Posted on 11/19/2020 11:21:10 AM PST by conservative98
I noticed something was up on Twitter the past few days when I could no longer find Dan Bongino’s account by searching for his username or name. It is also no longer a suggestion if you are on other similar accounts. They are hiding his account. It used to come up under suggestions or people whenever you searched his name, but this is what you get now:
Not Dan Bongino
@danbonginoknows
Dan Bongino
@DanBong38802342
Dan Bongino is a Terrorist
@BonginoIs
Bongino himself cancelled his twitter account he is NOW on Parler!!!!
When someone tells the truth, they are immediately silenced.
Now go on someone else’s account and search for Dan Bongino or dbongino, everything but the real Bongino account comes up.
Outbrain? Like their brain fell out?
Apt.
Bongino has rumble and parler
@dbongino Wow, Twitter is working hard in hiding you deep into the feed— Yoni Wolf (@wolfyoni) November 12, 2020
I only read twitter and am not sure how to even do that.
:)
So this is the dude bragging about how he owns Parler
crying about being deplatformed? Is he not getting
enough attention or making enough money for having an opinion?
Bongenious shows his true colors.
For example go to Mark Levin’s twitter page:
https://twitter.com/marklevinshow
Then in the search box type in dan bongino, bongino, or dbongino.
Everything but Dan’s twitter page comes up. It was never like this before. Someone at Twitter is working hard to hide his account. It also used to be a suggested site on Mark’s page.
How very fascist of Gay Rasputin.
There are 14 punctuation marks that are commonly used in English grammar. They are the period, question mark, exclamation point, comma, semicolon, colon, dash, hyphen, parentheses, brackets, braces, apostrophe, quotation marks, and ellipsis. Following their correct usage will make your writing easier to read and more appealing.
As a sentence ender:
Jane and Jack went to the market. After an abbreviation: Her son, John Jones Jr., was born on Dec. 6, 2008.
Use a question mark (?) to indicate a direct question when placed at the end of a sentence.
When did Jane leave for the market? The exclamation point (!) is used when a person wants to express a sudden outcry or add emphasis.
Within dialogue: "Holy cow!" screamed Jane. To emphasize a point: My mother-in-law's rants make me furious!
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I've been restricted and censored on Facebook. Please make sure you transition to Parler ASAP as I will be leaving Facebook probably by the end of the year.https://t.co/3RnjMoknfj pic.twitter.com/Yaek45yBXI— Mark R. Levin (@marklevinshow) November 19, 2020
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