It must have been the algorithm.
It was a mistake. Done in error. A bit of data went astray at a server bank in Utah and ā wouldnāt you know it? ā GOP Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey found herself locked out of her Facebook page. And after she spoke out about President Joe Bidenās vaccine mandate, too!
Of all the rotten luck.
According to AL.com, the online home of the Birmingham News and affiliated publications, the governorās campaign page was unpublished from Facebook Sept. 14 but was restored after her campaign appealed the suspension. Ivey said her campaign āfought back and won.ā
āEvidently, theyāre upset that I said Iām standing in the way of President Biden to protect Alabamians from this outrageous overreach by the federal government,ā Ivey said.
āIf big tech thinks they can silence us and that I wonāt fight back, then honey, they havenāt met me. They have another thing coming,ā she continued.
āIām not backing down. I never will. Weāre fighting Washington. Weāll fight big tech, too.ā
In an emailed statement to The Hill, Facebook acknowledged that the governorās campaign page wasĀ āmistakenly restrictedĀ for less than an hour.ā
āWhen we learned of our mistake, the page was quickly restored,ā said a spokesperson from Facebook said.
The suspension came days after Ivey had used her Social media to hit back at the presidentās Vaccine mandate, according to an earlier AL.com report.
In particular, Ivey targeted part of Bidenās speech where he said, āif these governors wonāt help, I will use my power as president to get them out of the way.ā
As The Associated Press noted, this came during a portion of the speech dealing with states that have battled teachersā unions on statewide mask mandates in classrooms; Alabama leaves that decision up to individual school districts.
āYou bet Iām standing in the way. And if he thinks heās going to move me out of the way, heās got another thing coming. Iām standing as strong as a bull for Alabama against this outrageous Washington overreach. Bring it on,ā Ivey said.
āI encourage Alabamians to take the Vaccine ā have been since the beginning, but weāre never going to mandate it. And we certainly arenāt going to allow Washington, D.C. and this president to tell Alabama what to do. Here in AL, we donāt put up with that nonsense.ā
Sheād also described the mandates as āoutrageousā and āoverreaching,ā saying they would āno doubt be challenged in the courts.ā
And itās just a coincidence that their page was āmistakenlyā taken down by the Social media giant. Facebook insisted the content on her page played no role in the temporary unpublishing.
The Associated Press reported that it was flagged as an imposter account, instead.
Iveyās campaign called this a ānonsense excuse,ā citing the fact they had been told the page was being unpublished because of āharassment and bullying.ā
Gov. Ivey apparently doesnāt remember this is always a mistake. Whenever a Social media platform or some other organ of big tech bans a conservative whoās recently said something inconvenient, itās a big misunderstanding. Something went screwy with the doohickey. A piece of data made a wrong turn at Albuquerque. Donāt worry about it.
Surely big tech has given you every reason to trust them, right?
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
