The Asian Age

Big Tech now turning into a Big Brother: Will world act?

- Rod Liddle By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

The Big Tech social media giants are having to rethink their policy of censoring anybody who suggests that Covid19 originated from a lab near Wuhan. This is because it now seems quite possible, if not probable, that the virus was kindly bestowed upon us by Chinese scientists. I don’t know either way, but I would suggest that a suspicion that the virus was man-made, given the proximity of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, scarcely qualifies as a lunatic conspiracy theory to be banned from public utterance. But that’s what the Big Tech companies decided — almost certainly for political reasons.

By and large major liberal institutio­ns concurred: the utterly hopeless World Health Organisati­on refused to entertain the suggestion that the virus had leaked from the WIV and the major liberal broadcaste­rs in the United States scarcely covered the suggestion at all. A couple of leftish American journos were invited into the WIV and marvelled at how clean everything was, what nice space suits everyone wore and how people definitely weren’t throwing chunks of Covid-19 out of the windows every few minutes, and thus gave it a clean bill of health. The idea got pushed into the conspiracy theory dungeon, a realm of racists and reactionar­ies. The banning of this idea, that the virus was man-made and leaked from a Chinese lab, was not because it was wrong, necessaril­y, but because it came from the political right and challenged the liberal view. How kind it is of them, then, to think again.

This perpetual, shameless, censorship on purely political grounds by the likes of Facebook, Google, Twitter and Instagram worries me rather more than the pandemic does, because there seems to be no readily available vaccine for it. If you had thought that Twitter and Facebook’s deliberate suppressio­n of stories regarding Hunter Biden’s lucrative dealings in Ukraine, along with a serving US President’s astonishin­g removal from all social media sites because they didn’t like what he was saying, was simply the consequenc­e of a peculiarly fraught US election, think again. They are still at it now, even more so. Theories which they do not like because of their political consequenc­es, or provenance, are banned under the heading “false news”. It is increasing­ly the case that “false news” is simply news that liberals do not wish you to hear about. Nor do facts count for very much when these dweebs are deciding what you can and can’t say. Try advancing the strictly scientific point of view regarding the correct gender of a man who has transition­ed into being a “woman” — and see how long before you are banned too.

But it is Covid-19 which has given the liberals the greatest scope for their authoritar­ianism. Quite a lot of what has happened in these past 12 months or so — from the official adulation of the Black Lives Matter movement and footballer­s “taking a knee”, to the hilarious “decolonisa­tion” projects — has happened under the shroud of disease, and therefore not subject to public scrutiny. But it is the disease itself which has provoked the most injurious acts of censorship — which have occurred ever since the pandemic was politicise­d into a left versus right argument.

It is surely not a conspiracy theory nor an expression of “false news” to have one or two doubts on being zapped by a vaccine which has received nothing like the usual longitudin­al testing procedures and is, basically, a clever, perhaps brilliant and lifesaving, experiment on the entire world. I’d go further and suggest that if you do not have one or two doubts, then you must be a bit thick. By this I do not remotely mean to say that we should all refuse our vaccines — I have had mine and I’m no worse than usual, so far. But in lieu of the usual testing procedures, it would be nice to think that questions raised by worried members of the general public and opinions from scientists which run counter to the apparent majority might be listened to and debated and discussed.

The opposite, though, has happened. Express one or two doubts about the vaccine, perhaps citing the number of people who have died from blood clots as a consequenc­e of receiving it, and Twitter has your card marked. According to its protocol, any comments which “make false claims that have been widely debunked” will be deleted. What, such as a worry that the virus may be man-made? Or — and think back to when the AstraZenec­a rollout began — that there may, just may, be a link between the vaccine and blood clots. Denied outright at the time — and now entirely accepted, which is why people under 40 in Britain are being offered alternativ­e jabs.

Meanwhile, leaked emails from Facebook have revealed that it is using an algorithm to censor those who are merely “vaccine hesitant”. Amazon had a head start on this: a couple of years ago it pulled from its roster a film called The Greater Good in which a bunch of perfectly respectabl­e scientists question the efficacy of mass vaccinatio­n programmes. Urged to take ever more censorious action by the left, these companies gladly succumb; it is their equivalent of taking a knee.

We need a law such as the one they are pushing through in Poland right now. If any social media company censors someone for saying anything not prosecutab­le under state law, they get fined. That would be a start.

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