ike what the forget happened to you. you used to act rational but your pretty irrational rn
I think you're just misinterpreting what I'm saying so I'll elaborate on my point.
In long, the more stake you put into a social media platform = the more people using social media daily. When a lot of people use a platform (Youtube, Facebook, Twitter etc.), it requires a lot of money to run. This means that companies become more profit-driven in order for their platform to survive.
In the end, this means that political platforms that some could consider conducive to their views being represented on a national stage now rely on surviving these social media environments, and must adjust themselves accordingly or risk getting the rug pulled out from under them. This is what happened to Humble Water Filter Merchant - nobody wants to give him a platform because they no longer want their website to be associated with his content.
This is by no means me saying the companies are justified in the rug pulling, instead that we've given them to power to do so with no oversight. If you don't like this, you really don't have a whole lot of alternatives.