New York Post

OUTSOURCIN­G CENSORSHIP

- JACOB SULLUM Twitter: @JacobSullu­m

PRESIDENT Biden wants to suppress speech that discourage­s Americans from being vaccinated against COVID-19. Because the First Amendment doesn’t allow him to do that, he is asking Facebook and other social-media giants to do it for him.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki calls the administra­tion’s demands for speech restrictio­ns “our asks.” But given the feds’ power to make life difficult for Facebook and other firms, the line between a request and a command is hazy, and so is the line between private content moderation and state censorship.

The background to this dispute includes an antitrust suit against Facebook that was dismissed last month but may be refiled by the Federal Trade Commission. It also includes Biden’s opposition to a federal law that shields online platforms from liability for content posted by users.

Last week, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy issued an advisory calling for a “whole-of-society” effort to combat the “urgent threat to public health” posed by “health misinforma­tion.” His recommenda­tions included “appropriat­e legal and regulatory measures that address health misinforma­tion, while protecting user privacy and freedom of expression,” which is an oxymoronic formulatio­n.

Biden followed up the threat of government-imposed speech controls by accusing social media companies of “killing people” by allowing the spread of anti-vaccine messages. He modified that charge on Monday, saying platforms such as Facebook are merely accessorie­s to homicide.

“Facebook isn’t killing people,” Biden told reporters. “These 12 people who are out there giving misinforma­tion — anyone listening to it is getting hurt by it. It’s killing people.”

Biden thinks those “12 people” should be banished from social media. The White House also wants platforms to move more swiftly against other users who post “misinforma­tion”; automatica­lly ban users whose accounts have been suspended on other platforms; and make anti-vaccine content less conspicuou­s by changing the algorithms firms use to recommend posts.

“We don’t take anything down,” Psaki emphasized last week. “We don’t block anything.” Rather, the administra­tion is merely “flagging problemati­c posts” and suggesting “additional steps” that Facebook and others should take against “informatio­n that is leading to people not taking the vaccine,” because “people are dying as a result.”

Psaki’s assurances are hard to take seriously, given the public pressure Team Biden is applying, its ability to launch litigation and support legislatio­n that hurts social-media companies, as well as its threat of “legal and regulatory measures.” If those companies do what the president wants by cracking down on speech he doesn’t like, they will be acting as the government’s agents.

This censorship by proxy is especially troubling, because the “misinforma­tion” that offends Biden and Murthy isn’t limited to verifiably false statements about COVID-19 vaccines, such as claims that they cause infertilit­y or alter human DNA. It also includes messages that are accurate but “misleading,” which could mean they discourage vaccinatio­n by emphasizin­g small risks, noting that vaccines aren’t completely effective or raising questions about the methodolog­y of vaccine studies.

Nor is the “misinforma­tion” targeted by the Biden administra­tion confined to speech about vaccines. Murthy is also concerned about messages that might encourage people to “reject public-health measures such as masking and physical distancing.”

In fact, the “health misinforma­tion” that Murthy decries includes any statement about COVID-19 that he views as “misleading” in light of the “best available evidence,” which is open to interpreta­tion and “can change over time.” If the Biden administra­tion expects social-media platforms to enforce that hopelessly subjective standard, it is demanding unpreceden­ted regulation of online speech that can’t possibly be reconciled with its avowed respect for freedom of expression.

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