That is, until 2024.
Lots of people have written about how Elon Musk changed Twitter — ruined it. But, when I’m being honest, I have to admit that he bought a site that was already on its way to ruin. By the time he bought Twitter in 2022, it was already a hellscape of hate and mistrust. He made its worst parts worse and its best parts less useful.
Opening verification to anyone willing to pay was the first blow, cutting back on content moderation was another. But ultimately, what made Twitter — now called X — no longer worth it for me was that it stopped being useful. The trolls and hate drove away the good people until they were most of what was left. In the end, I have stopped going to Twitter as often as I used to because it became boring.
I must confess, I stayed longer than I wanted, longer than I should have, because it remained an important way for me to grow Democracy Docket — a pro-democracy website that I started in 2020. Democracy Docket grew along with my Twitter following. But recently, Twitter isn’t even doing that particularly well.
After the election, I thought I might just cut back on social media. I had given up Facebook after the 2016 election in protest over its complicity with the Trump campaign. I had never really taken to Instagram and have no plans to ever support the Chinese-run TikTok. I did start a Threads account, but in addition to it just being another Meta product, it has proved aimless at best and hostile at worst to political content like mine.
My interest in social media was rekindled by Bluesky. I had signed up early in its lifecycle and was unimpressed. But its renaissance since the election has impressed me. The culture of blocking hate is refreshing. The lack of a forced algorithm is wonderful. It feels like the early days of Twitter. So, for now, that is where I will be.
I won’t entirely close my Twitter account, but I won’t post anything there other than to tell people to subscribe to Democracy Docket. It will stay dormant waiting (likely in vain) for something there to change. I will follow soon with the same approach to Threads.
Bluesky says it's billionaire proof. I’m now too experienced and too cynical to believe that is true. If it remains what it is today, I will stay. If not, I will go back to living happily without social media.
But one thing will always remain constant: the news website I built — don't call it a blog. It is not dependent on Substack or any third-party site. So, my advice to you is if you want to always follow my work, sign up there. It is the one place I will never leave.
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