for the organizers and attendees, it does highlight why a conference like RePlatform is so essential at this moment, as a culture of censorship is permeating major tech and financial platforms. This trend of canceling voices that speak out on issues as diverse as COVID-19 to the war in Ukraine should be very concerning for anyone who cares about free speech.

It’s bad enough to be removed from social media, but when individuals and organizations are barred from participating in standard banking and financial services, it signals a terrifying new front in the war on free speech. China has used this tactic to great effect to silence domestic political opponents, and sadly, it’s becoming a reality for Americans critical of mainstream opinions.

I spoke with Joe Rodgers, the publisher of Bitcoin magazine, about this trend.

“I was de-banked from Bank of America, so this is not something we're unfamiliar with. Amex quit credit card processing for us because we're a Bitcoin business, so we’re unfortunately familiar with this reality,” Rodgers said. “I think that's why this conference is important.”

Despite the setbacks and the ominous trend of censorship, the attendees I spoke with were excited about the future. Events like RePlatform highlight a movement that cares deeply about freedom of speech and is building the tools needed to fight back.

Stripe did not respond to a request for comment.

Amazon alternative set to go public later this month touted as a 'patriotic parallel economy' that will enable conservatives to keep their money out of woke activists' pockets



PublicSq., a marketplace touted as a pro-life, pro-family, and pro-freedom "patriotic parallel economy," is set to go public.

This initiative is the latest effort by conservatives to divest from a liberal marketplace that appears increasingly antipathetic to their traditional values and hell-bent on their subordination.

Michael Seifert, the company's founder and CEO, announced in a webinar Monday that PublicSq. was going public through the SPAC Colombier Acquisition Corp. (NYSE: $CLBR) on July 20.

Businesswire previously reported that following the business combination, the combined company will be renamed "PSQ Holdings, Inc." and will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbols "PSQH" and "PSQH WS."

According to Seifert, his marketplace will accommodate patriots "passionate about putting your values into the commerce experience, voting with your wallets, [and] supporting the small businesses that make this nations so special."

The CEO told "Just the News, No Noise" that "capital markets are in desperate need of democratization. ... Because unfortunately, the capital markets have been robbed by ESG mandated funds and DEI philosophies. And just like there's a drive for consumers to spend their money in alignment with their values, there's also an equally strong drive for investors to invest their money with companies that do not hate them and actually want to promote America. So that's what we're here to do."

Seifert suggested that the initiative was born, in part, of a reaction to woke corporations' activist responses to the Dobbs ruling.

Following the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Amazon and a number of companies that peddle their wares on its platform vowed to reimburse those employees who travel across state lines to execute their unborn children. The reality that consumers would be made complicit by way of subsidy struck Seifert as abhorrent.

Omeed Malik, CEO and chairman of Colombier Acquisition Corp., recently underscored the urgency of the initiative, telling Donald Trump Jr. on his podcast "Triggered" that "we can continue to b*** and moan like we have for over a decade, or we can actually create some solutions."

While boycotts of woke products have proven successful in recent weeks and months, as Bud Light and Ben & Jerry's have discovered the hard way, those divestitures have not necessarily translated into support for conservative brands, despite redirection efforts.

Unlike on Amazon and other marketplaces captive to woke doctrines, Seifert said that "every single one of the vendors that have joined this platform have actually agreed to respect our core values. And a majority of the businesses will then give discounts to consumers that are there just for being PublicSq. members."

PublicSq.'s stated core values are: "We will always protect the family unit and celebrate the sanctity of every life"; "We believe small businesses and the communities who support them are the backbone of our economy"; "We believe in the greatness of this Nation and will always fight to defend it"; and "Our Constitution is non-negotiable — government isn't the source of our rights, so it can't take them away."

The values are evidently not empty rhetoric. Seifert has committed to giving his employees a $5,000 "baby" bonus in the event that they have or adopt a baby, stressing, "Strong families make a strong nation."

Seifert indicated that the platform presently has over 1.1 million Americans registered as members already and over 55,000 vendors covering the full gamut of conservative needs.

"Whether you're looking for a bank, new meat, subscription boxes, or hair care products, or pants, or athletic clothing, you name it, we've got it represented on the platform," said Seifert.

Membership on the platform is free for both consumers and businesses.

For conservatives shopping outside PublicSq., Consumers' Research introduced an alert system earlier this year that helps grocery shoppers spot products peddled by corporate behemoths that have a hand in the advancement of the left's woke agenda.

TheBlaze previously reported that "Woke Alert" is a free text service that notifies shoppers which brands "put progressive activists and their dangerous agendas ahead of customers."

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