After Christchurch Shooting, Petition Calls for PewDiePie to Be Removed From YouTube For Normalizing “White Supremacy”
Following the terrorist attacks in New Zealand, a petition created by Maria Ruiz has called for YouTube to remove popular personality PewDiePie from the platform for normalizing “white supremacy.”
The petition created by Maria Ruiz is titled, “Remove White Supremacist Content from YouTube.” The petition is currently just shy of 50,000 signatures with 49,197 people having signed on. Ruiz specifically targets PewDiePie due to the terrorist attacks in Christchuch, New Zealand. The shooter name dropped PewDiePie in his video of the attack.
Immediately after the shooting PewDiePie responded to his name being used saying he was “absolutely disgusted.”
Nevertheless, Ruiz’s petition states:
“In the wake of the most recent mosque shooting I believe is time to take action as a community and remove white supremacist content from our platforms. One of the largest platforms for white supremacist content is PewDiePie’s YouTube channel. PewDiePie has on many occasions proven once and again to promote and affiliate himself with white supremacist and Nazi ideologies. Worst of all his channel is very much aimed toward children in their formative years. The New Zealand mosque shooter even mentioned PewDiePie by name and asked people to subscribe.”
Ruiz claims that even if PewDiePie cleans up his act it wouldn’t be enough for her, “Even if PewDiePie cleaned up his act his comment sections are still a cesspool of white supremacist activities and commentaries.”
She then adds that PewDiePie’s content is “a clear and present danger to society.” But she’s not just going after PewDiePie, she also targets YouTube:
“At what point is YouTube legally responsible for the content it provides and allows on its platform? I believe that his actions constitute a clear and present danger to society. YouTube’s guidelines state, “if content is intended to be humorous or satirical, it may remain online, “even if offensive or in poor taste.” However, “if the uploader’s intent is to incite violence or hatred, it will be removed.” How long will YouTube remain negligent?
Finally she concludes her petition writing:
“It’s Time to remove PewDiePie from YouTube permanently and develop AI to find and remove extremist material instead of having the SPLC do their work for them.”
A number of articles in the media have attempted to paint PewDiePie as being responsible for the actions of an Australian man. The Washington Poster writer Bethany Lacina even tried to connect PewDiePie to Captain Marvel criticism and that criticism to the New Zealand terror attacks.
She wrote:
“The alt-right’s pop culture tantrums bring people into the radicalization pipeline, like the NZ murderer who loves Pewdiepie. But the youth-facing part of the alt-right is invisible to most conservatives.”
Lacina wouldn’t be alone. Independent journalist Nick Monroe reported the Daily Dot “incited the death threats against PewDiePie and the people he followed.”
Daily Dot INCITED the death threats against @pewdiepie and the people he followed, attempts to wash their hands of responsibility with HALF-ASSED “CORRECTION” https://t.co/pw30Zor0iO pic.twitter.com/cYf9yitKaf
— Nick Monroe (@nickmon1112) March 18, 2019
PewDiePie wasn’t alone in being blamed for Christchurch. One Angry Gamer reports writer Meg Jayanth blamed #GamerGate and gamers at large for the shooting.
PewDiePie is currently in a hot competition with Indian company T-Series to be the most subscribed channel on YouTube. T-Series just overtook PewDiePie on March 30th.
However, not to be outdone PewDiePie released a congratulations parody video for T-Series!
The video seems to have pushed PewDiePie over the edge as he has of this writing 92,289,345 subscribers. T-Series only has 92,213,742.
What do you think of the petition? Do you think this is an outright call for censorship? Or do you think there is something to the petition?
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