Friend,
As the nation reels from white-supremacist violence in Gilroy, California, and El Paso, Texas, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is refusing to do anything about his platform's role in fueling hate.
The company has done very little to stop white supremacists on its platform from organizing, fundraising, recruiting and normalizing attacks on women, people of color and other communities. In fact, Twitter continues to provide a megaphone to the racists who planned or participated in Charlottesville’s deadly white-supremacist riot.
Enough is enough: Urge Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey to stand with Black and Brown communities and reject white supremacy.
Thanks—
Jessica
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Friend,
Over the course of only eight days, white-supremacist violence killed dozens of people in tragic mass shootings in communities including Gilroy, California, and El Paso, Texas.
These aren’t the first communities to have mass murder visited upon their doorsteps by white supremacists — nor will they be the last.
As Black and Brown people, we are not safe in the United States. Our communities are under attack. In Gilroy, the shooter even stooped so low as to murder a six-year-old Brown boy. We don’t want to live like this.
And we’re not going to take it lying down.
Tell Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey to reject white supremacy.
As we approach the two-year anniversary of the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, it’s important to take stock of what online platforms have done — or haven’t done — to stop the spread of white supremacy.
While the rally and murder of peaceful protester Heather Heyer served as a wake-up call for many tech companies, Twitter has done very little to stop white supremacists from organizing, fundraising, recruiting and normalizing attacks on women and people of color on its platform. In fact, Twitter continues to provide a megaphone to white supremacists who planned or participated in Charlottesville’s deadly white-supremacist riot.1
Words have consequences. White supremacists, with Trump at the helm, have consistently dehumanized our communities, calling us “invaders,” an “invasion” and an “infestation” on social media — words we saw parroted in the El Paso shooter's manifesto.
Tell Twitter enough is enough.
Twitter has allowed white supremacists to run rampant on its platform, and enabled them to organize real-world events centered on their hateful ideology and publicize their acts of violence. The company’s failure to stand strong against white supremacists is putting people of color, immigrants, religious minorities, LGBTQIA+ people and women — common targets of organized online hate — in danger.
No one has a right to be amplified by online platforms. It’s long past time for Twitter to step up.
Tell Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey to #StopRacistTwitter by banning white supremacists and adopting the Change the Terms coalition's model policies.2
Thanks for all that you do—
Jessica J. González, Free Press Brandi Collins-Dexter, Color Of Change Steven Renderos, Media Justice
P.S. Our communities are under attack, and we’re not going to live like this. Tell Twitter to put the lives of Black and Brown people over its bottom line.
1. “Twitter Still Has a White Nationalist Problem,” HuffPost, May 30, 2019: https://act.freepress.net/go/31757?t=11&akid=13169%2E10296224%2EBhAaq4 2. “Adopt the Terms,” Change the Terms: Reducing Hate Online: https://act.freepress.net/go/31758?t=13&akid=13169%2E10296224%2EBhAaq4 |