Censorship Run Wild? Two Docs Attacked by Big Tech

It’s increasingly clear we’re not allowed to share select thoughts in public.

We saw that with Hunter Biden’s laptop and contrarian views about the pandemic. The Twitter Files exposed how both topics got censored beyond a reasonable doubt.

In each case, Big Tech made sure the truth couldn’t dent The Narrative.

Now, two separate film projects may be facing Big Tech censorship. And, once again, the mainstream media’s silence is telling.

Director Eli Steele recently released “Killing America.” The documentary explores the eerie connection between anti-semitism and DEI agendas in San Francisco schools.

The film got smacked around by three separate bodies, one of which will come as a shock to some. YouTube, Vimeo and Subtack, a newer platform dedicated to letting more voices be heard, all shut the film down due to “copyright violations.”

A portion of the film features footage taken during a Sequoia Union High School District board meeting, according to Fox News.

Steele received a “cease-and-desist letter” tied to the footage. He claims the video clip falls in the “fair use” category and that multiple lawyers he consulted agreed.

Either way, three separate platforms chose to take the video down. In the case of Substack, it deleted Steele’s links to the footage from its platform.

The film can still be seen on Rumble and X, the latter owned by Elon Musk.

The M-A Chronicle, which sent Steele the “cease and desist” letter, contents censorship isn’t the goal.

Our objective is not to censor the documentary but simply remove our materials,” the editorial board continued, it told Fox News.

At least Steele and his team learned why the film had been taken down. Big Tech censors often refuse to explain to creators why their material ran afoul of said platforms.

It’s not the only recent censorship-themed problem.

This reporter appears in the new documentary “Hollywood Takeover.” The Epoch Times feature is highly critical of how Hollywood bends to China’s will in order to release their titles into the Middle Kingdom.

The team behind the film tells HIT the movie’s trailer got deleted by YouTube on March 4. The video platform also removed the film’s YouTube account.

Newsweek reported on the matter, forcing the Google-owned property to reinstate both days later.

Media pressure previously coaxed Amazon to lift its block against Steele’s last film, “What Killed Michael Brown?”

The company behind “Hollywood Takeover,” which also oversees “China in Focus,” is no stranger to Big Tech censorship. NTD’s “China in Focus” ran afoul of YouTube previously, according to a Newsweek investigation.

A member of the “Hollywood Takeover” team said it will not post that film’s trailer on its “China in Focus” YouTube channel for fear of punitive strikes against it.

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