Regular viewers of our podcast know about the bet I made with our favorite weapons inspector concerning his Twitter account, which he has not been able to access since April 6 of last year, when the previous regime suspended him for supposedly violating rules against abuse and harassment. The accusation couldn’t have been more preposterous. Here is the tweet for which Scott was suspended:
Obviously, the real reason for the suspension was that Scott had expressed an opinion that conflicted with the message of scoundrels who then pressured Twitter to censor him. When Elon Musk took over the company in October, I was very optimistic that Scott would soon be back on Twitter. My reasoning was simple: Elon sounds like a sincere proponent of free speech, and minimizing censorship is good for Twitter. His critics have been saying Elon shouldn’t be trusted, but I’ve never heard or seen a persuasive argument that it would somehow benefit him to falsely and repeatedly claim he opposes viewpoint discrimination. If he didn’t really intend to restore free speech to a significant degree, he wouldn’t need to say anything about it. Why set himself up to be ridiculed as a phony?
My good friend Scott has steadfastly maintained that he would never be allowed to tweet again, unless he agreed to delete his war crime allegation. Which he didn’t want to do. By contrast, I’ve been arguing that it’s more likely Elon just hasn’t focused on Scott’s situation yet. So we placed a bet: If Scott were not back on Twitter by the time we travel to Texas for events tentatively planned in the early Spring, I would buy Scott a beer, and if he were tweeting merrily by then, Scott would treat me to a glass of wine. High stakes, yes. But I’m a little bit dangerous, and Scott isn’t one to turn down a challenge.
I recently became frustrated, and decided to make some noise that would get Elon’s attention in order to find out once and for all why Scott was still locked out of his account:
Although many of Scott’s supporters retweeted my pitch to the Chief Twit, we heard nothing from Elon or anyone at Twitter after three days had elapsed. So on January 7 I sought the attention of the five Twitter Files reporters who are in the process of disclosing how various government actors infiltrated Twitter to run a propaganda operation:
It could just be a coincidence, but Scott was finally given access to his Twitter account today:
We’ll discuss the situation, and Scott will answer questions from the audience, on Episode 35 of Ask the Inspector Tuesday.
Wonderful, Jeff, a dangerous man! Given that I do not use Twitter, I will rely on your later reporting to see - as Scott Ritter commented - will see how long it lasts! 😘😇😎
About time too! Welcome back Scott Ritter. Of course many of us watched him on "freedom platforms", but this will his extend his reach to many who do not venture out of the mainstream world.
So thank you Elon Musk. (And thank you Jeff, for your tireless lobbying for this twitter resurrection.)