Controversial political streamer Destiny has been unbanned on Kick days after his account was suspended due to his comments about the recent shooting at the Donald Trump rally. Following his return to the platform, the Kick streamer gave a shoutout to fellow content creator TrainwrecksTV for playing a role in having his ban lifted.
For context, Destiny's view towards the former US President getting shot at and one of his supporters dying at the Pennsylvania rally earlier this July (2024) caused a lot of backlash. A couple of days after he made some comments regarding the matter, where he made fun of the victims of the shooting, his Kick account was restricted. Following that, the streamer even shared a screenshot, claiming that his channel had been suspended due to "hate speech."
On his first livestream back on July 21, 2024, Destiny talked about how TrainwrecksTV was a driving force behind getting his suspension lifted, claiming that the Kick advisor personally talked with him and the moderation team to sort things out.
Destiny gives a "quick shoutout" to TrainwrecksTV for chatting with Kick's moderation
For those unaware, TrainwrecksTV joined Kick's advisory team a few years back and has been a big proponent of the streaming platform while staunchly criticizing Twitch. Over the years, he has been updating the community about the Stake-backed platform's upcoming policies and has been a staunch advocate of streamers joining Kick.
While TrainwrecksTV does not have much to do with actual moderation, during Destiny's latest stream back, he thanked his fellow content creator for getting in touch with the people who got him banned and said:
"A quick shoutout, apparently Trainwrecks said that he got in contact with Kick's moderation. He chatted with them, they chatted with me, we chatted back and forth. And yeah, damn. Squad W!"
In related news, Destiny's 13-year-old son Nathan has recently been handed an indefinite suspension by Twitch after the boy allegedly made "violent threats" on one of his streams. Clips from the now-deleted VOD show the young boy had a toy firearm — probably an airsoft gun — with him when he was broadcasting and talked about shooting his father.