Apparently, reporting on
crime is a crime. Colin
Flaherty, who chronicles racially
motivated violence by blacks against whites, awoke Thursday to find YouTube had
terminated his account.
YouTube declined to
provide a reason to the author of “White
Girl Bleed a Lot: The Return of Racial Violence to America and How the Media
Ignore It.”
The company also didn’t
respond to a WND request for comment. But Flaherty suspects he knows what is
going on.
“YouTube sent me an
email the other day saying it was putting me on notice for violating its Terms
of Service, meaning I would not be allowed to post new videos for two weeks,”
Flaherty told WND. “The reason: I posted a private video from a parent of a
child who filmed an episode of black mob violence against a white child. The
local news blurred it. And I presented the original. YouTube did not like
that.”
He said in his version
of the video that “anyone who blurred this story is guilty of child abuse
because they are aiding and abetting this violence.”
“Two days later, I awoke
to find my account terminated.”
YouTube previously temporarily
suspended WND’s YouTube channel for featuring Mike Huckabee’s comments on transsexuals.
Flaherty also had his
account temporarily
suspended in June for posting
“shocking, sensational or disrespectful videos,” especially involving “minors
participating in a harmful or dangerous activity.”
However, Flaherty said
he was not creating offensive content but simply chronicling the objective
reality of certain crimes by posting videos, firsthand reports and other
evidence to show his subscribers what was really going on.
And the response was
massive.
“My YouTube channel was
getting 1 million views a month, generating about 5 to 10 million minutes of viewing.
There were 25,000 to 50,000 comments a month, and 15,000 subscribers. And all
of those numbers were growing 20 percent per month,” he said.
Flaherty denies the
accusation that his channel was somehow racially insensitive.
“There is nothing racist
or separatist or nationalist or supremacist about it,” he told WND. “This
channel satisfied a craving for real information about black-on-white crime and
black-on-white hostility that has reached epidemic levels. And I don’t
apologize for pointing out the obvious: black mob violence and black-on-white
crime is wildly out of proportion.”
Flaherty believes he was
creating such a “fantastic” response from the public because he was addressing
issues no one else would.
“My channel documents how the media ignore,
deny, condone, excuse, encourage and even lie about these kinds of crimes. I
filled a vacuum, and the people responded to that.
“And all of this was
based on facts and evidence. We produced videos, 9-1-1 calls, police reports,
eyewitness accounts and statements from victims who all said the same thing.
‘Something very wrong is happening here, and we have to pay attention to it,’”
he said.
YouTube removed many
videos Flaherty had posted and still will not tell him why.
“They simply turned off
the channel without any notice, which is what many people have told me they do.
I appealed and wrote three emails, but as of now, I have not received any kind
of a response. Nothing.”
WND
columnist Jack Cashill says he is
disgusted but not surprised at YouTube’s actions.
“‘In a time of universal
deceit – telling the truth is a revolutionary act,’ said George Orwell, and by
that definition, Colin Flaherty is a true revolutionary and a brave one,”
Cashill told WND.
The author of “Scarlet
Letters: The Ever Increasing Intolerance of the Cult of Liberalism” slammed YouTube as simply another part of a
corrupt media establishment he believes is actively concealing the truth from
the American people.
“In contrast to
Flaherty, the powers that be – YouTube apparently included – are cowardly and
counter-revolutionary. By denying America the truth about race, they are
increasing the sense of victimization among the black underclass and
encouraging more of the racial violence that Flaherty has been exposing.”
Flaherty said his work
will continue regardless of YouTube’s decision.
“My YouTube channel is
down, hopefully temporarily. But I’ll be back there or somewhere else soon.”
Flaherty stated his
audience will still be able to find much of his reporting.
“Until I can return,
many of those videos are still up on my Facebook pages, and they are easy to find.”
The journalist says his
audience is what is keeping him going.
“Here is the big
picture: We do not need to get angry at YouTube or anyone else. We need to get
more determined to expose the insanity behind the violence and denial. I will
not stop. And this will not stop,” he said.
“Today I received
hundreds of emails from fans who want to know what is happening. I’m not going
away. And more importantly, neither are they.”
http://www.wnd.com/2015/08/youtube-bans-proof-of-black-on-white-violence/
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