Federal Judge Blasts Google, Tech Giant Broke Antitrust Law

The evil Democratic Party is the number one enemy of free speech. In its desperation to cling to power, the liberals mobilized its propaganda machinery to suppress information and smear critics and anyone who stood in their way.

Google had long been serving that purpose – one recent instance is their manipulation of its search engine to support Kamala Harris’ depressing campaign.

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The tech giant also comes under fire after its autocomplete feature used to predict search queries failed to prompt searches about the failed assassination of Trump.

Before this, President Donald Trump thundered at Google for burying information from Infowars in 2018.

Senator Ted Cruz also revealed that Google targeted conservative news outlets and attempted to demonetize them, including The Federalist and Zero Hedge.

On Monday, US District Judge Amit P. Mehta of Washington D.C. handed its decision on the tech company, ruling that Google had violated US antitrust law.

“After having carefully considered and weighed the witness testimony and evidence, the court reaches the following conclusion: Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly,” US District Judge Amit Mehta Mehta wrote.

“It has violated Section 2 of the Sherman Act.”

Judge Mehta’s verdict hit Google for securing exclusive distribution agreements through paying smartphone and web browsing companies, including Apple and Samsung, tens of billions of dollars.

According to the district judge, this move violates the law prohibiting unfair monopolies, harming competitors’ abilities to make gains in both general search services and general text advertising markets.

Republican nominee and former president Donald Trump filed the charges against Google through his DOJ and state attorneys general in 2020.

 The filing states that Google is ‘one of the wealthiest companies on the planet,’ and has been engaging in a suppression campaign against conservatives. Eventually, it became a “monopoly gatekeeper to the internet for billions of users and countless advertisers worldwide.”

Google’s legal team and CEO Sundar Pichai repeatedly stressed that they only maintained an advanced search engine technology that none of the tech companies could match.

But Judge Mehta disagreed.  He said, “[the current system] puts rivals in no position to compete with Google for the increased ad revenue that accompanies greater query volume.”

The district judge was also appalled with the efforts exhausted by Google to cover their violations and was “taken aback by the lengths to which Google goes to avoid creating a paper trail for regulators and litigants.”

However, the judge ultimately declined to impose sanctions on the tech giant.

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