Thursday, June 27, 2019


Google Censors Video Exposing Google

Google-owned video platform YouTube took down a video from Project Veritas showing a senior employee at the company appearing to admit that the company plans to interfere in the next presidential election to stop Donald Trump.

The video, which is still available on the Project Veritas website featured undercover footage of a top Google employee, Jen Gennai, stating that the company shouldn’t be broken up because only they can prevent the “next Trump situation.”

Via the video:

Elizabeth Warren is saying we should break up Google. And like, I love her but she’s very misguided, like that will not make it better it will make it worse, because all these smaller companies who don’t have the same resources that we do will be charged with preventing the next Trump situation, it’s like a small company cannot do that.

This corroborates other leaks from Google. Earlier this year, former Google software engineer Mike Wacker published emails appearing to show that a manager at the tech giant told one of their subordinates that the company had to stop “fake news” and “hate speech” because “that’s how Trump won.”

James O’Keefe urged viewers to download the video and repost it to ensure it could not easily be censored.

And last year, Breitbart News published confidential footage from inside Google showing the company’s head of global affairs, Kent Walker, stating his intention to make the populist-nationalist movement represented by Donald Trump a “blip” or “hiccup” in history.

Project Veritas founder James O’Keefe reported on Twitter earlier today that the journalistic outlet received a privacy complaint on its YouTube videos. “Privacy” is the same excuse used by the tech giant for taking down a video about one of Veritas’ earlier stories, about anti-Christian bias at image platform Pinterest.

SOURCE 


3 comments:

Anonymous said...


In that one sentence she is admitting that she thinks Google has the power to control elections.

She makes the best argument of all for why Google should be broken up in her defense of why it shouldn't.

Anonymous said...

The "privacy complaint" may have a valid basis.

California is a "two person consent" state for the recording of a conversation. That consent did not happen, thus the privacy issue.

California also has a stiff civil penalty for violating the consent law.

Google and Jen Gennai are going to have to make an interesting choice to either hopefully let this die while being hosted on other sites, or bring an action against Project Veritas which keeps the subject in the news.

Anonymous said...

Liberals are still seething because Hillary was not elevated to her entitled prominence and they also know that trump will be reelected.