Fakebook deletes post from an MD linking to CDC and American Academy of Pediatrics; Fakebook claims "spam"!
A doctor was asked, on Fakebook, about the number of pediatric deaths due to the Chinese virus in April. Dr. Tracy Høeg responded with a link to the web page of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), which contained quotes from the CDC.
Fakebook deleted her post, claiming the comment "goes against our community standards on spam."
The company went on to say "We have these standards to prevent things like false advertising, fraud and security breaches," but didn't specify what part of her post fell under any of these categories.
Fakebook, like all the giant social-media tyrants, will remove even totally true, factual posts if those posts claim cases are down, or fatalities or down, or that the survival rate is far higher than claimed, or that most people who get the virus aren't hospitalized because they don't exhibit symptoms, or that the rarely kills people who don't have "co-morbidities" like obesity.
In short, Fakebook is preventing Americans from learning the truth. And it's deliberate. And they hide their censorship behind a cloud of bullshit verbiage that make it appear that the poster is lying or trying to defraud. It's absolutely classic. The sooner everyone leaves Fakebook, the better off we'll be as a nation.
If you're interested in the truth, get off Fakebook and Twatter.
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