10/01/2019 / By News Editors
YouTube has buried a viral video of Hillary Clinton lying for 13 minutes straight in yet another example of election blacklisting.
(Article by Paul Joseph Watson republished from Infowars.com)
Despite the video obtaining over 15 million views, it remains buried under over a dozen mainstream media search results even when you search for the direct word for word title.
YouTube election blacklisting has been a hot topic since Steven Crowder drew attention to the fact that the Google-owned company was deliberately preventing conservative channels from appearing in search results.
YouTube has literally broken its own search engine in a partisan effort to make conservative content harder to find.
A search for “Steven Crowder Change My Mind” would previously not return any such videos, despite most of them having multiple millions of views.
A search for my own name also produced zero links to my videos but numerous links to videos from other channels criticizing me.
In a new video, Crowder notes that while YouTube has fixed some of these issues since last week, other examples of conservative content being buried, specifically in the United States, have not been reversed.
As Dr. Robert Epstein has proven, algorithmic manipulation can literally shift millions of votes. This is election meddling, plain and simple.
UPDATE: We've been able to confirm that @TeamYouTube's #YouTube2020ElectionBlacklist is still blocking our content for some searches, but ONLY in the United States. The implications are alarming… pic.twitter.com/n0ESF6qvZ0
— Steven Crowder (@scrowder) October 1, 2019
Read more at: Infowars.com
Tagged Under: bias, Big Tech, blacklisting, Censorship, Clinton, Cover-Up, democrats, election, hillary, Hillary Clinton, lies, Suppressed, tech giants, YouTube
COPYRIGHT © 2018 SPEECHPOLICE.NEWS
All content posted on this site is protected under Free Speech. SpeechPolice.news is not responsible for content written by contributing authors. The information on this site is provided for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended as a substitute for professional advice of any kind. SpeechPolice.news assumes no responsibility for the use or misuse of this material. All trademarks, registered trademarks and service marks mentioned on this site are the property of their respective owners.