By the end of this week, the cable network will have lost its presence in some 20 million homes this year. The most recent blow came from Verizon, which will stop carrying OAN on its Fios television service starting Saturday. That will starve the network of a major stream of revenue: the fees it collects from Verizon, which counts roughly 3.5 million cable subscribers. In April, OAN was dropped by AT&T’s DirecTV, which has about 15 million subscribers. [More]
Who needs government censorship when its economic fascist apparatchiks have the Deep State’s six…?
And is anyone else getting a lynch mob inciters vibe here?
And I still maintain that there is a way to strike back.
[Via Mack H]
Tangentially-related UPDATE
Republicans think a “red wave” is inevitable in November. But the Democrats still have one big advantage: the ever-tightening grip of Big Tech censorship, which will be used to prevent undecided voters from encountering even the most mainstream conservative news in the runup to the next election. Republicans will have a strong message — but what if voters are prevented from hearing it? [More]
So much for election interference. So much for “insurrection.”
[Via Michael G]