Social-Media

Facebook bans Trump ads for Nazi videos.

The Trump campaign for the use of Nazi-linked images has deleted more than 1980 advertisements from Facebook. The advertisement used the image of an inverted triangle, which Trump's warned campaign was "a commonly used antifa symbol" and used the same synagogue as a symbol for recognition of political prisoners in Nazi death camps.
 
Ultimately, Facebook agreed to remove the ads due to the images linked to Nazi. The statement by Andy Stone on Facebook "Our policy prohibits the use of a prohibited group of hate symbols to identify political prisoners without the context that condemn or disagree with this symbol."
 
The ads warned of "dangerous Crowds from far-left gangs," causing the "total tragedy," across America. They were scattered over official pages to President Trump, Vice President Pence, and campaign manager Brad Parscale, among others.
 
The extreme is an extension of Trump's lengthy weeks-long antifa program, which began with a series of surreal hoaxes that violent rioters marched into rural areas in order to wreak havoc.
 
There have been no signs of organized antifa activity, even though national demonstrations have caused considerable collateral harm, although some far-right activists have been arrested for killings or attempted attacks during the same time period.
 
Some of the time in what historian Mark Bray called a "reclaim," the reversed red triangle was adopted by anti-fascist groups , especially the UK anti-fascist group of the 1980s.
 
Of the symbol used by Nazis for communists. "However, the symbol was widely displaced by the symbol of double flag among the U.S. anti-fascists and is seldom seen among contemporary groups.
 
As a direct reference to Nazi symbols used for the identification of political dissenters, many observers viewed the Trump ads.
 
President Jonathan Greenblatt called the advertisements "inflammatory and very distressing," in his statement to The Washington Post.
 
The move comes only a few weeks after Twitter removes the president's posts for glorifying violent behaviour, invoking the infamous slogan "when plundering starts, the shooting begins." Trump published an Executive Order aiming at perceived social media distortions after the incident.

 






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