CPAC DRAWS IRE OF FAUCI AND YOUTUBE

The annual Conservative Political Action Conference managed to get under the skin of COVID czar Anthony Fauci and big tech censors this past week.
Fauci, the conflict riddled beaurocrat that directed funding to a Chinese lab that likely created and released the virus that precipitated the COVID WAR, complained on a MSM weekend news show about the conference.
He was triggered by the CPAC crowd cheering a speaker who said the U.S. government was failing in attempts to “sucker” people into getting vaccinated.
“It’s horrifying,” Fauci said, adding:
“They are cheering about someone saying that it’s a good thing for people not to try and save their lives. I mean, if you just unpack that for a second… it’s almost frightening to say hey, guess what, we don’t want you to do something to save your life. Yay. Everybody starts screaming and clapping.”
There’s now ample evidence that Fauci had a direct hand in funding and promoting gain-of-function research experiments and scientists, that many believe led to the creation of the COVID-19 virus.
He also has patents relating to vaccines that have enriched him during the COVID affair, and has advocated lockdown policies that have siphoned wealth from the middle class to technocratic elites that have protected and acted as mouth pieces for pandemic power grabs.  
At the CPAC conference, former New York Times reporter Alex Berenson drew applause for speaking out against the government’s push to vaccinate populations in the U.S. that are at very low risk for serious COVID effects.
“They were hoping – the government was hoping – they could sucker 90% of the population into getting vaccinated. And it isn’t happening,” Berenson noted.
CPAC video about Trump lawsuit purged by Youtube
Meanwhile, the American Conservative Union, which runs CPAC, announced that YouTube had removed a video featuring former President Donald Trump’s announcement that he will launch litigation against Google, as well as Facebook and Twitter.
YouTube, which claimed the video violated their terms and conditions about COVID-19 information, also banned CPAC from uploading videos on its platform for one week.
YouTube’s move was widely seen for what it was – an attempt to censor likely viral news-making content from the CPAC conference from reaching its users. 
The ACU reacted in a statement on Sunday:
“It is evident that YouTube censored CPAC because ACU Chairman Matt Schlapp supported former President Donald Trump in his fight against Big Tech. This is simply another example of Big Tech limiting content with which it disagrees in order to promote its preferred political positions.”
Last week, Trump announced class-action lawsuits that claim three major tech companies violated Constitutional free speech rights and interfered with the right of Americans to hear that speech from their political leaders unfiltered.
Trump was censored repeatedly during the 2020 election cycle, while the opposing Joe Biden campaign received no similar treatment. Trump was eventually banned in January after citing widespread allegations of election irregularities and fraud surrounding the Nov. 3 election, and speaking at a massive January 6th protest in Washington D.C..
The former president’s lawyers have asserted that a small handful of social media platforms have become monopolistic gateways controlling most citizen speech and access to info on the Internet, and should be barred from censoring or manipulating the free speech rights of Americans guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution.

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