YouTube slams Jordan Peterson’s interview with Democrat RFK Jr. in which the president optimistically says chemicals in water are turning kids into trances, claiming it violates their vaccine policy
On Monday, YouTube took down an interview between Jordan Peterson and presidential hopeful RFK Jr. The Google-owned platform said the video violated its general vaccine misinformation policy In this interview Kennedy claimed that the chemicals in the water were leading to ‘sexual dysphoria’. American Children, available on Twitter
YouTube has removed an interview Jordan Peterson conducted with 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., claiming it violated its guidelines against sharing vaccine misinformation.
The Google-owned company said on Monday: ‘We have removed a video from the Jordan Peterson channel for violating YouTube’s General Vaccine Misinformation Policy, which prohibits content that alleges vaccines cause chronic side effects, beyond rare side effects recognized by health authorities. ‘
Kennedy, who launched his presidential campaign in April, criticized YouTube for removing the video he posted earlier this month.
During the interview with Peterson, Kennedy claimed that it was the chemicals in the water that were turning children transgender.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he was being censored and argued that there was no misinformation in a video that YouTube took down, citing its vaccine misinformation policy.
On Twitter, Kennedy wrote: ‘Do you think… social media platforms should censor presidential candidates?’
@YouTube deleted my conversation with @JordanBPeterson. Luckily7 you can see it on Twitter (thanks Elon Musk).
Peterson also responded, accusing YouTube of “taking it upon itself to actively interfere in the presidential election campaign.”
According to its vaccine misinformation policy, YouTube prohibits content that ‘risks serious harm by spreading medical misinformation about currently administered vaccines that have been approved by local health authorities and the World Health Organization (WHO) and are confirmed to be safe and effective. .’
The platform said its guidelines apply to all content and creators on the platform, regardless of their politics.
Earlier this month, Kennedy’s Instagram was reinstated after a ban was issued for posting ‘denying claims about the coronavirus or vaccines’.
The Kennedy campaign told Fox News that ‘while vaccines are not a top priority for Mr. Kennedy in this campaign, he would be happy to debate the issue with a prominent proponent of conventional views.’
‘Mr. Kennedy did not believe the attacks were coordinated. People are only speaking according to their beliefs. These beliefs are the result of the long influence of corporate money in medicine, research, media and government.’
‘Even so, there are alarming indications in published studies of serious safety studies on vaccines in general, but the Covid shot in particular. Mr. Kennedy’s real problem is regulatory capture and corporate influence over government. He advocates properly conducted, unbiased, transparent safety testing of all vaccines,” the campaign statement concluded.
YouTube is choosing to interfere in the 2024 election, says Jordan Peterson, a psychologist and conservative commentator.
In the interview with Peterson, Kennedy claimed that it was the chemicals in the water that were turning the children transgender.
Former Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy’s son says America is seeing ‘much more sexual dysfunction’ as a result of exposure to chemicals in water.
“I think it’s probably under-appreciated how much of the problems we see in kids, especially boys, is coming from chemical exposure, including a lot of the sexual dysphoria we see,” he says.
‘I mean, they’re swimming through a soup of toxic chemicals today, and many of them are endocrine disruptors. Atrazine is all over our water supply.’
RFK Jr. has found himself in the news headlines in recent days, largely for his views on vaccines. He has long criticized them, saying they cause autism. The 2024 hopeful recently appeared on Joe Rogan’s podcast, where he questioned vaccines.
This led Dr. Peter Hotz to criticize the interview on social media. Rogan then issued a challenge to the doctor to debate RFK Jr. on his podcast.
The challenge led to reactions from both sides of the debate on social media.
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