They latest censorship wave is just a new iteration of a long-standing push to replace free-thought with managed opinion. I'm putting my money where my mouth is and indefinitely disabling advertising on my videos.
Styxhexenhammer's Alliance to Combat Google: https://youtu.be/6ovn43o1V00
Matt Forney's list of recommended channels: http://mattforney.com/youtube-support-alliance-parts-1-2/
Delicious TAcos, How to Be a Screenwriter in Hollywood: https://delicioustacos.com/2013/03/07/how-to-be-a-screenwriter-in-hollywood/
My blog: http://www.staresattheworld.com/
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YouTube is, again, censoring content creators, acting punitively towards anybody on the right.
And now here's the challenge is, how do I make this video again and make it remotely engaging?
Well, I think what I'm going to do is first we need to cover what's happening right now, because there's probably a little bit more than you've heard about going on.
But then I want to talk about the bigger picture, because this is actually nothing new, and Google's been doing this since back when they still had the motto, don't be evil.
So what's happening right now?
Well, the big thing is that there has been a wave of demonetizations of videos of various content creators.
I've posted a few of the ones that I've had demonetized.
There have been more since then, and I got sick of posting it.
And the funny thing is, these are all ancient videos.
Okay, these are videos a year old, three years old.
Many of them, again, they're non-controversial.
You know, I had a problem with this a year ago.
And back then, Google's problem is that I was discussing the Bible.
They actually completely pulled some of those videos down.
The video where I pointed out that the current paradigm is corporate boyfriend and daddy government for women, just sucking the life out of them until they're 40, useless, single, infertile, and then they get spat out into the street.
That one got pulled.
And this is what's happening to a lot of other people.
It's happening to Sticks and Hammer.
I'm going to get back to him towards the end.
Matt Forney, it's happening to Ramsey Paul.
It's anybody and everybody who's on the right is having this nonsense being played with them.
But, you know, that's not all that's going on.
Okay, at the same time as they're demonetizing all these videos, what they've done is they've now given advertisers the choice to select which channels, which videos their ads play on.
And this right here is political control.
We're not talking about being able to target the advertisements.
Okay, targeting advertisements is great.
You know, you want to target men 25 to 35 or women, you know, 18 to 28.
Targeting your advertisements allows you to get the correct demographic.
But now that you can opt out of channels, now all of a sudden, all of a sudden, the corporation, the advertisers, they have to have an opinion on where their ads are playing.
The reality is that they do not want this.
Okay, if you just leave it wide open and anybody of any political stripe is allowed to have advertisements and they're targeted towards the demographic, that is what the advertisers actually want.
Because then nobody can complain.
They can say, sorry, we just don't have the tools to do that.
But they developed this tool, knowing that the voices on the right would be the ones getting silenced.
And so that's the second level of control that we have.
The third level, and this is the most significant in my opinion.
Okay, the other two are just harassment.
They're a financial attack on the creators.
But the thing about content creators, about artists, writers, etc., is that they're still going to be writing and creating content whether or not they're getting paid, to put it perfectly bluntly.
What they're doing, in addition to all of this, oh, and on top of that, they've been unsubscribing people as well, but I guess that's just a glitch, right?
What they've been doing is censoring comments.
If you leave a comment and then you log out, or if you check in a different browser, the comment might not be there.
You know, you might have 4,000 comments when you look at it, at your own video, but then you log out and look at your video and there's only 2,000 comments showing.
And on top of this, not all of your comments are going to be censored, and they're going to be censored in different places.
So, for instance, if you comment a lot on my videos, or Aaron Clary, or Roosh V or whomever, Alex Jones, you will see your comments.
Other people will see your comments.
But then if you go and comment on maybe a Fox News video, people won't see your comment there because you've been labeled as a dangerous element.
Okay, you've been labeled as somebody that's thinking outside of the box that isn't buying into the mainstream.
So as long as you're inside your alt-right ghetto, you are allowed to have an opinion, you are allowed to converse, that way you don't get suspicious.
But then you go and leave a comment somewhere else, and that comment disappears into the memory hole.
You know, very similar thing with Twitter, holding back tweets.
And the interesting thing is it seems to be, I mean, it's very hard to tell what's going on, okay, because we don't get to know what the algorithm is.
They're not even admitting that they're doing this.
They're blaming it all on a glitch, but it's clearly too targeted to be a glitch.
The interesting thing is that it's the moderate, it's the well-thought-out, it's the people that aren't just screaming angry rhetoric and racial slurs.
It's the people that actually have something to say who are being targeted.
Whereas the crazy voices, you know, the bullies, the harassers, whatever stupid label you want to give them, they are being left alone.
They're allowed to still be there.
They are still showing up in different places.
And once in a while, there's one of them that gets shot down, you know, gets their Twitter taken away.
You have it.
They're still allowed to communicate so that the only voices you hear are those extremist and ridiculous voices because they don't want a real conversation.
You know, one of the things they want in America is they want the blacks to hate the whites and the whites to hate the blacks.
And so the government can get bigger.
So that both the whites and the blacks are voting for bigger government to protect them from the other race.
As opposed to anybody that's saying that, you know, there are real issues, but there's ways we can deal with this.
There are differences between the races.
There are a lot of historical issues, the issues with the black family.
You name it, any sort of subtle conversation, that's not going to be heard.
And part of the reason they do this is that they don't want you influencing other people.
But another part of the reason they do this is they want you to feel like you're isolated.
Even within the alt-right, I've been noticing certain things going off the rails with the alt-right, some very worrying, some very foolish extremism.
You know, the guire is getting wider, it's coming off its hinges.
But when I actually talk to anybody I know, and when they talk to other people, and so on and so forth, there are actually a lot of reasonable people out there.
They're being slightly muted, slowed down, so that we think we're all alone.
And so we just give up at that point.
And so you've got the really crazy faction, which is essentially the manufactured opposition.
That's fine.
You need a boogeyman.
Whereas the people actually trying to come up with solutions that are not the mainstream solution, the globalist solution, these ones are being silenced.
Now, as I said, this is nothing new.
And in fact, this goes all the way back to Web 2.0, which I honestly wonder how much of you, my audience, how many of you still remember that term.
It was the big thing back in 2006, 2007.
And the thing is that Web 2.0 has become so ubiquitous, it's become so assumed that there's no longer a word for it.
Prior to Web 2.0, to the present-day internet, they called it surfing the web because there weren't these things like Google.
Okay, like Google was around, but it wasn't what it is today.
Okay, you had to go and hunt for things.
You had to form communities online, and somebody would drop a link and then it would get shared somewhere else and so on and so forth.
There's no way to look up, for instance, how do I pick up girls?
And you run into Return of Kings and then Rouch V forum, and then you get introduced to all these other topics through the Rouge V forum.
There wasn't anything like that.
Okay, you didn't know what was out there.
It was a very mysterious place there, and you'd run across something wonderful and awesome, and so on and so forth.
The internet's fundamentally changed in that it's being personalized for you.
Nowadays, the internet has boiled you down to a demographic.
It has figured you out.
It has a very, very specific lifestyle of who you are.
And so it's very, very good at finding relevant results.
And, you know, a lot of this started, you know, as I commented, what YouTube is doing now is nothing new.
They've been doing this for a while.
And it started back, I remember 2008, 2009, I think it was, when they removed the subscription button.
You know, it used to be, when it first started out, that YouTube had a subscription button right up there.
So you could watch a YouTube video, then you could click that, and you would go to your feed of all the people that you're following.
Then they removed it.
It's still there.
It's difficult to find nowadays.
I just have a hot link to my YouTube button.
My link to it is actually to my subscription feed.
But the reason they made it harder to find your subscriptions, I think it might still be on the front page, but it's not as obvious.
You have to scroll down for it, as opposed to it being the number one button.
It's because they want to decide what you're going to be seeing.
And this started off as a service.
You know, they would say, oh, well, you like this video and you like this video.
Well, people that like those videos like this video.
Maybe you should give it a shot.
And that's really not such a bad system.
That's the concept of Web 2.0.
It's a very interactive, customizable thing.
It's a very interesting sort of a thing.
And it's become so ubiquitous now that we forget about it.
You know, you've got that list of videos over there, you know, to my left, your right.
And yeah, there's probably a lot of stuff in there that you might find interesting.
I'll tell you something, and I've been paying attention to the feed that I get along here.
And oftentimes there's a lot of Pablo.
There's a lot of nonsense.
There's, you know, I'm not seeing Alex Jones over there.
I'm not really seeing Aaron Clary.
I'm seeing Let's Plays.
I'm seeing analysis of old movies and video games.
I'm seeing stuff that I might actually enjoy, but has no deeper content to any of it.
And see, this is the bubble they're pushing.
This is the paradigm that they're pushing.
That they are going to control the information that you consume.
Unlike the old days of the web surfing where you had to, you didn't know what you were finding.
Okay, you would just find some obscure blog and you would start reading it.
And you would be very critical of it.
Not anymore.
Now they're going to tell you what you're going to watch.
They are going to help you amuse yourself to death.
They are going to help you remain distracted.
And a lot of this has to do with the mainstream media needs dominance to survive.
It's built into the very system of mainstream media.
Yeah, there's a great post by Delicious Tacos about why Hollywood is absolutely terrible and why good movies don't get made.
And what it boils down to is that a movie costs $100 million to make.
Okay, $100 million, and it had better damn well succeed.
It had better be a successful movie.
And so they only make guaranteed bets.
And so they've got two movies they make, The Guy Flick and The Chick Flick.
And they're basically the same thing.
It's just they're a little bit inversed.
Neither of them are realistic.
Neither of them are truly cathartic.
But that's what they make.
Because it sells.
And because it needs to freaking sell, because it costs $100 million to make.
And you are going to watch the damn thing.
Because if you don't watch the damn thing, if you're watching some asshole on YouTube, or reading some blog, or watching some animated thing on Newgrounds, you're not watching that damn Hollywood movie.
So you are going to watch that damn Hollywood movie, and they are going to tell you what to watch, because that's the only way you get Hollywood movies.
And they know that you want Hollywood movies, because why wouldn't you?
They know what's right for you.
They know what's good for you.
They are going to tell you what is good for you, and you are going to sit down, shut up, and like it.
It's built into the methodology of the whole thing.
Okay, like this attitude that I'm describing right now is the globalist attitude.
They know that millions of migrants from the Middle East, it's good.
for Europe because otherwise Europeans might become Nazis again.
But if they can get all of these brown people to come in and start raping the women, then people will be too distracted to actually become Nazis.
And so that's good and the world can be in harmony once more.
What they're doing politically, what these globalists are doing politically, it is just as insane as Hollywood making another stupid, low-quality, paint-by-numbers, derivative Marvel comic book movie and you sitting down to watch the damn thing.
It is just as stupid as that.
But it's the system.
This is the system.
It is the logic of empire that we are dealing with.
And so what the hell are any of us supposed to do about this?
Well, as long as YouTube remains the primary platform, there's not too much we can do to switch over to alternative sources like Daily Motion, etc.
It's simply this is where the viewers are, so this is where we, the content creators, all need to come.
You know, I can certainly post my videos to Daily Motion, but I would lose 75% of you if I did that.
And I would be gaining a lot less people.
And unfortunately, as soon as another platform becomes big, it will fall into the exact same logic.
Now there's deeper forces at play right now.
Okay, there's some major shifts occurring all around us very, very rapidly.
And so during this gale, every single one of us just needs to keep our ship aright.
But now that said, there are some smaller things.
Not a big fancy revolution, but there's some smaller things that we can do right now to resist the current desubscribing, silencing, muting, and demonetization of all these people.
And that's to throw this back into YouTube's face.
So number one, Sticks and Hammer.
And you might think it's odd for a Catholic to be recommending a pagan, but he kind of reminds me of Merlin in That Hideous Strength by C.S. Lewis.
I worry about the guy who plays some dark forces, but he's not a terrible human being and he's right about a lot of stuff.
And so Sticks and Hammer, go subscribe to him.
There's a link to him below.
He is promoting people so that you can find out about them and go subscribe to them.
Go subscribe to other people that are creating new and interesting content.
Okay?
And share their content.
Post it all over the place.
Get their voices out there.
Get people more subscribers to say that, listen, YouTube, even if you're not going to tell me about these people because I'm not supposed to learn about them, because I'm supposed to be watching your damn Hollywood movies or CNN or going with whatever Fox News is telling me the world is, the hell with that.
I'm going to go find somebody that's going to challenge my preconceptions.
Not somebody that tells me the way the world is, but somebody that challenges the way I think, gives me new heuristics, new ideas, and I can weigh those for myself.
So, yeah, go start subscribing to some of these.
Matt Forney has done the exact same thing.
He is currently recommending people on his YouTube channel, and he has an article listing all of his favorite YouTubers.
It's a long list, but go check them out.
See if they jive with you.
Go subscribe to them.
And yes, keep sharing it on social media.
Because if they're getting bombarded with all of that, some of it's going to get through.
The next thing is actually: if you think people are making good content, consider backing them.
Consider helping them create the content that they create.
And listen, for my own sake, to put my money where my mouth is, I am going to be disabling advertisements on these videos on my YouTube channel.
I am no longer going to be making a deal with the devil.
If YouTube wants to say that me discussing the Bible or me talking about how pedophiles are bad, yeah, that was seriously one of them, to saying that pedophiles were bad, got demonetized.
If they, okay, they're saying they don't want to monetize that, I don't want them monetizing my videos.
So that's about $100 a month, maybe a bit more.
I'm putting that on the ground.
I don't want that money if this is going to be their attitude.
So there's me putting my money where my mouth is.
And guys, I'm not saying necessarily back me, but, you know, Forney's got, he's trying to do some reporting on what's going on over there in Eastern Europe.
There's always Christopher Cantwell.
There's Ramsey Paul.
If you like the content, see if you can back them.
You know, base Fouz.
You know, lots of people out there.
Doesn't have to be a lot either.
Don't.
Quite frankly, if you spent the same that you spend on a cable package, backing, like, what's a cable package?
30 bucks, 50 bucks?
You decide to send 30 or 50 YouTubers or other content creators, Return to Kings, Rooshby, whomever, send them a buck.
You know, that makes a huge difference.
So consider doing that if you can afford it.
And really, folks, the last thing to take away from all of this: the reason that they are fighting so hard to have such perfect dominance is because they fucking need it.
Hollywood is hemorrhaging money right now.
It is not in a good place.
The porn industry, I'm pretty sure that's being supported by somebody else.
I can't believe for one second that they're still making any money.
The globalists, the globalists need everybody.
They need 99% of the population thinking the same way, believing everything they're saying, and then the 1% you can write them off as crazies, dope them up, and lock them in institutions.
But as soon as that dominance slips, the whole thing falls apart.
The reason that they are being so oppressive and totalitarian about this is because they need to be.
They are not anti-fragile.
And they are largely a paper dragon.
You might feel sometimes like you're the only one who sees what's going on.
You're the only one who gets it.
You know, you feel very isolated, but you're not.
It's just that all the other voices are being silenced.
I'm not saying everything's rosy, because it sure as hell ain't.
There are some demographic issues.
There are some statistical issues.
Look at the reproductive rate in Western countries.
You know, there's one of them for you.
The massive debt, that's not looking good.
I'd be prepared for, well, who knows?
It could be next month.
It could be two years from now.
But their edifice is really, really cracking.
They are getting desperate.
They can't stop the signal.
They can try and jam it.
They can try and broadcast over top of it.
They can try and distract you from hearing the signal.