Facebook ‘Whistleblower’ Revealed To Be Democrat Operative Wanting To Censor Conservatives

Jason Fyk appeared on The Stew Peters Show to break it down

Source: Red Voice Media

The media has spent the past few days fawning over the Facebook “whistleblower” Frances Haugen, whom they have portrayed as someone who is a sole actor trying to take down the major corporations that run social media. Unfortunately for Haugen, however, her true agenda has just been exposed.

“This woman is an op,” our very own Stew Peters said of Haugen on his show today. “She’s part of a coordinated effort with the press, with Democrats, and with people inside Facebook itself to make the company commit more censorship.”

“That’s always what the left wants when they make claims about bias, or something threatening ‘democracy’ or ‘free speech,’” he added. “To the left, ‘democracy’ just means Chairman Biden getting his way, and ‘free speech’ means the freedom to recite left-wing platitudes.”

MORE NEWS: Who you gonna call, when there’s no one to call?

To further expose the agenda of Haugen and the Democrat power players who are backing her, Peters sat down with free speech advocate Jason Fyk, who is currently making a legal challenge to Section 230. Since this is the law that the left currently uses to enable mass censorship online, Fyk has a thing or two to say about Haugen and her agenda.

Fyk first became suspicious of Haugen when he saw just how much the media was pushing her story to the public. The media had virtually ignored countless other Facebook whistleblowers, so why would they give Haugen so much attention right off the bat?

Continue reading “Facebook ‘Whistleblower’ Revealed To Be Democrat Operative Wanting To Censor Conservatives”

Facebook Liable for Human Trafficking Connections: Court Ruling

Facebook Liable for Human Trafficking Connections: Court Ruling

By Andrea Cipriano | June 28, 2021

Photo by Kayla Kern via Flickr.

The Texas State Supreme Court has ruled that Facebook cannot be considered a “lawless no-man’s land” and must be held liable for the conduct of individuals who use its communicative technology to recruit and prey, the Houston Chronicle reports.

This is the first case to beat Facebook on its argument that it had immunity under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

The ruling follows a trio of Houston civil action lawsuits involving teenage trafficking survivors who detail meeting their abusive pimps through Facebook messenger. The survivors further argued that the California-based social media company was negligent, saying Facebook “failed to warn about or attempt to prevent sex trafficking from taking place on its internet platforms.” 

The survivors also allege that Facebook itself benefited from the sexual exploitation of trafficking victims, the Houston Chronicle details.

Continue reading “Facebook Liable for Human Trafficking Connections: Court Ruling”

The Largest Autocracy on EarthFacebook is acting like a hostile foreign power; it’s time we treated it that way.

In 1947, Albert Einstein, writing in this magazine, proposed the creation of a single world government to protect humanity from the threat of the atomic bomb. His utopian idea did not take hold, quite obviously, but today, another visionary is building the simulacrum of a cosmocracy.

Mark Zuckerberg, unlike Einstein, did not dream up Facebook out of a sense of moral duty, or a zeal for world peace. This summer, the population of Zuckerberg’s supranational regime reached 2.9 billion monthly active users, more humans than live in the world’s two most populous nations—China and India—combined.

To Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder and CEO, they are citizens of Facebookland. Long ago he conspicuously started calling them “people” instead of “users,” but they are still cogs in an immense social matrix, fleshy morsels of data to satisfy the advertisers that poured $54 billion into Facebook in the first half of 2021 alone—a sum that surpasses the gross domestic products of most nations on Earth.

GDP makes for a telling comparison, not just because it gestures at Facebook’s extraordinary power, but because it helps us see Facebook for what it really is. Facebook is not merely a website, or a platform, or a publisher, or a social network, or an online directory, or a corporation, or a utility. It is all of these things. But Facebook is also, effectively, a hostile foreign power.

This is plain to see in its single-minded focus on its own expansion; its immunity to any sense of civic obligation; its record of facilitating the undermining of elections; its antipathy toward the free press; its rulers’ callousness and hubris; and its indifference to the endurance of American democracy.

Read: Facebook is a doomsday machine

Some of Facebook’s most vocal critics push for antitrust regulation, the unwinding of its acquisitions, anything that might slow its snowballing power. But if you think about Facebook as a nation-state—an entity engaged in a cold war with the United States and other democracies—you’ll see that it requires a civil-defense strategy as much as regulation from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Hillary Clinton told me last year that she’d always caught a whiff of authoritarianism from Zuckerberg. “I feel like you’re negotiating with a foreign power sometimes,” she said. “He’s immensely powerful.” One of his early mantras at Facebook, according to Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang in their book, An Ugly Truth: Inside Facebook’s Battle for Domination, was “company over country.” When that company has all the power of a country itself, the line takes on a darker meaning.

The basic components of nationhood go something like this: You need land, currency, a philosophy of governance, and people.

When you’re an imperialist in the metaverse, you need not worry so much about physical acreage—though Zuckerberg does own 1,300 acres of Kauai, one of the less populated Hawaiian islands. As for the rest of the items on the list, Facebook has them all.

Facebook is developing its own money, a blockchain-based payment system known as Diem (formerly Libra) that financial regulators and banks have feared could throw off the global economy and decimate the dollar.Facebook requires a civil-defense strategy as much as regulation from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

And for years Zuckerberg has talked about his principles of governance for the empire he built: “Connectivity is a human right”; “Voting is voice”; “Political ads are an important part of voice”; “The great arc of human history bends towards people coming together in ever greater numbers.” He’s extended those ideas outward in a new kind of colonialism—with Facebook effectively annexing territories where large numbers of people weren’t yet online. Its controversial program Free Basics, which offered people free internet access as long as Facebook was their portal to the web, was hawked as a way to help connect people. But its true purpose was to make Facebook the de facto internet experience in countries all over the world.

What Facebook possesses most of all, of course, is people—a gigantic population of individuals who choose to live under Zuckerberg’s rule. In his writings on nationalism, the political scientist and historian Benedict Anderson suggested that nations are defined not by their borders but by imagination. The nation is ultimately imaginary because its citizens “will never know most of their fellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them, yet in the minds of each lives the image of their communion.” Communities, therefore, are distinguished most of all “by the style in which they are imagined.”

Zuckerberg has always tried to get Facebook users to imagine themselves as part of a democracy. That’s why he tilts toward the language of governance more than of corporate fiat. In February 2009, Facebook revised its terms of service so that users couldn’t delete their data even if they quit the site. Rage against Facebook’s surveillance state was swift and loud, and Zuckerberg begrudgingly reversed the decision, saying it had all been a misunderstanding. At the same time, he introduced in a blog post the concept of a Facebook Bill of Rights and Responsibilities, inviting people to share their feedback—but only if they signed up for a Facebook account.

“More than 175 million people use Facebook,” he wrote. “If it were a country, it would be the sixth most populated country in the world. Our terms aren’t just a document that protect our rights; it’s the governing document for how the service is used by everyone across the world.”

Since then, Facebook’s population has swelled to 17 times that size. Along the way, Zuckerberg has repeatedly cast himself as the head of the nation of Facebook. His obsession with world dominance seems fated in retrospect—his long-standing preoccupation with the Roman empire generally and Augustus Caesar specifically, the digital version of Risk he coded as a teenager, his abiding interest in human psychology and emotional contagion.

In 2017, in a winding manifesto about his “global community,” Zuckerberg put it this way: “Overall, it is important that the governance of our community scales with the complexity and demands of its people. We are committed to always doing better, even if that involves building a worldwide voting system to give you more voice and control.” Of course, as in any business, the only votes that matter to Facebook are those of its shareholders. Yet Facebook feels the need to cloak its profit-seeking behavior in false pretenses about the very democratic values it threatens.

Pretending to outsource his most consequential decisions to empty imitations of democratic bodies has become a useful mechanism for Zuckerberg to avoid accountability. He controls about 58 percent of voting shares at the company, but in 2018 Facebook announced the creation of a sort of judiciary branchknown, in Orwellian fashion, as the Oversight Board. The board makes difficult calls on thorny issues having to do with content moderation. In May it handed down the decision to uphold Facebook’s suspension of Donald Trump. Facebook says that the board’s members are independent, but it hires and pays them.

Now, according to The New York Times, Facebook is considering forming a kind of legislative body, a commission that could make decisions on elections-related matters—political bias, political advertising, foreign interference. This would further divert scrutiny from Facebook leadership.

All of these arrangements have the feel of a Potemkin justice system, one that reveals Facebook for what it really is: a foreign state, populated by people without sovereignty, ruled by a leader with absolute power.

Facebook’s defenders like to argue that it’s naive to suggest that Facebook’s power is harmful. Social networks are here, they insist, and they’re not going anywhere. Deal with it. They’re right that no one should wish to return to the information ecosystems of the 1980s, or 1940s, or 1880s. The democratization of publishing is miraculous; I still believe that the triple revolution of the internet, smartphones, and social media is a net good for society. But that’s true only if we insist on platforms that are in the public’s best interest. Facebook is not.

Facebook is a lie-disseminating instrument of civilizational collapse. It is designed for blunt-force emotional reaction, reducing human interaction to the clicking of buttons. The algorithm guides users inexorably toward less nuanced, more extreme material, because that’s what most efficiently elicits a reaction. Users are implicitly trained to seek reactions to what they post, which perpetuates the cycle. Facebook executives have tolerated the promotion on their platform of propaganda, terrorist recruitment, and genocide. They point to democratic virtues like free speech to defend themselves, while dismantling democracy itself.The freedom to destroy yourself is one thing. The freedom to destroy democratic society is quite another.

These hypocrisies are by now as well established as Zuckerberg’s reputation for ruthlessness. Facebook has conducted psychological experiments on its users without their consent. It built a secret tiered system to exempt its most famous users from certain content-moderation rules and suppressed internal research into Instagram’s devastating effects on teenage mental health. It has tracked individuals across the web, creating shadow profiles of people who have never registered for Facebook so it can trace their contacts. It swears to fight disinformation and misinformation, while misleading researchers who study these phenomena and diluting the reach of quality news on its platforms.

From the May 2012 issue: Is Facebook making us lonely?

Even Facebook loyalists concede that it’s a place for garbage, for hyperbole, for mendacity—but argue that people should be free to manage their intake of such toxins. “While Facebook may not be nicotine I think it is probably like sugar,” the longtime Facebook executive Andrew “Boz” Bosworth wrote in a 2019 memo. “Like all things it benefits from moderation … If I want to eat sugar and die an early death that is a valid position.”

What Bosworth failed to say is that Facebook doesn’t just have the capacity to poison the individual; it’s poisoning the world. When 2.9 billion people are involved, what’s needed is moderation in scale, not moderation in personal intake. The freedom to destroy yourself is one thing. The freedom to destroy democratic society is quite another.

Facebook sold itself to the masses by promising to be an outlet for free expression, for connection, and for community. In fact, it is a weapon against the open web, against self-actualization, and against democracy. All of this so Facebook could dangle your data in front of advertisers.

To one degree or another, this is something Facebook has in common with its subsidiary Instagram and its rivals Google, YouTube (which Google owns), and Amazon. All position their existence as somehow noble—their purpose is, variously, to help people share their life, to provide answers to the most difficult questions, and to deliver what you need when you need it. But of the behemoths, Facebook is most ostentatious in its moral abdications.

Facebook needs its users to keep on believing that its dominance is a given, to ignore what it is doing to humanity and use its services anyway. Anyone who seeks to protect individual freedom and democratic governance should be bothered by this acceptance of the status quo.

Regulators have their sights set on Facebook for good reason, but the threat the company poses to Americans is about much more than its monopoly on emerging technology. Facebook’s rise is part of a larger autocratic movement, one that’s eroding democracy worldwide as authoritarian leaders set a new tone for global governance. Consider how Facebook portrays itself as a counterbalance to a superpower like China. Company executives have warned that attempts to interfere with Facebook’s untrammeled growth—through regulating the currency it is developing, for example—would be a gift to China, which wants its own cryptocurrency to be dominant. In other words, Facebook is competing with China the way a nation would.

Read: What Facebook did to American democracy

Perhaps Americans have become so cynical that they have given up on defending their freedom from surveillance, manipulation, and exploitation. But if Russia or China were taking the exact same actions to undermine democracy, Americans would surely feel differently. Seeing Facebook as a hostile foreign power could force people to acknowledge what they’re participating in, and what they’re giving up, when they log in. In the end it doesn’t really matter what Facebook is; it matters what Facebook is doing.

What could we do in return? “Socially responsible” companies could boycott Facebook, starving it of ad revenue in the same way that trade sanctions deprive autocracies of foreign exchange. In the past, however, boycotts by major corporations like Coca-Cola and CVS have barely made a ripple. Maybe rank-and-file Facebook employees could lobby for reform, but nothing short of mass walkouts, of the sort that would make the continued operation of Facebook impossible, would be likely to have much effect. And that would require extraordinary courage and collective action.

Facebook users are the group with the most power to demand change. Facebook would be nothing without their attention. American citizens, and those of other democracies, might shun Facebook and Instagram, not merely as a lifestyle choice, but as a matter of civic duty.

Could enough people come together to bring down the empire? Probably not. Even if Facebook lost 1 billion users, it would have another 2 billion left. But we need to recognize the danger we’re in. We need to shake the notion that Facebook is a normal company, or that its hegemony is inevitable.

Perhaps someday the world will congregate as one, in peace, as Einstein dreamed, indivisible by the forces that have launched wars and collapsed civilizations since antiquity. But if that happens, if we can save ourselves, it certainly won’t be because of Facebook. It will be in spite of it.


This article appears in the November 2021print edition with the headline “Facebookland.” When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2021/11/facebook-authoritarian-hostile-foreign-power/620168/Source for original article

Get US Out! of the UN

Get US Out! of the UN

JBS YouTube Video Why Did the U.S Join the UN?

Surrendering Sovereignty for “Peace”

Following the horrific devastation of World War II, Americans were open to new ideas in the hope that it would prevent another world war and bring world peace. Foisted on them by the Deep State was the idea for the United Nations. The United States enlisted as a founding member of the United Nations when the U.S. Senate approved the UN Charter on July 28, 1945. After only six days of formal deliberation, the Senate voted 89 to 2 in favor of joining the world body. The two patriots who voted against ratifying the Charter and UN membership were Senators Henrik Shipstead (R-Minn.) and William Langer (R-N.D.).

Charter for World Government

The UN Charter contains a Preamble and 111 Articles in its 19 Chapters. Although being approximately the same size as the U.S. Constitution, the two founding documents could hardly be any more different. Whereas the U.S. Constitution creates a government with strictly limited and defined powers, the UN Charter establishes the framework for expansive global governance towards one world government.

Article 1 of the UN Charter states that its purpose is: “To maintain international peace and security.” The word “peace” appears a total of six times in Article 1. As a result, UN officials and supporters contend that the world body is a “peace organization.” However, in 1971 the peace organization ousted the free, anticommunist Republic of China – a founding member of the UN – and replaced it with the communist People’s “Republic” of China, whose leadership has killed over 60 million Chinese.

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/TBamLE0XYdM?feature=oembed

Where is the UN Heading?

From the Arms Trade Treaty intended to regulate and trace the flow of conventional weapons, including handguns, around the world to the onerous environmental controls of the UN’s Agenda 21/2030, which are designed to curtail every individual’s consumption of natural resources (i.e. clean water, coal, oil, natural gas, and food), the UN is a recipe for global despotism.

The ultimate goal for the United Nations is to create a unified one-world government. Consider learning more about the UN’s threat to U.S. sovereignty and freedom using our educational links, videos, and other JBS.org resources. This being one of our longest standing Action Projects our society has some of the most useful UN education tools. Click through the menu on the left to continue learning more about the UN plans for your Second Amendment rights, a one-world government, and the infamous Agenda 21/2030.

What Has Happened to Us?

Currently, the economic status of America is not what is was when our Former President Trump was running the country. If he doesn’t know anything about anything else (which he most certainly does) he is definitely a mastermind at finance and economics. He is brilliant at at moving the pieces in a chess game. It’s definitely his forte! While I’m certain he made plenty of mistakes and misjudged a few scenarios, he always recovered and usually his gain was much bigger than his loss. What I appreciate about this man is he is also a giver. A humble giver, when it came to everyday folks like you and me. I’m aware of how he likes to tout his accomplishments on national TV but I truly believe that most of this stems from him being attacked so furiously by the communists leaning, unduly progressive, democrats trying to shoot him down because they knew he was a threat to their totalitarian agenda. And they are right! He most certainly is! Thank God!

The Economic Situation, How Bad IS IT?

When you are looking at a government that is imposing a form of government in which the political authority exercises absolute and centralized control over all aspects of life, the individuals are subordinated to the state, and opposing political and cultural expression is suppressed.
When it is clearly obvious that the government I working on becoming a system of government where the people have virtually no authority and the state wields absolute control of every aspect of the country, socially, financially and imposing a form of government in which the political authority exercises absolute and centralized control over all aspects of life, the individual is subordinated to the state, and opposing political and cultural expression is suppressed.
A system of government where the people have virtually no authority and the state wields absolute control of every aspect of the country, socially, financially, and politically, and characterizing itself by the actions it’s taking on policies that will bankrupt its citizens, this is explicit evidence that they are a barreling full-speed ahead towards being a political authority that exercises absolute and centralized control. Why else would Bernie Sanders be demanding 6.5 trillion dollars that will throw the responsibility into the laps of its hard-working taxpayers? That’s the bottom line. Any amount in the trillions of dollars at this point is unreasonable and frankly, it makes it even clearer just exactly how much they don’t give a damn… As long as they bankrupt Americans to foist government dependence on the Americans that ALL they care about. Meanwhile, they are robbing us blind financially with lame taxes increases.
And if it wasn’t bad enough, they are forcing Americans to pay for and support millions and millions of illegal immigrants that they opened our borders to. For the millions of people that can’t even afford health care for themselves, that’s a hard punching the gut… I’m referring to the people that aren’t on welfare or the that don’t receive any government assistance at all because they make too much money. And aside from that, there are those of us that believe that personal responsibility for oneself and being a productive citizen in society through our own contributions is vital to being stable, healthy, happy, responsible, and self-reliant human. I’m not saying that are not deserving people that shouldn’t be on government assistance because there are! I simply don’t want to be controlled because it’s a fact of life that when the government gives handouts, they also have the option of removing them. When you are financially supported by someone else there is always the reality that the giver subconsciously feels like they are owed something in return. Especially when it’s the government. The words obedience, subordination, submission, and compliance, come to mind.

Speaking of Being Self-Reliance… What happened to accountability?

I do however agree that there should be legislation in order to keep law and order in the country because the lack of lawlessness and accountability in California is unimaginable! The new allowance of individuals going into a store like CVS and loading as much as possible that will fit into their arms or a rolling suitcase, then bolting out the door is insanity! Meanwhile, the employees are forced by the state to do NOTHING. They are not allowed to detain them and can not even file charges! That’s an incredible hardship on these business owners and in my opinion, the government should be accountable for these losses if they aren’t going to make the thieves responsible for their actions that are ruining the livelihood of these owners which also affects their employees! Once again, the hard-working taxpayers are losing because of the lack of concern of the ignorant government. Where I come from, we call that looting! You’d be extremely fortunate not get a bullet in the foot for stealing a man’s merchandise off the shelves of his store. That man worked and paid for those items and he is selling them in order to feed his family! The majority of the folks where I live (in Texas) we still have that old-west blood running through our veins and we don’t tolerate thievery! Prove me wrong!

I don’t know what your thoughts are but I’m fed up with the hypocrisy within the government and these so-called leaders. If you look at their financial situations especially when comparing them to when they started working for the government and now or when they left…. You will see for yourself how much they care about the citizens! “We The People” are not in their scope, I assure you!

Hospital systems purge thousands of workers to engineer health care collapse

Courtesy of American Patriot Email Reports

The purge of hospital workers with natural immunity is now underway, with The Epoch Times reporting that a large New York health care system has …

Hospital systems purge thousands of workers to engineer health care collapse