May 17, 2021

Facebook deletes “I trust my immune system” profile photo frames under “virus misinformation” policy

 


The pic above is a frame around a user profile pic on Fakebook.  Fakebook removed the frame, claiming the statement violated its "virus misinformation policy."  Seriously.  Read on.

Fakebook--a huge supporter of Democrats, Leftists, socialists and censorship, disguised as a way to post pics of your pets and kids--has a long, detailed, written policy on what they won't allow users of their platform to post.  If you post something they don't like, the company's censors will remove it and either lock your account for some period or delete your account altogether.

One of the things the dictators at Fakebook won't let users post is anything that can be even remotely interpreted as questioning the Party Line about any aspect of the Chinese virus--its origins or whether the communist Chinese government lied to the world, or whether masks had any benefit at all, or--the big one: expressing skepticism about any aspect of the COVID vaccines, including the death rate from them, the lack of adequate testing, adverse effects or the wisdom of getting the shot.

If you doubt any of that, try posting something like "Wow, sure do seem to be lots of people dying right after getting the shot, eh?" and see if they remove your post.

As with all totalitarian regimes, the rulers end up going to absurd extremes to suppress dissent. (Remember the 6-year-old who was suspended from his elementary school because he took a bite out of a pop-tart and the result looked like a pistol?  Seriously.)  Well read on...

Dozens of Fakebook users have been posting "picture frames" around their profile pic saying things like "I trust my immune system.”  Fakebook's crazy-Karens didn't find that offensive, until some Karen at  CNBC complained.  See, CNBC was "concerned" that posting a picture frame saying "I trust my immune system" was really a subtle way of saying the poster trusted his/her immune system to keep him healthy.

Get it?  CNBC claimed it was a coded way of saying "I don't need the shot."

Ooooh, can't allow THAT, eh?

CNBC even complained about frames saying unobjectionable truths like “I HAVE an immune system!”  You'd think that would be allowed, eh?  But to the Fakebook censors, truth isn't a defense.  The truth of a statement doesn't matter to the censors at Fakebook.  "We won't allow you to say things like that, period!"

And within a day of CNBC's complaint, Facebook deleted all those "I have an immune system" frames.

A spokesperson for Fakebook reportedly told CNBC that the company would continue to remove any photo frames bearing "vaccine skeptic messages."  The company's official, written policy says it prohibits, “promoting natural immunity or encouraging vaccine refusals.

By contrast, the spokesperson said picture frames with pro-vaccine messages will continue to be allowed.

Source.

https://reclaimthenet.org/facebook-deletes-i-trust-my-immune-system-profile-photo-frames/

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