Kanye suspended from Twitter again
Twitter on Friday suspended Kanye West’s account again, two months after it was reinstated, after its owner Elon Musk said he had violated the platform’s rules prohibiting incitement to violence. Musk, who calls himself a free speech absolutist, had welcomed the return of the rapper, now known as Ye, to the platform in October. “I tried my best. Despite that, he again violated our rule against incitement to violence. Account will be suspended,” Musk tweeted late on Thursday. West’s account was suspended within an hour of Musk’s post.
LOS ANGELES: The limits of Elon Musk’s self-professed “free speech absolutism” were laid bare, critics said, when he banned rapper Kanye West from Twitter over his latest anti-semitic outburst on Thursday.
Only a few days earlier, Musk tweeted that he was engaged in “a battle for the future of civilization. If free speech is lost even in America, tyranny is all that lies ahead.”
Since taking over Twitter, the billionaire has reinstated several controversial figures, including ex-president Donald Trump, who was banned for inciting violence with his false claims after his defeat in the 2020 US polls.
But Musk’s claim to be a free speech absolutist was always going to struggle to survive the clash with reality -- and particularly the clash with West (officially known as Ye), who has mounted an increasingly vociferous campaign of anti-semitic outbursts in recent weeks.
The final straw for Musk was West’s tweet showing a Nazi swastika interlaced with a Star of David. It followed an interview with conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, in which he declared his “love” of the Nazis and admiration for Adolf Hitler.
“The problem is that Elon Musk has a half-baked free speech philosophy,” said Jacob Mchangama, author of Free Speech: A History From Socrates
to Social Media.
“Sometimes he talks about total freedom of speech, sometimes about respecting the law. But of course laws are very different around the world where Twitter is present. Some of the
things (West) has said would arguably be punishable in court in Europe, especially in France.”
Few believe that total freedom of speech is possible, especially for a private platform that relies on advertising.
“So-called free speech absolutism is just a fantasy,” said influential podcaster Sam Harris earlier this week on his Making Sense show. He said some level of content moderation was needed to stop platforms turning into “a digital sewer”.
“Contrary to what most people think it’s legal to shout ‘fire’ in a crowded theatre, but wouldn’t we want the owner of that theatre to remove someone who was shouting that over and over again?” Harris said.
“The best way forward is to empower users to filter more of what they don’t like rather than have governments or big tech make these decisions,” Mchangama said.