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There Is Only One Solution To Social Media Deplatforming,
Townhall.com ^ | May 6, 2019 | Scott Morefield

Posted on 05/06/2019 3:30:38 AM PDT by Kaslin

Facebook and Instagram took the extraordinary step last week of banning several “far right” commentators and one left-wing anti-Semite (yeah, that was news to The Washington Post) from their platforms entirely. It was the latest in a series of moves over the past several months and years designed to curb what the platforms’ liberal management and ownership see as “dangerous,” albeit not illegal, speech.

Before Jones, Paul Joseph Watson, and Milo, it was key “alt-right” figures like Jared Taylor, David Duke and Richard Spencer being purged from various platforms. Next, will it be religious groups that oppose gay marriage, anti-illegal immigration organizations or even those who don’t believe the entire Third World should be brought to the United States en masse? Maybe those affected are a few ideological steps away, but we should all be asking the question: How many steps until it’s us?

Sure, Alex Jones and Infowars, much less Louis Farrakhan, have said and published a lot of things that are easy to disagree with. But in Jones’ case, at least, nobody of any credibility has accused him of being a racist, and while some content on the Infowars website certainly consists of outlandish speculation at best, such a description might have on occasion fit Trump’s “fake news” targets The Washington Post and New York Times. 

In other words, it’s a slippery slope, one that leads us down an increasingly undesirable path where the only speech that is “acceptable” is that which does not offend a single person - or basically no speech at all. Yes, it was done by a private corporation and not a governmental entity, and as such was legal, but such moves do have ominous portents about the future ability of conservatives to tell the truth and spread our message. 

Politico senior writer Jack Shafer pointed out Friday that, while what goes on on the platform is “Facebook’s house,” there are free speech health implications to both governmental and corporate attempts to shut it down. 

“Free speech’s health has traditionally been measured in America not by what we will allow speakers to say, although that is important, but what listeners will tolerate,” he wrote. “If enough of us stomach the dissemination of wicked conspiracy theories, race hatred, radicalism, blasphemy, poisonous lies, militancy, fearmongering and ugliness, that’s a good sign that free speech has found a safe harbor. But if the government censors the bounders and miscreants who spew these ideas—or if corporations, churches and other organizations work to strangle their expressions—then free speech is in trouble.”

Reason’s Nick Gillespie argues that such moves “feeds into the tendency to try suppress beliefs that one considers contemptible, dangerous, or evil. Those are not sharply delimited categories, and the tendency will be for more and more material to be seen as worthy of being policed, regulated, and eliminated. That is what's happening on many college campuses, and the results are not encouraging for a society that believes in freedom of expression.”

Whereas liberals have historically been the ones defending free speech at all costs, this time conservatives are up in arms because it is conservative voices and opinions that are being suppressed, not by government, but by private corporations whose power, particularly over the public consciousness, rivals that of any nation. Except, when it comes to solutions, conservatives often run into conflict with their own stated values. “Government cannot regulate speech,” said the good libertarian, “but a private corporation can do whatever it wants.”

Okay, but what happens when that private corporation is a virtual (no pun intended) monopoly? I suppose there’s no need to ask, because it’s happening now. “Don’t like it? Go start your own social media platform!” a conservative or libertarian might say smugly, as if it were just a matter of learning a little code and a making a quick visit to GoDaddy. Yeah, good luck with that. 

Sure, some have tried to make platforms to rival Facebook and Twitter (there’s the horribly hard to navigate Gab, and have you ever heard of any of these Facebook “alternatives?”), but any would-be competitors are sunk before they even begin by the very definition of a successful social network - everyone wants to be where everyone else is. Once Facebook and Twitter - two different types of platforms - gained peak popularity as the platform of choice for that style, it became nearly impossible to dethrone them absent a shift of monumental proportions. Even when companies create features people enjoy, Facebook’s billions can simply purchase or copy them. Even if someone were willing to risk a few billion of their own dollars in a foolhardy attempt to create the “next Facebook,” the user network is the key and they’d be starting at zero. Facebook’s unparalleled user numbers combined with unrivaled riches amounts to a monopoly that would put U.S. Steel to shame. 

So we’re left with a digital public square of sorts that has replaced the old one, brought about by the rise of the internet and its limitless possibilities and controlled by a few powerful corporations who happen to be do-gooder liberal types who think that socialism is cool and free speech drools. 

But, what to do? Let’s hope President Trump will put his money where his mouth is on the issue and get SOMETHING done, but not every suggestion is a good one. Texas Senator Ted Cruz’s approach would potentially remove the immunity social media platforms that engage in speech censorship currently enjoy from Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which otherwise holds platforms legally liable for content posted by users. By Cruz’s logic, if Facebook sees itself as the arbiter of speech on the internet, they are no longer a “neutral public forum” and should not enjoy those benefits. Except, would removing this protection merely hoist conservatives by their own petard by ‘forcing’ Facebook to simply ban any speech it deems remotely questionable? 

In his article on the subject, Gillespie recommends that social media networks install a series of robust filters that allow people to block certain types of content, even if such content is posted by friends and family members. It would work, and it’s a great idea, but methinks these social media giants aren’t interested in a solution that allows free speech. Could they have more nefarious motives? After all, they want to ban speech, not debate or debunk it. Why? “What are they afraid of?” an inquiring mind might ask.

At any rate, the only viable solution - and the sooner every conservative and free-thinking liberal gets there, the better - is for these social media giants to be regulated just like any other public utility. While illegal speech such as harassment and incitements to violence would still be illegal and prosecutable, everything else would be allowed. 

Just as everyone, regardless of their political opinion, has the right to purchase electricity or running water, EVERYONE should have the right to speak freely on what has, for all intents and purposes, become the public square. Anything less is Un-American.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: facebook; liberalfascism; newmedia; purge; socialmedia
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The rest of the title is: And The Sooner We All Get There, The Better
1 posted on 05/06/2019 3:30:38 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

They begged to be regulated. They should be.

They will at the least be hit with a lot of lawsuits and maybe one will wind it’s way up to the SCOTUS.


2 posted on 05/06/2019 3:34:32 AM PDT by dp0622 (The Left should know if.. Trump is kicked out of office, it is WAR)
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To: Kaslin

Unfortunately, when private enterprise becomes a monopoly, there is no other alternative but government regulation to force a level playing field for all users.


3 posted on 05/06/2019 3:44:34 AM PDT by iontheball
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To: dp0622
Regulation will mostly cement their monopoly and the regulatory levers will be taken over by leftists. Perhaps your second suggestion will work, after removing their protections against lawsuits. But leftist agitators can take advantage of that abd cash in with their own lawsuits..

The main problem we have is a lack of objective measurements of censorship. Banning Alex Jones is an objective fact but of little consequence. But soft-banning all conservative thought is hard to detect and deadly to freedom in the long run.

4 posted on 05/06/2019 4:13:10 AM PDT by palmer (...if we do not have strong families and strong values, then we will be weak and we will not survive)
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To: palmer

What about good old competition?

From what I’ve read, folks are leaving FB in pretty big numbers.

I new site offering unfettered speech could take off with the right advertising and person/people running it.

Or maybe not

I’m just guessing :)


5 posted on 05/06/2019 4:16:45 AM PDT by dp0622 (The Left should know if.. Trump is kicked out of office, it is WAR)
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To: iontheball
That is Nationalization, a socialist commandment.

We need a better social media platform, perhaps a platform that actually charges admission or membership fees of some kind, and surely someone must be working on a combo program that combines what makes facebook, instagram, twitter, and youtube popular.

We currently have social media outfits that could be described as a shopping strip (separate shops fishing for foot traffic on Main St.) but we know that in the end, the big box stores came along and won the traffic.

6 posted on 05/06/2019 4:20:22 AM PDT by rocknotsand (Rock. Not sand.)
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To: dp0622
Competition is the only alternative. But if people leave Facebook the best thing for them is stop sharing. I have about 5 or 6 "friends" on Facebook for a couple of reasons. Foremost because as an officer of a club I am required to have the account. But the sharing I see is mostly useless.

The best thing for most people would be reading literary sites like Chronicles Magazine and funding them to expand their reach instead of sharing.

7 posted on 05/06/2019 4:22:59 AM PDT by palmer (...if we do not have strong families and strong values, then we will be weak and we will not survive)
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To: rocknotsand
surely someone must be working on a combo program

More likely they are working on a program that makes Facebook obsolete. Not by copying their lame site.

8 posted on 05/06/2019 4:25:13 AM PDT by palmer (...if we do not have strong families and strong values, then we will be weak and we will not survive)
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To: iontheball

The only way these companies could be regulated on the basis as a monopoly would be if they were providing a critical good or service.
Like oil, transportation of goods and people, or communications.

Facebook and Twitter are not neccessary to the health of the economy so i don’t see them being sebject to goverment breakup.


9 posted on 05/06/2019 4:28:43 AM PDT by CapnJack
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To: Kaslin
"Whereas liberals have historically been the ones defending free speech at all costs,"

Couldn't get past that sentence.

10 posted on 05/06/2019 4:39:30 AM PDT by TangoLimaSierra (To the Left, The truth is Right Wing Extremism.)
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To: dp0622
A new site offering unfettered speech could take off with the right advertising and person/people running it.

The tech giants won't allow it. When Gab tried to position itself as the free speech alternative to Twitter, Apple/Google/Android blocked Gab's apps from their stores.

11 posted on 05/06/2019 4:40:07 AM PDT by Drew68
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To: TangoLimaSierra

Classical Liberals..yes.
Totalitarians disguising themselves as ‘liberals’...no.


12 posted on 05/06/2019 4:42:57 AM PDT by kanawa (Trump Loves a Great Deal (NorthernSentinel))
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To: CapnJack

These social platforms are by definition content providers because they flatly edit content. They either allow or disallow (outright ban or shadow ban) users based on comments and postings, which de-platforms a person and stifles their editorial capability. They are interfering with the free-flow of information on their website by editing or censoring someone’s postings - this is the same as content providing.


13 posted on 05/06/2019 4:44:44 AM PDT by jurroppi1 (The Left doesnÂ’t have ideas, it has cliches. H/T Flick Lives)
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To: Kaslin

FB is a private company and just like the Christian baker, they have a right to discriminate based on their “principles”.

Free Republic is my social media. You all dont comment on my hair and clothes, you think about my opinions and usually agree with me. sarc/


14 posted on 05/06/2019 4:57:29 AM PDT by BarbM ( President Trump: MAGA)
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To: Kaslin

bkmk


15 posted on 05/06/2019 5:02:54 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o ("Genius is of small use to a woman who does not know how to do her hair." - Edith Wharton)
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To: TangoLimaSierra

“liberals have historically been the ones defending free speech”

Maybe up through the 60’s. I was in college in the 70’s and they were well into censorship by then.


16 posted on 05/06/2019 5:04:58 AM PDT by beef (Caution: Potential Sarcasm - Process Accordingly)
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To: Drew68

“Gab tried to position itself as the free speech alternative to Twitter, Apple/Google/Android blocked Gab’s apps from their stores”

You can always sideload or use another app store, or just use a web browser. I think POTUS needs to start posting to Gab as well as Twitter, then when he has that going, start doing exclusive Gab posts. That would cause millions to get Gab accounts and pressure the app stores to host Gab apps. This is important not just to develop a free forum. I think in 2020 that Twitter will try to ban him, and he needs to have his alternative channel ready to go.


17 posted on 05/06/2019 5:15:03 AM PDT by beef (Caution: Potential Sarcasm - Process Accordingly)
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To: Drew68

WOW!!


18 posted on 05/06/2019 5:16:07 AM PDT by dp0622 (The Left should know if.. Trump is kicked out of office, it is WAR)
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To: palmer

Boy do I agree with that.

I’ve no desire to share my persona life anywhere but here!! :)

Especially since DP0622 isn’t my real name :)

I “tweeted” during the election to post news that we received her to twitter. News that most wouldn’t know about otherwise.

Twitter will probably ban that in the 2020 election.


19 posted on 05/06/2019 5:20:19 AM PDT by dp0622 (The Left should know if.. Trump is kicked out of office, it is WAR)
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To: Kaslin

Since corporations are considered “persons” under the law, why not simply hit them with US 18 sec 241? Imprison Facebook and Twitter for 10 years.


20 posted on 05/06/2019 5:22:40 AM PDT by vikingd00d (chown -R us ~you/base)
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