Tech giants censor anti-White manifesto by gender-confused killer
Social media platforms are blocking the release of a manifesto written by gender-confused killer Audrey Hale for violating their “community guidelines.”
On March 27th Hale massacred three children and three adults at The Covenant School in Nashville. Her manifesto, posted to X on Monday by political commentator Steven Crowder, shows she was driven by a violent hatred for White people.
On one page of the manifesto dated February 3rd and titled "Kill those kids!!!” Hale referred to the schoolchildren as “those crackers... going to fancy private schools with those fancy khakis + sports backpacks w/ their daddies mustangs + convertibles."
"F*ck you little sh*ts," she wrote. “Wanna kill all you little crackers!!! Bunch of little faggots w/ your white privileges f*ck you faggots."
Following the shooting the Metro Nashville Police Department promised to release the manifesto to the public but then suddenly and inexplicably reversed their decision.
While X took no action against Crowder for publishing the manifesto, Crowder received a warning when he tried to publish it to Facebook:
Your post may go against our Community Standards on violence and incitement. Your post looks similar to content that we’ve removed for going against our Community Standards. You can delete it now to avoid potential account restrictions.
Crowder then tried to post an episode of his podcast Louder with Crowder to YouTube during which he discussed the manifesto. YouTube immediately removed it and sent him the following message:
We wanted to let you know our team reviewed your content, and we think it violates our violent criminal organizations policy. We know you may not have realized this was a violation of our policies, so we’re not applying a strike to your channel. However, we have removed the . . . content from YouTube. [emphasis original]
YouTube’s violent extremist or criminal organizations policy forbids “content intended to praise, promote, or aid violent extremist or criminal organizations.”
A search on YouTube for “right-wing shooter manifesto” yields seemingly endless videos discussing in detail the manifesto written by Payton Gendron, a White man who killed ten Black people in Buffalo last year.
When Crowder tried to post the manifesto to Instagram which, like Facebook, is owned by Meta, he received a similar message:
Your post was removed. Your post goes against our Community Guidelines on dangerous individuals and organizations. Repeatedly breaking our rules can cause more account restrictions.
Unlike Facebook or YouTube, Instagram explained its policy in more detail, though its direct relevance was still unclear:
We don’t allow people to share symbols, praise or support of people and organizations we define as dangerous, or follow them.
This includes things like:
- Praising a terrorist attack
- Supporting violence against a particular group of people
- Supporting or promoting harmful criminal activity, like human trafficking
“Have you tried labeling it ‘Trump tax returns’?” a user asked Crowder.