Embargo escalates, Oil Tube and Vimeo delete campaign fraud videos in seconds

The phenomenon of allowing only one voice for information about the U.S. presidential election is a concentrated manifestation of the current blockage of free speech in American society. Pictured is Mike Lindell, founder of My Pillow, a leading American company that produces and distributes films. Mike Lindell, the founder of My Pillow, which produced and distributed the film. (Photo credit: Gage Skidmore/Flickr/Wikipedia/CC BY-SA2.0)

The silencing of dissenting voices by U.S. tech giants is escalating. Mike Lindell, a well-known American entrepreneur, has been a key player in the fight against the dissident voice. Mike Lindell made a documentary film to try to prove that Biden is not the president-elect of the United States, and uploaded it to the U.S. video and audio media giants YouTube and Vimeo for free viewing. However, both platforms quickly removed the film, and YouTube’s response exposed the platform’s long history of speech censorship.

Mike Lindell Mike Lindell is the founder and CEO of the U.S. company My Pillow Inc. He is the former President of the United States, Donald Trump. He is a loyal supporter and advisor to former U.S. President Donald Trump (Trump).

Lindell’s film “Absolute Proof” was removed from YouTube and Vimeo on Friday (Feb. 5), the same day it was released.

According to U.S. media reports, the documentary was broadcast four times on an anonymous U.S. news network that questioned the legitimacy of Biden’s election.

The two-hour-long video recounts the “election rigging” by the Biden camp in the 2020 U.S. presidential election with extensive and detailed evidence. Since Election Day, November 3, 2020, Lindell and former President Donald Trump and their vast supporters have been in a state of shock. Trump and his vast supporters have argued that the election victory was “stolen” as a matter of fact.

YouTube responded by accidentally exposing the platform’s previously unannounced and unknown, but long-standing and ongoing, policy of blocking election information.

After the deletion, YouTube representative Alex Joseph told the Times. Alex Joseph told The Washington Times, “In accordance with our presidential election integrity policy, we removed some content that was uploaded after the safe harbor deadline (Dec. 8, 2020).” “That content made false claims that widespread fraud, errors or glitches changed the outcome of the 2020 U.S. presidential election.”

“We have removed the video and the video that was re-uploaded (after it was removed) in accordance with this policy.”

Similarly, Vimeo removed the video “because it claimed that the 2020 presidential election was fraudulent, stolen or illegal and that the video violated Vimeo’s policy on posting content.” The company said in a statement.

Newsmax has previously endorsed the election fraud theory. Earlier in the week, Lindell tried to talk about those fraud allegations in an interview with “Extreme News,” but was rebuffed by the host.

Like Lindell, the “Extreme News” network has received warnings that they could be sued.

However, even under the threat of a lawsuit, Lindell has not shied away from promoting that theory, telling the media, “I’m going to keep fighting, I’m going to keep speaking out, and I’m going to keep going until the last black foot tries to take me down.”

He questioned, “People have worked hard to gather all this evidence. Do Americans really not care?”

Trump has maintained that he actually won the 2020 U.S. presidential election by a large margin of votes, yet his victory was “stolen” by election fraud. The Trump side’s protests and appeals have been roundly suppressed by the U.S. mainstream media, where they are nowhere to be seen.

In early January, social media giants Facebook and Twitter deleted the account of Trump, who was still president at the Time, drawing attention and criticism from all walks of Life for the blocking of speech by the American left.