VIP Membership Christmas SALE: 60% Off!
We Know Who Set That Woman on Fire in the NYC Subway This...
Here's the Message Trump Gave to Pete Hegseth When He Nominated Him for...
No, Did CBS News Really Think This Segment on Gun Control Through?
No Circular Firing Squads This Time, Republicans
Luigi Mangione Enters Plea in Shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO
We Have the House Ethics Report on Matt Gaetz
Tom Homan Reveals When Trump's Mass Deportation Operation Will Begin
Fetterman's Comments About Trump Aren't Sitting Well With Progressives
Trump Threatens to Take Back Control of the Panama Canal. The President of...
BREAKING: Biden Commutes Sentences of Nearly All Prisoners on Federal Death Row
Biden Commuting the Sentences of 37 Federal Death Row Inmates Ignores the Will...
Trump Vows to Stop 'Transgender Lunacy'
Is America's Heartland the Next Stop for Vehicle-Borne Terror?
A Georgia Homeowner Tried to Move Back Into Her Home Inhabited by a...
Tipsheet

New York Post is Censored by Social Media, Again

Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

On Thursday, Facebook decided to censor a New York Post article about Black Lives Matter co-founder, Patrisse Cullors, a "trained Marxist" who has come under heavy criticism for the hypocrisy in her buying a $1.4 million home in a largely white neighborhood. The piece in question, by Isabel Vincent, from April 10, reported that "Marxist BLM leader buys $1.4 million home in ritzy LA enclave."

Advertisement

Facebook used the oft-repeated reasoning of "violating community standards." Specifically, "This content was removed for violating our privacy and personal information policy."

An Inquire piece from Shant Mesrobian and Zaid Jilani confirms the ban is worldwide. 

Vincent's piece makes mention of the neighborhood, with pictures, but cites a celebrity real estate blog, and does not list addresses.

In an editorial, the New York Post is adamant they did not share Cullors' personal information:

We reached out to Khan-Cullors for comment before publication; she didn’t respond. After it was posted, her organization put out a statement saying yes, she used to take a salary from BLM but doesn’t anymore, and the money she used to buy property came from her private income for book and development deals. Take the organization’s word for it. We added the response in full to our online article post-publication.  

Then she accused us of being “abusive” and putting her at risk.

Our article features some pictures of the properties she bought, but includes no addresses, in fact doesn’t even say the city in some cases. Our reporter compiled the information from public records.

Khan-Cullors’ lawyers apparently got a more sympathetic ear at Facebook, however, and five days after the article was published, it suddenly decided that it clashed with its “community standards.” “This content was removed for violating our privacy and personal information policy,” Facebook writes.

Advertisement

The editorial also highlighted the sheer hypocrisy and double standard:

This decision is so arbitrary as to be laughable. Does Facebook know how many newspapers, magazines and Web sites highlight the real estate purchases of the rich and famous? The next time People magazine covers Kim Kardashian’s latest mansion purchase, will it violate any community standards? How about running a picture of the resort Ted Cruz is staying at?

Rachel Bovard highlights this concern further in her piece for the New York Post, "Progressive figures work hand-in-hand with social media to silence opponents" from Friday afternoon:

Likewise, Facebook made no effort to reduce circulation of a stories containing the illegally leaked details of President Trump’s tax returns, or secretly recorded conversations with Melania Trump.

Information about celebrity home purchases, including sale prices and photos, circulate daily. So, too, do images of revenge pornography, child abuse, and sex trafficking – which Facebook claims before Congress and in court it should not be held responsible.

That’s because Facebook’s content policies aren’t really concerned with privacy, or with protecting personal information. They’re about protecting the politically and culturally powerful by suppressing criticism, punishing dissent, and crushing counter-narratives.

The New York Post wasn't the only one who found the explanation faulty. 

Advertisement

The New York Post has also had content censored when it comes to publishing a column that the Wuhan Coronavirus could have leaked from a virology lab there, and about the laptop Hunter Biden left at a Delaware computer repair shop. Twitter CEO, Jack Dorsey, admitted before a Congressional committee that it was "a mistake," in remarks that conveniently came after President Joe Biden had already won the election. He called it "a total mistake," before another committee when President Biden had already taken office.

According to a poll commissioned by the Media Research Center, 9.4 percent of Biden voters would have changed their vote had they been fully aware of the Hunter Biden scandals.

In other words, President Trump could very likely have been re-elected if not for censorship from the mainstream media. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement