The Globalist Authoritarians Are Playing With Fire
The Only Thing Democrats Won’t Stand Up for Is America
The Press Says Not All Billionaires Are Spending Equal, and Larry O'Donnell Negotiates...
Who's Defying Court Orders Again?
New Bill From Chip Roy to Protect Exotic Hunting Ranches Could Bolster Conservation
Injustice in Nashville
Fighting Against the Tide Of History
The Party of Hate
Time to Lower the Boom on Harvard
In Germany, the Government Wants to Decide What Is True
After Many Warnings, Trump Admin. Freezes Funding for Maine Over Refusal to Comply...
More Bad News Could Be Coming for Planned Parenthood
USCIS Stops Biden Gender Policy ‘Effective Immediately’
Details on Biden's Endorsement of Harris Shows How Much Dems Were in Disarray...
Does This New Poll Show Hopeful News for Israel?
Tipsheet
Premium

Here's How YouTube Directed Employees to Handle the Project Veritas Pfizer Video

Project Veritas' bombshell video last week exposing a Pfizer director explaining how the pharma company was doing research to "mutate" COVID went viral on social media—getting viewed over 27 million times on Twitter alone. In the mainstream press, however, there was a total blackout on it, with Big Tech helping quash it. Stories were removed, and for a while, search results on Google came up empty. 

Now we have a closer look at some of Big Tech's efforts behind the scenes to address the "massive" exposé.

According to a YouTube insider, employees received an "urgent guidance" document explaining part of the Project Veritas video "violates the COVID-19 misinformation policy."

Specifically, YouTube jumped on the part where Project Veritas' James O'Keefe says, "Our undercover journalist asked Walker how Pfizer is handling the fact that their COVID vaccines are ineffective against virus variants. What he said is disturbing, listen to this." 

On Friday, Pfizer addressed the video, issuing a statement acknowledging that in some cases, "when a virus does not have any known gain of function mutations, such virus may be engineered to enable the assessment of antiviral activity in cells."

The company also said such studies are "required by U.S. and global regulators for all antiviral products and are carried out by many companies and academic institutions in the U.S. and around the world." 

Fox News's Tucker Carlson called on Congress to investigate which regulators are requiring this research. 


Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement