Rumble, a pro-free speech alternative to YouTube, is suing the globalist-affiliated ‘Check My Ads’ group for defamation. Rumble accuses the tax-exempt organization of “routinely target[ing] news outlets and platforms that do not adhere to their political worldview” by seeking to deprive them of ad revenue.
“As an unapologetically free-speech platform, Rumble’s mission is to provide all content creators and users a place to speak, listen, and debate freely, regardless of their political perspective,” explained Rumble chairman Chris Pavlovski.
“When anti-free speech zealots, whose self-declared mission is to shut Rumble down, lie to inflict intentional economic harm on our company, we have no choice but to hold them accountable,” he added.
Specifically, Check My Ads is being sued for “accus[ing] Rumble of lying to its shareholders and the Securities and Exchange Commission about the company’s financial health and the source of its revenue.”
Check My Ads co-founder Nandini Jammi is a serial censorship advocate, having once run the notorious ‘Sleeping Giants’ group that targeted news websites like Breitbart.com in a bid to bankrupt them. Jammi has also confessed a strange obsession with radio host Dan Bongino, boasting about being the “CEO of ruining” him – an admission of her targeted approach.
Pavlovski describes Rumble’s lawsuit as “another front in the ongoing war against censorship” after the Musk lawsuit. He also cited Donald Trump’s Truth Social suing 20 corporate media organizations, including MSNBC, Forbes and The Guardian.