The site claimed it removed all of the poster's content because it believed the usage of the word "vengeance" suggested the demonstration was not meant to be peaceful. Immediate coverage of the event was negative after a transgender ex-student of a Nashville area Christian school shot and killed three students and three teachers.
After Greene removed her original post and reshared the image again, the platform finally restricted her account. She was placed under house arrest for a week. In a tweet published to her @RepMTG account, Greene explained that her "official Twitter account was termporarily [sic] suspended" because she had "warned of Antifa's Trans Day of Vengeance in front of the Supreme Court yesterday."
The Republican congressman then said that major corporations and the political left were trying to downplay the significance of the incident.
She claimed that "global brands and the left" were trying to "whitewash" the tragedy. Meanwhile, "no mention" has been made of the "innocent Christians" killed by a trans mass shooter in Tennessee.
Her tweet featured a clip from a Tucker Carlson show in which he argued that Christians cannot accept transgender people into their churches.