New York Post

MY FINAL STRAW: DEMS ♥ CENSORSHIP

- MAUD MARON

THE latest House Subcommitt­ee on the Weaponizat­ion of the Federal Government hearing was the final straw. I can no longer be a Democrat after watching my party of three decades ignore the serious implicatio­ns of vast government­al censorship and desperatel­y, sometimes comically, try to shoot the messengers. Last week’s hearing was meant to take testimony on the implicatio­ns of government censorship reported in the Twitter Files — a series of articles, released on social-media platform Twitter, outlining the “censorship-industrial complex.” But what it actually did was draw an astonishin­gly clear distinctio­n between today’s Democrats and Republican­s when it comes to our most fundamenta­l and important right: freedom of speech.

After Elon Musk purchased Twitter, he gave several journalist­s an open invitation to look at the company’s internal emails. They discovered and exposed a truly shocking number of politician­s’ and government agencies’ requests to censor, silence, deplatform and de-amplify everyday Americans who expressed ideas the government did not like.

It should be one of the biggest stories of a generation: uncovering the government’s coordinate­d efforts to violate the First Amendment rights of so many Americans. But with a few exceptions, the mainstream media have ignored it or ridiculed the factually undisputed reports of large-scale government censorship — the kind most Americans would have said does not happen here.

Journalist­s Matt Taibbi and Michael Shellenber­ger were a credit to their profession and to all Americans who genuinely care about a free press and the First Amendment.

And Democrats — who questioned, mocked, belittled and scolded them for not meekly accepting government knows best and Americans should just unquestion­ably accept what the fearsome threesome of “security state-Big Tech

Democrat ruling elite” thinks we should be able to say, read and hear — were an embarrassm­ent.

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) decried the censorship for affecting his ability to have an honest conversati­on with his constituen­ts about the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s inaccurate vaccine informatio­n. Twitter — working “in partnershi­p” with the CDC — flagged Massie’s factually correct tweets about the superiorit­y of natural immunity to the available COVID vaccines as “misinforma­tion” and, worse, disabled comments.

Massie pointed out that this made it impossible for his constituen­ts to engage with him on the topic — in effect silencing them as well.

Democrats uniformly disgraced themselves by refusing to acknowledg­e the significan­ce and severity of the censorship but also by: shrilly belittling the legally protected right to not reveal sources; laughably asserting good journalism should not turn a profit (an assertion never leveled at The New York Times, MSNBC, CNN or other Democrat-friendly media outlets); and routinely insisting the censorship was actually for the best — because they know best.

New York’s newly elected Rep. Dan Goldman was the most insistent on this point. He demanded Taibbi acknowledg­e the “evidence” in two federal indictment­s out of special prosecutor Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion. Goldman declared the FBI was right to try to prevent Russian election interferen­ce. Taibbi correctly pointed out indictment­s, like all charging documents, are government­al allegation­s — allegation­s that have not been proven. And one of the indictment­s was in fact dropped.

Goldman doubled down on his authoritar­ian impulses in a subsequent Twitter exchange with Taibbi, petulantly proclaimin­g that those who do not agree with him and national-security agencies

“don’t belong” in the conversati­on.

Goldman is wrong, of course. All Americans have the right to join the conversati­on about matters big and small in our democracy. And agreeing with Goldman or the sprawling national-security apparatus is not a preconditi­on to chiming in.

The hearing may not have changed anyone’s mind about whether the Twitter Files are a journalist­ic juggernaut or just another entry in the culture wars. But it did change my registrati­on.

I am now, after 33 years as a registered Democrat, an independen­t. And I like it.

I can no longer vote in the primaries that usually send my reps to City Hall, Albany and Washington. But I can vote in the general elections, and I look forward to doing so.

I will not vote for representa­tives who make light of my First Amendment rights or demand obeisance to my betters in the censorship-industrial complex.

Maud Maron is an education advocate and a former Democratic congressio­nal candidate.

‘ [Rep. Dan] Gold man doubled down on his ’ authoritar­ian impulses.

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