With Elon’s acquisition of X, the demise of the censorship think tank Stanford Internet Observatory, and even YouTube standing up to the commissar bullies at media matters, it is fair to say that internet censorship is on the retreat. One notable and troubling exception to this is the domain of e-mail, a critical topic we’ll be covering extensively in the coming weeks.
Revolver News in particular has been singled out for particularly vicious censorship of our e-mail lists ever since we began exposing the January 6 Fedsurrection. Longtime readers might recall our saga with the disgraced Nandini Jammi, a particularly obsessive nuisance whom Soros put to work full time to harass and intimidate anyone who would advertise with us, as well as any e-mail service (such as Mailchimp) that would dare distribute our e-mails to the hundreds of thousands of Americans who signed up to receive them.
Unfortunately, Nandini was quite successful. Shortly after our launch over four years ago, Revolver collected over 200,000 emails from fans who wanted to receive our content in the mail. Nandini crawled straight out of the sewer and got to work, managing to get Revolver deplatformed from every single company that facilitates mass email sends
Darren Beattie claims he just lost the ability to email conspiracy theories, anti-vaxx disinformation and hate speech to 250k people.
Direct action works, folks!šŖš¼ pic.twitter.com/5ZyEVGrPbb
— Nandini Jammi (@nandoodles) October 25, 2021
If a site like Revolver dares to embarrass the national security state with cutting-edge reporting, such as our coverage of January 6, Nandini is sure to step in. Thereās a reason George Soros hired Nandiniāher aggressive efforts have earned her the appellation of Slumdog Commissar.
CONFIRMED: @twilio (@SendGridās parent co) has terminated Revolver Newsā email account. š¾ https://t.co/A31fZHuuFV pic.twitter.com/jkDJmOkzix
— Nandini Jammi (@nandoodles) November 24, 2021
For over a year, Revolver was simply unable to send its newsletter to the hundreds of thousands of readers who had signed up to receive them, as we were banned from every commercially available email sender known to man. Eventually, we bit the bullet and undertook the laborious and expensive process of building our own email system (with servers and everything) pretty much from scratch. Finally, we were able to send our newsletters to keep our beloved and intelligent audience up to date on all critical matters to the happenings of American politics—or so we thought.
Much to our astonishment and scandal, it recently came to our attention after an audit of our system that nearly half of our subscribers are still unable to receive the newsletters they signed up to receive. Why? It turns out that many major email domains, including Comcast, Yahoo, and Microsoft (and more minor ones, such as Juno), have simply decided to block their users from receiving our newsletter.
Here is MSN (Microsoft):
And Comcast:
And Yahoo:
Even more shocking, it appears that even Congressmen and Senators and their staffers are unable to receive our newsletter. This is troubling, as we have several staffers and congressmen (and a handful of Senators as well) who have signed up to receive our newsletter. It is remarkable to think that this newsletter could be blocked at the domain level from Congress itself. Indeed, a number of our investigative reports have been entered officially into the congressional record, and it is well known that we worked with several congressmen in our research on January 6th.Ā
That many major email providers have prohibited their customers from receiving our newsletter is scandalous, but perhaps not altogether that surprising. Our investigative reporting has for a long time rattled some very powerful feathers. Remember the story of the FBI agent who literally had his security clearance revoked for merely sharing one of our articles?
So what can we do to address this problem? First, there is simply no reason Congressional staffers and Congressmen should be banned from receiving our newsletters, especially when our very investigations have played such a large role in many congressional inquiries in the past and ongoing inquiries in the present. As for Microsoft, Yahoo, and Comcast, we are appealing through official channels, and depending on the result, we may have to increase pressure. Despite the realignment of many major figures in tech toward Trump, Microsoft in particular remains something of a pro-regime holdout, and the company is especially close with Kamala Harris.
Of course, any indictment of Microsoft would be remiss not to include its political leanings. As many of the tech worldās biggest CEOs and venture capitalists have embraced Trump, and even Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently expressed admiration for Trumpās ābadassā reaction to being shot, Microsoft remains steadfastly committed to the Democrat Party, and Kamala Harris in particular. Microsoft President Brad Smith was one of Kamalaās earliest donors in the 2020 primary, and Smith hosted a fundraiser for Kamala at his home as recently asĀ last year.
The most critical thing is to show the forces of censorship that they can’t stop our message from getting out. If you’re a regular reader of Revolver News and haven’t yet subscribed to our e-mail newsletter, do so right nowāand critically, do so using a gmail or proton mail account if possible. The coming weeks and months are going to be critical, and Revolver will as always be covering the bleeding edge of all major political developments.
Given Google’s notorious political leanings, readers might find it surprising that Gmail hasn’t done the same thing as Microsoft, Comcast, etc. in outright censoring our newsletter. Thankfully, they haven’t done this. They have done something far more subtle to reduce our reach, and we have a workaround. More on that later.
In the meantime, besides signing up for the mailing list, you can vote with your dollars against Soros’ chaiwala by buying an annual subscription to ditch the ads on our site. It’s only $49 per year.
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We thank all of you for your continued support of this site. We can’t do it without you.
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