Censorship and Arrests in Wake of Christchurch Attack
Kit Knightly
19
March, 2019
No
matter the source of the violence, no matter the politics or
casualties or the location, it seems the reaction of governments in
the face of “terrorism” is virtually always the same – clamp
down, hard, on individual rights.
This
grand tradition goes back hundreds of years, from James I’s
crackdown on Catholics after the Gunpowder Plot, through to the
despot’s charter that is the Patriot
Act,
passed within six weeks of 9/11. Just last year, famously, gab.com
was heavily targeted in the wake of the “Magabomber” (fake)
bombings. (Our
article predicted
that further purges were on the horizon).
The
pattern is established: The state will always – ALWAYS – use a
crisis, real or invented, to enhance their power. Most of the time
this is done at the cost of individual liberty.
The
Christchurch mosque shootings are proving no exception to this rule.
NZ police are currently threatening people with 10 years in prison
for sharing the live-streamed footage, and other punishments just for
owning a copy of the recording.
RT
reports [our
emphasis]:
Video footage of killer Brenton Tarrant’s shooting spree at a Christchurch mosque on Friday – which left 50 worshippers dead – was pulled from Facebook immediately after the massacre. With the footage proliferating on several hosting platforms afterwards, the Kiwi authorities have already charged an 18-year-old man for sharing the video, as well as for posting other “objectionable” comments days before the shooting.
The teenager faces up to ten years in prison, under New Zealand’s ‘objectionable and restricted material’ laws. Police have meanwhile issued an overt threat to anyone else looking for the video.
This
crackdown is, simply put, crazy. You can’t charge people for owning
a copy of a video that was live-streamed over the internet to
millions of people, and you certainly can’t make it illegal to
even watch the
video. (Further, we as a people, must strongly resist the idea that
being “objectionable” could ever be considered a crime. That is
insane.)
In
2014 the Metropolitan police suggested the same thing of the ISIS
video where James Foley is apparently beheaded.
(That was dismissed as ridiculous by a lawyer in this
article).
(NOTE:
Why some violent videos are deemed “criminal” to even watch, and
others aren’t, is an interesting question. Is it just control for
control’s sake? Or something more sinister?)
Of
course not a shooting goes by in the US that doesn’t result in an
outraged chorus of people railing against the 2nd amendment,
demanding their government take the dramatic step of removing
civilian ownership of guns. (This is somewhat quieter under Trump,
because not even the liberal establishment can seriously insist Trump
is a fascist on the one-hand, and then insist he take away civilian
guns with the other. They do their best though.)
But
New Zealand are going further even than that – blocking sites and
services that have literally no connection to the video – they are
just alternative.
8chan
is where the alleged gunman made his “announcement”, but 4chan
was not involved. Both are banned in both Australia and New Zealand.
Alternative video hosting sites Liveleak and BitChute have both been
blocked, despite neither hosting the video. LiveLeak even released a
statement saying they refused to host it.
Dissenters,
gab’s discussion platform, was also blocked. They have no
connection to the arrested man, or the crime itself.
Even
ZeroHedge are apparently blocked – their crime? Posting excerpts
from the shooter’s “manifesto”.
Of
course many publications posted some small sections of that document.
None of the mainstream outlets have been blocked. Facebook
live-streamed the video – Facebook isn’t blocked. These
“crackdowns” on the internet never hurt the internet giants, they
are directed solely at the fringe.
This
mirrors last year’s “Magabomber”/synagogue shooting cases
exactly – where the alleged bomber had a twitter account and a the
shooter a gab account – but only gab was shutdown and blocked.
We
don’t know all the facts of the terrorist attack – whether it
really was a lone lunatic, or another example of state-backed terror
– there’s no knowing exactly what happened yet. But whatever
proves to be the case, there is absolutely no denying that the NZ
government is already using it as excuse to overreach and shut down
dissent and free speech on the internet.
This
will spread. Parliament and congress and all the others will come
together to demand “action” from internet giants, and google will
further fix their algorithm to push mainstream outlets to the front,
and sideline the alternative. Facebook and twitter will increasingly
shadowban or quarantine pages – putting up bulkheads to prevent
information flowing to the wrong places.
“Hate
speech” will become a “crime” punishable by being denied access
to the internet, or fined huge amounts of money…the exact legal
definition of this “hate speech” will be fuzzy and vague.
Shifting to meet government needs.
There
will come a time when even columns like this one, commenting on the
increasingly authoritarian attitude of Western governments, will be
deemed unacceptable and removed for “stoking dissent” or
“promoting conspiracy theories”.
Increasing
awareness and encouraging protest are the only ways we can stop that
from happening.
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