New York Post

Facebook’s hide & sneak

Blocks Post story on BLM honcho’s homes

- RACHEL BOVARD

JUST months after Facebook retaliated against the government of Australia by effectivel­y canceling the flow of the country’s informatio­n, the company is at it again — this time, wielding its outsized power to shield progressiv­e political figures from public criticism.

On Friday, Facebook’s nearly 3 billion users worldwide discovered they could not share a New York Post story about a Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors, a self-identified Marxist, purchasing several high-end homes. The story was blocked from circulatio­n on all of Facebook’s social-media services: the platform itself, Instagram, as well as Facebook messenger.

When pressed for its reasoning, Facebook declared that the story violated their community standards by providing “personal or confidenti­al informatio­n” or images “in violation of their privacy rights.” Odd, because, according to The Post, all of the informatio­n in its reporting, including the photos, was gathered from public records. No addresses were shared.

By now, the hypocrisy of Facebook — and Big Tech, more generally — is wellworn territory. These are the same platforms who made up reasons to block circulatio­n of a separate New York Post story about influence peddling in the Biden family weeks before the 2020 election.

Likewise, Facebook made no effort to reduce circulatio­n of a stories containing the illegally leaked details of President Donald Trump’s tax returns or secretly recorded conversati­ons with Melania Trump.

Informatio­n about celebrity home purchases, including sale prices and photos, circulate daily. So, too, do images of revenge pornograph­y, child abuse and sex traffickin­g — which Facebook claims before Congress and in court it should not be held responsibl­e.

That’s because Facebook’s content policies aren’t really concerned with privacy or with protecting personal informatio­n. They’re about protecting the politicall­y and culturally powerful by suppressin­g criticism, punishing dissent and crushing counternar­ratives.

Big Tech companies like Facebook are now the primary gatekeeper­s of news and informatio­n sharing in America and around the world. The content they choose to suppress or amplify changes what informatio­n billions of people around the globe can easily ac- cess about the people who lead them.

Leading Democrats know this. When former First Lady Michelle Obama was fed up with Trump’s rhetoric, she didn’t appeal to Congress, or the voters, or even to Trump himself. She called on Big Tech to permanentl­y ban him.

The whole of Silicon Valley and other corporate outlets later did. When Project Veritas founder James O’Keefe leaked videos of a CNN executive bragging that the focus of the outlet’s coverage “was to get Trump out of office,”

Twitter banned his account.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez routinely complains to Twitter about trending hashtags which criticize her and asks her followers to report them as harassment. On Jan. 6, her communicat­ions director called circulatio­n of older tweets from Ocasio-Cortez “misinforma­tion” and asked Twitter to stop users from sharing them. In the tweet in question, Ocasio-Cortez observes that “the whole point of protesting is to make [people] uncomforta­ble.” In the wake of the Capitol breach, Ocasio-Cortez no longer wanted to answer for that sentiment.

These are leading political figures appealing to the world’s biggest speech platforms to silence dissent and minimize criticism. This is unaccounta­ble corporate control merging with a single political narrative to set the terms of what constitute­s allowable speech in our political debate.

With the tweak of an algorithm, or the hasty conjuring of a new “community standard,” Facebook and its Big Tech allies can diminish the accountabi­lity, critical questionin­g and dissent that are the hallmarks of both a free press and a healthy democracy.

Free speech, as Americans have always understood it, is about the freedom to declare, to criticize, to dissent — and to be heard while doing it. Companies like Facebook, whose power, reach and resources rival global government­s, are now routinely inserting themselves into America’s speech, reshaping the norms on which this country has been built.

America has faced no bigger threat to its liberty in the modern age than the accumulati­on of centralize­d, concentrat­ed power in a handful of unaccounta­ble corporatio­ns which gatekeep speech, informatio­n sharing and access to the free market. It is past time for the people, acting through our representa­tive self-government, to check this power before it reshapes the country in its image.

Rachel Bovard is senior director of policy at the Conservati­ve Partnershi­p Institute.

 ??  ?? LIKE, WHAT?! A story by The Post about the pricey real-estate property of Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors (below) was blocked from circulatio­n by Facebook, which dubiously claimed the piece violated a policy on “personal or confidenti­al informatio­n.”
LIKE, WHAT?! A story by The Post about the pricey real-estate property of Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors (below) was blocked from circulatio­n by Facebook, which dubiously claimed the piece violated a policy on “personal or confidenti­al informatio­n.”
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