The Daily Signal - #532: Exclusive Interview With Jon Kyl on New Facebook Bias Report
Episode Date: August 23, 2019Facebook hired former Sen. Jon Kyl, senior counsel at the firm Covington & Burling, to investigate allegations of anti-conservative bias at the social media company. In his first interview since the r...eport's release, Kyl tells The Daily Signal what he discovered and how Facebook should move forward. He also responds to criticism of the report. A transcript is available at DailySignal.com.We also cover these stories:• A new jobs number shows job growth hasn’t been quite as robust as previously reported.• Military vets who are permanently disabled will soon have quicker access to loan forgiveness, thanks to a new executive order.• Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is taking heat after calling the Electoral College a “scam” that has a “racial injustice breakdown.” The Daily Signal podcast is available on Ricochet, iTunes, SoundCloud, Google Play, or Stitcher. All of our podcasts can be found at DailySignal.com/podcasts. If you like what you hear, please leave a review. You can also leave us a message at 202-608-6205 or write us at letters@dailysignal.com. Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Friday, August 23rd. I'm Kate Trinco.
And I'm Daniel Davis. Conservatives have lost trust in Facebook. That's one conclusion from a new independent report spearheaded by former Senator John Kyle.
The report was released this week after Kyle and an assisting law firm interviewed 130 conservative politicians and leaders about their experience with the social media giant.
Today, our executive editor, Rob Bluie, speaks to Kyle about that report and an exclusive.
interview. And if you're enjoying this podcast, please be sure to leave a review or a five-star
rating on iTunes and please encourage others to give it a listen. Now on to our top news.
Job growth hasn't been quite as strong as previously believed. The Bureau of Labor Statistics
is now saying around 500,000 fewer jobs were created than previously reported. USA Today reports,
quote, the large change means job growth averaged 170,000 a month.
during the 12-month period, down from 210,000 initially estimated, according to J.P. Morgan Chase.
Well, Iran unveiled a new long-range missile defense system on Thursday, the Bavar 373.
Speaking in a televised address, President Hassan Ruani said the new system was an improvement over the Russian S-300.
The missiles can detect targets and planes from over 190 miles away.
He also dismissed nuclear talks with the United States as being useless,
and said, quote, now that our enemies do not accept logic, we cannot respond with logic, end quote.
The unveiling of the new system comes after months of heightened tension in the Persian Gulf,
in which Iran's Revolutionary Guard shot down a U.S. drone over international waters.
Two new military deaths in Afghanistan have brought the number of combat deaths there to the highest number in five years,
according to CNS News.
In 2015 through 2018, fewer than 14 combat deaths occurred annually.
President Trump addressed Afghanistan when talking to reporters earlier this week, saying via ABC News.
If I could have heard Afghanistan, what is your current thinking on pulling out the United States?
Well, we're talking to the government of Afghanistan.
We're talking to the Taliban.
We're talking to others.
and we're looking at different things.
We've been there for 18 years.
It's ridiculous.
We have taken it down a notch.
Military veterans who are permanently disabled
will soon have quicker access to student loan forgiveness
thanks to a new executive order signed by President Trump on Wednesday.
The executive order directs the government
to create an expedited process for eligible veterans
to take advantage of the already available loan forgiveness,
something about only 20% of eligible eligible.
disabled vets have taken advantage of due to the burdensome application process.
Speaking at the American Veterans National Convention in Louisville, Kentucky, the president said,
quote, the debt of these disabled veterans will be completely erased.
That's hundreds of millions of dollars of student loan debt for our disabled veterans that
will be completely erased.
Former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders will now be appearing regularly on Fox
News.
She's joined the channel as a contributor.
Sanders is far from the only press secretary to make the jump to cable news.
Other former White House press secretaries, including Dana Perino, Jay Carney, and Robert Gibbs,
have gone to work for Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC.
Well, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is taking heat after calling the Electoral College a scam
that has a, quote, racial injustice breakdown.
On Monday, the New York Democrat posted a video on Instagram while driving through the desert.
The camera showed empty land being passed in the backdrop as she said this.
We're coming to you live from the Electoral College.
Many votes here, as you can see, very efficient way to choose leadership of the country.
I mean, I can't think of any other way, can you?
Well, she went on to say, quote,
The Electoral College has a racial injustice breakdown due to severe racial disparities in certain states,
the Electoral College effectively weighs white voters over voters of color,
as opposed to a one-person-one-vote system where all our votes are counted equally, end quote.
Well, it wasn't long before major conservatives shot back.
Iowa Senator Joni Ernst tweeted, quote,
Actually, AOC, eliminating the Electoral College would silence our voices here in Iowa
and in many other states across the country.
This is just more evidence of how out of touch the Democrats have become, end quote.
and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee tweeted,
quote,
The Great Sage AOC apparently didn't take civics
so she wants to get rid of the electoral college.
The college we need to close is the one who gave her a degree.
Next up, we'll feature Rob Blue's exclusive interview
with former Senator John Kyle,
who is looking at whether Facebook has a conservative bias problem.
Americans have almost entirely forgotten their history.
That's right.
And if we want to keep our republic, this needs to change.
I'm Jared Stepman.
And I'm Fred Lucas.
We host The Right Side of History, a podcast dedicated to restoring informed patriotism and busting
the negative narratives about America's past.
Hollywood, the media, and academia have failed a generation.
We're here to set the record straight on the ideas and people who've made this country great.
Subscribe to the Right Side of History on Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, and Stitcher Today.
I'm joined today by former Arizona Senator John Kyle.
He's currently senior counsel at the firm Covington &.
Burling. Senator Kyle, thanks for joining us. Well, it's my pleasure. Thank you.
This week, you released the results of a survey that many people anticipated. It was commissioned
by Facebook. Your firm was asked to look into complaints from conservatives about Facebook.
Let's begin with that. What exactly did you set out to do with this survey?
Sure. Well, first, a bit of background. They had already engaged a person to survey some,
a liberal opinion. They called it a civil rights audit, and that work was underway, and they knew that
there was a lot of criticism coming from the conservative side, and knowing that I had a good rapport
with conservatives, having been one my whole career in the Senate, they thought perhaps I could get a
good, candid and pretty complete assessment of conservative thought, which would then better enable them
to make decisions about what, if anything, they wanted to do about that.
And they were very well aware that a lot of conservatives believed that they were biased against conservatives
and that their policies and procedures at Facebook reflected that biased.
So they asked me to put together a team at Covington, interview, well, first of all, set up a form of a questionnaire
so that the information that we received was usable by.
by them. It was consistent. And we did that. And then we identified 133, actually more than that,
but we ended up interviewing 133 individuals from the conservative community, not just in Washington, D.C.,
but other places as well, who we either knew had been, had expressed criticisms of Facebook,
or we figured they probably would if we asked. And for a period of,
of over three months, we conducted those interviews.
And then in early August of 2018, we presented our findings to Facebook.
And they were denominated preliminary findings, but based upon the huge number of people
that we talked to, we were pretty sure that we got a very good cross-section of views
and that what we heard was pretty representative of the conservative community.
in general. So we presented our findings to Facebook, and then I can discuss what happened
thereafter if you're interested. I do. I want to get into what those findings are. I do have a
couple of other questions, though, just on the process that you took, because I feel that there's
maybe some confusion out there. And I saw it firsthand, because in the interest of full disclosure,
we hosted you for a listening session at the Heritage Foundation in June of 2018 with representatives
from several conservative organizations. I know, as you stated in your Wall Street Journal op-ed,
naming those 133 organizations or individuals that you spoke to, but it is a sizable number of
people that you did receive feedback from.
And I'd just like to hear more about how you selected them, what you kind of did in terms of
collecting that information and packaging it in your initial report to Facebook back in August
of 2018.
Sure.
Well, first of all, you know Bill Witterman and Gabe Neville are part of my team at Covington,
and they are very well connected to the conservative community in Washington.
And so we sat down and over a period of several days just thought of all of the conservatives
who would probably have an opinion on this that we could think of as well as conservative organizations.
We also identified some members of Congress.
And then we began our interviewing process.
And of course, that led us to some other individuals as well.
But at the end of the day, we did talk to 133 individuals, some representing themselves, personally, others representing organizations.
And we had several meetings, such as the one that you hosted with a larger group of people all gathered together at the same time.
We tried to ask the same questions of everyone so that the results that we got would be usable by Facebook.
and when we finished that first tranche of interviews,
we gathered our team together and basically asked the question,
all right, what does this tell us?
And because we had categorized everything very, very carefully,
we were able to divide the comments that we received into six separate categories of concerns.
And I think that was useful because the way we presented it to Facebook then,
It wasn't just war stories from conservatives that were mad at Facebook.
It was, here are six specific areas that the criticisms seem to all fall into,
and we had subsets to it as well and documented it so that when Facebook got our preliminary findings,
they had a very good sense of what the most important conservatives in the country
we've felt about Facebook, and in particular what kind of biases they thought Facebook had,
that's what they wanted, a very candid assessment of conservative attitude,
so that they could then decide what, if anything, they wanted to do with that.
I'll also point out that we told everybody that we interviewed that, first of all,
we weren't lobbying for Facebook.
We were there to gather information, not make a case on behalf of Facebook.
And secondly, we told them that we would.
not disclose their names, that they would remain anonymous so that we hoped in that way to get
the most candid assessments possible. And I think that did help. There are some who don't mind
letting the public know that they were interviewed, but others, I think, were very candid with
us because they knew that we would keep their identities private. And so one of the criticisms I note
from some people that responded to my op-ed was, well, you didn't name them.
the names. Well, there's a good reason for that. In the spirit of trying to get the most candid
information, we told folks that we wouldn't mention their name. Well, you mentioned your op-ed.
You wrote for the Wall Street Journal this week in which you provide a link. The full report is
available for the public to read. We also included it in our news coverage on the Daily Signal,
so encourage our listeners who might be interested in learning more. I wanted you to go through
those six categories, if you wouldn't mind. I think on a very broad level, high level, it would be
important to hear about why and how you decided to settle on those?
Well, the reason was because when we looked at all of the data that we had received,
it was pretty clear what the nature of the concerns were, and they fell into these categories.
And we thought that the best way to get, to be useful for Facebook was to be able to relay it to their
policies or procedures so that they would know where to look internally if they wanted to
respond to these concerns.
So, for example, on ad policies, we broke it down under the ad policies and the way that
the ad policies were enforced.
Those were two of the categories.
And they were able to go right to their policies and basically connect up the complaints
that we received with the policy.
policies. And of course, they had to undergo some assessment of how valid the information was.
And, you know, we weren't asked, as a firm, we weren't asked to determine the validity of all of the complaints.
We would have had to go into Facebook and look through all of their algorithms and decisions that they made and so on and connected up with the individual complaints.
And that obviously was beyond the scope of what we were asked to do. But Facebook had an opportunity to do that.
at least at a high level.
And so they could determine that in these six specific areas where they heard complaints.
They could match that up with their policies and their procedures
and get some kind of an idea of whether they thought it worth responding to
and whether they thought the complaints probably had some merit.
And by the way, they made the point to us that even though they might disagree
that some of these complaints had merit, that they didn't really reflect bias.
They understood that perceptions are part of the problem.
And even if not every single complaint could be authenticated, the fact that people thought
this about Facebook was enough for Facebook to take a good, hard look at their policies to see
what, if anything, that they wanted to change.
The title of your Wall Street Journal piece is, Why Conservatives Don't Trust Facebook,
My Independent Team of Investigators looked into the complaints and the company has taken action.
Facebook did come out with its own blog post at the same time as your,
op-ed, and they talked about some of the changes they've made. Do you want to share what you were
able to do in terms of bringing forward some of the concerns and how they have taken action?
When we presented our findings, this was to a group of Facebook people with whom we had been
working from the very beginning. And by the way, several of these people were well-known in
the conservative community themselves. So we...
were not working with a bunch of California liberals. I'll just be real crass about putting it that way,
because that's kind of the way a lot of the conservatives view Facebook. We were also dealing
with folks within the company who really wanted to get to the bottom of this. And so we had
ongoing conversations. As we began to get these results, we told the folks at Facebook what we
were beginning to find. We talked to them about what categorizations would be the most useful
to them. And that process continued long after we actually submitted the first tranche of
findings to them. And then we did follow-up interviews, and we discussed with them ideas that we
developed internally that they might want to consider to respond to some of these concerns.
and it was an iterative process.
It wasn't like we made a series of formal recommendations,
but rather when we got some of these complaints,
we sat down with them and said,
well, what do you think?
Is this something you might want to look into?
And here's some ideas about maybe responding to these concerns,
and they took that back to their headquarters
and would come back and say, yeah, our folks really do want us to look into this,
or no, they don't think that will work.
But in any event, it was an iterative process that went on
really for a year. And during that period of time, as I say, we did follow-up interviews and
shared those results with them as well. And we did discuss several of the ideas that they had,
for example, one of the things that we reported on, and they announced early on, was the
creation of a special board that, in fact, it would be international. It would have both people
from the United States as well as other places where Facebook is. And this board would be very
diverse and would hopefully be able to act as a final arbiter on some of the complaints or
appeals that come to Facebook as a result of decisions that it's made. We gave them recommendations
for people who the conservative community would find trustworthy as members of that board.
And so, as I say, it was an iterative process as we went along. We're trying to be as helpful
as we can to not only report what we hear from conservatives, but to give them some ideas about
what we think might work to ameliorate the concerns. And we hope to be able to continue that
process moving forward as Facebook dives into additional changes that they think they may want to make.
Looking at that oversight board that you mentioned, of course, Facebook is headquartered in one of the
most liberal areas of the country. This is a complaint conservatives often raise about the leadership
of the company.
Looking at the ideological diversity that they have promised for this board,
do you feel that there's a commitment on their part to achieving that right balance and fairness?
Well, obviously, the proof will be in the pudding, and no one will be totally satisfied,
I'm sure.
But what I can't say is that I've talked to people at the highest levels of the company,
and they have the very best of intentions.
and if they can make this work so that they can defy most of the people all around the world,
that'll be quite an achievement.
But I know that's their goal.
Senator, of course, in the middle of this process, you filled the seat of the late John McCain in September of 2018,
shortly after you delivered your preliminary results to Facebook.
This is obviously a massive undertaking that you were able to.
to take on here in terms of the number of interviews and the complexity of the issues. I imagine
it's also something you probably didn't need to take on. But personally, why did you decide
that it was important for you to be involved in surfacing some of these concerns that conservatives
do have? Facebook is a client of Covington and Burling, and a very trusted group of folks worked together
from our firm and at Facebook. And we wanted to try to be able to support
our client. But secondly, when Bill Whiterman and I talked about this, we saw an opportunity
to try to do some good here. We were already aware that there was a great deal of skepticism,
if not cynicism, on the right about Facebook policies. And we felt that if we could listen to
those and present them to Facebook so that Facebook would know that this isn't just something
that occasionally somebody says on TV or writes, but it is a very real phenomenon.
And given the fact that we knew Facebook wants to be trusted by its users and conservatives
are major users of Facebook, that they would probably want to do something about the findings
that we got from our interviews, we decided it would be a real good opportunity, not just
for Facebook, but also
to
potentially respond to these conservative
criticisms so that Facebook
could continue to be a
trusted platform by
conservatives. You know, a lot
of conservatives are of the view. You can't trust the mainstream
media very much, and Facebook
offered a place where
you could express yourself very
candidly and very thoroughly and
to an audience
and get your message out
that way. And so Facebook has
been used by a conservative for that purpose.
And Bill and I thought, well, this is a chance to both help Facebook restore some of that
trust, but also provide a voice for conservatives that they had lacked before then, but that
we could amplify to Facebook so that they knew full well what the conservative complaints
really were.
Well, on that note, you write in the report, quote, Facebook has recognized the importance of
assessment and has taken some steps to address the concerns we uncovered, but there is still
significant work to be done to satisfy the concerns we heard from conservatives.
What would you say some of the work that they need to do going forward to appease some of the
conservatives might be?
Well, it all boils down to one word trust, and they know this.
Now, whether they can do enough to regain that trust among all conservatives, that would be a pretty
tall order, but they know they need to try. And their initial reaction and changes that they've
announced are certainly steps in that direction. Now, I would not argue that those are major
significant actions on the part of Facebook, but more their effort to try to quickly respond to,
I don't want to use the word low-hanging fruit really, but things that they could, that they could
addressed. They understood conservatives were concerned about, and they could fairly quickly address
those things, and they wanted to show that good faith. But they understand that there's a lot more
that they're going to have to do to restore the trust if conservatives will continue to be
major users of their facilities. I don't want to suggest that
The information we've given them has been fully taken on board in the sense that Facebook agrees with it all.
They have, in some instances, said, well, it's easy to complain,
but you have to understand the tough job we have of monitoring literally millions of sites all around the world every day.
and we do make mistakes.
Nick Clegg, who's been brought on board by Facebook,
to really head up this project at a blog post a couple days ago
in which he said, you have to understand, we make mistakes.
And so we acknowledge that.
We're going to do our best to try to avoid that,
but with all of the posts that are made every day
and some of the very difficult, very fine,
decisions that have to be made. It's not easy to please everyone. And I accept that. So they're not going to just say, well, whatever the conservatives' complaints are, we'll try to respond to them because they have a much larger audience than that. But I do know that they understand they need to try to restore that trust with as many conservatives as possible because they are very large users, and they want a good reputation as an entity that's fair.
And speaking of that trust and the issues involved there, the Daily Signal, I can speak from experience, has itself seen its content pulled down at times from Facebook.
I think of a specific video of a pediatrician, a doctor who warned about the dangers of giving puberty blockers to young children.
That video went viral.
It has over 74 million views.
For a period of time, it disappeared from Facebook.
We contacted Facebook, and it took a couple of weeks, but they did restore.
that video. And I think that that's an issue that other conservatives had faced and why I think
it's so important for them to at least have people who are in touch and in communication with
conservatives as they might encounter some of these challenges.
Now, let me just make a point on that. One of the criticisms we heard from some of the medium
size and smaller Facebook users was, well, if you're a big outfit like Heritage, for example,
you can go right to people that you know in Facebook and plead your case, and they might well restore, in this case, the item that have been pulled down.
But for the smaller groups and the mid-sized groups, it's not as easy to get your appeal hurt.
And we thought that sounded plausible, presented to Facebook, and they said, you know, you're right.
It's just a question of manpower, but we'll devote some, we'll hire some more people, and we will devote these folks specifically to the small people.
and mid-sized folks that have complaints.
So it's not just the big national organizations like Heritage that can have a voice,
but also we'll try to help the smaller ones as well.
Now, whether that's enough, whether it'll really work, I don't know,
but at least it shows that they tried to respond to a criticism that we thought was fair.
In your report, you also mentioned the concerns that conservatives raised over the issue of hate speech
and the hate speech policy.
Facebook and other tech companies have relied on organizations like the sub-execations.
Northern Poverty Law Center, which deems a lot of what I would consider mainstream conservative
groups as hate groups.
And Facebook, of course, is no different than some of these other companies and that it also
has a hate speech policy.
What were you hearing from conservatives that you talk to about their concern specifically
regarding this issue?
Well, I can just summarize it into two categories.
One, groups that felt that they were discriminated against because of these kinds of
characterizations. And secondly, at a broader level, the view expressed by a lot of conservatives
was hate speech to begin with is fraught with potential dangers. And if you're an entity like
Facebook, you're going to be having decisions that may actually cast, it may get into people's
motivations. And that's a very tricky business to do. And therefore, the basic idea from a lot of the
conservatives was, try to stay away from these categorizations of hate because you don't know whether
somebody has hate in their heart or not. Now, whether Facebook can deal with that in a way that's
satisfactory to the whole political spectrum, I don't know, but at least I know they got an earful
from the conservatives on that point. Now, of course, Senator, this is a country that is deeply
divided after all, so we heard both criticism from conservatives and liberals in the wake of your
report. Some conservatives, Brent Bozell of the media research, for instance, said that it fails to
admit fault or wrongdoing. Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri said, quote, merely asking somebody to
listen to conservatives' concerns isn't an audit. It's a smokescreen disguised as a solution.
What message would you like to leave with those concerns? I would tell Senator Holly this.
Remember what we were asked to do. Conservatives didn't think that their voice was being heard.
Facebook knew that there was a lot of concern and unrest out there in the conservative community,
but they didn't really know how serious it was and what the conservatives were really saying.
So they hired somebody that was a conservative who could talk to these folks
and receive candidly the responses back because Facebook wanted an unvarnished, truthful response.
What exactly are a conservative saying?
What do we need to know here?
That's what they hired us to do.
They didn't hire us to fix the problem as we couldn't do that.
And I've been a little disappointed by folks who don't appreciate the value of simply getting the conservative complaints heard.
I mean, it's not easy with a great big company like Facebook with all the other stuff that they're doing.
But they at least recognized the fact that they were missing information that they needed.
And they hired us to get that information.
So I would say to Senator Hawley, appreciate what we did.
That doesn't mean that all the problems are solved,
but it certainly wasn't intended to be a smokescreen.
If Facebook isn't able to assuage a lot of these concerns
and to deal with fair complaints by conservatives,
then you can make your complaint.
But until then, at least give them a chance to respond
and recognize that their good faith in wanting to at least hear what conservatives had to say.
say, for example, I don't think that Senator Cruz would mind if I acknowledge the fact that he's one of the people we talked to because he had been an outspoken critic of all of these platforms.
And so we asked him all the questions.
What do you think?
And he was very good, very candid, and had very specific information for us that I was pleased to pass.
It really showed an important person who was very disappointed in a platform that he originally had thought it could be a real good outlet example.
And so I think, and he responded by at least expressing some appreciation for the fact that his views were, that they got through to the people in Facebook.
And that's what we were trying to achieve.
And I know we did achieve that much now, you know, as to what all happens with it.
as I say, that will remain to be seen, but at least to give them a chance, I guess, would be my message.
Of course, I don't want people to think that conservatives were the only ones to criticize.
There were conservatives who were complimentary of the work that you did and the fact that you were surfacing these issues.
But some on the left said that Facebook was giving legitimacy to the complaints from conservatives simply by asking you to investigate them.
Sure.
You know, there was sharp criticism on the left who would rather have these issues probably brushed aside and not addressed at all.
Right, exactly. And that's to be expected. I knew that the left would say, well, don't listen to those conservatives. They don't have anything useful to say. I figured we'd get it from there. I was a little disappointed that some of the conservatives didn't at least acknowledge that it was a good thing for the conservative community writ large to have a voice and to have that expressed in a very candid and thorough way to the leadership of Facebook.
But, you know, people have their own agendas, and that's fine.
All I know is that we were able to get some good information to Facebook, and we're very hopeful.
We know they understand the need for that information because they asked us to get it,
and we're very hopeful that they will make good use of it.
Senator, I have a final question for you, looking ahead to something that Facebook is planning to roll out later this year.
In your op-ed, you note that in 2016, Facebook employees were accused of suppressing conservative articles from the newsfeeds discontinued trending section.
I joined our former Heritage Foundation president, Jim Demand, for a meeting with Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook's headquarters back in 2016 to talk about that issue.
In recent days, Facebook has announced that it is planning to roll out an update or a new news section on the platform.
I guess a small team of journalists that Facebook will hire are going to pick the top stories for that section.
You've heard in recent days some conservatives express concern, including the president's son, Donald Trump Jr., who said, quote,
because what everyone really needs is Facebook giving even more power and control to establishment corporate media hacks.
So what advice as Facebook prepares to do this would you have for them to make sure that they are treating conservatives fairly going forward?
Well, I think just pretty much the same thing that we've told them in the past.
You now know, you have before you, a very thorough compilation of conservative concerns.
You appreciate the fact that they are very skeptical and in some regards even cynical.
You have to restore the trust.
They know that.
And so throughout this process, I think they will be mindful of the fact that the kind of
people they selected to do this will have to be trusted. And again, the proof will be in the
pudding if when they come out with their product, conservatives and say, wait a minute, this is no
better than what existed before. Well, then they will not have succeeded, at least with the
conservative community. So I would ask conservatives, based upon the past, hold your cynicism.
They're trying. And if you don't think they match up to what you want them to do, then
continue to criticize. That's what I said in the op-ed. They fully expect to continue to get feedback,
and a lot of it will be negative, and we think that's a good thing, and we've encouraged
conservatives to continue that. So they expect it, and we encourage it, but we hope that it'll
be constructive criticism based upon skepticism and real thing, just assuming that something is going
to be bad before you give it a chance to work.
Well, Senator, we appreciate you spending the time with the Daily Signal to go over the report, the process that you use to collect the information and some of the hopes that you have for Facebook and its future relationship with its conservative users.
It's been a real pleasure for us to be able to reconnect with a lot of our conservative friends and to get their ideas, and we encourage them to continue to express those directly to Facebook or to us.
We'll certainly pass them on.
I can guarantee you that.
Senator John Kyle, his article for the Wall Street Journal is called Why Conservatives Don't Trust Facebook.
You can find a link to the full report in that op-ed.
You can also find it on DailySignal.com.
Senator Kyle, thanks again for joining us.
You're very welcome. I appreciate the interview. Thank you.
We'll leave it there for today.
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