The Vermont publishing house and Mercola, an osteopath and prolific disseminator of COVID-19 misinformation, were the subject of a September 27 Seven Days cover story. Coauthor of a best-selling book, Mercola also had half a million followers on his YouTube channel, according to the New York Times.
YouTube announced the decision in a blog post Wednesday, writing that while vaccines have been “a source of fierce debate” for years, the coronavirus era has called for stronger policies. The media company said it had already removed more than 130,000 videos for violating its COVID-19 vaccine policies.
Now-banned content includes videos alleging that approved vaccines don’t reduce the transmission of disease, and that they can cause chronic health effects such as autism and cancer.
Mercola is a chief peddler of such falsehoods, including in his latest book, The Truth About COVID-19: Exposing the Great Reset, Lockdowns, Vaccine Passports, and the New Normal, published by Chelsea Green in April. In the text, Mercola says that COVID-19 was engineered as a bioweapon and leaked deliberately, and that the vaccine is deadlier than the virus itself.
The tome is one of Chelsea Green’s best-selling titles yet. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., another prominent anti-vaccine advocate who also was banned by YouTube, wrote the book’s foreword.
“Our public responsibility is to the truth, as far as we can determine it,” Baldwin recently told the Washington Post. “Creating a climate of fear and misinformation is what mainstream media seems to excel at, not independent publishers like Chelsea Green.”
The Seven Days story generated several letters to the editor supporting Chelsea Green’s decision to publish Mercola — and supporting the newspaper for writing about that “ethically precarious” decision.
“Independent media platforms that defend freedom of speech and the rights of Americans to speak out against the global tyranny will defeat the censorship extremists,” Mercola wrote. “We are united across the world, we will not live in fear, we will stand together and restore our freedoms.”
A few hours later, he tweeted out links to his content on “free speech supporting” channels.


