Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Youtube Bans p.2 Rape Defense Video - Mirrored

 

This article was posted posted on a site called ALI, Americans for Legal Immigration.  Ali is actually the name of the Imam appointed to command the Faithfuls.  We prayed to Almighty Allah to assist us against the oppressors and His response is a clear sign here.  The ALIPAC National Release is mirrored on this blog as an event that occurred two days after our prayer was made.  All praise is for Allah.

 ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Americans for Legal Immigration PAC received an email notice from Google / Youtube on Feb 26 that another video from the heavily censored ALIPAC account had been banned as 'hate speech'. Youtube also states "We know you may not have realized this was a violation of our policies, so we're not applying a strike to your channel."


ALIPAC's Youtube account and videos are already heavily shadow-banned and suppressed, demonetized, unable to live-stream, and unable to run ads because Google supports Amnesty for illegal immigrants, censorship, and more foreign labor which ALIPAC.us opposes.

ALIPAC originally uploaded the video on 2-2-2016 to warn Americans how dangerous and ridiculous things have become in countries like Sweden and Finland where local police report the huge influx of young male illegal immigrants from Muslim nations has led to a huge wave of rapes and gang rapes.

The video has not been uploaded again on Feb. 28, 2021 to ALIPAC's Bitchute account for videos Banned by Youtube (VIEW) at..


VIDEO Banned by Youtube: (New Copy Uploaded)
Rape Defense Instructions to repel Muslim illegal alien refugee gang rapists (Finland)
https://www.bitchute.com/video/JQsLplzGD6e5/



Here is the email message ALIPAC received from Youtube. While we plan to appeal the decision to ban this video, we have little hope the foreign workers and leftists at Google will change their minds.

Hi ALIPAC,

We wanted to let you know our team reviewed your content, and we think it violates our hate speech policy. We know you may not have realized this was a violation of our policies, so we're not applying a strike to your channel. However, we have removed the following content from YouTube:

Video: Rape Defense Instructions to repel Muslim illegal alien refugee gang rapists

We realize this may be disappointing news, but it's our job to make sure that YouTube is a safe place for all. If you think we've made a mistake, you can appeal this decision - you'll find more details below.

What our policy says

Content glorifying or inciting violence against another person or group of people is not allowed on YouTube. We also don't allow any content that encourages hatred of another person or group of people based on their membership in a protected group. In June 2019, we announced updates to this policy. We understand you uploaded your content before our policy updates, so we’re not applying a strike to your channel.

What you can do next

We want to help you keep your content on YouTube, so please:

If you have any further questions, please feel free to reach out to us here.

Sincerely,
The YouTube Team
     

Friday, February 26, 2021

YouTube Bans p.1: Medical Thought Crimes & COVID-19 Death Toll


About me:


I am a Healthcare instructor who trained medical staff to perform COVID-19 testing in March 2020.  YouTube banned several videos I made sharing FDA approved treatments for COVID-19. 

Background: I am a descendant of Russian grandparents who escaped a Nazi concentration camp in Poland during World War II.  My grandparents migrated to the United States in 1958.  My grandfather was killed in the U.S. by Aryan Supremacist for being an immigrant Ukrainian.  

In 1967, my mother joined the United States Marine Corps and married my father who is a U.S.M.C. Officer.  Both of my parents embraced the Jewish faith decades ago.  My father gave me a Torah from his Rabbi and I studied Hebrew to learn its contents. 

YouTube allows false copyright strikes on videos I make teaching Hebrew words from my father's  Torah.   

About YouTube censors:

YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki is a Polish citizen [1][2][3] with Socialist and Communist [4][5] ties, and a family history that traces back to Warsaw where my grandparents were oppressed. 

The video posted below is one of several that was attacked by YouTube censors for sharing medical information and encouraging prayer.   

YouTube removed FDA approved information twice.  Each time without valid reason or legitimate guideline violations, hence, disregard for their own policies and abuse of power. 

Here is what YouTube censors considered punishable thought crimes:

 



 




1.  Kafka, Peter (August 12, 2014). "New YouTube Boss Susan Wojcicki Talks Talent, Music and M&A (Q&A)". Re/code. Retrieved 16 December 2014.

2.  Paid Maternity Leave Is Good for Business, The Wall Street Journal, 16 December 2014

3.  Prezes YouTube wlasnie przyjechala do Polski a to dopiero poczatek, Gazeta.pl, 28 March 2017


In addition to her Polish citizenship.Her grandfather, Franciszek Wójcicki, was a People's Party and Polish People's Party politician who had been elected MP during the 1947 Polish legislative election

4.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_People%27s_Party_(1945%E2%80%931949)

5.  "Polish History - Part 13". Poloniatoday.com. Archived from the original on January 17, 2008. Retrieved 2009-08-22.

"Wojcicki is not religious." Bloom, Nate (September 10, 2013). "Jews in the News: Diane Von Furstenburg, Michael Kors and Barbara Hershey". Tampa Jewish Federation. Brin wed biologist Wojcicki in 2007 and the couple now have two children. Neither Brin nor Wojcicki (whose mother is Jewish) are religious, but they did have some Jewish touches at their secular wedding: a chuppah-- and Brin stepped on a glass

Wojcicki is a Polish name, not a Jewish name. 

Prayer against the Oppressors:

In the Name of Allah the Most Merciful, All Merciful

Ya Allah, we plead with You for help against those who oppress us.  Allahuma Saly 'ala Muhammad wa Alay Muhammad.  Ameen.







Saturday, January 16, 2021

Jim Jones - Mosque Maryam: Peoples Temple Revival: Ukiah Daily Journal, October 15, 1976


Ukiah Daily Journal, Ukiah, Calif.  Friday, October 15, 1976. Page 10



Temple revival services prove successful  

 

Capacity audiences hear Rev. Jones speak

Rev. Jim Jones, pastor of Peoples Temple, recently embarked on a series of remarkable revival services that have been highly successful and heavily attended.  The tour began with an interfaith meeting that featured ministers of several denominations (including the Nation of Islam, and a representative of the Jewish community) as well as government and civic officials, in Kansas City.

In subsequent meetings held in St. Louis, Chicago, and Detroit, capacity audiences heard Rev. Jones stress the importance of humanitarian service.  Referring to examples from the life and teaching of Jesus with regard to care for the people in need, Rev, Jones emphasized the spirit of ecumenical unity as a vehicle for achieving these goals.

The revivals were held in Disciples of Christ, Methodist, and A.M.E. denominational churches.  

In every service, people with problems in the area of drug usage and alcoholism were ministered to, and many of these joined the Peoples Temple, choosing to relocate in California in order to receive more extended help from the rehabilitation outreach of the Temple.  These people boarded the bus caravan that was carrying many hundreds of Temple members traveling with Rev. Jones on this series of meetings, designed to spread the message of Christian human service and interfaith unity.

Rev. Jones has also been calling attention to the need for people of conscious to be concerned about the dangers facing our freedoms, especially freedom of the press.

Rev. Jones will be returning to California after paying a visit to the church’s agricultural mission project in South America, where great quantities of food have been harvested in efforts to help relieve world hunger.  

 

The project has received the plaudits of many government officials there and in the United States, and is demonstrating the kind of dramatic results that can be achieved when people work together with the spirit of service to mankind which, Rev. Jones emphasizes, is “the highest service to God.”





 


Jim Jones - Muhammad Mosque No. 30: Kansas City Times, October 4, 1976

The Kansas City Times. Monday, October 4, 1976.  Page 42

Jubilee Unites Faiths for ‘Human Service’
By Richard A. Serrano a member of the staff.


Jubilee For Unity.  Black and White Christians, Jews and Muslims attended a (Spiritual) Life Jubilee yesterday afternoon at the Muhammad Mosque No. 30, 2715 Swope Parkway, where speakers such as the Rev. Jim Jones, leader of the Peoples Temple Church, urged that God, in whatever form, can best be found in the good works of man to man.  

(Staff photos by William H. Batson)



About 2,000 persons, members of different religions with different view points, joined forces yesterday afternoon for prayer, a barrage of talks and a display of camaraderie.  

The speakers, from Jewish, Christian, and Islamic faiths meeting for the (spiritual) Life Jubilee at Muhammad Mosque No. 30, 2715 Swope Parkway, agreed that in whatever way man envisions God, brotherly love is the way to seek that vision.  

“Human service itself is the highest worship to God,” said the Rev. Jim Jones, leader of the Peoples Temple Church.  In fact, his church, based in San Francisco, is made up of persons- the poor, the rich, minorities- who have different religious beliefs but who seek God in man’s compassion for man.

About 1,200 members of the church arrived in Kansas City yesterday morning for the jubilee, traveling here by bus caravan.  They later are to attend meetings in St. Louis and Detroit before returning to their homes in Kansas, Oklahoma, Wyoming and California.

As Michael Prokes, a church spokesman, said, many of the church members are lawyers, teachers, and medical workers.  Prokes was a CBS bureau chief who four years ago, while producing a documentary on the church, resigned and joined.  And as another spokesman said, “People must work together, regardless of religion.  This takes preference over anything else, so we all must choose programs to benefit the good of man.”


Mr. Jones echoed those views, calling for better drug reform programs, fewer politicians and more statesmen and defense of the freedom of the press.  

“It’s sad that even after Watergate, the press is not loved,” he said.

Wallace D. Muhammad, chief minister of the Nation of Islam, who was unable to attend the jubilee, told the group in a telephone conversation from Chicago that he was “very, very encouraged” at the meeting of minds in Kansas City yesterday.  

“I can’t help but feel good,” he said.  “We can forget about our religious labors and accept each other as brothers whenever people come together for the common good.”  

His brother, Nathaniel Muhammad, minister of the mosque here, which has about 600 members, said he was delighted at the success of the jubilee and said the mosque had not been so crowded in a long time.   
“Why the life?” he asked the congregation, referring to the title of the jubilee.  “Life is to be alive.  Let us come together and give the body a shot of truth and put it back on the right path.  Let us then wake up this community with the spirit of truth.”

He said he never dreamed this meeting would happen, “especially here in Kansas City.”

Another speaker was the Rev. James Leffingwell, executive director of the Metropolitan Inter-Church Agency, who said, “I’m for a world where liberty and justice for all means liberty and justice for all.”

Lorie Newhouse, executive director of the Religion and Culture United for Peace, said that he hoped that Muhammad(1) “will be treated in all fairness and decency in the days ahead” in his appeal of a drug conviction(2).  Newhouse also introduced his daughters, one an orthodox Jew, and the other a Moslem. 

City Councilman Bruce Watkins, speaking on behalf of the mayor, proclaimed yesterday Life Jubilee Day in Kansas City, saying “I am proud to be part of a city that recognizes all of its people.”  

A dinner was held after the meeting at the Salaam Cuisine Restaurant.  
 


1.  Nathaniel Muhammad - police informant:  https://www.newspapers.com/image/?clipping_id=1597009&fcfToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJmcmVlLXZpZXctaWQiOjU1ODc0NjU1LCJpYXQiOjE2MTA4MTk0NTgsImV4cCI6MTYxMDkwNTg1OH0.u1VBJ3sW1EPZET9OYmA8GMF5V_vh0-Tafq7k7_3ePkM

2.  https://www.nytimes.com/1976/01/25/archives/islamic-leader-sentenced-to-8-years-on-drug-charge.html

Farrakhan meets Peoples Temple in Ukiah, CA: Ukiah Daily Journal, September 3, 1976

 Ukiah Daily Journal, Ukiah Calif.  Friday, September 3,1976.  Page 8

Spiritual Jubilee and national tour




Eventful summer for Peoples Temple

A wide variety of programs and special events have highlighted this Bicentennial summer season for members of  Peoples Temple.

In late May, the Temple cosponsored a Spiritual Jubilee with the Nation of Islam. attended by 20,000 people, that received nation-wide publicity, bringing together people, from all faiths, and emphasizing the need for brotherhood.  Dignitaries and leaders in religious, civic, and governmental spheres attended, and heard speeches by Rev. Jim Jones, and the Muslim’s chief minister, Wallace Muhammad. 


In June, over 750 members of the Temple took a 10,000 mile national tour, covering 22 states, bringing the message of brotherhood to many major metropolitan centers, and visiting scenes of historic and cultural interest.  The trip culminated with a Fourth of July celebration on Redwood Valley attended by several thousand members and guests of the congregation.

The summer months saw the implementation of educational and recreational programs, featuring field trips to many areas of interest, special film programs, trade and technical training programs, as well as religious, historical and cultural enrichment courses and seminars for young and old.  Many guest speakers from the community addressed the congregation, and expressed the need for more churches and community groups to follow the model of Peoples Temple in its outreach of concern and practical help.

One of the church’s most successful projects that was brought to fruition during the summer has been the establishment of a Bay Area Community News Service, the Peoples Forum, reaching hundreds of thousands of homes.  

Over the weekend, representatives from the congregation met with Minister Abdul Farrakhan, international representative of the Muslim Mosques, at a press conference attended by Channel 5‘s Belva Davis, and other news persons.  



Jonestown Massacre: Nation of Islam Joins First Interfaith Rally. L.A. Times. May 24, 1976

 


The Los Angeles Times.  Monday, May 24, 1976. Main Edition.  Page 24.

Nation of Islam Joins First Interfaith Rally

Group Once Known as Black Muslims Convenes in L.A.
BY JOHN DART

Times Religious Writer

The Nation of Islam, once known commonly as the “Black Muslims,” joined Sunday in its first major interfaith rally and heard its reform minded leader refer as much to the Bible as to the Muslim holy book, the Koran.

Wallace D. Muhammad of Chicago, chief minister of the Nation of Islam since his father’s death 15 months ago, spoke to an estimated 18,000 persons, all of whom had to pass through airport-type security checks to enter the Los Angeles Convention Center.  

Muhammad criticized world religious leadership to date for failing to end oppression or archive unity and he noted the traditional Islamic indebtedness to Moses and Jesus as predecessors of Mohammed.

“There is no division in the family of prophets,” he said, “but there is division in us.”

Under Wallace Muhammad’s leadership, whites have been admitted to membership and friendly relations have been established with Arabic Islamic representatives.  Sunday’s “Spiritual Jubilee” marked the sect’s first venture into interfaith cooperation.

Preceding Muhammad on the platform was Rev. Jim Jones, the white founder-minister of Peoples Temple, which claims more than 12,000 members in three California churches.  People Temple cosponsored the programs.

Jones, a Protestant minister, recalled several years ago tension was high between his San Francisco church and a neighboring Nation of Islam temple.

“But under Wallace Muhammad all those things have changed.”  Jones said “Peace has come.”

The People Temple churches, affiliated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), are relatively unorthodox under Jones’ leadership.  The emphasis is on community service and support to worthy secular causes.

Jones says that even atheists and agnostics are welcome to his church as long as they agree with the gospel messages to serve others.

Pointing to the fact that traditional Islam regards Jesus as a prophet, the preacher declared- to the cheers of the audience- “It’s high time Christianity gave honor to Mohammad.”

Representatives of the predominantly Arabic Islamic Foundation of Southern California and the Southern California Council of Churches also extended their congratulations from the platform.  

Some speakers began with an Arabic Islamic greeting of peace, including Supervisor Kenneth Hahn and Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally.  The latter recalled that “it wasn’t safe” to give such a Muslim greeting 14 years ago, recalling the exchange of gunfire by police and Muslims at a Mosque in Los Angeles in 1962.

Greetings were also extended by activist-educator Angela Davis, Mayor Bradley and a young black woman member of the Sikh Dharma Brotherhood who wore white clothing and headgear similar similar to the attire of

Please turn to page 3 col 1.

Jim Jones & Peoples Temple @Muhammad Temple No. 26. 1974