Facebook suspends Catholic priest for criticizing Islam
Facebook enforcing shari’a censorship? But of course:
After a short Sharia suspension, Facebook ultimately let him back in. But if the U. S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Pope Francis hear about this, Fr. Higgins may have more to worry about than Facebook. The Catholic Church at this time is officially bound to a policy of willful ignorance regarding the jihad threat, and the bishops in the U.S. ruthlessly suppress dissenting speech about this threat with far more zeal than they ever display toward those Catholics who dissent from actual Catholic dogma.
(Robert Spencer)
“Catholic Priest Suspended from Facebook for Post About History of Islam,” ChurchPOP, June 6, 2017 (thanks to PJ Media):
Facebook temporarily suspended the account of Catholic priest Fr. John Higgins in response to a post he made about the history of Islam.
Here’s the offending post:
Fr. John Higgins
“There are peaceful and good Muslim people,” his post reads in part. “And then there are the Islamists who are defended by the ignorant who refuse to learn history.”
He made his comment on a post on the Facebook page of his Congresswoman Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (CA-D). On May 23rd, his post was deleted and he was suspended from posting on Facebook for a week.
“I wrote Facebook several times,” Fr. Higgins told ChurchPOP, “explaining that this post was just history. Of course there was no response.”
Fr. Higgins serves as the pastor of St. Raymond Parish in Downey, California and as the chaplain of his local fire department.
Greg Stone, a friend of Fr. Higgins who does work for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles on conflict resolution, wrote a lengthy Facebook post about the suspension, calling for Facebook to honor its pledge to not censor different viewpoints.
Ha. Facebook relentlessly censors dissenting viewpoints. Jihad Watch referrals from Facebook went down 90% on February 11, 2017, and have never rebounded.
“It is horribly ironic that the very week Islamists murder scores of innocents,” Stone’s post read in part, “—young girls at a pop concert in Manchester, Coptic Christians in Egypt, and Catholics in the Philippines—Facebook suspends the privileges of a respected clergy member for posting an academic synopsis regarding Islamic history. FB spikes the very information the community needs to understand current events.” You can read the full text of Stone’s post here.
On May 30th, his week-long suspension over, Fr. Higgins posted again on Facebook: “I’m back. That was a week? LOL”….