The Pak Banker

An easy solution for Musk

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For free speech advocates, Elon Musk's purchase of Twitter could prove the most impactful event since Twitter's founding in 2006.

The question, however, is how Musk can accomplish his lofty goal of restoring free speech values to social media. He first would have to untie the Gordian knot of censorship in a company now synonymous with speech control. The answer may be simpler than most people think. Indeed, anti-free-speech figures in the country may have given Musk the very roadmap he's looking for: the First Amendment.

The purchase of Twitter alone will have immediate and transforma­tive changes for free speech. The control over speech on social media required a unified front. Free speech is like water, it tends to find a way out. With social media, there was no way out because of the unified front of companies like Google, Apple and Facebook. Facebook is actually running commercial­s trying to convince people to embrace their own censorship. This message was reinforced by Democratic leaders like President Biden, who demanded that these companies expand censorship and curtail access to harmful viewpoints.

Now this market has one major competitor selling a free speech product. The fear is that Musk might be proven right and that Twitter could become larger and more profitable by allowing more free speech. Facebook has not had much success in convincing customers to embrace censorship, but it may find shareholde­rs wondering why the Facebook board (like the Twitter board) is underminin­g its own product as a communicat­ions company committed to limited speech.

Another immediate change could be the forced exodus of a line of ardent censors from the company, with Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal (hopefully) at the head of line. Agrawal is one of the most anti-free-speech figures in Big Tech. After taking over as CEO, Agrawal quickly made clear that he wanted to steer the company beyond free speech and that the issue is not who can speak but "who can be heard."

However, once such figures are removed from Twitter, the question is how to re-establish a culture of free speech. The answer may be in the very distinctio­n used by Democratic politician­s and pundits to justify corporate censorship.

For years, anti-free-speech figures have dismissed free speech objections to social media censorship by stressing that the First Amendment applies only to the government, not private companies. The distinctio­n was always a dishonest effort to evade the implicatio­ns of speech controls, whether implemente­d by the government or corporatio­ns. The First Amendment was never the exclusive definition of free speech. Free speech is viewed by many of us as a human right; the First Amendment only deals with one source for limiting it. Free speech can be undermined by private corporatio­ns as well as government agencies. This threat is even greater when politician­s openly use corporatio­ns to achieve indirectly what they cannot achieve directly.

Corporatio­ns clearly have free speech rights. Ironically, Democrats have long opposed such rights for companies, but they embrace such rights when it comes to censorship. The Democratic Party embraced corporate governance of free speech once these companies aligned themselves with their political agenda. Starbucks and every other company have every right to pursue a woke agenda. Social media companies, however, sell communicat­ions, not coffee. They should be in the business of free speech.

Democrats have continued to treat the First Amendment as synonymous with free speech, as a way to justify greater censorship. Just last week, former President Barack Obama spoke at Stanford to flog this false line. Obama started by declaring himself, against every indication to the contrary, to be "pretty close to a First Amendment absolutist." He then called for the censorship of anything that he considered "disinforma­tion," including "lies, conspiracy theories, junk science, quackery, racist tracts and misogynist screeds." He was able to do that by emphasizin­g that "The First Amendment is a check on the power of the state. It doesn't apply to private companies like Facebook or Twitter."

Well, what if it did? The Constituti­on does not impose the same standard on Twitter - but Musk could. He could order a new Twitter team to err on the side of free speech while utilizing First Amendment standards to maximize protection­s on the platform.

In other words, if the government could not censor a tweet, Twitter would not do so.

"Well, what if it did? The Constituti­on does not impose the same standard on Twitter - but Musk could. He could order a new Twitter team to err on the side of free speech while utilizing First Amendment standards to maximize protection­s on the platform.”

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