This is what happens in all tyrranies. In fact it is a litmus test.
Americans
Are Begging The Government And Corporations To End Free Speech
9
August, 2018
This
week, internet giants like Facebook, Youtube, Spotify and others
banned the notorious Alex Jones and InfoWars from their platforms,
and the
purge is enjoying widespread support among the left, which has made a
reputation for itself as intolerant of differing opinions (last
year, for example, a group of Antifa protesters beat
one of our own Anti-Media reporters and
destroyed his camera equipment at a rally simply because he was
filming).
In
Jones’ case, Facebook cited hate
speech, though this stance seems inconsistent considering the
platform has caught flack for allowing anti-semitic
content. This
lack of principle doesn’t matter to many left-wing partisans,
though, as long as someone they find reprehensible is silenced - even
as others with far better reputations are banned from other platforms
(to clarify, Anti-Media does
not endorse Infowars in any way, nor do we consider them to be a
legitimate news outlet).
At
the same time, however, the
right is proving equally open to banning speech and news outlets they
dislike.
A recent poll from
Ipsos found 43 percent of Republicans advocate giving
the president, and thereby the government, the power to shut news
outlets down. The president, too, has fantasized about
doing so:
With all of the Fake News coming out of NBC and the Networks, at what point is it appropriate to challenge their License? Bad for country!
Disdain
for journalists is palpable at
Trump rallies,
and popular right-wing commentator Milo Yiannopoulos
recently called for
the assassination of journalists (before claiming the comment was
just a joke).
Adherents
to both sides of the false dichotomy are increasingly okay with
silencing speech and ideas that conflict with their own. What
this represents is a bipartisan war on free speech as both factions
lust after control of the power institutions that create and
perpetuate the divide and conquer struggle for that authority in the
first place.
Worse
still, companies like Facebook, Google, and Youtube, which is now
owned by Google, are aligned with intrusive government agencies and
policies that regulate speech and expression on the internet —
whether it’s these platforms working with government
to monitor speech,
colluding to install backdoors for
spy agencies to access users’ private data, or Google
having roots with
the CIA and NSA. Further, we may not know the extent of just how much
shadowy levers of government dictate platform’s decisions to
allow or ban users and pages, but it has happened
and will likely continue.
At
the same time, public opinion is creating demand for these kinds of
crackdowns. It
may be true that Facebook is a “private” platform, but the
reality is that whether it’s Facebook banning Jones or
Disney firing Guardians
of the Galaxy director
James Gunn, who was critical of conservatives, they are, at least in
part, responding to the public’s intolerance of ideas and opinions
that don’t align with their own — and this intolerance is
directly linked to people’s views on government and politics.
Aside from
ever-encroaching state and corporatist power, the biggest problem is
that due to people’s dogmatic, programmed, and evidently fragile
beliefs on both sides -
views emboldened by government and “acceptable” media outlets -
the people themselves are condoning the suppression of ideas and
speech, and this further cements consent for government and
corporatists to continue doing just that, fueling an ever-worsening
cycle specific to neither left nor right.
This
disdain for free expression is parallelled in government. American
press freedom in the U.S. has been deteriorating for
years, Obama and his cabinet had
their own blatant war on journalism,
and in 2012, Congress legalized government-funded
propaganda. Democrats are currently looking to
regulate speech on the internet in the name of fighting the Russians
and fake news, and Senator Chris Murphy is eager to shut down more
pages:
Meanwhile,
“acceptable” outlets spew propaganda for bipartisan priorities,
like war and the two-party system itself (in
2016, the Washington
Post ran
a story smearing
independent anti-war outlets, including Anti-Media, as “useful
idiots” for Russia, if not outright shills, and weeks later issued
a clarification admitting that the “experts” they were citing
were anonymous and many of the outlets they condemned objected to
the designation).
The
government and their corporate partners are objectively terrible,
but the
influence of the mainstream ideologies they espouse has made the
public they’re supposed to be accountable to so blind with hysteria
that they are voluntarily demanding suppression of speech.
This inevitably requires more state power as both sides grapple for
government control and battle each other instead of the institutions
breathing down their necks.
We
can blame the government and Big Tech all we want, but at some
point, we’re
going to have to take a look in the mirror and stop begging those
suffocating our freedom for
more power to regulate it.
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