by Eric Lendrum
A handful of conservative organizations have signed onto a letter to House Republicans stating their opposition to any proposed anti-trust action against Big Tech companies, according to Breitbart.
The 10-page letter, addressed to Congressmen Ken Buck (R-Colo.), Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), and Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), declared on behalf of these groups that “both sides of the aisle are pushing for the weaponization of anti-trust, either as a tool to punish corporate actors with whom they disagree or out of a presupposition that big is bad.”
Among the most prominent signatories were the American Conservative Union, the Eagle Forum, Americans for Tax Reform, and FreedomWorks, along with at least 16 other groups. Of these groups, at least five have received massive donations from the tech giant Google, including the American Conservative Union and Americans for Tax Reform.
According to Breitbart’s sources, Google representatives helped write the letter on behalf of the conservative organizations.
Big Tech companies have come under major scrutiny over the course of the Trump presidency, especially in recent weeks as various tech giants, including Apple, Google, and Amazon, have conspired together to silence potential competitors such as the alternative social media platform Parler. Twitter has also faced widespread global backlash for its permanent suspension of President Donald Trump’s account, after baselessly accusing him of “inciting violence.”
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Eric Lendrum reports for American Greatness.
We shouldn’t really be surprised that so-called “conservative” groups are carrying water for Google. Most of these organizations care more about preserving some irrelevant abstract idea of “conservatism” than actually doing anything to preserve individual rights. The ACLU, for all its flaws is more likely to be on the “right” side of censorship issues.
While I can agree in principle that anti-trust laws shouldn’t be “weaponized” to go after companies for political purposes, Google, Apple, and Amazon appear to have blatantly violated anti-trust laws and engaged in a conspiracy in restraint of trade. The evidence is plain as day in their coordinated attempt to put Parler out of business, and they should be prosecuted for that…not that it’s likely to happen in a Lieden administration, especially since they were probably operating under direct orders from the Liar-In-Chief himself.