The nonprofit StopAntisemitism.org, which searches for anti-Semitic content on the Internet, reported that “hundreds of complaints” had been filed with the host.
Epik’s spokesman said the company had won court cases on both sides, those that were not easy to remove and those who asked for it. Many of them were accompanied by violent threats, some of which were shared through the spokesman.
“Unfortunately, we never won in those cases,” wrote the person, who asked Anonymous for his own safety.
“An online page is opening: we have three hundred court cases that call us neo-Nazis and precursors of death,” they said. “We eliminate it – we have three hundred court cases that say we’re [we’re] fascists, threatening to put bullets in our heads.”
The user stated that Epik had deleted the online page “a few hours” after receiving the complaints, and that after attempting the platform owner to delete the objectionable content, it had failed.
Publicly, on Twitter, Epik to some of his criticisms.
“Freedom of expression does not enter our house, claims war on an organization of others because of their faith or creed, does not post videos inviting them to be killed through a horrible genocide and then celebrates the paintings that have been made,” the tweet reads.
But on Thursday, the channel hosted through BitChute, called Handsome Truth GDL (for Goyim Defense League), the same content from the old Goyim TV website.
This content largely includes wild anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, photographs of Minadeo’s mobile phones and others driving around California and shouting anti-Semitic words (often through a megaphone) and other far-right conspiracy theories (about the coronavirus, Dr. Anthony Fauci and the Black Lives Matter movement, for example).
BitChute, according to the company, earns $23485 per month, what it calls network investment sources.
The transfer written on Twitter, where Minadeo’s account, Verdad Guapa, remains active. It implied that theArray withdrawal, of course, a Jewish conspiracy.