The Interview That Got The Channel Going: She Was Killed A Year Later Over A $ Debt

All drug references were removed. YouTube no longer recommends my videos and daily people are unsubscribed that didn’t do so on their own. I’m experimenting to determine if removing drug talk changes anything. I don’t think so, but it’s worth a try. If you noticed with some recent homeless interviews I skip anyone’s drug history. What’s the sense of a channel if no one knows it? It’s fun to chat, answer questions, etc. YouTube used to promote my videos. Initially, all a creator had to worry about is not promoting or glorifying drugs, which I didn’t. There was no need to. Now a creator isn’t supposed to reference drugs, legal or otherwise, even if lets say a drug is legalized in a video where it was shot. Ultimately, YouTube decides what is permissible. I’m find with that, but the rules are constantly. YouTube promoted all my viral videos without any editing at the beginning. I’m assuming my channel will continue to decline despite any changes. The good news is I was uploading the videos for my own use and never really counted on anyone subscribing or watching to begin with. I’ve never once asked someone to subscribe, share, give a thumbs up or comment. Four years ago I had over 7500 stalkers blocked. I’m not sure what the number is now because the blocked list is not accurate or up to date. This channel isn’t related to a popularity contest of any kind. I plan on keeping that way and uploading videos of interests of mine.
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