My Pillow founder Mike Lindell said he’s launching his own social media website after his personal and MyPillow accounts were suspended by Twitter.
“Every single influencer person on the planet can come there. You’re going to have a platform to speak out,” Lindell announced last week on Charlie Kirk’s podcast. “We’re launching this big platform so all the voices of our country can come back and start telling it like it is again.”
Lindell said that with his unnamed social media website, “you will not need YouTube. You won’t need these places. ... It will be where everything can be told, because we’ve got to get our voices back. People will be able to talk and not walk on eggshells.”
Lindell said his social media website will launch in “four to five weeks” but didn’t elaborate on the nature of the website or how it would function.
The former president—who was suspended by Twitter, Facebook, and others—said that Twitter has “become very boring” in recent days, asserting that “millions of people are leaving” the platform.
Lindell, also in the interview, also said that Google “canceled me on some things” and took “tens of thousands of dollars” in ad revenue from him before he was shut down.
It came as Dominion Voting Systems last month filed a $1.3 billion lawsuit against Lindell alleging he defamed the firm. A key argument in Dominion’s lawsuit was that Lindell used election-related claims to boost his brand and sell products.
Lindell, meanwhile, told media outlets that he welcomes the Dominion lawsuit, as it would provide him a means with which to prove his claims.
Other than Lindell, prominent conservatives including Michael Flynn, Sidney Powell, and Lin Wood were suspended by Twitter, forcing them to move to other platforms such as Telegram.
And last week, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s YouTube account was banned from uploading new content for two weeks.
“We removed content from the Rudy W. Giuliani channel for violating our sale of regulated goods policy, which prohibits content facilitating the use of nicotine, and our presidential election integrity policy,” a YouTube spokeswoman said in a statement to Bloomberg and other outlets on March 1.