Article originally appeared on thepostmillennial.com.
Steven Crowder dropped a bombshell on Louder with Crowder on Monday morning, making public pages from what’s become known as the Nashville school shooter’s manifesto. He showed pages from that alleged manifesto that he received, showing that shooter Audrey Hale was driven by anti-white hate and an insidious desire to murder blonde children at Covenant Catholic School. After he aired the photographs of three, hand-written sheets of loose leaf paper, YouTube took it down.
YouTube sent a message to Crowder, which he shared on free speech platform X. “We wanted to let you know our team reviewed your content and we think it violates our violent criminal organizations policy,” YouTube said, conflating the release of primary source information obtained by an investigative journalist and an actual crime syndicate.
“We know you may not have realized this was a violation of our policies,” they continued, “so we’re not applying a strike to your channel. However, we ahve remove the following content from YouTube.” And the listed the shocking episode containing details about the shooter’s motivations that even a FOIA request could not spring loose from an FBI and police department that have refused to make the information public ever since the March 27 shooting.
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