5 Compelling Reasons Why The Youtube Shooting Has Disappeared From Headlines

in #news7 years ago

By Rachel Blevins 

Breaking news alerts announcing reports of a shooting at YouTube’s  headquarters quickly faded from the spotlight and out of the news  cycle—and there are a number of imperative reasons why the rampage  initiated by a woman who injured three people and then killed herself,  has not been used to push the mainstream’s media obsession with gun  control. Here are 5 compelling reasons why the YouTube shooting has disappeared from headlines: 

1. As a woman, a peaceful vegan, and a PETA advocate, the  suspected shooter is the opposite of the typical “mass shooter” profile  promoted by the mainstream media.

When the suspected shooter was identified  as Nasim Najafi Aghdam—a 39-year-old woman attempting to carry out a  mass shooting when the overwhelming majority of mass shooting suspects  are typically men in their early 20s, it may have seemed as though she  would actually receive more media attention than most. However, Aghdam does not appear to have been a white supremacist, a  crazy conspiracy theorist, or a religious cult member. Instead, she was a  vegan YouTube content creator with a long list of bizarre videos and a  passion for animal rights. Despite being Iranian-American, which would  excite neocons who are hungry for war with Iran, it does not appear that  Aghdam had a political motive or was affiliated with any terrorist  groups. 

2. The shooter reportedly used a handgun, which also  deviates from the mainstream narrative that all mass shooters use  high-powered rifles.

Aghdam’s weapon of choice was a 9mm Smith & Wesson handgun, which she purchased legally in January. While Bloomberg attempted to blame  Smith & Wesson by noting that the company’s AR-15 was the gun used  in the Parkland shooting, the fact is that the weapon Aghdam used does  not fit the narrative of dangerous firearms pushed by the mainstream  media. 

To attempt to ban a 9mm handgun would be almost impossible, but to  attempt to ban a firearm that has been demonized and referred to as an  “assault rifle” used in a number of mass shootings, is something the  media has been working towards for years. While it is estimated that  more than 8 million Americans own AR-15’s, it has not stopped the  mainstream media from openly calling for a ban on “assault rifles” and  attempting to explain “Why the AR-15 keeps appearing at America’s deadliest mass shootings.” 

3. The shooting happened in California—a state that has already enacted some of the strictest gun control laws in the nation.

When a mass shooting occurs, one of the first things the mainstream  media and gun control advocates tend to do—after blaming the weapon—is  to look at the location where the shooting took place and how that  state’s gun laws can be tightened to prevent another attack. 

In this case, the shooting happened in San Bruno, California, which already has some of the strictest gun laws  in the United States. As a “May Issue” state, California issues  concealed handgun permits to individuals at the discretion of the local  sheriff, and restrictions can be based on where that permit can be used  in the state itself. California also requires all guns to be registered,  and it does not honor permits from any other states. 

4. The police were warned about the shooting by the  suspect’s father in advance, and they did nothing—something the media  tends to cover up.

One day before Nasim Aghdam entered YouTube’s headquarters and opened  fire on innocent employees, her father contacted police to report that  she was missing, and warned that she may be planning an attack on YouTube. Ismail Aghdam said “she was angry” because YouTube “stopped everything” in terms of monetizing her videos, and he warned police that his daughter may be trying to attack YouTube because she “hated” the company. 

While police reportedly found Nasim Aghdam sleeping in a car at 2  a.m. on the morning of the shooting, it is not clear why greater  surveillance measures were not taken at YouTube’s headquarters, or how  long the attack lasted before Aghdam took her own life and police  arrived at the scene. 

5. The shooter blamed YouTube for censoring and demonetizing  her videos—a problem alternative content creators experience on a daily  basis that mainstream media tries to pretend doesn’t exist.

As her father noted, Nasim Aghdam was overwhelmingly angry with  YouTube for demonetizing her videos and she believed that the platform  was intentionally censoring her work. 

On her website, Aghdam wrote, “There  is no free speech in the real world and you will be suppressed for  telling the truth that is not supported by the system. Videos of  targeted users are filtered and merely relegated so that people can  hardly see their videos.” While most content creators who have had their channels demonetized  by the giant platform would never dream of going to its headquarters and  attacking innocent employees, the fact is that YouTube does have a  serious ongoing problem. 

As The Free Thought Project has reported, while YouTube has ignored  ISIS recruiting videos, it has chosen to label videos that show the  United States committing war crimes, conducting airstrikes that kill  innocent civilians and aiding the enemies it claims to be fighting as “extremist content” that is banned from the site. The platform has also started openly targeting smaller channels by demonetizing them and removing the incentive for the creators to continue to attempt to grow their channels. 

While there is no way to defend Nasim Aghdam’s actions, there are a  number of glaring reasons why the shooting she carried out has been  blacklisted by the mainstream media, as it does not fit the typical  narrative and can hardly be used to rally against one race or religion,  or to call for increased gun control. 


 We are the Free Thought Project — a hub for Free Thinking conversations about the promotion of liberty and the daunting task of government accountability. All of our content was created by our team of artists and writers. Learn more about us on our website thefreethoughtproject.com.

Sort:  

You are making some good points.
Plus, now we are distracted by the latest comedy: «The FBI, the Porn Star, the President and his Attorney».

There's really only one reason (according to a #gunsense nut I talked to): it wasn't a mass murder. But also: the type of weapon

I still want to know how she got into the building.
Did she take someone's key card?

yeah it is a very good question how she got that far

Sure, those are possible reasons but also:

  1. She didn't actually manage to kill anyone except herself
  2. She wasn't targeting children

Both of the above are also going to be reasons for less coverage than say a school shooting where a number of students are killed.

Also number 5 isn't exactly a "problem". Organization like Youtube are private companies and can choose what they want to publish just as a book company can. There are many alternative outlets. This isn't censorship in the sense that someone is preventing your speech. They just aren't providing you a platform. They are not obligated to nor should they be.

organizations like youtube have an effectively monopoly

If you arent seen on youtube and facebook, you arent seen by the masses, and that amounts to censorship

sure, there is competiting platforms, but they dont reach the masses, which means that alternative viewpoints dont reach the masses

What would you suggest? Laws forcing companies to publish your stuff? More government regulation? That won't work out well in the long run. It's up to you to reach the masses. It's not up to youtube or facebook to do it for you. How did you reach the masses before those platforms were available? They haven't been around all that long. You have a right to free speech, you don't have a right to someone else's platform to speak on. Reaching the masses is your responsibility, not that of youtube or facebook.

And no, youtube has no monopoly, effective or otherwise. They just happen to be the most successful at the moment. It won't last forever. Alternatives to YouTube include DailyMotion, DTube, Vimeo, Flickr, Metacafe, Photobucket, Veoh, SlideShare, etc. And those are just the ones I came up with off the top of my head and on the first page of an internet search. I could name many more competitors to facebook including the one we are using right now. If Youtube only wants to publish videos about ponies, they can do so. If they only want to publish far left wing political commentary then they can do that too.

Either they need to stop pretending they are a neutral platform and make a clear TOS that is followed, or they need to actually be neutral. Anything else is effectively an abuse of their monopolistic position.

As I pointed out, they aren't a monopoly and I don't know that they have made claims of "neutrality", whatever that would mean. If everybody that complained about them stopped using their service they also wouldn't be nearly as successful. Complex laws probably make a clear (and simple) TOS difficult. Do you think their TOS, such as it is, has not been followed?

They absolutely are a monopoly, they have no competitors who come even close to their scale. Neutrality as in not selectively enforcing rules for points of view they don't agree with rather than just enforcing TOS. Their TOS has been repeatedly shown to be violated and they are going to be sued over it as a result of this exact behavior.

Saying that property is theft is a bit of an oxymoron. You can't have theft without property. If they have violated their TOS then a lawsuit is an appropriate response. They are still not a monopoly.

Well that is irrelevant because I never said "property is theft". You can have theft without property, it is called "intellectual property" and it protects the investment used to produce it, but again this has zero to do with my argument and I am not even sure why you are bringing it up. The matter at hand is a violation of TOS which is a CONTRACTUAL violation. As far as being a monopoly, it certainly is: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/monopoly.asp