1. American Crossroads had ads removed by Facebook because of a brutally dishonest attack on Warnock.
The ads claimed that Warnock said "God Damn America" as an expression of his own views.
He was quoting someone else
One day later, Facebook has approved ads w/the SAME CLAIM
2. What is the point of enforcing a rule and taking down ads if you can just republish an ad with the exact same claim the next day?
This ad has been debunked by Facebook fact-checking partner
Facebook doesn't seem to be taking their own rules very seriously
3. This is the second time in two days that American Crossroads has responded to this ad getting taken down by publishing an ad with an identical claim.
1. A bill that would make it more difficult for companies to import products made with slave labor in the Xinjiang region of China passed the House by a vote of 406-3.
3. The bill would require companies to prove that products from the region "were not produced wholly or in part by convict labor, forced labor, or indentured labor" before importing them to the U.S.
UPDATE: Two days ago, I flagged how Karl Rove's Super PAC, American Crossroads, was using Facebook to run an outrageously dishonest attack on Raphael Warnock.
"They’re offering tens of thousands of dollars in cash, making their personal assistants pester doctors every day, and asking whether a 5-figure donation to a hospital would help them jump the line
The COVID-19 vaccine is here — and so are the wealthy people who want it first"
"'We get hundreds of calls every single day,' said Dr. Ehsan Ali, who runs Beverly Hills Concierge Doctor. His clients, who include Ariana Grande and Justin Bieber, pay between $2,000 and $10,000 a year for personalized care."
"Those patients are already on waiting lists with concierge doctors who charge as much as $25,000 a year for 24-hour access to top-notch care, which includes working to get their clients vaccinated as soon as it’s available."