Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suppressio­n habit-forming

- Michael Barone Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner.

Speech suppressio­n is a habit that the Biden administra­tion and its liberal supporters can’t seem to break. Many staffers may have picked up the habit in their student years: Colleges and universiti­es have been routinely censoring “politicall­y incorrect” speech for the last 30 years.

As Thomas Sowell noted, “There are no institutio­ns in America where free speech is more severely restricted than in our politicall­y correct colleges and universiti­es, dominated by liberals.”

The Biden administra­tion seems to be giving the colleges and universiti­es some serious competitio­n. Like many Democrats during the Trump presidency, they have come to see suppressio­n of “fake news” as the ordinary course of business and indeed a prime responsibi­lity of social media platforms.

For decades, print and broadcast media have been dominated by liberals, but Facebook, Google and Twitter have developed a strangleho­ld over the delivery of news which exceeds anything that the three major broadcast networks and a few national newspapers ever enjoyed. If they suppress a story or a line of argument, it largely disappears from public view. And to the extent that it lingers, it can be stigmatize­d by these multibilli­on-dollar companies as “misinforma­tion” or “fake news.”

Speech suppressio­n was exactly what White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki had in mind when she called on Facebook to suppress 12 accounts that she said were spreading “misinforma­tion” about covid-19 vaccines. These accounts, she said July 15, were “producing 65 percent of vaccine misinforma­tion on social media platforms.”

“Facebook needs to move more quickly to remove harmful, violative posts. Posts that would be within their policy for removal often remain up for days, and that’s too long. The informatio­n spreads too quickly.”

She wasn’t aiming her demand at just Facebook. “You shouldn’t be banned from one platform and not others,” she added a day later. The message was surely not lost on these companies, whose fabulously successful business models are vulnerable to government disruption.

Like most speech suppressor­s, Psaki protested her good intentions. As did her boss, President Joe Biden, who, when asked about Facebook, said simply, “They’re killing people.” The implicatio­n is that any advice contrary to the current recommenda­tions of public health officials—contrary to “the science”—is bound to increase the death toll.

This is more in line with Cardinal Bellarmine’s view of science than Galileo’s. As Galileo knew, science is not acceptance of holy writ but learning from observatio­n and experiment.

Today, in dealing with a novel and deadly virus, current science is a body of hypotheses only partly tested and subject to revision based on emerging evidence.

There’s a long list of things once believed to be “misinforma­tion” about covid that are now widely accepted. One prime example: the possibilit­y that the coronaviru­s was accidental­ly released from the Wuhan lab. For more than a year, this was widely treated as a wacky right-wing conspiracy theory. Facebook slapped “warnings” on it and boasted that it reduced readership—i.e., suppressed speech.

Then, in May, former New York Times science writer Nicholas Wade, in an article that Facebook let slip through, argued a lab leak was likelier than animal-to-human transmissi­on, and a group of 18 bioscienti­sts called for a deeper investigat­ion. The Biden administra­tion, to its credit, soon reversed itself and opened its own investigat­ion and, reportedly, multiple officials now believe the lab leak theory is likely correct. Some misinforma­tion!

That example provides powerful support for Galileo’s view that debate over scientific matters takes place best out in the open. But of course the urge to suppress speech is not limited to science. As conservati­ve commentato­r Stephen L. Miller wrote, “Removing informatio­n on vaccines will translate right over to anything they think is misinforma­tion on gun violence, or climate, or healthcare or what defines a man or woman. Which is why they are doing this.”

If you think that’s extravagan­t, consider that, as Townhall’s Guy Benson argued, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been stretching its ambit to studying gun violence and climate change even while letting its core mission of advancing public health atrophy, as shown by its inability to produce a covid test.

Speech suppressio­n is evidently habit-forming. Which is why a constituti­onal amendment was passed back in the 1790s guaranteei­ng “freedom of speech, and of the press.” Or is that obsolete in these modern times?

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