Don't
those idiots who tried to suppress InfoWars know that censorship
makes people all the more determined?!
Infowars’
Alex Jones claims 5.6 million extra subscribers since being censored,
so did he win?
RT,
9
August, 2018
In
the battle to have Alex Jones and Infowars purged from social media,
it’s not obvious who won. Jones’ critics are celebrating because
he’s been deplatformed, while he claims to have 5.6 million extra
subscribers as a result.
Jones
and his right-wing conspiracy platform, Infowars, have been wiped off
YouTube, Facebook, Apple, LinkedIn, Spotify, Stitcher, and Pinterest,
among others. The big beasts of social media who constantly insist
they are independent, appeared to work in a coordinated way to censor
the bizarre but undeniably popular conspiracy theorist.
“Infowars
has had the highest traffic it’s ever had – 5.6 million new
subscribers in the past 48 hours – and so has my radio show,”Jones
told the Daily Mail, referring to his newsletter and podcast.
That
claim means over 5 million extra subscribers, in just a matter of
days, may have signed up to watch him and his Infowars organisation
deliver their little nuggets of hate and conspiracy. Not exactly the
outcome the would-be censors were looking for. The blowback from
attempting to stifle ideas and speech has a long history, matched
only by the history of people failing to learn from it.
Social
media platforms risk creating the right-wing answer to Star Wars’
Obi Wan Kenobi: strike him down and he will become more powerful than
you can possibly imagine.
There
have been a range of high profile voices warning against censoring
Jones who, while widely-watched, appears to the majority like little
more than a vicious but comic figure screaming red-faced diatribes.
Jordan
Peterson, the highly-popular Canadian psychology professor who is
himself often the target of the political left, commented on Twitter
about the Jones case saying: “never
persecute someone paranoid, lest you justify his paranoia.”
Never persecute someone paranoid, lest you justify his paranoia. This is seriously not good, @EricRWeinstein
Censoring
Jones could help achieve the unlikely task of making him seem like a
serious political figure who is taking on the established elite. That
can be a powerful message, even from figures that appear to many to
be laughable, just ask Donald Trump.
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