If you look at the New York Post's Twitter, you’ll see that there are no tweets since Oct. 14. That’s because Twitter locked the account of the newspaper (originally founded by Alexander Hamilton) on the basis that it was publishing “hacked materials.” Twitter deleted the Post's tweets to its stories about Hunter Biden’s communications stored on a computer he left at a repair shop, and prohibited anyone on Twitter from linking to the story, or even sending it via direct message to their friends.
Although Twitter eventually relented, the Post still isn’t tweeting. Why? Because the Post demands that they delete the tweets that supposedly violated the policy that they are no longer enforcing. Makes sense, right? Here’s the upside-down view from Twitter in their message to the Post: “While we’ve updated the policy, we don’t change enforcement retroactively. You will still need to delete the Tweets to regain access to your account.”