Where Are the Free Speech Warriors on Blurt?

You ever get that feeling like you're in the wrong timeline?

Like you're watching something obvious unravel right in front of you, but nobody else seems to notice—or worse, they pretend not to?

That's me right now, looking at the booming, passionate, censorship-fighting world of First Amendment auditors and wondering:

Why aren’t any of them on Blurt?

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Let me back up for a second.

Blurt is the only platform I know of that actually, honestly, unapologetically allows free speech.

No shadow bans.
No demonetization.
No one playing hall monitor because someone felt “offended.”

Just pure, raw, decentralized posting—where the community upvotes what it values, and nobody can downvote you into silence.

Now compare that to YouTube and Twitter (sorry, I mean "X")—platforms that claim to support free speech... right up until you post something they don't like.

First Amendment auditors know this firsthand. Their content gets flagged, restricted, or demonetized just for standing on public sidewalks with a camera.

So again I ask—where are they?

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Who Are These People?

If you don’t follow First Amendment auditors, let me introduce you to a few big names:

  • Audit the Audit has nearly 3 million subscribers and averages hundreds of thousands of views per video. They break down police encounters with legal commentary and focus on educating the public.

  • Long Island Audit is pushing close to a million subscribers, regularly clocking 400K+ views per video. He’s polite, well-spoken, and has built a massive following just by standing up for constitutional rights with a camera and a calm voice.

  • James Madison Audits (about 393K subs) brings experience from inside law enforcement. His videos provide a unique angle—someone who knows both sides of the badge.
  • HonorYourOath, People’s Court Audit, Denver Metro Audits, and F.I.R.M. Audits all have over 100K subscribers, and collectively? We're talking millions of monthly views.
  • These are creators with loyal, die-hard fanbases—people who believe in accountability, free expression, and standing up to authority. You know... our people.


    And yet... none of them are on Blurt.


    Why Does That Matter?

    Because Blurt is literally built for this kind of content.

    Let’s be real—YouTube has demonetized, restricted, and outright deleted some of these creators’ videos.

    Twitter/X might give the illusion of freedom, but how long before they start slapping warning labels or suspensions on live audits?

    Meanwhile, Blurt doesn't just allow this content—it rewards it. With zero ad revenue split, creators keep 100% of what they earn. Every upvote on Blurt is a micropayment. It’s not going to make anyone rich overnight, but it’s real ownership, not a rented algorithmic spotlight.

    And here's the wildest part:

    If just 1% of their audience followed them to Blurt, it could change the game.

    Let’s do some napkin math. Say a creator like Long Island Audit has 900K subs. 1% of that is 9,000 users. If just those 9,000 fans showed up on Blurt and upvoted a few of their favorite creator’s posts each week?

    That’s traction. That’s community. That’s decentralization in action.

    It’s not charity—it’s economic empowerment for voices that the mainstream doesn't want heard.


    Why Aren’t They Here Already?

    That’s the million-dollar question, right?

    Honestly, I don’t think it’s resistance. I think it’s ignorance.

    Most of these creators probably don’t even know Blurt exists. Or if they do, they’ve never had someone explain it to them like, “Hey, this is a place where you can post uncensored, get rewarded in crypto, and never get demonetized for telling the truth.”

    Nobody’s made the case. And nobody’s shown up in their comment sections saying, “Hey, we’ve got your back—come to Blurt.”

    Until now.

    Screenshot 2025-07-17 at 18-07-27 Deposition Of Sgt. Joffrion - YouTube.png

    I left this comment on Honor Your Oaths video posted above.

    Go comment and tell him you saw this on Blurt.blog and let the 1st raid begin.


    Introducing: Comment Raids for Free Speech

    We need a plan.

    A simple, repeatable one.

    What if we organized comment raids? Nothing hostile, nothing spammy—just genuine engagement, offering a hand and a home.

    Let’s say once a week, we hit up a different audit creator’s latest video and drop a short comment like:

    “Love your work. Ever thought about posting on Blurt.blog? It's free speech without demonetization. You’d have huge support there.”

    Or:

    “This got demonetized? You should check out Blurt.media. They don't censor and you can earn crypto without ads.”

    These are organic, non-pushy invites. Even better if they come from real users (not bots), ideally after watching the full video and engaging authentically.

    We could time them around when a video gets demonetized or pulled. Those are the moments when creators are listening—frustrated, tired, and open to alternatives.


    Think About the Ripple Effect

    If even one of these creators posted a mirror link to Blurt with their YouTube video?

    Their audience might follow.

    Not all of them, of course.

    Maybe 1%, maybe less.

    But that’s still hundreds—maybe thousands—of new users who believe in free speech and are already tired of big tech’s double standards.

    And they wouldn’t just be scrolling. They’d be engaging, rewarding, and possibly becoming creators themselves.

    This is how movements start.

    Not with slick ad campaigns or top-down sponsorships, but with communities inviting people in one by one.


    What We Can Offer These Creators

    Let’s put ourselves in their shoes. What would get their attention?

    • Zero censorship. Obvious, but it’s the core appeal. If YouTube keeps deleting videos, Blurt becomes the lifeboat.

    • Crypto rewards. They don’t need to wait on Adsense checks—or worry about advertisers yanking their income. On Blurt, every post earns directly from community votes.

    • No cancel mobs. No downvotes. No mass flagging. Just real people with real opinions.

    • Decentralized distribution. Nobody can take their content down, shadowban them, or demonetize them for vague “policy violations.”

    Free Speech Lives On Blurt 2.jpg


    How You Can Help

    You don’t need to be a whale or a web3 nerd to make a difference. You just need to be consistent.

    Here’s what I’m doing—and you can join in:

    1. Subscribe to 5 audit channels. Long Island Audit, Audit the Audit, James Madison Audits, HonorYourOath, and FIRM Audits are great places to start.

    2. Turn on notifications. When they post, watch the video. Like it. Leave a thoughtful comment.

    3. Drop a Blurt mention. Occasionally. Casually. Authentically. No pressure—just “Hey, love this. There’s a free speech crypto platform called Blurt.media that would love you.”

    4. Engage the community. Reply to others in the comments. Upvote other Blurt mentions. Build visibility.

    5. Do it weekly. Make it a habit. Maybe even rotate channels each week.


    Final Thoughts

    We can’t sit around complaining about censorship and then ignore the tools we’ve already built to fight it.

    Blurt is here.
    It works.

    And it’s waiting for people like these creators—people who risk confrontation, lawsuits, and ridicule just to show us the truth—to find a place where they can speak freely and earn for it.

    Let’s not wait for someone else to connect the dots. Let’s be the ones who say:

    “Hey, you’ve got a voice. We’ve got a platform. Let’s make this thing unstoppable.”

    Free speech isn’t just a slogan. It’s a movement.

    And Blurt might be the best place left for it to grow.

    Follow me on X, YouTube, and Blurt: @grandpapulse

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