In case you missed it: The #EiffelTower went dark last night to honor the victims in Monday's #Manchester attack. pic.twitter.com/DClfLWTZcX— CBS This Morning (@CBSThisMorning) 24. Mai 2017
Lights were also turned 'on':
The world lights up in red white and blue in tribute to the victims of the #Manchester attack https://t.co/aArqce1sPR pic.twitter.com/D5TUacID7T— The Sun (@TheSun) 24. Mai 2017
The next move to fight terror was to attack those who criticize the government's open-borders policy and integration fetishism.
First, alt-right personality Richard Spencer was blocked from Soundcloud. Just hours later, the European Union parliament announced a new piece of legislation that would force Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to eliminate 'hateful' critique. Here is an excerpt from the article:
from "The EU is working on a new law to force Facebook and YouTube to take down hate speech," Julia Fioretti, Reuters
European Union ministers approved plans on Tuesday to make social media companies such as Facebook, Twitter and Google's YouTube tackle hate speech on their platforms, the first legislation at EU level on the issue.
The proposals still need to be agreed with the European Parliament before becoming law, but EU lawmakers have similarly pushed for social media companies to be included in the legislation.
The proliferation of hate speech and fake news on social media has increased pressure on companies to remove such content promptly, while internet campaigners have warned an excessive crackdown could endanger freedom of speech.
Social media companies will have to take measures to prevent the proliferation of hate speech, incitement to hatred and content justifying terrorism on their platforms. They could include establishing mechanisms for users to flag such content (more).
In the effort to combat fake news, perhaps Twitter should have went after Cosmopolitan, which falsely reported that this taxi driver, who gave free rides to victims of the terrorist attack, was a Muslim and not a Sikh. Mainstream media's reckless determination to project the world as it wants, with complete disregard for reality, should not be tolerated.
Hey @Cosmopolitan - why did you describe this guy as a Muslim when you knew he was a Sikh? pic.twitter.com/zm7kRRQaCJ— Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet) 23. Mai 2017
With regards to combating 'hate speech', the lib-left public was quick to identify what it considers "hate" and is likely to flag as such, like questioning the terrorist world view or proposing policy changes beyond turn lights on and off.
The #Manchester terrorist attack was announced on Twitter. Where was Jack? Oh yeah, he was busy...banning people who criticize terrorists. pic.twitter.com/kekIQeuWlD— 👌🏻Elizabeth🌹 (@BasedElizabeth) 24. Mai 2017
@hopenothate And out crawl those who think they have everything to gain from this horrendous act of violence. Hate creates more hate. #hopenothate— Paul Critchley (@critchyboy) 23. Mai 2017
@LeaveEUOfficial @Nigel_Farage Right wing extremists like Nigel condemning immigrants is fuelling terrorist recruitment. You are making them feel unbritish through hatred— RealityCheck (@Complyorcry) 24. Mai 2017
The system is determined to stay the course because its wealth is invested therein, and letting us suffer is more profitable than changing policy through a complete economic system overhaul. The 'immigration economy' is the new 'slave economy' - and, like in the Old South, nothing is going to change until the economy is in shambles, bullets are flying and their luxurious estates are burning.