![Tidy up the house games](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/32.jpg)
His noxious website was hounded off the web in the aftermath of the deadly 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. That both have seemingly become safe harbors for extremist Western content reflects a disturbing and growing alliance between the far-right and authoritarian governments.Īnglin would know. China, in particular, operates the most extensive and sophisticated censorship apparatus the world has ever seen. “There is no internet company that will support your freedom of speech if the media says you shouldn’t have freedom of speech that is not either Chinese or Russian.”īoth China and Russia are highly adept at censoring any information they deem unacceptable. “I just want to make this 100% clear,” Andrew Anglin wrote on the Daily Stormer soon after Parler was taken down. President Donald Trump and conspiracy theorists deemed too extreme for Twitter and Facebook, became inaccessible after it was banned from Google and Apple’s app stores and then by Amazon’s hosting services for failing to curb violent and threatening content on its platform during the insurrectionist riots at the U.S. Parler, which had become a refuge for those supporters of U.S. Obeidallah's lawsuit claims Anglin libeled him, invaded his privacy and intentionally inflicted "emotional distress." It seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.The founder of neo-Nazi rag the Daily Stormer had some advice for the people who ran Parler, after the app was purged from the internet last week: Ask China or Russia for help.
#DAILY STORME LICENSE#
But the First Amendment does not license defamation," his suit says. He recognizes the importance of freedom of speech and political discourse, regardless of viewpoint. Obeidallah is an ardent believer in and defender of the First Amendment. Obeidallah said if Anglin had taken down the post as he’d asked him to, he wouldn’t be filing the suit, though he calls the death threats “stunning and revolting.” One comment said Obeidallah "just earned himself a spot at the gallows," and another threatened him with hanging. The site includes sections called "Jewish Problem" and "Race War."Īnglin, an Ohio native who uses a post office box in Worthington, Ohio, didn't immediately respond to an email seeking comment Wednesday on Obeidallah's suit. “I don’t think the timing could be any better in that there’s such an imperative to make it clear that we’re going to stand up against the 'Daily Stormer' and Andrew Anglin,” Obeidallah said.Īnglin's site takes its name from Der Stürmer, a newspaper that published Nazi propaganda.
![daily storme daily storme](https://www.dailydot.com/wp-content/uploads/106/70/f4d615fd0b290a1d.jpg)
Obeidallah said he’s received death threats since, and after this weekend’s white nationalist march in Virginia, he and the Oakland-based legal group Muslim Advocates are filing the suit now. The suit claims that the article's defamatory statements were intended to incite violence against Obeidallah, citing other alleged examples of Daily Stormer readers who did just that, including Dylann Roof, who read the site before killing black churchgoers in South Carolina. The lawsuit says Anglin fabricated tweets showing Obeidallah was the terrorist mastermind behind the Ariana Grande concert bombing in England in May. SiriusXM Radio host Dean Obeidallah is suing Andrew Anglin of Worthington for a "Daily Stormer" post in June.
![daily storme daily storme](https://uploads.dailydot.com/2020/02/andrew-anglin-daily-stormer-money.png)
He’s now getting hit with a defamation lawsuit filed in Columbus by a well-known Muslim comedian, columnist and radio host. The Central Ohio man who’s behind the white nationalist website "The Daily Stormer" has gotten a lot of attention since this weekend’s violence in Virginia.
![Tidy up the house games](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/32.jpg)