Facebook now openly admitting its ludicrously Soviet like policies: “Only can say bad things about Tommy Robinson”

First, please watch this first five minutes of a Danish TV show with one of Facebook’s top execs. Although we hope to have the whole thing done over the course of next week, this first segment contains an admission which is so stunning it is hard to believe he said it out loud like it was an OK thing to say.

Direct link:

https://d.tube/v/vladtepesblog/QmYZopgdUHiCi8n6Xy211t2grPaw2CMxYYrdUri73osPvP

And if you do not think this is a big deal, consider it in the context of the video below, and the video below in the context of the one above.

The company that tells you what you can say and not say about a person with zero consideration of what is true, wants you to use money it invents and completely controls.

How would this not become a Chinese like, Social Credit system where Facebook can cancel or refuse to allow you to buy airline or rail tickets or anything else someone with whom it disagrees. And at the moment it disagrees with anyone not sporting a Neo-Marxist value set.

About Eeyore

Canadian artist and counter-jihad and freedom of speech activist as well as devout Schrödinger's catholic

8 Replies to “Facebook now openly admitting its ludicrously Soviet like policies: “Only can say bad things about Tommy Robinson””

  1. WORTHY SUGGESTION: I see D-Tube is into investors. A good idea.

    HOWEVER, they won’t get sufficient nor worthy investors if there is no indication of a video in the title of the post. By nature, people are visual, they aren’t into a lot of reading. If there isn’t an indication of a video, the newbies/uninformed might skip the post.

    Also, they must refine the quality of the system so as it doesn’t stop at the beginning or mid-way or whatever for some 30+ seconds before taking off again. A real turn-off. Sometimes, it can be almost two minutes. Recently, some of the videos are much better, they don’t shut down mid-way. But for the newcomers, it’s a turnoff and they won’t trust the system.

    FINALLY, sometimes we’re so ahead of others that we forget how the “common folk” will react to a post with no mention of a video.

    These are only my suggestions. With full respect.

    P.S.: It would be a great idea to include the original video link, before translation, to give them a thumbs up or down. This is important to encourage Free Speech in these countries.

    • It does work better under certain conditions. Also if the video has been up a while. But the more people watching it the better it works as we are all sharing it to each other.

      This is why it is difficult to knock it offline. So if you see a video here you feel is important, after watching it please leave a tab open to it to help others watch it fluidly.

      Also try different browsers and see what works best. They did something to Safari and it doesn’t seem to be as good but Brave is.

    • Yes just scrape and post the direct link to the video with your own description if you like. It may not resolve into an embedded vid but it should be a hot link to the video.

  2. I thought Facebook was starting to go the way of MySpace and Livejournal.

    Maybe in Trump’s second term, he can really crack down on big tech and regulate them into something a bit more civilized.

    • There are several suits against the big tech companies on anti trust grounds, those are the best chance of changing things.

      The more regulations on big tech the more the Dems can make permanent the next time they are in power. We want less regulation and more competition not more big government.

  3. I wish the interviewer had asked the Facebook man what he means by the term hate speech.

    Also, if a million people want to follow Tommy Robinson on Facebook, who is he to decide that they cannot do so?