Oh calm down. The clear reason: <i>"Mr Rogan has an exclusive deal with the streaming service [Spotify]"</i>, <i>"several third-party channels have taken it upon themselves to post the episodes"</i>...its a DMCA takedown, per Joe's contract.<p>Something about conspiracy theories makes people just stop using their brains.
Here is the podcast: <a href="https://open.spotify.com/episode/3SCsueX2bZdbEzRtKOCEyT" rel="nofollow">https://open.spotify.com/episode/3SCsueX2bZdbEzRtKOCEyT</a>
Whether you like either of these guys, this is getting out of hand with these social media companies.
There is perfectly logical and scientific reasoning for arguments on both sides of this issue. However, companies like Twitter are heavily pushing internal ideology.
I just finished listening to JRE #1747, and it was the most eye opening piece of media I've ever seen on Covid. If I could recommend only one piece of samizdat on the subject it would be this. It pairs well with the Malone interview. Dr. McCullough is certainly not crippled by false modesty, but he appears to have earned that. He is arguably a, if not the, world leading expert on treating the disease. That doesn't mean he should be believed, but it does mean that he shouldn't be dismissed.<p><a href="https://rumble.com/vqt3p6-jre-1747-dr.-peter-mccullough.html" rel="nofollow">https://rumble.com/vqt3p6-jre-1747-dr.-peter-mccullough.html</a>
"YouTube takes down Joe Rogan interview with Dr. Robert Malone for its criticism of healthcare industry and government institutions."<p>FTFY<p>Just this bit hits home: <a href="https://youtu.be/HUX9LqA3bGY" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/HUX9LqA3bGY</a>
I wonder what doctors analyzed the video at YouTube — I have become impressed by the teams that social media giants have amassed who can factually check the top researcher’s, of our society, studies.<p>It would be interesting to see a list of these people’s names and credentials.