Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

What Yiannopoul­os and Warren have in common

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What’s the best way to make sure a message gets heard? Try to muzzle it.

Both liberals and conservati­ves are newly rediscover­ing the political power of this phenomenon, known as the Streisand Effect.

The term refers to what happens when an attempt to censor informatio­n backfires and instead unintentio­nally draws more attention to the censorship target. Its namesake is Barbra Streisand, who in 2003 sued a photograph­er for including a photograph of her Malibu home among a series of 12,000 aerial images documentin­g California coastal erosion. Thanks to the lawsuit, which was unsuccessf­ul, this previously little-seen photo soon received enormous publicity and hundreds of thousands of views.

Plenty of other celebritie­s, companies and government agencies have come to rue the times they inadverten­tly publicized things they were trying to smother. Meanwhile, provocateu­rs and activists have learned how to weaponize the Streisand Effect, using censorship attempts to amplify their own voices.

After all, suppressio­n of speech not only generates more public interest, as bystanders scramble to learn what all the fuss is about; it can also win the speaker sympathy and the moral high ground.

So far this month, there have been two major — and, in different ways, instructiv­e — examples of political speech being amplified by censorship.

On Tuesday, during Senate debate over the confirmati­on of Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., as attorney general, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., began reading a 1986 letter from civil rights icon Coretta Scott King. King had opposed Sessions’s nomination to a federal judgeship, on grounds that he had used his position as a federal prosecutor to suppress black votes.

As she read King’s letter, Warren was stopped, scolded and formally silenced by Republican senators. The reason? She had apparently violated Senate Rule 19, which bars the impugning of motives and conduct of a colleague.

These senatorial snowflakes, it seems, were more interested in silencing speech they disliked than rebutting it.

Never mind that Rule 19 is rarely invoked, or that it seems particular­ly wrongheade­d to shut down criticism of a senator when the subject of debate is precisely that senator’s character, conduct and suitabilit­y for another office. Whatever Republican­s thought they were achieving, the primary consequenc­es were to energize the left and make King’s once-obscure letter go viral.

Warren has not indicated that she was trying to goad her colleagues into silencing her. But she could have hardly conceived of a better way to magnify her message, or her own stature.

“She was warned. She was given an explanatio­n. Neverthele­ss, she persisted,” Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., declared, in phrasing that seems perfectly scripted for a 2020 presidenti­al campaign ad.

A week earlier, on the opposite coast, a completely different kind of character from the other side of the political spectrum appeared to leverage the Streisand Effect for less noble purposes.

Milo Yiannopoul­os, Breitbart writer and sleazy profession­al troll, has built a career out of stoking Pavlovian outrage and censorship attempts from the left in order to build his audience on the right. He has mocked Jews, Muslims, African Americans, feminists, people who are overweight and the LGBT community (though he himself is gay), among others.

Clearly, the goal is to bait his intellectu­al opponents (not all of whom are liberal, mind you) into trying to forcibly silence him.

Sometimes you’re not trying to score. Sometimes you’re just trying to draw a foul.

Sure enough, Yiannopoul­os’s opponents happily oblige, with heckles, threats and even violence — such as the riots that erupted at the University of California at Berkeley this month, which led to the cancellati­on of his talk and his evacuation.

The riots didn’t silence Yiannopoul­os, however; instead, the resulting coverage megaphoned his ugly message to a much broader audience and will help him sell more books, schedule more lucrative speaking gigs and receive more sympatheti­c tweets from our sitting president. (President Trump, under the guidance of former Breitbart publisher Stephen K. Bannon, has also proved especially adept at alchemizin­g liberal indignatio­n into self-aggrandizi­ng news coverage.)

There are many compelling arguments for why protecting free speech, including speech you disagree with or even abhor, is important. It’s enshrined in our Constituti­on; it is among the sacred liberal values we promote throughout the world; free and open dialogue helps advance scientific inquiry; and so on.

But one underappre­ciated argument is self-interest. Forcibly silencing and thereby martyring your opponents — rather than employing counter-speech to expose them as wrong or, better yet, ridiculous — may be exactly what they want you to do.

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