Facebook is using censorship to block the publicity of the
Pro-Life movie exposing the nefarious behind the scenes lies and manipulation
that was behind the Supreme Court making unborn baby-murder (abortion) on
demand legal via Roe v. Wade in 1973. The flick
is called ROE v. WADE the Movie.
Posted by Roe v. Wade
The Movie
Published on Jan 8, 2018
Indiegogo Campaign for "Roe v.
Wade" Launches January 10, 2018.
[Blog Editor: You can donate to
the cause with this link:] https://tinyurl.com/yaz6zehk
I’m running with the WND story on Facebook
censorship, but should note that Breitbart claims Facebook is backing
off on the censorship if “crowdfunding” for the movie. However, the
Breitbart story shows how Facebook took crowdfunding page down, then
restored the page and then took it down again. Ergo, as of this post, who knows
how many times Facebook will remove and restore.
****************
FACEBOOK BLOCKS FUNDING FOR MAJOR PRO-LIFE MOVIE
Theatrical drama to tell 'true story' of Roe v. Wade,
Planned Parenthood
By ART
MOORE
January 12, 2018
A crowdfunding site for a theatrical drama in production that promises to tell the “true
story” of the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision that established a “right” to
abortion has been blocked by Facebook.
The movie’s producer, Nick
Loeb, told WND the content of the pro-life movie, which exposes Planned
Parenthood’s roots in the eugenics movement, clearly is the reason for the
censorship.
“They have even blocked people sharing the ads I paid for,” Loeb said.
“This is stealing or fraud.”
Facebook has not responded to
requests for an explanation.
Loeb told WND he and his colleagues are looking for a lawyer to take on the case.
The executive producer of the
movie is Alveda King, a niece of Martin Luther King Jr. and the head of the
group Civil Rights for the Unborn.
The film features Academy
Award-winning actor Jon Voight as a Supreme Court justice.
On the film’s Indiegogo crowdfunding page,
the makers describe it as “the real untold story of how people lied; how the
media lied; and how the courts were manipulated to pass a law that has since
killed over 60 million Americans.”
“Many documentaries have been
made, but no one has had the courage to make an actual feature film, a
theatrical movie about the true story.”
The producers, calling it the
“most important pro-life movie in history,” say Hollywood “only wants you to
hear their version of the story,” noting there are three movies in development
that take a pro-abortion stance.
“But you shouldn’t be
surprised. Hollywood has always had an agenda to influence Americans to accept
abortion, even if they have to re-write history to do it.”
The movie opens with Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, speaking about her “Negro project” initiative aimed at reducing the growth of African-American population in the United States.
It continues as abortionist
Bernard Nathanson joins with famed feminist-activist Betty Friedan and Planned
Parenthood to recruit for a legal case “a broke girl with a 10th grade
education named Norma McCorvey,” who became known as “Jane Roe.”
The opposition to the
activists seeking to legalize abortion is led by the film’s protagonist,
Mildred Jefferson, the first African-American woman to graduate from Harvard
Medical School, who believed “that she became a doctor to protect life, not
destroy it.”
Later, Nathanson, through the
help of new sonogram technology, “realizes he is killing babies, confesses to
all the lies and becomes a leading activist in the pro-life movement,” and
McCorvey, realizing she had been manipulated, also joins the pro-life cause.
Internet freedom
WND reported last month censorship of Christian and conservative speech
online by tech companies such as Facebook, Twitter, Google and Apple is the
target of an initiative called Internet Freedom Watch, launched by the National
Religious Broadcasters.
The initiative has established
a website, InternetFreedomWatch.org, to
document cases, including Twitter’s removal of an ad by Rep. Marsha Blackburn,
R-Tenn., in October and Facebook’s removal of former Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee’s post supporting Chick-fil-A in 2012.
NRB, which has published a
chart with more than 30 instances of Internet censorship, said Sen. Ted Cruz,
R-Texas, and a former Federal Communications Commission commissioner have
endorsed the effort.
FCC chairman Ajit Pai has
accused Twitter and other tech companies of being disingenuous by arguing for a
free and open Internet while they “routinely block or discriminate against
content they don’t like.”
NRB also wants Congress to
hold hearings on the “severe problem of viewpoint censorship on the Internet.”
In a recent case noted by
Internet Freedom Watch, PJ Media D.C. editor Bridget Johnson was
suspended from Twitter with no warning or explanation.
WND reported in August that days after the launch of a book arguing
fascism and Nazism are ideological spawns of the left, author and filmmaker
Dinesh D’Souza and his promotion team were locked out of his Facebook page by
hackers.
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