Unfortunately, since this post was first published, the documentary has been removed. This highlights the very real dangers of censorship.
What is it – do you think, monoliths like Alphabet – Google – Youtube, Facebook, are afraid of?
When the past and present cannot be openly discussed and ideas cannot be freely exchanged collective discernment cannot be reached.
In silencing dialogue, we weaken our ability to learn, to question, and to understand.
Less openly discussed, but very real: controlling what stays up shapes public conversation. Platforms don’t just host content; they curate reality at scale. Removing material can quietly narrow the range of ideas people are exposed to. A society that restricts open discussion places itself on a dangerous path, one where mistakes are repeated rather than examined.
If we allow history to be erased or controlled, we risk entering an extremely dangerous period in human history, marked by ignorance, division, and the loss of critical thought
If you know of a copy of this documentary please share it with us and leave it in the comments.
Below is a copy of the original youtube.com page (unfortunately the video does not get archived by the “WayBackMachine”) and an article by Dr Tess Lawrie about Genocide in a suit
Genocide in A Suit: by Janis Plavins
“This documentary examines how genocide unfolds through law, language, obedience, and systems that present themselves as normal – where violence becomes diffused, normalized, and bureaucratic. What once required force now depends on compliance, silence, and moral justification. The most effective genocide is the one people have been taught to defend.”
Why this documentary? Genocide is no longer announced with uniforms, camps, or mass graves. It advances quietly through policies, expert language, moral framing, and social pressure – while appearing lawful, reasonable, and even virtuous.
This documentary exists because most people have been taught to recognize genocide only after it becomes undeniable. By then, it is already too late. Genocide in a Suit exposes the earlier stages – the psychological conditioning, the bureaucratic normalization, and the obedience mechanisms that make large-scale harm possible without overt violence.
Using real-world examples and established frameworks, the film shows how ordinary people can be guided to participate, comply, and even defend systems that undermine their own freedom, health, and dignity. Not through fear alone – but through appeals to responsibility, safety, and morality.
This is not a documentary just about villains – it is about systems that teach ordinary people to comply, justify, and defend harm.
Genocides The system is happy to talk about?
The powers that shouldn’t be have no problem talking about genocide, so long as it’s the approved kind. Major Main-Stream platforms endlessly churn out videos, documentaries, Tv Shows and films about “certain” alleged atrocities, replaying them until the narrative is fixed and unquestioned. But mention the Uyghur Muslims in China, and the conversation goes quiet. Talk about Christians being slaughtered or driven out across parts of the East, and it’s dismissed or ignored.
Bring up the systematic targeting of white farmers in parts of Africa, and you’re accused of wrongdoing just for noticing. Expose forced labor and modern slavery tied to powerful corporations BYD in places like Brazil, and suddenly the story is “too complex” or quietly buried.
Uyghur Persecution / Genocide (2017–present) – China
Mass detention, forced labor, cultural destruction; classified as genocide by several governments and human rights organizations (still contested by China).
This isn’t about protecting people from disturbing content. It’s about protecting power. Some victims are useful. Others are inconvenient. Some crimes are amplified; others are erased. The suffering that threatens money, ideology, or geopolitical alliances is silenced.
Late 19th / Early 20th Century
- Armenian Genocide (1915–1917) – Ottoman Empire
Armenians were systematically deported and killed; ~1–1.5 million deaths. - Herero and Nama Genocide (1904–1908) – German South West Africa (Namibia)
One of the first genocides of the 20th century.
World War II Era
- The Holocaust (1941–1945) – Nazi Germany
allegedly 6 million people not just Jews where murdered, Roma, disabled people, Poles, Slavs, and others. - Romani Genocide (Porajmos) – Nazi-occupied Europe
Hundreds of thousands of Roma killed.
Cold War Era
- Cambodian Genocide (1975–1979) – Khmer Rouge
~1.5–2 million people killed through executions, starvation, and forced labor. - Guatemalan Maya Genocide (1981–1983) – Guatemala
Indigenous Maya communities targeted during the civil war.
Late 20th Century
- Bosnian Genocide (1992–1995) – Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ethnic cleansing of Bosniak Muslims; Srebrenica massacre legally recognized as genocide. - Rwandan Genocide (1994) – Rwanda
~800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu murdered in ~100 days.
21st Century
- Darfur Genocide (2003–present) – Sudan
Targeting of non-Arab ethnic groups; mass killings, displacement, and rape. - Yazidi Genocide (2014–present) – ISIS in Iraq
Yazidis targeted for extermination, enslavement, and forced conversion. - Rohingya Genocide (2016–present) – Myanmar
Ethnic cleansing and mass atrocities against Rohingya Muslims.
Ongoing or Heavily Debated Cases
These are often described as genocidal or potentially genocidal by scholars or human rights groups:
- Ethiopia (Tigray conflict)
- Sudan (renewed violence, 2023–present)
- Indigenous peoples in various regions (through forced assimilation, displacement, and destruction of culture)
When platforms decide which genocides are allowed to be discussed and which must be ignored, they are not neutral hosts, they are active participants in deception. History isn’t being remembered; it’s being edited. And a world that only acknowledges atrocity when it’s politically safe is a world that has learned nothing and with Covid19 as an example is fully prepared to let it happen again.
If you know of an available copy of this documentary (Genocide in A Suit – Documentary – 2026) please share it with us and leave it in the comments. So we can share it with others.


























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