Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg Defends His Decision To Allow Trump's Post

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Business Insider: Mark Zuckerberg defends Facebook's decision to allow Trump's post in internal meeting even as employees protest and resign

* Facebook is refusing to change its decision to allow a post from President Donald Trump about the US protests.

* Late on Thursday, Trump posted on Facebook and Twitter, "When the looting starts, the shooting starts." Twitter said the post was "glorifying violence" and hid it with a disclaimer — but Facebook disagreed.

*At a heated meeting on Tuesday, Facebook employees challenged CEO Mark Zuckerberg as he stuck by his decision.

* Employees have staged virtual walkouts over Facebook's decision, and some have resigned.

Mark Zuckerberg isn't backing down.

On a heated call with employees on Tuesday, the Facebook CEO refused to change course on the company's decision to allow a post by President Donald Trump that has been criticized as "glorifying violence," according to a source familiar with the matter. The New York Times first reported on the meeting.

As protests over police brutality have engulfed the US in recent days, Facebook has faced a wave of internal unrest. It was sparked by the company's refusal to take action against a post of Trump's that said, "When the looting starts, the shooting starts" — a phrase used by a Southern police chief during civil-rights unrest in the 1960s.

Trump also posted the phrase on Twitter, which determined that the tweet was "glorifying violence" and attached a warning label to it. But Zuckerberg said it didn't break Facebook's rules.

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WNU Editor: He made the right choice. Some of his employees want to politicized the platform, But it is clear that he does not want to go down that route. 

More News On Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg Defending His Decision To Allow Trump's Post

Mark Zuckerberg on leaked audio: Trump’s looting and shooting reference “has no history of being read as a dog whistle” -- VOX
Zuckerberg really said Trump's 'shooting' comment has 'no history' as a 'dog whistle' -- Mashable
Mark Zuckerberg tries to explain his inaction on Trump posts to outraged staff -- CNN



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