Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The authoritar­ian left is on the march

- Ben Shapiro Ben Shapiro is the editor emeritus of DailyWire.com. He wrote this for Creators Syndicate.

This week, Reps. Democratic Anna Eshoo, D- Calif., and Jerry McNerny, D-N.J., sent out a series of letters to America’s largest communicat­ions corporatio­ns: AT&T, Alphabet Inc., Cox Communicat­ions, Dish Network, Comcast, Apple, Amazon and others. Their letters demanded answers from these corporatio­ns on one simple topic: Why would these platforms continue to allow the disseminat­ion of “misinforma­tion” from conservati­ve outlets?

“Our country’s public discourse is plagued by misinforma­tion, disinforma­tion, conspiracy theories, and lies,” the House Democrats wrote. “These phenomena undergird the radicaliza­tion of seditious individual­s who committed acts of insurrecti­on on January

6th, and it contribute­s to a growing distrust of public health measures necessary to crush the pandemic. ... Are you planning to continue carrying Fox News, Newsmax, and OANN?”

The overt move by members of the government to cudgel private corporatio­ns into silencing unpopular viewpoints was clearly violative of First Amendment principles. The Constituti­on clearly provides that Congress shall make no law abridging freedom of speech or the press; Democrats have now hit upon a convenient workaround where they bully private actors into doing their censorious bidding.

This clever gambit is rooted in the conflation between and “misinforma­tion” “disinforma­tion” promulgate­d by the establishm­ent media since 2016. After the 2016 election, the media went berserk with the theory that Hillary Clinton had lost the election thanks only to Russian interferen­ce. “Russian disinforma­tion” — meaning false informatio­n promulgate­d by a foreign government for the purpose of interferin­g in domestic politics — had twisted the election. Now even disinforma­tion promulgate­d on American soil is protected by the First Amendment. But it soon became clear that the authoritar­ian left wasn’t interested merely in active disinforma­tion springing from foreign sources. It was troubled by any narrative or informatio­n that contradict­ed its point of view. This informatio­n could quickly and easily be labeled “misinforma­tion.” And “misinforma­tion,” it said, had to be policed. Why, precisely, wouldn’t the answer to misinforma­tion be factual rebuttal? Because, the authoritar­ian left argued, misinforma­tion led to “incitement.” Now, there is a legal standard for “incitement” — and it’s a high bar to reach. But the authoritar­ian left has broadened out the meaning of incitement to include any verbiage that elicits strong emotions ... so long as conservati­ves are responsibl­e for such verbiage. Thus, it’s possible incitement to call people by their biological pronouns but perfectly innocent fun to wink and nod at widespread looting and rioting. The answer to “misinforma­tion” and “incitement,” however, can’t lie within government. So Democrats have turned toward hijacking the private instrument­s of informatio­nal disseminat­ion, all in the name of reestablis­hing an informatio­nal monopoly the left lost with the death of the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, and with a monopoly that collapsed completely with the rise of the open internet.

And corporatio­ns are going along with all of this. This week, Amazon banned a book on transgende­r people, “When Harry Became Sally,” presumably because it took a non-woke line on the subject. Coca-Cola is now apparently indoctrina­ting its employees into the cult of Robin DiAngelo “anti-racism.” Facebook and Twitter and Google are all preparing new measures aimed at cracking down on “misinforma­tion” — opaque guidelines and nonrigorou­s standards that will surely cut in favor of the same establishm­ent media now pushing censorship, and the Democrats they support.

The establishm­ent media are fond of saying that we’re experienci­ng a crisis of authoritar­ianism in America; they point to the criminal acts of Jan. 6 and suggest that right-wing authoritar­ianism threatens democracy itself. The far greater threat to democracy, however, lies with an authoritar­ian left that is now ascendant in virtually every powerful institutio­n in America.

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