YouTube promotes docuseries on BLM co-founder

Big Tech has consistently censored conservative voices and opinions, while promoting and excusing left-wing radical ideologies. The most recent example of Big Tech’s blatant Leftist propaganda machine is YouTube’s feature series on Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors. Cullors is featured in YouTube’s “Resist” series, which is advertised on the video platform in a user’s recommendation newsfeed.

YouTube is a popular social media video platform run by Google’s parent company Alphabet.

The video series, according to Cullors’ YouTube page, is a “12 episode docuseries that follows the grassroots work of the intersectional organizations fighting the Los Angeles county’s $3.5 billion jail expansion plan in 2018.”

Titles and topics of the videos, which  typically ranged between eight to ten minutes long, are as follows:

  • “Meet the Activists Disrupting LA’s Unjust Justice System”
  • “Why We Fight for Justice”
  • “JusticeLA Takes a Direct Action Against Institutional Racism in LA”
  • “LA County Students Demand Changes to School Policing”
  • “How ‘Cash Bail’ Criminalizes Poverty in Los Angeles”
  • “We Know The Justice System is Broken. Let’s Try Something New”
  • “Fighting ICE Raids in Los Angeles”
  • “Injustice, Resilience, Power: Trans Lives in LA’s Prison System”
  • “Activists Confront LA’s Top Politicians”
  • “Why Didn’t LA’s Prison System Protect My Son?”
  • “Bringing The Prison Abolition Movement to Antelope Valley”
  • “Politicians Betrayed Us, So We Fight Harder”

The docuseries gives a behind-the-scenes look at left-wing Marxist tactics, which range from coordinated ideological slogans and chants, accusing law enforcement of systematically “brutalizing” minority communities for decades, and turning anger and resentment into protesting at meetings and in public places.

The series also highlighted Cullors’ advocacy for abolishing all prisons, which begs the question of what to do with criminals if all prisons are abolished. Typically, Marxists like Cullors could claim that the community can rehabilitate criminals and does not need interference from police officers or departments. The need for prisons and police is replaced by their vision of a community-based approach, where community activists train, educate, and reform criminals.

But the video series never asked the following question: Is Cullors a role model or a public figure that others should emulate?

Cullors is one of three co-founders of the Marxist movement and is a self-described “artist, organizer and freedom fighter.” She also once admitted that Black Lives Matter activists were “trained Marxists.” At an event in 2015, Cullors said, “We are trained Marxists. We are super-versed on, sort of, ideological theories. And I think that what we really tried to do is build a movement that could be utilized by many, many black folk.”

On her official website biography, it said, “Patrisse will continue to create, organize and shut it down until all Black lives matter.”

It was also reported that she was the protégé of a former Weather Underground domestic terrorist operative named Eric Mann. One of her past employers, the Labor/Community Strategy Center, focused on “Black and Latino communities with deep historical ties to the long history of anti-colonial, anti-imperialist, pro-communist resistance to the US empire.” The organization supported efforts by the U.S. Communist Party, the Black Panther Party, and other radical groups.

YouTube, and by extension, Big Tech, continues to push left-wing and Marxist ideologies on their audiences by promoting the likes of Cullors and other radical, left-wing activists. Meanwhile, Big Tech continues to censor conservative voices and opinions in an attempt to mold the United States into its version of democracy, where conservative dissent is silenced.

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