
Malone was only the second of recent guests on The Joe Rogan Experience to liken pandemic health policies to the Holocaust following the appearance of Peter McCullough on the December 13 edition of the podcast. Malone used the Joe Rogan Experience platform to further promote numerous baseless claims, including several falsehoods about COVID-19 vaccines and an unfounded theory that societal leaders have ‘hypnotised’ the public,” the letter continued, while also calling out Rogan for repeatedly making “misleading and false claims”, including discouraging young people from getting vaccinations, promoting off-label use of the drug ivermectin, and calling mRNA vaccines “gene therapy”.

The group, who count experts in microbiology, immunology, epidemiology, and neuroscience among their numbers, wrote that “Spotify is responsible for allowing this activity to thrive on its platform,” in the open letter published on WordPress. READ MORE: Joe Rogan’s exclusive Spotify deal is reducing his influence, data study suggests.Robert Malone on the Spotify-exclusive The Joe Rogan Experience podcast. Now that’s openly and repeatedly stated on CNN. If you said I think it’s possible that COVID-19 came from a lab, you’d be banned from many social media platforms – now that’s on the cover of Newsweek.A group of doctors, health experts and scientists have published an open letter calling on Spotify to create a misinformation policy following the controversial appearance of virologist and prominent anti-vax advocate Dr. of two recent guests on Rogans show (along with anti-vaxxer Peter McCullough) who have compared pandemic policies to the. Now, that’s accepted as fact,” Rogan continued. “If you said, I don’t think cloth masks work, you would be banned from social media. “For instance, eight months ago, if you said, ‘if you get vaccinated, you can still catch COVID and you can still spread COVID,’ you’d be removed from social media, they would they would ban you from certain platforms. “The problem I have with the term ‘misinformation,’ especially today, is that many of the things that we thought of as ‘misinformation’ just a short while ago are now accepted as fact,” he correctly explained.


“The podcast has been accused of spreading ‘dangerous misinformation,” Rogan said in a video posted to Instagram.

It may well be decisive at least in the English-speaking world. Joe Rogan’s nearly three-hour interview with epidemiologist and cardiologist Dr Peter McCullough is just such a success. When Joe Rogan responded Sunday night to the countless attacks advocating censorship of his enormously popular podcast “The Joe Rogan Experience,” he got a lot right.įirst off, Rogan perfectly articulated the danger of censorship under the guise of stopping so-called “misinformation.” Sometimes one voice enjoys an almost inexplicable success in influencing and perhaps turning round popular thinking on a major issue.
