Last month we were among those who helped spread the news of a mother who lit up her local school board over their mask mandates for kids.
Grabien Media founder Tom Elliott shared the video on their YouTube page, and guess what happened next:
.@YouTube: Mothers having opinions about whether their children should be forced into masks “violates our community guidelines” and our “medical misinformation policy” pic.twitter.com/i7XR38fK7w
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 26, 2021
Wait, “we think it violates our medical misinformation policy”?
I’ve updated Grabien’s post of this video w/ a transcript of the mother’s full comments. Can anyone find anything she says that contradicts WHO guidance on Covid, as YouTube/Google claims? Because I can’t. https://t.co/V1qvX4z10N
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 26, 2021
Parents are allowed to express opinions over whether their children should be forced into wearing masks. Parents' perspectives are a valid part of the public debate. This mother does not represent herself as a doctor or medical expert.
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 26, 2021
So now a parent presenting his or her opinion is “dangerous”?
Incidentally the WHO agrees with this mother that there is currently no scientific basis for compelling all children to wear masks indoors/outdoors as a measure to stop the spread of Covid. So YouTube's "medical misinformation" claim is entirely false. https://t.co/nOSI7eF5z3
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 26, 2021
I appealed, noting there's nothing in the WHO guidance this mother is contradicting (supposedly the basis of the video being taken offline). @YouTube has already rejected the appeal. Apparently the platform must remain "safe" from concerned mothers. pic.twitter.com/JyTmaaol5u
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 26, 2021
Sum it all up, and here we are:
Shorter @Google: Your kids are state property https://t.co/8oGfbMUAuU
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) May 26, 2021
Unreal.
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