Skip to content

Dinner With the Devils: Trump Clinks Glasses With Big Tech Titans Who Censored Him

comment-1 Created with Sketch Beta.

The chandeliers gleamed, the wine flowed, and the White House dining room buzzed with the smug satisfaction of tech titans toasting their host, President Donald Trump.

On Thursday evening, Silicon Valley’s heavyweights — Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, Tim Cook, Sam Altman, Sundar Pichai, and Sergey Brin — gathered to shower the president with praise for his "pro-business, pro-innovation" stance.

The air was thick with flattery, but for those who’ve watched Big Tech’s stranglehold on free speech and election integrity, the scene was a bitter pill to swallow.

This wasn’t just a dinner; it was a masterclass in hypocrisy.

Zuckerberg, seated beside Trump, gushed about Meta’s $600 billion commitment to data centers through 2028.

Gates, cozying up next to Melania, waxed poetic about eradicating diseases like polio and HIV, conveniently sidestepping his more controversial obsessions, like his goal to depopulate.

Cook promised $500 billion for Apple’s domestic manufacturing, while Altman credited Trump’s policies for positioning America to “lead the world” in AI.

Google’s Pichai, fresh off dodging a breakup in a landmark antitrust case, grinned as Trump teased him about his "big day."

Notably absent was Elon Musk, who posted on X that he couldn’t attend but sent a representative.

The event, originally planned for the Rose Garden, moved indoors due to weather, but the real storm was the optics of this cozy affair.

Now, let’s cut through the champagne bubbles.

In 2020, Joe Biden’s election theft relied on Big Tech’s complicity.

Trump’s first-term mandates were clear: dismantle Big Tech’s monopolies and hold those who obliterated servers, peddled the Russian collusion hoax, silenced dissent, and were hellbent on rigging the 2016 election accountable.

Yet here he is, clinking glasses with the very architects of that debacle.

Zuckerberg, who banned a sitting president from Meta’s platforms and banned and shadowbanned conservative voices, "dangerous individuals" for wrongthink, sat at Trump’s right hand.

This is the same Zuckerberg who censored COVID truth-tellers, deplatforming anyone questioning mandates or the experimental mRNA shots mislabeled as vaccines.

Lives were lost because of his chokehold on free speech, yet Trump jokes about his "political career"?

Then there’s Bill Gates, the depopulation evangelist.

Through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, he’s funneled millions into biotech ventures like Oxitec, engineering genetically modified mosquitoes he claims curb malaria.

Gates calls it his "best investment," but his obsession with population control raises red flags.

His pandemic simulations with the World Health Organization, coupled with his vocal support for reducing global population, have fueled international calls for his arrest.

In 2015, Gates warned of a coming pandemic, and by 2020, his Event 201 simulation eerily mirrored COVID’s rollout.

Coincidence? Critics worldwide don’t think so, accusing him of orchestrating crises to push his agenda.

Yet Trump, fully aware of these concerns, dines with him, discussing “cures” while ignoring the elephant in the room: Gates’ depopulation advocacy isn’t philanthropy—it’s a power grab.

Election integrity?

Don’t hold your breath. Trump’s recent executive order on voter citizenship verification is a step, but it’s a whisper compared to the roar needed to counter Big Tech’s interference.

Zuckerberg’s platforms suppressed voter fraud discussions in 2020, tilting the scales.

Google’s search algorithms buried conservative content. The tech giant's top executive pledged the company would take measures to "stop the next Trump situation," and now, with their antitrust slap on the wrist, they’re emboldened.

Trump’s DOJ continues Biden-era lawsuits against Google, but where’s the fire to break them up? Where’s the accountability for Zuckerberg’s censorship of life-saving medical information?

Sure, diplomacy demands playing nice with enemies, even domestic ones. But this dinner was a slap in the face to every American who fought for free speech and bodily autonomy.

The MAGA movement, once a blazing rebellion against globalist elites, is flickering.

Biden’s disastrous presidency left America on life support—his cognitive decline a global embarrassment—but Trump’s got three years to right the ship.

Is rubbing elbows with tech tyrants who censor, manipulate, and dream of a depopulated world the answer?

Patriots who bled for the First Amendment deserve better than watching their champion dine with the devils who silenced them.

Alicia Powe

Alicia is an investigative journalist and breaking news reporter with RiftTV. Alicia's work is featured on outlets including The Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Townhall and Media Research Center.

Conversation

Comments

Sponsored