French President Macron Imposes Total Ban on Social Media Reporting of Events in France

Instead of mass deporting these destroyers, Macron is killing the messenger. The American press does this as policy. Whatever news they don’t want the American people to know, they censor, scrub or frame to suit their malevolent objectives.
France:
Is that a car bomb going off in France? pic.twitter.com/b0Dkg4gPyK
— Luke Rudkowski (@Lukewearechange) July 2, 2023
SHOCKING: Race rioters chant ‘Allahu Akbar’ as they torch France, 719 arrestedhttps://t.co/nX0zvg6fdK
— Jack Poso
(@JackPosobiec) July 2, 2023
The rioters have belt-fed weapons. This isn’t Gaza or Libya, it’s France. pic.twitter.com/hZJGTDcss0
— TimOnPoint (@TimOnPoint) July 1, 2023
EYES ON
FRANCE FULL LOCKDOWN TOMORROW INCLUDING INTERNET BLACKOUTFrance is about to go into Full Lockdown with full internet blackout 2moro. You have until midnight to prepare. Food, Water & Supplies. Shooting the 17….year old boy was the way to slip this in.… pic.twitter.com/fGI99FCxCM
— GH17TAFKAG (@GH17TAFKAG) July 2, 2023
Macron Demands Platforms Delete Riot Content; Blames Social Media & Video Games For Protest Spread https://t.co/6JVBzP4XFF
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) July 3, 2023
Authored by Christina Maas via ReclaimTheNet.org
One cannot help but raise an eyebrow as President Macron pleads with social media giants to erase the “most sensitive” content pertaining to the rioting.
With a wave of his hand, he decrees, “platforms and networks are playing a major role in the events of recent days.”
His words, veiled under a guise of concern, echo a familiar tune that has been played on the world stage before.
“We’ve seen them; Snapchat, TikTok and several others, serve as places where violent gatherings have been organized, but there’s also a form of mimicry of the violence which for some young people leads them to lose touch with reality.
“You get the impression that for some of them they are experiencing on the street the video games that have intoxicated them,” he added.
It’s fascinating that social media platforms and video games are often the easiest targets when those in power look for a scapegoat.
It’s like a well-rehearsed performance: when there’s unrest, point fingers at technology.
Surely, Snapchat and TikTok are not centuries-old entities that have been brewing riots since the French Revolution.
Is it not reasonable to ponder if this fervor in urging platforms to suppress content may serve a dual purpose? On the surface, it appears to be an act of preventing violence, but does it not also conveniently serve as an avenue for controlling narratives and stifling voices?
One must also critically examine the role of parents, which Macron emphasized by stating that a third of those arrested were “young or very young,” adding that “it’s not the state’s job to act in their place.”
(@JackPosobiec) 
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