765 – Τὸ Facebook κατεδικάσθη γιὰ μαστροπεία

Facebook censors those who spread ‘misinformation,’ but looks the other way while pimps abuse children
Graham Dockery
is an Irish journalist, commentator, and writer at RT. Previously based in Amsterdam, he wrote for DutchNews and a scatter of local and national newspapers.
29 Jun, 2021 18:36

Ἐπιτέλους! Καιρὸς ἦταν! Ὅσοι ἐγνώριζαν τὴν αἰσχρὴ πολιτικὴ προωθήσεως μαστροπεἰας ἀνηλίκων ἐνῲ ἀπηγόρευε τὴν ἐλευθερία γνώμης ὅσων δὲν ὑπεστήριζαν τὶς σοσιαλδημοκρατικὲς θέσεις τῶν Λίμπεραλς τοῦ Σόρος δικαιώνονται. Τὸ Facebook πρέπει νὰ ἀπαγορευθῇ πάραυτα!

Ἐγὼ προσωπικὰ ὑπῆρξα στόχος συχνῶν ὁμοφυλοφιλικῶν προτάσεων καὶ πράξεων μέσῳ τῆς στήλης τοῦ Messenger, χωρὶς ποτὲ τὸ Facebook νὰ ἐπεμβαίνει ἐνῷ μὲ τὴν παραμικρὴ πολιτική μου θέσι ἀντίθετη μὲ τὸ φιλελεύθερο πιστεύω τοῦ ὀργανισμοῦ ἐκοβόμουν.

The Texas Supreme Court ruled on Friday that Facebook can be held liable for the conduct of pimps and traffickers on its platform – a landmark decision that opens the firm up to further legal action from a trio of teenage trafficking victims.
In the suit, filed in 2018, the three young women accused the company of running “an unrestricted platform to stalk, exploit, recruit, groom, and extort children into the sex trade.” One was 15 when an older man contacted her on Facebook, offered her a modeling job, photographed her, posted the pictures on the now-defunct BackPage website, and prostituted her to other men, leading her to be “raped, beaten, and forced into further sex trafficking.” The other two girls were 14, and reported almost identical experiences, with one openly pimped out for “dates” on Instagram, a Facebook subsidiary.