Dallas, TX
Why was Dallas chef John Tesar suspended on Twitter?
Dallas chef John Tesar has been Tweeting under the curious name @truth24471632 since April 2022. Why? He was suspended from his main account, @chefjohntesar, for threatening conservative TV character Sean Hannity.
“It was a mistake,” says Tesar, a several-time Prime Chef contestant whose Orlando restaurant Knife & Spoon simply received a Michelin star. “Semantically, it was a mistake,” he clarifies.
Representatives from Twitter is not going to verify the content of Tesar’s October 2021 tweet, which was written in response to a COVID-19 vaccine-related tweet initially posted by Hannity. Tesar’s account was suspended for 9 months till he manually deleted the tweet on July 4, 2022. The suspension was first reported by D’s critic.
Right here’s how Tesar summarized the incident:
“[Hannity] despatched an anti-vax tweet,” Tesar remembers. “So I mentioned, ‘Should you really feel that means about vaccinations, I hope you get the mumps, the measles and the clap.’ I didn’t understand if you want one thing upon anyone, it’s thought-about a menace.”
However it’s. A Twitter spokesman says the tweet violated Twitter’s rules on abusive behavior.
Tesar says his tweet was supposed to face up for vaccines. He believes it’s harmful for TV personalities and politicians to steer the general public away from COVID-19 vaccinations throughout a public-health disaster.
“I’ve to shout it out,” the chef says.
A historical past of Twitter rants
That is the second time Tesar has been disciplined for violating Twitter’s guidelines. Earlier than the Hannity incident, Tesar was suspended for 10 days for tweeting at Rudy Giuliani, former New York Metropolis mayor and a former member of Donald Trump’s private authorized group.
Tesar doesn’t bear in mind the small print of the tweet; he believes Giuliani was repping Trump by saying the presidential election was stolen. And why can’t Tesar bear in mind such an necessary dialog? Tesar argues with politicians on Twitter virtually consistently. His @chefjohntesar account contains greater than 15,000 tweets. Look at Tesar’s “tweets & replies” tab for his new account, and there’s a day by day standoff between the Dallas chef and conservative politicians.
“I’m simply bored with being lied to by each politician,” the 64-year-old says. “At my age, I take it very critically. I believe Twitter is a good place to launch your frustrations so long as you don’t make it private.”
That’s been Tesar’s bother.
Tesar was as soon as known as “essentially the most hated chef in Dallas” by D, a title that also haunts him. He spewed cuss phrases at a former Dallas Morning Information restaurant critic as a result of he disagreed together with her evaluate. For years, he was a “rageholic,” he mentioned in a 2017 interview.
Some 5 years in the past, he claimed to have modified his methods, saying he began meditating, going to remedy and smoking weed to chill out. Twitter-as-therapy is one other means the chef clears his head, he says. Practically on daily basis, Tesar scans tweets from Congressman Jim Jordan, Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, Senator Ted Cruz, Hannity and others, then responds to them when he disagrees.
“Once I name somebody out for mendacity in politics, I really feel higher about it,” he says. “I do it within the privateness of my own residence. I get it out of my head. I really feel higher. And I am going on with my day.”
A case for Tesar?
The Dallas chef says he “discovered his lesson” after his Twitter account was placed on pause and he misplaced the power to achieve his 6,000 or so followers.
Tesar’s Florida restaurant simply received a Michelin star, and Dallas diners have been buzzing about whether or not Texas will be capable of appeal to Michelin subsequent. Tesar worries that vacationers will keep away from Texas due to its picture as a crimson state led by headline-making conservatives like Cruz and Gov. Greg Abbott, he says.
Tesar says he’s neither Republican nor Democrat. He calls himself a Libertarian.
“I fear about my political feedback affecting individuals wanting to return to dinner,” he says.
“However I believe the steak is just too good for individuals to care.”
For extra meals information, comply with Sarah Blaskovich on Twitter at @sblaskovich.

Dallas, TX
Former Dallas Cowboys starter at position of need signs with Titans

The Dallas Cowboys have plenty of talent at defensive back, but injuries have plagued to position in recent years. All-Pro cornerbacks Trevon Diggs and DaRon Bland have struggled to stay on the field at the same time, and Diggs will likely miss the start of the 2025 NFL season after suffering a season-ending knee injury for the second straight year.
Dallas drafted East Carolina star Shavon Revel in the third round of this year’s NFL Draft, but he is also coming off a torn ACL that prematurely ended his college career.
Last season, ball-hawking cornerback Amani Oruwariye got the opportunity to start in six games for the Cowboys because of injuries, and he made the most of it.
MORE: 6 Cowboys players in contract years entering 2025 NFL season
Oruwariye recorded 29 tackles, one interception, and three passes defensed. Unfortunately, he will not be back with Dallas this season.
According to FOX Sports’ Jordan Schultz, Oruwariye has agreed to a one-year deal with the Tennessee Titans.
Tennessee also added linebacker Amari Burney off waivers this week, so it is clear the Titans are revamping the defensive roster.
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Dallas, meanwhile, has had plenty of roster shakeups of their own this offseason, so it is going to be interesting to see how everything plays out throughout the year.
And, in case you were wondering, the Cowboys do not face the Titans in 2025, so there will be no “Oruwariye revenge game.”
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Dallas, TX
US DOJ, John Cornyn starts investigation into Muslim community, Epic, tied to East Plano Center

The U.S. Department of Justice has opened a federal civil rights investigation into a Muslim-centered planned community around one of the state’s largest mosques near Dallas, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn said Friday.
Cornyn requested the federal probe of the development last month, citing concerns it could discriminate against Christians and Jews. He announced in a post on X that U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi had notified him of the investigation.
The developers of the proposed planned community tied to the East Plano Islamic Center, which has not yet been built, have said they are being bullied because they are Muslim.
The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment or to confirm Cornyn’s announcement.
A federal probe would further escalate pressure on the proposed EPIC City, which is already facing mounting criticism and multiple investigations from Republican Gov. Greg Abbott and other GOP state officials who claim the group is trying to create a Muslim-exclusive community that would impose Islamic law on residents.
Among its chief critics is the state’s hard-right Attorney General Ken Paxton, who is challenging Cornyn for his Senate seat in 2026.
“Religious discrimination and Sharia Law have no home in Texas,” Cornyn, of Texas, wrote in his post on X. “Any violations of federal law must be swiftly prosecuted, and I know under (President Donald Trump’s) administration, they will be.”
Dan Cogdell, an attorney for EPIC City who defended Paxton in his 2023 impeachment trial when he was acquitted by the state Senate, said the developers have “done nothing illegal and we will cooperate fully with all investigations-regardless of how misguided and unnecessary they are.”
The state investigations include whether the development is violating financial and fair housing laws and whether the mosque has conducted illegal funerals.
Cogdell has said none of the investigations would be happening if the community was planned around a church or temple.
The attacks on the project about Islamic law and other claims “are not only completely without merit and totally misleading but they are dangerous as well,” Cogdell said Friday. “These folks are US Citizens, law abiding and Texans.”
The Council on American-Islamic Relations in the Dallas area also has criticized the state probes as bullying the Muslim community and a violation of constitutionally protected religious expression.
Plans for the mixed-used development include more than 1,000 homes and apartments, a faith-based school for kindergarten through 12th grade, a community college, assisted living for older residents and athletics fields.
EPIC City would be near the community of Josephine, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) northeast of Dallas.
Dallas, TX
Dallas-based bookstore leading fight against Texas bill

Dallas-based Half Price Books is helping lead the fight against a bill being considered in Austin.
The bill would allow bookstores to be sued for selling or even displaying harmful material to minors.
Supporters say it’s needed to protect children, but critics call it censorship.
Workers at Half Price Books love reading but reading every book that comes through its doors, President Kathy Doyle Thomas says, is unrealistic.
But that, she says, is what her stores would be expected to do under a bill proposed by Republican State Rep. Nate Schatzline of Fort Worth.
“How do we know in all of these books that we have in all of the stores across the state — We don’t know what’s inappropriate. [They] could be inappropriate in Corpus Christi compared to Dallas, Texas,” explained Doyle Thomas.
HB 1375 would hold bookstores liable for “damages arising from the distribution, transmission, or display of harmful material to a minor.”
Rep. Schatzline told a House committee last month that it provides parents with the option to sue those who expose children to obscene content.
“As lawmakers, we have a duty to protect families and children from exploitation and from the unchecked spread of harmful spread of harmful materials in our communities and online,” said Rep. Schatzline.
Doyle Thomas says titles in the romance, mystery and self-help sections would be at the top of the list of those at risk of being targeted.
“When I saw the bill, I was just frustrated and mad and I thought we have to do something about it,” she said.
In a recent letter to lawmakers, Doyle Thomas wrote that HB 1375 is “a threat to all booksellers” and asked them not to interfere with their ability to do business in what’s seen by critics as the latest chapter in book censorship.
“Someone is trying to decide what I can and can’t read and my children can and can’t read and we do not think that’s fair or appropriate,” said Doyle Thomas.
The bill remains in a House committee.
The Texas legislative session is scheduled to end on June 2.
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