Published on Jun 13, 2019


By
Speaking to Big League Politics, Rivers explained that his page was banned for buying ads on Facebook to promote a contest where entries could win an AR-15 rifle, even though according to the letter of Facebookâs community guidelines, his promotion was following Facebookâs rules.
âWe do try to stay within Facebookâs guidelines, they just make them up as they go along,â said Rivers. âWe ran a contest, a promo to give away an AR-15. It was a licensed firearms company, and we are an online retailer. According to Facebook rules, itâs okay because we are two online retailers that follow all applicable state and federal guidelines.â
He went on to explain that 8 days into the advertisement, which was approved by Facebook, they removed the advertisement and banned the staff member who posted it for 30 days. Rivers immediately ended the advertisement and removed all reference of it from the page, but Facebook proceeded to ban members of his staff two more times for the same, deleted advertisement.
âThey banned us again for the same exact thing,â said Rivers. âSo again, we appealed it, and then yesterday the page was unpublished and they cited the same thing again.â
âWe had ended the promo last month, midway through it. After two or three weeks of not running it, they banned us for the same advertisement.â
Rivers says he appealed the latest ban and supplied Facebook with relevant excerpts from their own community guidelines as evidence his page did nothing wrong. He is currently waiting to hear back from the big tech platform.
In addition to selling merchandise via the Dysfunction Veterans online store, Rivers also runs a non-profit organization focused on providing housing to homeless veterans, DV Farm, that sometimes receives cash injections from the profits made from the Dysfunctional Veterans retail operation. Rivers provides housing and support to up to five homeless veterans at a time, and says his organization focuses on the âproblem childâ cases that are ignored by the Veterans Administration and other veterans organizations.
While Rivers remained optimistic about DV Farmâs ability to continue, it seems Facebookâs decision to remove the page for a post that seemingly did not violate the big tech platformâs rules may impact the non-profit.
âWe are not federally or state funded so we rely solely on donations,â said Rivers. âEvery month, of course, the non-profit being brand new, there would be a shortfall. We try to keep it in the black, but it can be an expensive project.â
âNo matter what, whatever I make off the Dysfunctional Veterans store, goes to making sure the non-profit keeps running.â
Rivers also revealed that a similar incident happened in the days before the 2016 presidential election. His page was removed by Facebook without an explanation, and after other veterans who are now CEOâs and prominent business individuals reached out to Facebook on Riversâ behalf, the page was reinstated. Rivers still has no idea why his page was removed, or why it was reinstated.
âIn the last few days before the voting started, we were on fire. Every meme we posted was reaching millions,â said Rivers. âAnd we were shut down, and of course they would not show us what we posted that violated the community guidelines.â
âPeople reached out to me from other organizations, other CEOâs, and within 24 hours Dysfunctional Veterans was back up.â
He explained that this is a âhabitâ of Facebook, where they will remove content and ban pages without giving them an explanation of what they did wrong or what behavior they should avoid in the future.
Big League Politics contacted Facebook for comment on why the Dysfunctional Veterans page was removed, and did not receive a response.
Riversâ other Facebook page, Veteran Humor, is still published on the platform.

On June 11, OâKeefe interviewed a whistle blower at Pinterest who revealed that the platform adds conservative news websites, including Big League Politics, to a list of âpornâ websites in an attempt to prevent our links from being posted to the platform, and that employees at Pinterest consider Ben Shapiro, a Jewish conservative commentator, to be an anti-Muslim âwhite supremacist.â Project Veritas was suspended from Twitter for posting screen shots from the companyâs Slack chat illustrating this.
âTwitter has decided that investigative journalism is a violation of their terms of service,â wrote OâKeefe on his personal Twitter account. â@Project_Veritas has been temporarily suspended from posting for tweeting internal communications from @Pinterest which show them calling @benshapiro a âwhite supremacist.’â

It would appear Twitter is doing its best to protect their fellow big tech platform in this latest move. Unfortunately, Big League Politics and others have already reported on the Pinterest employees calling Shapiro a âwhite supremacistâ.
Big League Politics reported:
Further documents published by Project Veritas show an employee calling right-wing pundit Ben Shapiro a âwhite supremacist,â and putting listing Candace Owens alongside him as âones to watch for content.â
âBen Shapiro is a white supremacist who has regularly spewed anti muslim hate and he and candace owens and few others may be ones to watch content for over the next few days,â a post from an internal Slack chat said.
âI reported all the top instances of his âMyth of the tiny radical muslimâ video from youtube that a number of journalists have been calling out,â the post continued. âThere will no doubt be people searching for his content across platforms. Iâll start putting together a list of things like this video of his that may be worth creating an advisor for (though not blocking results).
As Big League Politics also reported, the platform considers our website to be âpornâ and uses this as an excuse to prevent links to our stories from being posted to its platform.
In Pinterestâs text document, âporn_domain_blacklistâ, dozens of conservative media outlets are considered âpornâ. Big League Politics, Western Journal, TeaParty.org, PJ Media, and others are all covered in the dragnet, and considered âpornâ by the big tech platform.
The whistle blower explained to Project Veritasâ James OâKeefe that the porn blacklist is used to ensure links to conservative and pro-choice websites are not posted to the platform.
It is unclear why Twitter took this action against Project Veritas, considering the leaked Slack chat does not identify a user by name, or identify private information about Slack employees, the rule Twitter claims was broken by the whistle blowing organization.
Published on Jun 12, 2019


By Chris Menahan

Their post read:
Itâs Pride Month â officially! đâĄď¸đŚ â and Aaron Philip (@aaron___philip) has a message for young LGBTQ+ people: âTake care of each other and keep growing. This is your world and everywhere is your space,â says the 18-year-old fashion model. âSoak it all up.â This June, we celebrate the LGBTQ+ community by sharing stories of #UntoldPride. âPride to me means acknowledging the roots and history of our community and holding space to collectively uplift and take care of one another,â Aaron says.
Follow along this month and beyond as we shine a spotlight on people who are making a difference just by being themselves, and check out @lgbt_history to see even more stories of #UntoldPride.
After Instagram promoted Philip all over their site, Twitter and on Facebook, Philip within hours began calling for the “killing” of all “transphobes.”
Philip wrote on Twitter: “i’ll be that girl. k*ll all transphobes & abolish the prison industrial complex. if youâre not k*lling transphobes then beat their ass or scare them. make them shit themselves. all or nothing.”

Philip wrote in another tweet: “i want to watch every transphobe burn.”

One day before Instagram’s campaign kicked off, Philip wrote: “you don’t have to be civil and kind to transphobes. no. raise hell.”

Philip wrote: “if you see a transphobe you come for their neck. i didnât make the rules sorry :/”

Philip suggested earlier this year that “white men” were responsible for creating transphobia: “white men created colonialism which created transphobia and the erasure (of knowledge) of gender variant/trans identity in history.”

After being criticized for “talking down on black men” but not saying enough about “white male toxic behavior,” Philip responded: “are you dumb? the point of criticizing patriarchy in general is literally to criticize white men & the oppressive structures theyâve imposed upon the world as we know it. however, every and any man benefits from patriarchy by being men & having those privileges. shut the fuck up.”

Instagram and Facebook banned right-wingers like Paul Joseph Watson, Alex Jones, Milo Yiannopoulos, Laura Loomer and left-winger Louis Farrakhan earlier this year for their “dangerous” political views, meanwhile this is what they’re choosing to promote.
Published on Jun 11, 2019

JUNE 11,2019
Oh, the foul stench of hypocrisy.
Last week, Crowder has his channel de-monetized by YouTube after Voxâs Carlos Maza accused the comedian of using gay slurs against him, despite Maza using some of the same slurs against himself in previous comments.
This led to the #VoxAdPocalypse, with leftist outrage mobs pressuring YouTube to delete or de-monetize thousands of videos and channels which featured controversial material. The collateral damage even took out some historical archive channels, prompting educators to complain that they had been censored for âhatemongeringâ.
However, Voxâs disdain for homophobic language was noticeably absent when they gave Filthy Frank a pass during a 2017 profile video which amassed almost 3 million views, allowing his fans to make the argument that offensive and politically incorrect language was OK because Filthy Frank is just a comedy character.
âFilthy Frank pulls no punches and even openly says the word âfaggotâ without bleeping it,â writes Brandon Morse. âIn one video, he comedically apologized â much like Crowder did â for saying certain things, especially against the LGBT community. This video ended with a song with the lyrics â⌠youâre gay now / youâre a giant faggot and you should kill yourself.â
âIt should be striking everyone as weird that Vox was only too happy to celebrate comedic videos featuring a person encouraging gay people to kill themselves just two years ago. Suddenly it canât help but grasp at its pearls at the mere suggestion that someone is âqueer,â he adds.
As ever with the left, the motto always seems to be, âItâs OK when we do it.â
There is a war on free speech. Without your support, my voice will be silenced.
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Published on Jun 11, 2019

