‘Big tech, big media and the big lies you need to know’ Morrow

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Sky News host James Morrow has warned people to beware of “big tech, big media, and the big lies” they promote, claiming the woke establishment are willing to go to increasingly “ridiculous and dangerous” lengths to push their preferred narrative.

For instance, big tech recently blocked news content regarding avowed Marxist and co-founder of Black Lives Matters Patrisse Khan-Cullors’ purchase of multi-million-dollar real estate.

"Hard-left anti-capitalist leader of a group that had solicited countless millions of dollars in donations from individuals and woke corporations alike gets rich," Mr Morrow said.

“According to big tech it's nothing you need to know about."

Last year the New York Post’s social media accounts were blocked for reporting on Hunter Biden and have now been locked again for reporting on the real estate decisions of one of the BLM founders.

“As the Post wrote in its editorial, this decision is so arbitrary as to be laughable. Does Facebook know how many newspapers, magazines and websites highlight the real estate purchases of the rich and famous?” Mr Morrow said.

Mr Morrow also raised a second news story which was pushed during the 2020 presidential campaign about former President Donald Trump doing nothing to stop Russia placing bounties on US soldiers’ heads in Afghanistan.

“Yet surprise, surprise it was lies," he said.

Meanwhile the mainstream media pushed "Russia conspiracy theories against Trump from claims Moscow hacked a Vermont power company to the lunatic claims advanced by the Steele Dossier” and big tech did absolutely nothing.

Mr Morrow said "this is of course bad. Why are Silicon Valley wokies and eggheads making editorial calls in a country where the First Amendment still, at least theoretically, holds sway?”

“Tech giants and the mainstream US media at large, are willing to push the most genuinely ridiculous and dangerous pieces of fake news at least when it fits their narrative.

“These days it's not so much about whether something is true but whether it advances the narrative.”

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