The Washington Post recently posted this correction about the “Let’s Go Brandon” cheer:
“Correction: A previous version of this article incorrectly said a crowd broke into a “Let’s go Brandon” chant during a Donald Trump Jr. speech in Georgia,” the Post wrote. “The crowd broke into a ■■■■■ Joe Biden!” chant at that speech in September. The error, which was inserted by an editor, has been corrected.”
YouTube recently deleted the hit rap song, “Let’s Go Brandan”, as “medical misinformation”. What medical information was in the song?
Clearly they were not concerned about crude language about the president since Robert De Nero’s rant that used even clearer language has been up since 2018. Here is a censored version:
It looks like YouTube eventually recognized the deletion was transparently politically motivated censorship and has restored the video:
Meanwhile Biden’s approval numbers continue to drop like a rock. A clear majority of the country highly disapproves of his performance.
Is Biden finally bringing the country together in massive disapproval of his inept performance?
Is this change coming in spite of the media doing everything they can to cover for him?
Yes. It is mild compared to many other songs out there without any questions from YouTube.
There is still no word on what “medical misinformation” could possibly had resulted in the deletion, but weird stuff like this seems to happen to anything with conservative political slant.
Biden is only allowed to appear before a pre-selected crowd with pre-approved questions and a friendly CNN host acting as moderator. Even then he makes multiple gaffes and misstatements.
Let’s go Brandon!
Someone else posted a transcript and there was “medical misinformation” in it, something about the vaccines not working. If you are dumb enough to take medical information from a rapper seriously.
Yes, the CIA may be better at installing presidents that at selecting ones with popular policies.
. . . roughly 5 million pages of assassination-related records the federal government kept shrouded in secrecy through the early 1990s. A 1991 Oliver Stone film about the assassination ignited public outrage over the documents’ status, prompting Congress require they all eventually be released, with exceptions only for the “rarest cases” that could compromise national security.
The CIA holds 70 percent of the remaining unreleased records, many of which reportedly relate to clandestine US intelligence operations in Cuba in the years leading up to Kennedy’s death, the Intercept reported.