Breitbart's Milo Yiannopoulos banned from Twitter for harassing Ghostbusters' Leslie Jones
Writer calls Twitter's move 'cowardly' as fans rally under hashtag #FreeMilo
Breitbart tech writer and editor Milo Yiannopoulos's Twitter account was "permanently suspended" Tuesday night, afterreports that he led a barrage of online abuse towardsGhostbustersactressLeslie Jones.
Yiannopoulos, who has been described as a "notorious internet troll" and "one of the most egregious and consistentoffenders of [Twitter's] terms of service," reportedly led the wave of sexist and racist attacks sent to Jones, one of the stars of the movie, featuring an all-female cast in this sequel. Theyincluded multiple users tweeting images comparing her to apes.
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Several news outlets including The Associated Press, Reuters and Buzzfeed reported that Yiannopoulos led or directedmuch of the abuse aimed atJones. Yiannopoulos had over 350,000 followersbefore his account @Nerowas suspended.
Yiannopoulos called the move "cowardly,"saying he was targeted for being a gay conservative.
"Twitter has confirmed itself as a safe space for Muslim terrorists and Black Lives Matter extremists, but a no-go zone for conservatives," he added.
Scathing review
Yiannopouloswrote a scathing review of Ghostbusterson Monday titled"Teenage boys with tits," calling it "amovie tohelp lonelymiddle-aged women feel better about being left on the shelf."
The review singled out Jones's character Patty as "a two dimensional racist stereotype," calling her "spectacularly unappealing, even relative to the rest of the odious cast."
Italso included an illustration ofco-star Melissa McCarthy labelled"Weightwatchers."
Yiannopoulos, who described himself in the same review as "stunningly handsome, friendly to the proletariat, and blessed with a beautiful singing voice,"is wellknown as an online provocateur for the alt-right movement in the U.S., railing against feminism and political correctness in his columns.
Fans tweet #FreeMilo
Fans of Yiannopoulos have rallied behind him with the hashtag #FreeMilo, calling the suspension an attack on free speechand political conservatives.
Twitter revoked Yiannopoulos'sverified status in January following a series of temporary suspensions. At the time, hisfollowers used the hashtag#JeSuisMiloas a play on #JeSuisCharlie, the pro-free speech movement that followed thedeadly Charlie Hebdo shootings in 2015.
Denounced online 'trolling'
Yiannopoulosspoke out againstonline harassment and "trolling" of public figures, especially reporters and journalists, in a CBC Radio interview in 2013. You can listen to an excerpt from that interview on this page.
"The consequence of this abuse, be it anonymous or not, are becoming very serious," he said of online behaviour similar to what he himself has since been frequently accused of.
"I have limited patience or sympathy with the aggressors in this because we are starting to see public figures having to accept hideous, disgusting abuse as part of the daily routine. Which is not acceptable," he added.