As I reported Tuesday, America’s Frontline Doctors held a press conference on Capitol Hill exposing the dangers, ineffectiveness and superfluousness of COVID-19 containment measures. Over 17 million people watched the video before YouTube, Twitter and Facebook gave it the “misinformation” stamp of disapproval and deleted it.
Yet another video censored for exposing the COVID-19 charade. No big surprise…
But then yesterday, I tried to visit the organization’s website and was met with the following message:
Their site is (was) hosted by SquareSpace. I have not yet found any explanation for the takedown. The hosting company’s Acceptable Policy Use seems pretty reasonable. Nonetheless, point 3.1 is wide open for any sort of censorship, as it forbids “anything that’s false, fraudulent, inaccurate or deceiving.”
Inaccurate? That would probably mean they need to take down every website that the company hosts. From a bakery claiming to make the “best” bread in town, to an insect blog that miscounted the stripes on the colletidae bee.
This is the first time I’ve seen an actual website removed from the internet for exposing the COVID-19 hoax. Other sites have been exposing the false pandemic since the beginning with far more content and far less credibility. What was different about America’s Frontline Doctors? I’ll talk about that in tomorrow’s Red Pill post.
Now, it may seem a step backwards that America’s Frontline Doctors was taken down; but the opposite may be true. As Fast Company says: “…such moves could backfire by feeding into a common narrative among conspiracy theorists that they are being silenced.”