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YouTube shuts down Pro-Life group account: calls it dangerous and harmful

Are you a pro-life group with an account on Youtube? Be prepared to be shut down because you re dangerous and harmful. That’s what happened to pro-life group Abortion Pill Reversal (APR) account for some reason. I guess being pro-life is considered dangerous and harmful in he Silicon Valley.

YouTube shuts down Pro-Life group account: calls it dangerous and harmful
YouTube shuts down Pro-Life group account: calls it dangerous and harmful

Last week, YouTube suspended the Abortion Pill Reversal (APR) account for “repeated or severe violations of [the] Community Guidelines.” Four videos were posted to the account. The “offending” videos included one webinar explaining APR in scientific and medical terms. The remaining three told the stories of women who chose life for their babies using the APR protocol.

Citing its policies on “harmful or dangerous content,” YouTube opted to suspend the APR account entirely, explaining that it “doesn’t allow content that encourages or promotes violent or dangerous acts that have an inherent risk of serious physical harm or death.” Examples of videos that violate this policy are videos about “instructional bomb making, choking games, hard drug use, or other acts where serious injury may result.”

Above is one of the videos that YouTube deemed “harmful or dangerous.”

The move comes mere weeks after a new study found that the Abortion Pill Reversal protocol is both safe and effective for women who change their mind after beginning a chemical abortion. The study, which followed 754 women who wanted to stop their in-progress chemical abortion, reported a 68 percent success rate in reversing the effects of mifepristone, the first pill in the two-part chemical abortion process.

The APR protocol involves administering progesterone to counteract the first abortion pill. Progesterone is FDA-approved and has been used to prevent miscarriage since the 1950s. Since 2007, over 500 women have used the APR protocol to save their babies from abortion. Today, the protocol is backed by a network of 350 medical providers.