Sunday, March 7, 2021

Anti-Semite Farrakhan makes vaccine claims that should have banned him from social media


If you believe that Twitter and Facebook has banned Nation of Islam's anti-Semitic leader Louis Farrakhan from their platforms for lying about the coronavirus vaccine or his Jew hatred rhetoric, you're as clueless as a supporter of Cuomo's nursing home strategy.

Both platforms are not a bit concerned about Farrakhan's allegedly false claims about the coronavirus vaccines even though their policies clearly call for banning coronavirus misinformation, and in the anti-Semite's case, disinformation.

Farrakhan’s baseless remarks, recorded on video last month during the Nation of Islam’s annual Saviours’ Day convention, remained available via Twitter, Facebook and YouTube as of Saturday night.

They included claims that the vaccine was a "vial of death."

His hatred of America, Jews, and people in the LGBTQ community are a vial of death, but he is allowed to get away with it.

Farrakhan compared the vaccine to the cyanide-laced Kool-Aid from the Jim Jones mass-death tragedy in Guyana in 1978.

"It is death itself," Farrakhan said, without evidence other than the voices in his head.

Twitter announced last week that users "may not use Twitter’s services to share false or misleading information about COVID-19 which may lead to harm." By "harm," they really mean harm to their political/culture agenda, but they don't tell you that.

In February, Facebook put out a statement saying it was expanding its efforts to remove false claims about the pandemic. So instead of allowing for free speech and debate, Big Tech will be our deciders in chief.

Other NOI speakers at the event lied about the vaccine saying that it killed over 900 people and suggested the U.S. uses vaccines for population control and that is it linked to autism.

The vaccines issued by Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson are considered safe by medical experts, which Louis Farrakhan is far from being. 

Some of the fears that Black people may have likely stem from what took place in the Tuskegee syphilis study in the 1930s whereby Black men went untreated so the government could observe the effects of the disease. That was truly disgusting and is a good example of why we should not eradicate our historical knowledge so that we can learn from it.

Because of this horrible historical event, many leaders in the Black community have been working to restore faith in the vaccine.


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