When a GOP Missouri U.S. Senate candidate released a video Monday in which he cocked a gun after calling for a hunt of fellow Republicans who he believes are "RINOs," or Republicans in Name Only, Facebook scraped it off its platform within a few hours.
But it's still live on YouTube, where it's been watched thousands of times, and on Twitter, which deliberately left it up after disabling retweets, likes and replies.
It's a striking example of the different ways various social platforms can treat posts that violate their policies. The result: a post banned on Facebook might stay live on Twitter, depending on who has said what in which context.
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