The Daily Signal - What You Need to Know About Big Tech’s Crackdown on Trump, Parler

Episode Date: January 12, 2021

Following the mob violence at the U.S. Capitol last week, Facebook suspended President Donald Trump from its platform, and Twitter followed suit shortly thereafter. Over the weekend, Google and Apple ...removed Parler, a social media platform widely used by conservatives, from its app stores. Then, Amazon suspended Parler from its web services Sunday evening. Now, many Americans are voicing their concerns over the power such platforms have to limit free speech.  Klon Kitchen, director of the Center for Technology Policy at The Heritage Foundation, joins the show to explain why Twitter and Facebook say they banned the president, and why Google, Apple, and Amazon are actively suppressing Parler. Kitchen also explains what laws and reforms are needed to keep the power of technology giants in check.  We also cover these stories:  Democrats file an impeachment article against Trump, citing the Jan. 6 unrest at the Capitol. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., asks that Sens. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., and Ted Cruz, R-Texas be removed from the Senate following their attempts to object to the certification of the 2020 presidential election. The social media platform Parler sues Amazon after being suspended from Amazon Web Services.  Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:05 This is the Daily Signal podcast for Tuesday, January 12th. I'm Richard Del Judas. And I'm Virginia Allen. Twitter and Facebook have banned President Trump from their platforms. And Google, Apple, and Amazon have suppressed the social media platform parlor. Klon Kitchen, the director for the Center for Technology Policy at the Heritage Foundation, joins the podcast to explain what you need to know about the actions of these big tech companies. And don't forget, if you're not.
Starting point is 00:00:35 you're enjoying this podcast, please be sure to leave a review or a five-star rating on Apple podcasts and encourage others to subscribe. Now on to our top news. Democrats have filed an article of impeachment against President Donald Trump citing Wednesday's unrest at the Capitol, authored by Democrats David Cicillini of Rhode Island, Ted Lew of California, and Jamie Raskin of Maryland. The article says that Trump was willfully inciting violence against the government of the United States and adds that President Trump, bravely endangered the security of the United States and its institutions of government. He threatened the integrity of the democratic system, interfered with a peaceful transfer of power,
Starting point is 00:01:23 and imperiled a colloquial branch of government. He thereby betrayed his justice president to the manifest injury of the people of the United States. Democrats issued a resolution on the House floor Monday, calling for Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove the president from office. Republicans blocked the immediate consideration of the resolution with one objection from Representative Alex Mooney, Republican of West Virginia. House rules allow one objection to delay consideration of such a resolution. In a statement Monday, Mooney said, Speaker Pelosi should not attempt to adopt
Starting point is 00:02:01 a resolution of this magnitude without any debate on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives. And he added, the U.S. House must never adopt a resolution that demand. the removal of a duly elected president without any hearings, debate, or recorded votes. The full House is expected to vote on the resolution Tuesday, which will likely be voted down by many Republicans. Democrat Senator Sheldon White House of Rhode Island is asking that his Republican Senate colleagues, Josh Hawley of Missouri, and Ted Cruz of Texas, be removed from the Senate following their attempts to eject to the certification of the 2020 presidential election, which Congress, certified on Wednesday. In a Sunday tweet, White House said, the Senate Ethics Committee also must
Starting point is 00:02:48 consider the expulsion or censure and punishment of Senators, Cruz, Holly, and perhaps others, to conduct security review of what happened and what went wrong. White House added, Because Congress has protections from the Department of Justice under separation of powers, specifically the speech and debate clause, significant investigation will need to be done in the Senate. Because of massive potential conflict of interest, Senators Cruz, Holly, and Johnson at least need to be off all relevant committees reviewing this matter until the investigation of their role is complete. The social media platform, Parlor, has sued Amazon after the tech giant suspended them. Amazon suspended Parlor from their cloud service on Sunday night, citing
Starting point is 00:03:34 concerns over user posts which encourage violence. Amazon's actions come shortly. after both Google and Apple removed the Parlor app from their App Store this weekend, following the events that transpired at the Capitol Wednesday. The large tech companies say Parlor users were using the platform as a place to plan and coordinate more violent attacks. Parlor's lawsuit argues that Amazon's suspension is in violation of antitrust law and that Amazon has violated their contract with them. Parlor is asking the U.S. District Court in Seattle to order Amazon to re-encentral.
Starting point is 00:04:10 state the platform immediately. Now stay tuned for my conversation with Klon Kitschen, Director for the Center for Technology Policy at the Heritage Foundation, as we discuss why Twitter and Facebook ban the president from their platforms and what action should be taken moving forward. This is Virginia Allen, host of the Daily Signal podcast. I don't know about you, but YouTube is certainly one of my guilty pleasures. I really enjoy watching short videos on a variety of topics. So I'm always looking for videos that are actually educational and beneficial to me in some way. And the Daily Signal YouTube channel never disappoints. There is so much binge-worthy content, from policy and news explainers to documentaries. If you're not driving, go ahead and pull out your
Starting point is 00:05:01 phone and subscribe to the Daily Signal YouTube channel so you can be in the know on the issues you care about most. You can also search for the channel by going to YouTube.com slash dating signal. I am joined by Klon Kitchin, the director for the Center for Technology Policy at the Heritage Foundation. Klon, welcome back to the show. My pleasure. Thanks for having me. So big tech companies and free speech is definitely on everyone's mind this week after
Starting point is 00:05:34 rioters forcefully entered the Capitol and caused a full lockdown of the building last Wednesday, Twitter suspended President Donald Trump's Twitter account first for just 12 hours. But then shortly after they reinstated his account, Twitter banned President Trump from the platform permanently. Could you just walk us through the reasoning for why Twitter said that they decided to permanently ban the president from their site? Sure. And as I do, you know, a bit of context here. Conservatives have been concerned about the way the tech industry has been handling itself and conservatives to reach online for a long time. And these companies have utterly failed to win and to hold public trust. And, you know, that reality is really making an already difficult situation right now even worse because of things like this where, you know, this type of action was taken.
Starting point is 00:06:34 I'll walk through a little bit of the rationale behind it. But frankly, the intentions of these companies just aren't broadly trusted. And so regardless of the relative merits of the individual case or not, a lot of people are just unhappy. And we're all trying to navigate that. So that's just context. And I just kind of want to recognize that reality. In terms of what happened with Twitter's permanent ban of President Trump, as you said, following the events last week at the U.S. Capitol, he was put on a 12-hour suspension at the point where he came back up. At the end of that suspension, he posted two tweets.
Starting point is 00:07:17 The first tweet said this, quote, The 75 million great American patriots who voted for me, America first, and make America great again, will have a giant voice long into the future. They will not be disrespected or treated unfairly in any way, shape, or form, end quote. He then followed it up with a second tweet that said this, quote, to all of those who have asked, I will not be going to the inauguration on January 20th, end quote. Now, Twitter initially determined that these tweets did not in and of themselves violate their community standards, and so they were left up. And one could read through those and see like, well, I mean, like, you may agree or disagree with kind of whatever it is the president said. They don't seem particularly kind of provocative.
Starting point is 00:08:04 But Twitter also decided that what they were going to do was they were going to kind of watch the online conversation around these tweets. And as they did that, they began to observe a growing number of users that were citing or interpreting the president's tweets, those two particularly, as calling for or justifying additional violent political rallies or actions, and that even specific and deliberate planning, including dates and locations, was starting to evolve and be discussed and organized on Twitter and on other social media platforms. And that's actually, if you take a look at Twitter's announcement of the ban, they actually kind of obliquely referenced that rationale in the very first paragraph where they talk about how these tweets are being interpreted and used. So this led Twitter to ultimately close the president's account and to begin working with federal law enforcement and to leverage existing counterterrorism partnerships with other tech companies to begin sharing threat information as this kind of this challenge kind of group. Now, one final point. I think it's fair to say that while what I just described is the immediate context for this decision, I think it also is true that this decision is the culmination of four years of sparring between the president and Twitter. And, you know, the most recent thing may have just been the straw that broke the camel's back. But, you know, what we're seeing now, even in news reporting that's coming out today, is that these threat streams that seem to have motivated Twitter are now coming into public view. And the FBI is now actively warning against some of this.
Starting point is 00:09:49 So, Klon, I mean, of course, there are instances where individuals should be removed, should be blocked. We obviously don't want to see people calling for violence using these platforms to provoke violence. But following that logic that essentially, you know, Twitter looked at those two initial tweets, they saw that the tweets themselves didn't violate their standards, then to remove the president because of conversations happening off of those initial tweets, it seems to me that it would make more sense just to focus on removing those individuals who are the ones that are spurring on the violence instead of removing the leader of the free world from Twitter. Yeah, I think that's a fair critique. I think one of the challenges is, well, one, they absolutely did pivot and start focusing on the people who were actually doing the planning, right? That was clearly happening. I think, too, one of the things that we have to recognize is it's broadly believed that there were things that the president has said over the course of time and specifically most recently that that actively instigated some of the,
Starting point is 00:11:00 the activities that we observed last week. I mean, one of the president's most ardent supporters, Senator Lindsey Graham, on Wednesday night, came to the Senate floor and said exactly that, as did Liz Cheney, as did Tom Cotton, as did a whole host of other people. So when Twitter gives the justification that, hey, we're concerned that leaving these tweets up, meaning the president's tweet, could inspire or lead to additional violent actions. whether we agree with them or not, they certainly weren't the only ones who were making similar judgments, and it wasn't only left or liberal commentators making that judgment. It was also, frankly, those on the political right, even in the U.S. Senate. So we have seen that a lot of conservative users
Starting point is 00:11:49 are saying that many of their followers have all of a sudden disappeared. Do we know kind of the situation there? What's happening with mass amounts of people seems to be being taken off the site and then who is making those decisions for who gets to stay and who's taken down. Yep. So almost near simultaneously to the action against the president, we began observing the loss of thousands of conservative, putting that in air quotes because it's just impossible to know, but conservative followers on Twitter, particularly those who followed conservative influencers. And what we have discovered and what's occurring is that as Twitter and other social media organizations began investigating this threat stream about online kind of anti-government planning,
Starting point is 00:12:36 they realized that a key part of what was kind of fomenting that and also kind of spreading it were these users and networks associated with the Q&on conspiracy. And so it was decided to increase the scrutiny on those accounts of the Q&N accounts in an effort to, one, mitigate their ability to kind of coordinate and plan. And then two, also mitigate the kind of spread of of their content. And what that mitigation effort largely consisted of was any account that that showed activity that looked like it was either spam or bots. These are automated fake accounts when I say bots.
Starting point is 00:13:14 That's what I mean. That they immediately moved those accounts into a kind of purgatory status where the owner of the account had to verify that they were in fact a real person. and if they could verify that, usually it's typically with just a phone number, then they would be reinstated. Well, when those accounts were put into that purgatory state, they dropped off the follower count, and they kind of went quiet. And so what happened was, it turns out that, you know, on the political right side of Twitter and social media, a fair number of our conservative influencers are also followed by these large Q&on networks. And so when they got taken down, you saw a corresponding decrease in the number of followers because those networks, those spammer networks, those bot networks were being taken down.
Starting point is 00:14:07 And the people who are making that decision are the social media companies themselves. Okay. So at the end of the day, that in some ways, it's not a bad thing to have these sort of bot platforms being pulled down. I mean, look, the influencers will make an argument that it was bad for them because it cuts down on the kind of propagation of their material. So there are plenty of people who are saying, look, I'm being suppressed here. You're preventing the spread of my, meaning the conservative commentator's message by
Starting point is 00:14:39 taking down, you know, my followers by, you know, thousands at a time. And, you know, technically speaking, that's not wrong. That is one of the consequences. but we've often encouraged both sides of the political law have been encouraging these social media companies to take down these types of networks. And particularly in the context where these networks are being leveraged to play on anti-government violence, it seems like a rational or at least defensible choice. Of course.
Starting point is 00:15:06 Let's talk for a minute about Facebook. So Facebook, they really didn't hesitate right away after the events at the Capitol on Wednesday following, of course, first President Trump's rally and then the full-law. lockdown of the Capitol, Facebook announced that they were banning president through at least the end of his term. What do you think about Facebook's decision? I think any content moderation decision, including who gets to stay on a platform and who doesn't, is almost always going to be debatable. There's no ironclad logic that will satisfy everybody. I, of course, think that Facebook is a private company and has a choice in whom it will allow to use its platform.
Starting point is 00:15:48 in the same way that the Heritage Foundation has a choice in who it will allow to use its website to post articles. I think it hurts the conservative cause. Even if you believe that Big Tech is weighted with bated breath to constrain conservative speech, if you believe that, if you have drawn that conclusion, well, then one of the best things that conservatives can do to combat that is not give them golden justification,
Starting point is 00:16:18 for taking that kind of action. And the reality is, is that over the last several weeks and even longer, you know, a number of golden opportunities have been presented. And so it makes it really difficult to discern, you know, the motives behind any one thing. But, you know, this is the sticky situation. It goes back to my point at the beginning. The fact that the public does not trust these companies is decisively. bad for the country in these types of moments.
Starting point is 00:16:53 Well, I think one of the reasons why so much of the public doesn't really trust these companies is because we're often seeing it feels like these standards applied unequally that you'll have, you know, groups on the right more frequently targeted than those on the left. Is that a fair assessment? I mean, have we seen Twitter and Facebook apply any of these standards to leaders on the left on their platforms? have any prominent liberal lawmakers been fact-checked or banned? So number one, what you're describing is exactly the issue.
Starting point is 00:17:24 And look, at one sense, these companies are absolutely hypocrites. And we've certainly said that to their face. I mean, at the point where you have the Ayatollah of Iran able to, you know, call this state of Israel a cancer on Twitter, and that gets left up. But then, you know, other actions are taken. I mean, like, I think they're completely open to legitimate claims of hypocrisy. and I have been at the forefront of engaging them on those issues as heritage has been more broadly, and I think that's legitimate.
Starting point is 00:17:52 At the same time, it is also true that actions are taken against democratic and left-leaning users online, and that that's not always known. So a recent example is that there were a host of liberal and left-leaning groups that were labeled or checked or even kind of brought down on the night of the Georgia Senate election because they prematurely declared victory. Now, that happened and it happened, you know, at a fairly significant scale, but frankly, the left just isn't as organized as the right is when it comes to this. They're so fractionalized along different identities that they often aren't able to kind of make the noise that our side is able to do when action is taken against them online.
Starting point is 00:18:41 then what actions should be taken in order to kind of make sure that these standards are applied equally and evenly? Are there certain laws that need to be passed? What needs to happen in order for us to be able to move forward in a way that the American people can begin to see that these companies are taking some responsibility for their actions and are actually applying their standards evenly? That's the big question. One, there is no silver bullet. Two, there are some very practical things that can be done. So in terms of beginning to directly address the lack of confidence in these companies, I think there has to be some demonstrated accountability. I think these companies have to demonstrate some accountability. And I think one of the best ways to begin that, this is not going
Starting point is 00:19:28 to be decisive. It's not sufficient, but it is required. And that is reform of what's called Section 230. This is the what's called intermediary liability protections that these companies enjoy. We've written a paper about it. I've got it on our website. I'm sure you can link to it, but it's Section 230, Mend it, don't end it, in which we lay out a number of very specific changes to that law that we think would bring it into compliance with its original intent, and that would begin to provide the type of accountability that we're talking about here. How do you think the rest of the world is kind of viewing this situation? Because, you know, as you mentioned earlier, we've seen other very dictatorial, radical violent leaders in countries like Iran and China,
Starting point is 00:20:15 who are allowed to remain on platforms like Twitter. And yet President Trump has been pulled off. So what are we kind of hearing from the international community about how this is being viewed? Well, China specifically is watching this and they are then explaining to people how this is yet another piece of evidence that our system of government is unsustainable and that the alternative that they're offering is a better way. And what they say is like, look, we can promise, the Chinese government says they can promise the wealth of capitalism coupled with the stability of authoritarianism. And they identify technology as being the kind of key mechanism for realizing
Starting point is 00:21:01 both of those two promises. And so they look at our democracy and without a doubt our shared experiment in ordered liberty right now feels very disordered. It feels very messy. And in one sense, like it is. In another sense, I would encourage conservatives to also understand that our nation has faced challenges like this before, that we have some underlying institutional stability that allows us to see our way through it. We certainly need to exercise prudence and caution and charity, frankly, toward one another. But we can get through this. I don't, I don't buy into apocalyptic notions about where the nation is right now. But that would certainly be something that the Chinese and the Russians and the Iranians and the North Koreans
Starting point is 00:21:53 and all kinds of other, you know, foreign bad guys out there would have us believe. And I think that is neither safe nor justified. Well, and it certainly flies in the face of who we are as Americans that, you know, one of our foundations is that of free speech. And even with private companies where the First Amendment doesn't, you know, directly apply to them, there's, there's no doubt of our, you know, that free speech is something that is really sacred kind of in, for Americans in that social media space and is still thought that it should be guarded and protected. So how do we go about promoting that free speech online? Look, our system of government is not made for efficiency.
Starting point is 00:22:37 Our system of government is made for stability. And there are some internal tensions that are kind of baked into the cake. And one of those tensions is when we talk about valuing freedom of speech, that's absolutely the case. But we mean that not just for individuals, but also entities like these companies. The decisions that they're making about who will and will not be on their platform, those are free speech issues on their part. again, as in the same way that we would never want the government to come in and tell Heritage that we have to post certain materials on our website, that, you know, that Heritage doesn't want to
Starting point is 00:23:16 post, you know, for whatever reason. But the reality is that Section 230 governs that activity, heritage's online presence, as much as it does Facebook's online presence. And so the rules that we make for the one are going to apply to the other. And so there's just this inherent tension that we're going to have to navigate. Now, there's room for improvement, and that's why we wrote the paper on Section 230 and we made the recommendations that we had. But it should also, you know, everyone should understand that fixing Section 230, one, is going to be requiring a scalpel, not a broadsword, and two, that that is in no way, shape, or form a silver bullet because we have these baked in tensions within our society that are going to persist long after Section 230 is
Starting point is 00:24:00 dealt with. Well, and one of those sort of free market solutions that we've seen in recent years arise are other social media platforms. And there's one in particular that I'd love to chat about for a few minutes called Parlor. And that's known to be very friendly to conservatives. It doesn't censor posts. And many on the right, they've been using Parlor to share their ideas. And after the events of Wednesday and President Trump's removal from Twitter, we saw a real flood of conservatives moving over to Parlor, but Apple, Google, and Amazon have removed or taken away services from the Parlor app. So let's start with just talking about Apple and Google. Can you just explain what exactly is going on there with more or less kind of their censorship
Starting point is 00:24:46 almost to Parlor? Well, okay, so this goes back to the investigation that came on Twitter in terms of the anti-government violence planning. And as all of that was being mapped out, it was discovered that a huge sense. of gravity for that activity was actually occurring on Parlor. And so as the various platforms became aware of that reality, they began to take action. So when Twitter learned that people were using Twitter that way, Twitter had moderation rules that allowed them to kind of take action and remove those accounts.
Starting point is 00:25:21 Parlor is deliberately kind of making its brand that we're the no moderation social media a company. Well, what that means is that they actually don't have and weren't moderating any of that violent content or that content justifying violence on their on their platform. And they also did not have any type of a mechanism for users to report that kind of content. Well, not moderating violent content and not having a mechanism to report violent contact actually violates the rules that Apple and Google have set for being hosted on their app stores. And the reason, that they have those rules is because if someone were to use parlor's app to successfully plan and conduct a violent act, well, if Apple and Google were aware of that activity but allowed it to
Starting point is 00:26:10 persist, then they could be held liable. So that is one of the reasons why Apple and Google said, Google just kicked them off completely as soon as they discovered it. Apple gave them 24 hours to adopt new moderation controls, and Parlor failed to do that. And so both of them out of, I mean, frankly, a self-preservationist motivation said, well, okay, well, we're not going to assume the liability of this. If you're not going to take action, we're not going to host you. It was similar when Amazon made its decision. Amazon has similar rules.
Starting point is 00:26:44 Amazon provides the cloud infrastructure that supports Parlor. And for the same rationale of not wanting to be held liable for the violent content on Parlor said, listen, you either take care of this or we're going to no longer host your services. Parlor failed to take care of this. Amazon dropped them. And now subsequent cloud service providers for the exact same reasons are not willing to take them up. So the bottom line here is that it's not as though other social media companies didn't have the idea that Parlor was offering of trying to be kind of a free speech zone, meaning like a zero moderation zone on social media. It's just that by becoming that, by choosing that business model, two things happen. One, you tend to be
Starting point is 00:27:29 a pretty gross place. There's lots of stuff that shows up. Some of the worst stuff on the internet ends up being on your platform because you're not moderating. And not a lot of people want to go there. And then two, you expose yourself to these types of existential liabilities. And, you know, this was always going to be something that parlor faced. And at the point where that inherent challenge intersected with the ongoing anti-government violent planning that just became the straw that brought the camel's back for these other companies. So then taking all that into consideration, as a tech policy expert, what is your assessment of Apple, Google, and Amazon's actions here? Well, so looking at just the facts and not trying to discern intentions, the fact-based
Starting point is 00:28:16 that's laid out there in terms of their concerns about liability. I mean, That's legitimate. It's discernible. It's clear. That's true. I mean, just imagine for a second if we found out that there was an app on the Google and Apple App Store that, let's say it was a Saudi Arabian messaging app. And we found out that Al-Qaeda used that app to successfully plan an attack against the United States. and that Apple and Google knew that that activity was going on on that app and didn't take action against it.
Starting point is 00:28:55 What do you think would happen to those companies? Yeah, it wouldn't end well. No, right? I mean, beyond, I mean, certainly they would be dragged before Congress rightly and grilled and asked why did you allow this activity to happen. But then there would be very real legal liabilities that they would be exposed to and rightly so. Well, you know, this is exactly that kind of scenario, right? Right. And so it's, you know, that doesn't mean that I'm letting them off the hook for their hypocrisy or for the thousands of other dumb things that they have done or ways that they have treated the conservatives. I'm not denying any of that. But in this specific case over the last six days, the things that are being asserted and the fact pattern that is being laid out would seemingly justify at least some of these actions. Yeah, Klon, this is obviously such a complex issue. There's so many layers here in various facets to the situation. But for individuals who are just kind of looking at this situation, and I think specifically for conservatives who are feeling really overwhelmed and just kind of watching so quickly how it feels like all of these social media companies have very, very quickly, it sort of feels like are intentionally pushing those on the right out.
Starting point is 00:30:16 pushing them off. And I think people are kind of wondering like where, where does this stop? I mean, you know, are all of conservatives, you know, going to essentially be thrown off of these social media platforms? I mean, how, how concerned should we kind of be about where this leads and where it's going to end? Well, I think real concerns are justified in terms of even if what's going on right now is completely legitimate, it is a valid concern to be worried that these concerns could be expanded to include much broader types of conservative content that we would have a real problem with, right? So I am very sympathetic to that concern, and it's something that we at the Heritage Foundation are obviously mindful of and pushing back on. And we're waiting into this conversation,
Starting point is 00:31:01 trying to be kind of the adult in the room by recognizing the realities that we've been talking about up until this point and recognizing, you know, the very real negative kind of overreach that could follow all of this. But while, we engage in that, I'm often telling myself two things. One, well, don't give them any excuse, right? So really be smart about how I'm operating. But then, two, understand that there's some inherent risk to the way we've organized our society where, you know, these companies and individuals have rights, have freedoms. And sometimes those rights and freedoms are bumping into one another. Now, that doesn't mean that the status quo is the best possible way. In fact, I'm, I feel like
Starting point is 00:31:45 the status quo is probably unsustainable. And so we need to be thinking very carefully about how we allow these companies to play a role in our society. To what degree, if any, we need to impose some type of a constraint on them. But we also need to understand the full consequences of any constraints that might be placed on them. And that, again, our underlying conservative political philosophy understands that there is no perfect solution. It is always about tradeoffs. But I think it's time to start thinking more carefully about what tradeoffs may be warranted in this modern context. Clown, we really appreciate your expertise on this issue. How can our listeners follow your work and keep up with all the research and the work that you're doing on this issue?
Starting point is 00:32:29 Yeah, thank you. Well, I mean, I try to be available on podcasts like this. They can go to the Heritage website and do a simple name for my search. It's Clon, K-L-O-N, kitchen, just like the room. You'll see, I think, most of everything I produce, whether it's published somewhere else or not there. I have a newsletter, a weekly newsletter called The Kitchen Sink, S-Y-N-C, where I just kind of comment and give updates on the latest tech policy and news. That can be found. You can sign up for that, I think, on the Heritage website as well. And, yeah, I think that's a good way. You can also follow me on Twitter, if that's your thing.
Starting point is 00:33:04 I'm at Clon Kitchen, and, yeah, I'm happy to engage as I can. Great. Klon, thank you so much. You really appreciate your time today. My pleasure. And that'll do it for today's episode. Thanks for listening to The Daily Signal Podcast. You can find the Daily Signal podcast on Google Play, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and IHeartRadio.
Starting point is 00:33:24 Please be sure to leave us a review and a five-star reading on Apple Podcasts and encourage others to subscribe. Thanks again for listening and we'll be back with you all tomorrow. The Daily Signal podcast is brought to you by more than half a million members of the Heritage Foundation. It is executive produced by Kate Trinko and Rachel Del Judas. designed by Lauren Evans, Mark Geinney, and John Pop. For more information, visitdailysignal.com.

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