Zuckerberg 'invited' to tell Congress about kowtowing to China

 April 11, 2025

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

Whistleblower already has charged the company with being willing to jeopardize national interests

Mark Zuckerberg, the chief of Facebook and a key player in America's Big Tech industry, has been "invited" to tell Congress about if, and how, his company kowtowed to China, possibly to the detriment of America.

That invitation comes from Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who has written Zuckerberg a letter calling for his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Counterterrorism.

It follows revelations by a former Facebook insider, now a whistleblower, Sarah Wynn-Williams, who has finished telling Congress Meta, Facebook's parent, didn't only sell out Americans, it surrendered to the Chinese Communist Party.
She explained there was a secret project, called "Project Aldrin," that apparently involved handing to the CCP access to U.S. artificial intelligence tech.

The senator told Zuckerberg, "The American people deserve to know the truth about your company."

He cited the testimony from Wynn-Williams who told of the company's willingness "to jeopardize American national interests, betray American consumers and Chinese dissidents alike, and lie about it to Congress."

The claims include that Facebook briefed Chinese officials are AI tech allowing them to compete against American interests, were willing to hand over the data on users that the CCP wanted, and muzzled a Chinese dissident.

"Worse, your company lied directly to Congress about deplatforming Guo Wengui. A top executive of your company, under oath, claimed that Facebook did so according to its normal policies. Documentary evidence unveiled in the hearing, authenticated by the whistleblower, proves that the action was taken due to pressure from China."

It previously was reported that Wynn-Williams, who worked for Facebook from 2011 to 2017 and served as director of global public policy, told Congress the corporation was willing to capitulate to the Chinese government.

Facebook claimed her testimony wasn't accurate.

But in her prepared opening statement for a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Counterterrorism, Wynn-Williams accused founder Zuckerberg of pledging himself as a "free speech champion" while working "hand in glove" with the Chinese Communist Party to "construct and test custom-built censorship tools that silenced and censored critics of the Chinese Communist Party."

Wynn-Williams charged, 'I watched as executives decided to provide the Chinese Communist Party with access to Meta user data — including that of Americans."

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