“Boom, Boom, Tel Aviv” Song Faces Major Censorship

To no one’s surprise, my super-viral song Boom, Boom, Tel Aviv, which has been heard by billions of people worldwide and has become the anti-Israel anthem of the summer, has been taken off Spotify and every other platform it was distributed on. This is because the distributor I used, Distrokid, is a Jewish company that has its offices in Tel Aviv. Of course, you’d ask, Why did you use them, and why not just get another one?” and I would respond: “Because every single music distributor is Jewish or is working with the ADL to remove ‘hateful’ content from streaming platforms, so there is no point.” My YouTube channel, which I haven’t used for years, was completely erased without any warning, just because it had my track on it. Moreover, Tik Tok and even X have begun censor the song and limit any visibility to my tracks that I post.

What is interesting, however, is the silence from the media in my own country: there is not a single MSM outlet or any influencer on the Left or Right that is talking about this track or how it is being censored. They only people talking about it are several large pro-Palestinian and anti-Zionist accounts on X, Tik Tok and Instagram. In fact, I have not seen a hit piece or any comment from the ADL or any other Jewish NGO, which is very unlike them. Perhaps they don’t want people catching on to the idea that we should be fighting against their poisonous entertainment industry without our music, art, and movies. Well, I have inspired others to start making their own tracks as well, so its a bit too late for that.

What would have been a life-changing event for anyone else, becoming a multimillionaire from just my song being streamed from 23 different platforms across the world, was completely stripped from me because of the Jews. But despite this, it is still being uploaded by people all over the world, with copies and copies of it on all of the platforms.

Since the end of my short “music career,” I have decided to make all my music available for free on my website, so everyone can download my tracks and help them spread across the planet even further.

Although my own country said nothing about me, I’ve become household name in the Middle East and Asisa. In fact, I even made the cover of the Tehran Times, which is the Iran’s equivalent of the New York Times, except its not run by Jews.

Early today, I saw that several news outlets posted on X about the song, crediting me for making it, and it was also mentioned by Russia Today, as well. In other words, despite the Jews trying to shut me and the track down, the damage has been done, as the most important part of this spontaneous fame was never about getting rich—although I would have loved the life-changing money—but to break through all the censorship and deplatforming the Jews have put me through for the last two years, so I can reach more people..

I’ve gained nearly 20-thousand new followers on X in the last few days, and more people are listening to my other tracks which are very antisemitic because they tell the full truth about the Jews and their power.

So, although it sucks I won’t become the multimillionaire I could have been, my name and message have spread across the world like never before, and that is—priceless.

— Lucas Gage

The Internet Censors Chortle at Their Success With the EU


The Internet Censors Chortle at Their Success With the EU


We did it!!!!

Hours ago, the EU Parliament overwhelmingly voted in favor of the most ambitious regulation ever drafted to end the era of toxic social media.

We’re still in shock. 

We were up against some of the most powerful corporations in the world. But we were louder.

Donating in the thousands, flooding key decision-makers with messages, delivering powerful solutions in meetings, and publishing groundbreaking investigations showing the harms caused by Big Tech: the Avaaz community has helped shape history this week, together with other awesome groups out there fighting alongside us and brave lawmakers who decided to listen.

We’re not done yet, but if EU lawmakers stand strong in further negotiations, this could be the first wave of a cascade of new laws all over the world that finally put people before platforms and their profits: whenever Facebook, Youtube or TikTok would harm our societies at scale – from making dangerous disinformation go viral to spreading harmful content to kids or misusing our personal data — our democracies would be able to ensure they take responsibility.

Join the celebration by retweeting the Avaaz tweet here or posting on Facebook here


Social media has brought powerful innovation to our societies. But for too long they have been  able to evolve with literally just one goal: maximizing their profit, even if that meant radicalizing our societies, delegitimizing science or a rise in teen depression.

Now, thanks to this regulation which some have called a new constitution for the Internet, we can demand a future where technologies are shaped around common values, and protect our fundamental human rights, instead of exploiting our weaknesses.

Also, with so much disillusionment around politics, this regulation has shown Europe at its best. With almost all the demands from citizens, experts and civic society organizations landing in some way in the text just voted including:
Detoxify the algorithm— make the platforms take responsibility for the harms they cause to our societies, like the viral spread of dangerous disinformation;  Big sanctions — Face fines up to 6% of their global income, yes we’re talking billions of dollars here, if they don’t fix their systems;Open the black box — Allow independent auditors, researchers and civic society to scrutinize their actions and uncover their wrongdoings;Stop surveillance ads — Ban the exploitation of children’s data, and our political beliefs or gender choices, to target us with ads.

Join the celebration by retweeting the Avaaz tweet here or posting on Facebook here

For over four years Avaaz has been on the forefront of the public push to force social media platforms to tackle the harms they create. From the EU, to the US, or Brazil, we have reported on disinformation and its scale, commissioning polls on its harmful effects, evaluating platforms’ efforts to tackle them, and identifying their failures. None of this would have been possible without the Avaaz membership. It was a huge shared effort. But it paid off. And now we’re making history.

With deep excitement and determination,

Luca, Sarah, Christoph, Joana, Nadia, Andy, Rosie, Luana, Camille, Barbara, Sam and the rest of the Avaaz team