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Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, announced on Wednesday that it will restore former President Donald Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts. This comes more than two years after both accounts were suspended following the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol in 2021.

“We will be ending the suspension of Mr. Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts in the coming weeks,” Meta said in a recent blog post. The company also noted that it has put “new guardrails in place to deter repeat offenses.”Meta explained that the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol immediately led to the indefinite suspension of Trump on both social platforms. At The same time, Trump was also kicked off of Twitter. Trump’s Twitter account, however, was reinstated in November after Elon Musk became the social media platform’s CEO. Trump has yet to post on Twitter and has remained solely on his own social platform, Truth Social.

While Trump’s accounts will soon be reinstated, Meta warned that it will ban the former president again if he posts any “further violating content.”

“In the event that Mr. Trump posts further violating content, the content will be removed, and he will be suspended for between one month and two years, depending on the severity of the violation,” Nick Clegg, Meta’s president of global affairs, wrote in the blog post.

According to Reuters, the news was met with both praise and criticism from civil rights advocates.

“Facebook has policies, but they under-enforce them,” said Laura Murphy, an attorney who led a two-year-long audit of Facebook that ended in 2020. “I worry about Facebook’s capacity to understand the real-world harm that Trump poses: Facebook has been too slow to act,” she asserted.

Meanwhile, executive director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University and former ACLU official Jameel Jaffer defended the decision despite previously supporting Trump’s suspension.

“The public has an interest in hearing directly from candidates for political office,” Jaffer said. “It’s better if the major social media platforms err on the side of leaving speech up, even if the speech is offensive or false so that it can be addressed by other users and other institutions.”

Trump, who announced in November that he would be running for president again in 2024, responded to the news of his reinstatement by criticizing his prior suspension.

“Such a thing should never again happen to a sitting President, or anybody else who is not deserving of retribution!” he wrote on Truth Social.

Photo courtesy: Getty Images/Joe Raedle/Staff

Milton Quintanilla is a freelance writer and content creator. He is a contributing writer for Christian Headlines and the host of the For Your Soul Podcast, a podcast devoted to sound doctrine and biblical truth. He holds a Masters of Divinity from Alliance Theological Seminary.

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Has Russia really ‘legalized’ cryptocurrency mining?

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Russia’s crypto mining laws have filled the “regulatory vacuum,” but there is still a lot of legal uncertainty about many aspects of regulation.

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Paxos launches USD-backed USDG stablecoin with DBS Bank

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Markets react on second open after budget – as traders concerned over some announcements

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Markets react on second open after budget - as traders concerned over some announcements

The cost of government borrowing has jumped, while UK stocks and the pound are up, as markets digest the news of billions in borrowing and tax rises announced in the budget.

While there was no panic, there had been concern about the scale of borrowing and changes to Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s fiscal rules.

At the market open on Friday, the interest rate on government borrowing stood at 4.476% on its 10-year bonds – the benchmark for state borrowing costs.

It’s down from the high of yesterday afternoon – 4.525% – but a solid upward tick.

The pound also rose to buy $1.29 or €1.1873 after yesterday experiencing the biggest two-day fall in trade-weighted sterling in 18 months.

On the stock market front, the benchmark index, the Financial Times Stock Exchange (FTSE) 100 list of most valuable companies was up 0.36%.

The larger and more UK-focused FTSE 250 also went up by 0.1%.

While there was a definite reaction to the budget, uniquely impacting UK borrowing costs, the response is far smaller than after the UK mini-budget.

Many forces are affecting markets with the upcoming US election on a knife edge and interest rate decisions in both the UK and the US coming on Thursday.

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