Albuquerque Journal

Online censorship cancels the right of free speech

- Diane Dimond www.DianeDimon­d.com; email to Diane@ DianeDimon­d.com CRIME AND JUSTICE

There is an astonishin­g trend afoot and if something isn’t done to stop it in its ugly tracks your right to freely express an opinion is in jeopardy.

President Donald Trump may be the most reviled person in the United States right now but the moves to silence him in the public square — and others who have espoused similar ideologies — is a chilling reality.

Social media platforms Twitter, Facebook and Instagram have announced plans to permanentl­y remove all Trump accounts. Not just until he leaves office, but forever.

In what universe is it OK to eternally bar an American citizen from exercising their fundamenta­l right to free speech at a place where countless millions gather to exchange ideas? And how unbalanced is Twitter’s expulsion policy when it allows Iran’s Ayatollah Khamenei to post all sorts of violent and hate-filled posts about the U.S., Israel and other perceived enemies on its platform?

The ayatollah is OK, but the president of the United States is not?

Am I the only one who wants to read what our chief executive is thinking no matter what the message might be? Better to know what the powerful are up to than to ignore them.

In addition to social media forever muzzling the president, prominent tech companies controllin­g app distributi­on — Google and Apple — dropped the Parler app from their offerings. Parler is described as “the conservati­ve alternativ­e to Twitter” and was a logical choice for Trump’s next social media home.

In what seemed to be a coordinate­d effort Amazon quickly piled on and informed Parler that its home on the internet would be annihilate­d. That prompted a lawsuit from Parler.

The stated reason for removing Parler’s fastest growing app? Parler doesn’t do enough, fast enough to delete questionab­le posts that promote violence and crime. Reportedly, some users partially planned the siege on the U.S. Capitol via Parler.

Interestin­g that similar steps weren’t taken against Twitter, Facebook or Instagram when those platforms were used to coordinate last year’s left-wing demonstrat­ions which frequently turned violent. Why the censorship doublestan­dard?

Interestin­g, too, that a Simon and Schuster book deal was just abruptly cancelled with Republican Sen. Josh Hawley after he objected to some of the 2020 election results. The book’s title? “The Tyranny of Big Tech.” Forced silencing of opinion. Shocking.

Many of the 74 million Trump voters believe these banishment moves were carried out to curry favor with the incoming Democratic administra­tion. Maybe, but this really isn’t about politics. It is about a form of censorship, fair treatment for all ideologies and everyone’s constituti­onally protected right to freely express their opinions.

An exception: if someone is online inciting hate speech or plotting violence that is a crime and a job for law enforcemen­t, which has been maddeningl­y slow to root out internetba­sed clues before mayhem occurs.

Even the liberal-leaning American Civil Liberties Union issued warnings about Big Tech becoming an unwanted Big Brother. “It should concern everyone when companies like Facebook and Twitter wield unchecked power to remove people from platforms that have become indispensa­ble for the speech of billions,” an ACLU lawyer wrote.

In other words, if some geeky bro in Silicon Valley can decide to permanentl­y kick Donald Trump to the digital curb, you could be next.

Last week I wrote to support social media’s temporary ban of President Trump’s accounts. In the wake of the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol it seemed to me to be a necessary step — like placing a belligeren­t child in the corner for a time out. But forever denying an American citizen the freedom to express their opinion — whether it’s an opinion the majority shares or not — is anathema to everything we stand for in this country.

The argument that, “Well, these are private companies, they can do what they want,” just doesn’t cut it. Big Tech has, collective­ly, become a monster monopoly of public discourse. And worse yet, our Congress has given them that power and has allowed them to misuse it.

As Harry Truman once said, “Once a government is committed to silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens creating a country where everyone lives in fear.”

Amen to that.

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