Colin Flaherty vs. YouTube

By Colin Flaherty

YouTube sent me an email the other day saying it was putting me on notice for violating its Terms of Service and that I would not be allowed to post new videos for two weeks.

The reason: I posted a private video from a parent of a child who filmed an episode of black mob violence against a white child.

The local news blurred it, while I presented the original. YouTube did not like that.

In my version of the video, I said anyone who blurred this story is guilty of child abuse because he or she is aiding and abetting this violence.

Two days later, I awoke to find my account terminated.

My YouTube channel was getting one million views a month. Generating about 5 to ten million minutes of viewing, with 25,000 to 50,000 comments a month along with 15,000 subscribers – and all those numbers were growing 20 percent per month.

This channel satisfied a craving for real information about black-on-white crime and black-on-white hostility that has reached epidemic levels.

There is nothing racist or separatist or nationalist or supremacist about it.

Neither do we apologize for pointing out the obvious: black mob violence and black-on-white crime is wildly and sickly out of proportion.

And we also document how the media ignores, denies, condones, excuses, encourages, and even lies about it.

That is what that YouTube channel did every day, and the response was fantastic.

We produced videos, 911 calls, police reports, eyewitness accounts, and statements from victims who all said the same thing: something very wrong is happening here, and we have to pay attention to it.

Now my YouTube channel is down. Temporarily.

I’ll be back on YouTube, or somewhere else.

In the meantime, many of those videos are still up on my Facebook pages, and they are easy to find.

But here is the big picture: we do not need to get angry at YouTube or anyone else.

We need to get more determined to expose this insanity behind the violence and denial.

That will not stop.

Today I have received hundreds of emails from fans who want to know what is happening.

I am easy to stay in touch with by subscribing to my email newsletter at WhiteGirlBleedaLot.com.

I’m not going away.

More importantly, neither are they.

@Colin Flaherty
Author of the New Book, Don’t Make the Black Kids Angry.

YouTube sent me an email the other day saying it was putting me on notice for violating its Terms of Service and that I would not be allowed to post new videos for two weeks.

The reason: I posted a private video from a parent of a child who filmed an episode of black mob violence against a white child.

The local news blurred it, while I presented the original. YouTube did not like that.

In my version of the video, I said anyone who blurred this story is guilty of child abuse because he or she is aiding and abetting this violence.

Two days later, I awoke to find my account terminated.

My YouTube channel was getting one million views a month. Generating about 5 to ten million minutes of viewing, with 25,000 to 50,000 comments a month along with 15,000 subscribers – and all those numbers were growing 20 percent per month.

This channel satisfied a craving for real information about black-on-white crime and black-on-white hostility that has reached epidemic levels.

There is nothing racist or separatist or nationalist or supremacist about it.

Neither do we apologize for pointing out the obvious: black mob violence and black-on-white crime is wildly and sickly out of proportion.

And we also document how the media ignores, denies, condones, excuses, encourages, and even lies about it.

That is what that YouTube channel did every day, and the response was fantastic.

We produced videos, 911 calls, police reports, eyewitness accounts, and statements from victims who all said the same thing: something very wrong is happening here, and we have to pay attention to it.

Now my YouTube channel is down. Temporarily.

I’ll be back on YouTube, or somewhere else.

In the meantime, many of those videos are still up on my Facebook pages, and they are easy to find.

But here is the big picture: we do not need to get angry at YouTube or anyone else.

We need to get more determined to expose this insanity behind the violence and denial.

About Luke Ford

I've written five books (see Amazon.com). My work has been covered in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and on 60 Minutes. I teach Alexander Technique in Beverly Hills (Alexander90210.com).
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