Notorious social media site refused ads about Israeli hostages of Hamas
A few weeks after thousands of Hamas terrorists infiltrated Israel on October 7, murdering 1,200 people and brutally kidnapping some 240 individuals, including more than 30 children, the devastated families of those held hostage in the Gaza Strip launched a global campaign demanding their release.This is far from shocking at this point. (Hat tip: Breitbart.) And it confirms in addition that they never intended to respect the requests of delegates like Amy Schumer, who requested they stop allowing antisemitic slogans onto their servers.
With assistance from marketing and advertising professionals, the newly created Hostages and Missing Persons Forum in Israel turned to powerful social media platforms used by billions of people worldwide and asked to place paid advertisements to raise awareness of their plight.
Mostly short video clips depicting the lives of ordinary civilians and children held captive by a U.S.-designated terror organization, multiple ads were placed on Meta platforms Facebook and Instagram, but the Chinese-owned video-sharing app, TikTok, refused to accept any of them, deeming them “too political.”
So on the one hand, TikTok allows antisemitism and other horrific ideologies like LGBT advocacy on their site, yet on the other hand, won't allow advertisements vital for combating Islamic terrorism. This is very telling. How much longer are parents going to allow their children to make use of such a repulsive site?
Labels: anti-semitism, China, communications, dhimmitude, islam, Israel, jihad, military, misogyny, Moonbattery, racism, sexual violence, terrorism, war on terror