So, Microsoft now has both the financial resources and the power need that could justify a serious research/development project to produce a production Thorium reactor. -- The original problem that the DOE had with Thorium reactors was that they were almost useless for producing nuclear weapons (an important 'side effect' of Nuclear power back in the '70s). Microsoft has no need (one would hope) for nuclear weapons, but could definitely use the thorium promise of a far smaller radiation waste footprint.
If you can't take the speaker to court, you shouldn't be able to scare the platform into censoring them.
Two reasons for that:
The US is quickly going the way of Italy and Spain. 5,000 dead in a month, (href="https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/index.html"> annual US flu death toll in 2012 was around 12,000) and it's not even up to steam, yet! Both countries have lost a lot of health professionals and are begging for more.
...Most countries don't have the resources to do extensive testing.
A couple of weeks ago, a hospital administrator in Toronto, Canada (about 20 miles north of the US) noted that his one hospital had done more tests than the entire USA. Here in British Columbia, Canada, we've done more testing than the entire USA. I'm not talking countries. I'm talking singular hospitals and small provinces (BC population: 5Million).
"If truth is beauty, how come no one has their hair done in the library?" -- Lily Tomlin