🇺🇸 🇮🇱 🔇 The late Susan Wojcicki (former YouTube CEO) once said in an interview: pass laws so we can ban more.
🔶️ UBERSOY: "The censorship was getting a bit much - even for them - and they thought they could be sued unless government passed laws that would allowed/approve of them censoring more YouTube content."
🔶️ Chris Menahan: "Susan Wojcicki's husband Dennis Troper was serving on the board of the Anti-Defamation League around the time she went on her banning spree against the "far right" and embraced mass censorship on YouTube."
🔶️ LeafyUsHereHQ: "As soon as she became CEO of YouTube in 2014, she started implementing hate speech policies, Ноⅼосаᥙѕt denying policies, etc etc. She ran the biggest website in the world into the ground and turned it into a mass censorship arm of the Israeli government. She is the reason why all of your favorite people are banned from YouTube."
https://www.timesofisrael.com/youtube-says-over-10000-workers-will-help-curb-shady-videos/
📝 🇺🇸 📖 During the American revolutionary period, one of the most common practices among patriots, activists, and revolutionaries was wearing disguises or covering faces to prevent themselves from being identified. This wasn't because they were cowardly; it was because during moments of heated political action, one must prioritize self-preservation.
1. The Boston Tea Party: Roughly 100-150 activists from the Sons of Liberty—led by Sam Adams, dressed up their faces to look like Mohawk Indians and dump tens of thousands of pounds of tea into the Boston harbor.
2. Stamp Act Protests (1765): In Boston and other ports, Sons of Liberty members blackened their faces with charcoal or wore masks while hanging effigies of tax collectors (e.g., Andrew Oliver) and destroying stamped paper.
3. Boston Non-Importation Agreement Enforcement (1768–1770): Patriots disguised themselves to intimidate merchants violating boycotts of British goods. Nighttime raids often involved face paint or masks to ...