Community notes is one of the greatest innovations in all of social media. The ability to prominently call out the lies of the elite & powerful in real time, where even their own fans can see it, is a game changer.
Hassan later tried to claim Community notes was a tool of the right to target him, and that got noted too š They canāt handle this.
As for Hassan, really hard to decide on stupid or liar on this one.
As with the leftist freak out over ābanned booksā this is not banning books, itās still easy to get Harry Potter and bookstores should be able to limit whatever books they want for whatever reason. But not only does it show a double standard, the rationale is far less justifiable than removing certain content from school libraries. At least there the justification was the content of certain books are inappropriate for children, clearly not every book should be available in a school library. Here, thereās no argument about the content they just donāt like the authorās politics!
Because news came out about his letter to the FBI, revealing he was a nutcase. The letter was rambling and incoherent, claiming he was trained by the US military off the books, and that Walz had instructed him to kill Amy Klobuchar so he could run for Senate. None of it made any sense (Walz is not running for Senate) and none of the assassinations made any sense, even in a diabolical way.
Nearly all of his hit list was Democrats (including Walz) and abortion clinics, but he was supposedly working for Walz?! Plus, one of the guys he killed wasnāt even on his list, and others were no longer in office or deceased. None of it makes sense from any coherent angle.
Basically, it appears the guy was mentally ill and neither the left or right can use the incident to push their agendas anymore, so the story was dropped.
This is so dumb. First, this means LA began as Spanish land founded to support Spanish missions (i.e. colonialism). Which contradicts their entire premise. But the reality is that Los Angeles is a quintessential American city.
āŖļøWhen the US acquired California in the 1840s, LA was a small town of less than 2,000 people. It was basically nothing. It became large only after the gold rush and the railroads completed in the 1870-80s, which brought thousands of new settlers and a booming commercial center.
āŖļøBut LA had a major issue limiting its growth, no water. It wasnāt until Mulholland found a water source and built an aqueduct down from Northern California that LA had the infrastructure to grow into a major city.
āŖļøThen, a combination of oil, real estate and the film industry caused it to boom in the early 1900s. Post WWII, industries like aerospace continued its spectacular growth. Calling this āMexican landā is a brain dead take. Neither the Mexicans, Spanish nor ...