Facebook’s quest to vanquish “hate speech” from the world’s largest social media site apparently includes a ban on criticizing suspected Islamic terrorists who allegedly train kids to carry out school shootings.

Brigitte Gabriel, founder of Act for America, the nation’s largest national security grassroots organization, explained the situation on Twitter.

“.@facebook took this EXACT post down under the claim of ‘Hate Speech,’” Gabriel wrote. “Shameful that they hate the truth so much they will resort to censorship.”

The tweet included her original post, which went up on both Facebook and Twitter.

“This is the smile of a sick and depraved Muslim terrorist who is back on the streets (on bail) after training children to shoot up schools,” the post read. “The judge who allowed this to happen should be removed from their post ASAP. If he harms anyone while on bail, the blood is on their hands.”

Judge Sarah Backus opted to release five adults arrested in a raid of a northern New Mexico Islamic compound earlier this month because she said the state failed to prove they were a danger to the community. The suspects, Siraj Wahhaj, Hujrah Wahhaj, Lucas Morton, Jany Leveille and Subhannah Wahhaj all face 11 counts of child abuse – one for each child found living in deplorable conditions at the site, KOB reports.

They were released on personal recognizance bonds, meaning they did not have to post a cash bail, despite evidence presented at a hearing Monday that “the 11 children at the compound were being trained to use guns as they prepared to attack teachers, law enforcement and others in institutions the group considered corrupt,” the Albuquerque Journal reports.

Prosecutors also said police found the body of a young boy, believed to have been kidnapped from Georgia, dead inside a tunnel at the compound near Amalia, and interviewed witnesses who said he died in a religious ceremony that was intended to resurrect the child as Jesus.

Defense attorneys claimed Islamophobia at the hearing, and Backus nodded along.

“If these were white people of the Christian faith who owned guns, this wouldn’t be as big of a deal,” Santa Fe attorney Tom Clark told the judge.

The children recovered from the extremist Islamic compound, which was reportedly under FBI surveillance, ranged in age from 1 to 15, and are now in state custody, KOB reports.

Gabriel’s experience with Facebook censorship is only the latest in a long list of complaints about the social media giant discriminating against conservatives, most recently by limiting posts and reach of Trump-supporting duo Diamond and Silk, Republican candidates, and a conservative artist who likes to paint flattering Trump scenes.

The social media site even temporarily blocked the Declaration of Independence because it allegedly violated the site’s “standards on hate speech,” according to The Vindicator, which posted excerpts from the founding document leading up to Independence Day.