Recently Facebook announced they would be "standing against hate" in the future. And that future started last week when they banned, among others, Paul Joseph Watson, who used to hang out with Alex Jones ("Infowars"). He no longer does as far as I know. Once a liberal bastion of free speech and other human rights, The Atlantic Magazineheartily endorsed Facebook's embrace of regressive neo-facism. Material related to Infowars is subject to the most severe restrictions.
Infowars is subject to the strictest ban. Facebook and Instagram will remove any content containing Infowars videos, radio segments, or articles (unless the post is explicitly condemning the content), and Facebook will also remove any groups set up to share Infowars content and events promoting any of the banned extremist figures, according to a company spokesperson.
I'm assuming, as did free-speech advocate and you-tuber Tim Pool and others, that Watson's ban was due to his former association with Jones. (Jones had been previously banned from Facebook and all other social media, but now, like that fabled fraternity in Animal House, Jones and Infowars are on double secret probation.)
I watch Paul Joseph Watson videos. I enjoy watching them. I even look forward to new ones. I have never seen Watson be hateful about anything.
No, Watson's crime is far, far worse than that — he makes fun of delusional humans (aka., idiots like Mark Zuckerberg or Justin Trudeau). He derides them, ridicules them, ... he mocks these idiots over and over again. He's really, really sarcastic.
And if I've learned anything here on Earth, it's that with humans, you can never be sarcastic enough.
But ridicule is considered hate speech in the Age of Political Correctness. A crime. A bannable offense. So watch some PJW videos. Share them on Facebook.
Find out just how enlightened and tolerant your social media overlords are.
Here's a couple to start you off with.
And to think I live in a society where Tucker Fucking Carlson is actually the voice of reason.
"Don't worry, these [alleged journalists] aren't terrifying or anything."