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Twitter

Free Speech on Twitter? Not If Europe Has a Say

EU officials threaten to make their restrictive content rules a global standard.

J.D. Tuccille | 11.23.2022 7:00 AM

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Twitter logo and European Union flag | Ralf Liebhold | Dreamstime.com
(Ralf Liebhold | Dreamstime.com)

Elon Musk's "free speech absolutist" version of Twitter is looking more like a platform moderated with a lighter and less-partisan hand than a free-for-all, but even that is too much for critics. Some warn that free speech is dangerous. Others hint that app stores might ban Twitter to spare users from the peril of slightly less-filtered discussion. And our friends across the Atlantic are doing their best to live up to fears of the European Union as a totalitarian project by threatening old-fashioned government censorship.

Twitter "is in the process of reducing moderators, but will have to increase them in Europe," EU Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton huffed last week (article in French) about Musk's new regime at Twitter. "He will have to open his algorithms. We will have control, access, and people will no longer be able to say nonsense."

Breton pointed to the EU's new Digital Services Act (DSA) and a companion law addressing digital markets, which give Brussels-based regulators wide-ranging power to regulate internet businesses and, importantly, online speech. He wasn't alone.

"There are sound reasons to suggest that the standards applied by Twitter until now, may be weakened, at a time when the fight against election interference, misinformation and hate speech is more important than ever," EU lawmakers Dita Charanzová and Sophie in 't Veld wrote to the president of the European Parliament on Nov. 8.

The centrist legislators asked for Elon Musk to be summoned to a hearing to "remind Musk of his obligations under EU law and the 2022 Code of Practice on Disinformation." The European Parliament is poised to grant that request, reports Politico.eu. Musk isn't technically obligated to attend, but the EU has powerful legal weapons with which to torment those who defy official whims.

Chief among those weapons is the above-mentioned and recently enacted Digital Services Act, which threatens hefty fines of up to six percent of global turnover and even outright bans on platforms that don't toe the line. Eurocrats peddle the legislation as a safeguard, but the law's strict rules for speech and harsh penalties for failure to promptly remove "unacceptable" content are nothing of the sort.

"The DSA does not strike the right balance between countering genuine online harms and safeguarding free speech," Jacob Mchangama, executive director of Copenhagen-based human-rights think tank Justitia, warned in April. "It will most likely result in a shrinking space for online expression, as social media companies are incentivized to delete massive amounts of perfectly legal content."

The DSA "gives way too much power to government agencies to flag and remove potentially illegal content and to uncover data about anonymous speakers," agrees the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

All this huffing, puffing, and threatening of legal penalties comes in response to the new owner of a social media company who might describe himself as a "free speech absolutist" but also says he'll allow greater, but not completely unmoderated, range for discussions.

"New Twitter policy is freedom of speech, but not freedom of reach," Musk tweeted last week. "Negative/hate tweets will be max deboosted & demonetized, so no ads or other revenue to Twitter."

That's the policy that has eurocrats so hot and bothered—a promise to broaden boundaries for discussion, but to make unpleasant speech unprofitable and difficult to find. To American sensibilities, that's a rather tepid commitment to free speech.

"It's your company, so you're free to enact any policy you like," former Rep. Justin Amash, a Michigan Libertarian, responded to Musk. "But free speech includes speech that challenges and sometimes offends others. That's how people grow. Making 'negative' tweets harder to find hurts this process, and there's no way this policy can be applied evenly."

Well, many Americans find this version of free speech unimpressive; some are of a more European bent.

"For a free speech absolutist to take control of a platform like Twitter, where so many people spend their time and when there's where there's a lot of debate going on, this is not just about, you know, allowing a free speech free-for-all. This is about eventually silencing marginalized voices," fretted Nina Jankowicz, who briefly threatened to head a federal Disinformation Governance Board before the project was scrapped. "That free speech free-for-all is going to mean less speech for marginalized groups."

Jankowicz described the horrors of being publicly criticized over her interrupted government job, so perhaps she considers political appointees "marginalized." She is certainly no fan of unfettered speech.

At Fast Company, Clint Rainey wistfully speculated that "if Musk's laissez-faire approach to moderation ends up putting Twitter at odds with developer policies on the major app stores, Musk's platforming of hateful content could get Twitter itself deplatformed."

Once again, a policy of somewhat lighter moderation is characterized as free rein for nastiness, with a hint that tech companies might do what is forbidden to the U.S. government by the First Amendment. In fact, Europe's restrictive rules may ensure exactly that. It's easier for global businesses to apply Europe's regulations everywhere than to vary policies by country. Platforms like Twitter risk the wrath of EU regulators when speech inevitably bleeds across digital borders.

"The Brussels Effect entails that the EU does not need to impose its standards coercively on anyone—market forces alone are often sufficient to convert the EU standard into the global standard as multinational companies voluntarily extend the EU rule to govern their global operations," wrote Columbia Law School's Anu Bradford, author of The Brussels Effect: How the European Union Rules the World (2019).

That's unfortunate, because the international trend is towards greater censorship via rules imposed by places like Europe.

"Free speech has been on global decline for more than a decade," Denmark's Justitia notes while announcing a conference on the future of free speech for December in Copenhagen. "Even in open societies, the democratization and virality of online speech are increasingly seen as a threat rather than a precondition for well-functioning, free, tolerant and pluralist societies."

Whatever Elon Musk's ultimate plans for Twitter, EU officials seem determined to ensure that a free speech conference held on their turf will be a downbeat affair, and to nudge the global environment for exchanging information and ideas in a decidedly restrictive direction.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Brickbat: Adding Insult to Injury

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

TwitterElon MuskSocial MediaEuropean UnionCensorshipEuropeFree Speech
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    3. JesseAz   3 years ago

      Still plenty of crypto banks you can invest in. They for sure aren't ponzi schemes.

      1. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

        I've never understood the whole crypto thing. Then again I don't truly get fiat currency either, and would prefer specie or currency based on specie.

        By understanding, I understand the concept but it seems awfully arbitrary and basically all bullshit. Oh, it has value because someone says it has value. Specie has value as an actual product and has multiple uses besides monetary value. Silver, gold, platinum, bronze, diamonds etc all have industrial uses as well as value. But I suspect once governments began creating bullshit currency, it was not going to be long before the grifters got involved.

        1. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

          Permissionless transfer of wealth obviously has some value. Being able to be 'banked' without a bank is a huge value in many parts of the world.

          1. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

            How? Is it guaranteed or insured? How is value assessed? Who backs it?

            1. Rossami   3 years ago

              Is it guaranteed or insured? No.

              How is value assessed? By measuring how much other people are willing to trade for it - just like every other commodity (including dollars).

              Who backs it? In the conventional sense, nobody. Looking a little more broadly, everybody who values it. And they back it to precisely the degree that they value it - today. Which is part of why it's inherently more volatile than things that are conventionally-backed.

              1. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

                Gold, silver etc have value because they have multiple uses besides as currency. Crypto is just another Fiat currency without even a government to give it value.

                1. Rossami   3 years ago

                  Exactly.

                  Note, by the way, that when gold and silver are produced as currency they have value far above their intrinsic value for jewelry, electronics, etc. If the metal's intrinsic value is 1, it's value as currency is 2 (or 3 or 5, ... depending). Fiat currency is simply the idea of creating the same difference but starting from a base of zero.

          2. Agammamon   3 years ago

            The problem is that crypto is not wealth.

  3. Sometimes a Great Notion   3 years ago

    Others hint that app stores might ban Twitter to spare users from the peril of slightly less-filtered discussion.

    And even more others hint, Musk will nuke them from orbit

    1. R Mac   3 years ago

      Pretty sure it’ll be a space laser.

    2. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

      The thing is, Musk actually has basically created his own internet. So, if he doesn't like it, he really can take his ball and go home, to mix metaphors.

      1. jonnysage   2 years ago

        Thats not how the internet works. He could only deliver twitter via starlink to starlink customers. "the internet" could block twitter via all other ISPs, and all other content to starlink.

  4. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    EU? More like FU, amirite?

    1. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

      The two most powerful countries in the EU are France and Germany (and Italy is usually considered third). Hmmm, could be a historical joke here but I'm not quite placing my finger on it.

  5. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

    … people will no longer be able to say nonsense.

    Mtrueman hardest hit.

    1. R Mac   3 years ago

      Hopefully repeatedly.

    2. JasonAZ   3 years ago

      Hey, what is Dee? Chopped liver?

  6. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

    The Brussels Effect entails that the EU does not need to impose its standards coercively on anyone—market forces alone are often sufficient to convert the EU standard into the global standard as multinational companies voluntarily extend the EU rule to govern their global operations,

    Shorter version : PrIvAtE cOmPaNy

  7. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    "The Brussels Effect entails that the EU does not need to impose its standards coercively on anyone—market forces alone are often sufficient to convert the EU standard into the global standard as multinational companies voluntarily extend the EU rule to govern their global operations," wrote Columbia Law School's Anu Bradford, author of The Brussels Effect: How the European Union Rules the World (2019).

    Someone needs to tell Anu Bradford that if the EU is passing strict regulations, it clearly is NOT the actions of market forces alone. There is a coercive effect when governments are banning access to customers in their nations. That's such a weird statement.

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      Have you noticed that the hoods of cars are now a few inches above the engines now? That didn't used to be the case. Ever wonder why? It's because EU regulations require that cars must be built to hit a pedestrian at like 20mph without killing the person. That gap below the hood is so if a pedestrian lands on it it will crush and lessen the force.
      Those regulations are only EU that I know of, yet it's now standard on most cars. Why? They don't want to make different models for different markets.

      I think they're saying something similar may happen with these internet regulations.

      1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

        So you're saying that companies choosing to follow EU regulations is just them abiding with market forces, when they wouldn't have made those choices otherwise? That's clearly not "the free market," it's a government exercising monopolistic power.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago (edited)

          No, that’s not what I said.

          Edit: I was simply giving an example of EU standards turning into global standards.

          1. R Mac   3 years ago

            Which makes it an odd response to his comment. Or did you not actually read his comment?

      2. Zeb   3 years ago

        RoHS standards for electronics is another example of coercive EU policies being widely adopted outside the EU.

    2. JesseAz   3 years ago

      Mike agrees with Anu for the most part.

  8. Marshal   3 years ago

    Left wingers are so accustomed to having the referee on their side they refuse to participate in non-partisan venues.

    1. CE   3 years ago

      bingo

  9. Idaho Bob   3 years ago

    "He will have to open his algorithms. We will have control, access, and people will no longer be able to say nonsense."

    Communism, naked and out in the open.

    1. Rossami   3 years ago

      Totalitarianism, not communism.

    2. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      He has already stated he will reveal the algorithms.

      This is actually what they DONT want.

    3. CE   3 years ago

      all your algorithmz are belong to us

    4. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

      I think it's more like a different totalitarian style government created by the Italians and enforced by the Germans.

      1. flag58   3 years ago

        Just like about 90 years ago?

  10. JesseAz   3 years ago

    There is a reason WEF and globalist are centered in Europe. The EU was their test trial.

    1. R Mac   3 years ago

      Hopefully the lack of heat this winter will remind Europeans of their history of guillotine use.

      1. Art Stone   3 years ago

        The leader of Hungary wearing a t-shirt at the World Cup showing the original boundaries of Hungary should reinforce the idea that borders between nations are not sacred and unmovable. If that were true, Ukraine would still be in the Soviet Union.

    2. American Mongrel   3 years ago

      The EU was the nazis winning Europe the peaceful way.

  11. Mickey Rat   3 years ago

    Thierry Breton sounds like a prime candidate to justly end up hanging by the ankles from a street lamp.

    Nina Jancowitz's assertion that free speech will result in less speech from allegedly "marginalized" people seems completely irrational.

    1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

      Not surprising, given the source.

    2. JasonAZ   3 years ago

      "Nina Jancowitz’s assertion that free speech will result in less speech from allegedly “marginalized” people seems completely irrational."

      She's a progressive. You need rules and censoring in order to preserve free speech. Hate speech laws too. This is how the mind of progressives work.

      1. Will Nonya   3 years ago

        Without those laws how will you know which speech is free and which isnt?

    3. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

      It's amazing how many people don't actually understand what free speech is. It's like the artists who think pissing on the cross is edgy but get offended if South Park dares to ridicule Mohammed.

  12. InsaneTrollLogic   3 years ago

    The EU needs to be reminded that Twitter and other such companies are US-based companies, and as such, the EU needs to be told to FO.

    1. Rossami   3 years ago

      Those US-based companies are voluntarily subjecting themselves to EU law by delivering goods and services to EU customers. The only way to tell the EU regulators to FO is to boycott the EU generally.

      That would be bad for those EU citizens who actually want to exercise some measure of freedom. And it might get the US companies in trouble with anti-trust laws. Boycotting by buyers is allowed. Sellers doing the same thing earns accusations of "market manipulation".

      Despite all that, I think you're right. Cutting off authoritarian jurisdictions until their own citizens press for change is the only long-term solution.

      1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

        Equality is the lowest common denominator.

        1. R Mac   3 years ago

          Another odd response from sarc. Starting the holiday early?

          1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

            The eggnog is strong with this one.

      2. CE   3 years ago

        Sounds like a cross-marketing opportunity for Musk to develop his own Starlink phone using his own satellites, which carries his own apps which don't ban Twitter.

        1. Rossami   3 years ago

          That would not get around the EU regulators' claims of jurisdiction. In fact, it would probably make it worse under their precedents against vertical integration.

      3. DRM   3 years ago

        All Twitter really has to do to avoid the reach of the EU is to shut down its physically-in-the-EU operations.

        The EU might still claim jurisdiction, but it would be impotent to actually impose fines and the like. What'd be left is prohibiting EU residents from buying ads on Twitter and Twitter Blue subscriptions, and maybe building a Ersatz Great Firewall.

        1. Rossami   3 years ago

          Eh, not so much anymore. EU courts have asserted and US courts have recognized jurisdiction even without a physical presence. And they have then claimed (and sometimes been able to get) assets purely domiciled in the US.

          In fairness, we started that fiasco of a policy. The precedents they relied on were based on US tax decisions attacking overseas assets.

        2. Ersatz   2 years ago

          I won't be participating in that project, so I guess they'll be out of luck.

    2. Eeyore   3 years ago

      And they also need to lay off anyone working in EU offices.

  13. TJJ2000   3 years ago

    Where's Boehm? He'll set Tuccille straight.
    The USA has to bow-down and offer resistance free foreign trade! /s

  14. BrittanyGray   3 years ago (edited)

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  15. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

    At this point, why not tell the Euros to fuck off and let Putin invade them all? I mean, most of them want to live in a nominal communist system (and most of them expect elite status and privileges).

  16. EscherEnigma   3 years ago

    It's funny that y'all think Musk is going to make Twitter more "free".

    He's so desperate to recoup his loss that he's not going to bow out of any market he can keep it in. So rather then trying to do the least censorship possible to stay in a market (see Germany, India, Nigeria) he's probably just going to start rolling over on government demands. Because the bottom line is his bottom line, as evidenced by every Twitter decision he's made so far.

    Simply put, someone that puts profits first will never be a reliable principled ally. That you think he will be would be comical if you weren't so serious.

    Elon Musk is not the free speech advocate you are looking for.

    1. JasonAZ   3 years ago

      "Elon Musk is not the free speech advocate you are looking for."

      Musk is a huge step forward from the previous group of progressive authoritarians. Nobody is perfect, but progress in the right direction should celebrated.

      "Simply put, someone that puts profits first will never be a reliable principled ally. That you think he will be would be comical if you weren’t so serious."

      LMAO! I trust somebody seeking profits more than some progress retard like Nina Jancowitz.

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      Elon Musk is not the free speech advocate you are looking for.

      So then what's the big worry? Why the panicking? Why the waving of arms? Why is the journolisming sphere so aghast?

    3. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      he's already turned the company profitable. You have no idea what you're talking about.

    4. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      Elon Musk is not the free speech advocate you are looking for.

      Well he is currently #1, and by a long margin. He's lapping the competition.

      Who do you suggest should be our free speech advocate if not him? lol

    5. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      ^ I spotted the regime agitator!

    6. Minadin   3 years ago

      https://twitter.com/TheWorthyHouse/status/1594812682636754946

      "1. I will now examine Twitter’s past financials and predict the future from them. I conclude that criticism of @elonmusk is bizarrely off base, because Musk has overnight changed Twitter’s net (profit) margin from negative 20% to approximately plus 28%, more than Apple or Google."

    7. Sevo   3 years ago (edited)

      “…Simply put, someone that puts profits first will never be a reliable principled ally. That you think he will be would be comical if you weren’t so serious…”

      ^ Coming in from far, far left field. Yes, we need politicos or self-righteous assholes like you.

  17. Dillinger   3 years ago

    >>EU Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton

    what color is this joker's skin?

    1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

      Thierry Breton is a French business executive, politician, writer and the current Commissioner for Internal Market of the European Union. Breton was vice-chairman and CEO of Groupe Bull, chairman and CEO of Thomson-RCA and chairman and CEO of France Telecom.

      A real man of the people.

      1. Dillinger   3 years ago

        >>vice-chairman and CEO of Groupe Bull

        sounds like a cuck-cover.

      2. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

        Can’t hold a steady job.

  18. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    Some warn that free speech is dangerous.

    Like Sam Harris. Boy that dude has gone off the rails.

    1. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      He's absolutely lost it. He used to have some good discussions about AI is all I remember of him before he went full TDS.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

        His theories on free will are somewhat terrifying, even if unwittingly so on his part.

        1. The Margrave of Azilia   3 years ago

          Ha, I see what you did there (I think).

          1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

            It works on so many levels.

      2. Libertariantranslator   3 years ago

        Does TDS stand for former Trumpanzees who now Dislike his Shinola?

  19. The Margrave of Azilia   3 years ago (edited)

    You know who else tried to expand his system from Europe to the rest of the world?

    1. CE   3 years ago

      Marconi?

    2. mad.casual   3 years ago

      Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord?

    3. JohnZ   3 years ago (edited)

      Robespierre?

    4. Sevo   3 years ago

      Lenin.

    5. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

      Dr. Terwilliker?

  20. Michael Ejercito   3 years ago

    I wonder what sort of regulations the Saudis have for social media.

    1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

      Or women’s fashions.

  21. CE   3 years ago

    "This is about eventually silencing marginalized voices," fretted Nina Jankowicz,

    I thought that was her plan all along, except that she would get to decide who gets marginalized.

  22. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

    I wouldnt put it past Elon to simply cease operations in EU countries that demand the censorship.

    He's already turned the company profitable and has promised to open source the protocol and reveal all the content moderation algorithms.

    This would create a surge of VPN use in Europe which would be amusing to watch.

    1. JohnZ   3 years ago

      Who cares. Western Europe is going down the drain anyway. They're like the corpse that hasn't figured out it is dead.

  23. MWAocdoc   3 years ago

    It's still not clear to me how the EU - or anyone else - can impose their laws on an enterprise that does not physically exist in their jurisdiction. If Europeans choose to follow Twitter over an internet connection via satellite - e.g. Musk's "Starlink" network - how would the government stop them? For the same reason that Russia cannot prevent Ukrainians from coordinating their resistance against Russia's invasion of Ukraine, I doubt that the EU can prevent Europeans from seeing forbidden content that way. It would be interesting to see how the EU would punish Musk or Twitter if they have no assets inside the EU.

    1. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      They can make it illegal for any domestic advertizer to do business with the service and they can even block the service entirely within their borders. only people savvy enough to use a VPN will be able to access it.

      1. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

        I had not thought of the advertising angle. But if Musk chooses to make Twitter available without advertising - say, for political reasons or to make a point - they couldn't actually block users in the EU.

  24. Fats of Fury   3 years ago

    He has satellites and already proved he can ignore restrictions.

  25. JohnZ   3 years ago

    I could care less what the You're-a-pee-ins want or believe. F them.
    Especially the snot nosed French. I fart in their general direction. Who needs the French anyway? They can't build a car worth a shit, have no real manufacturing base except for overpriced wine that can't even compete with California. They're cowardly, bereft of any morals, will throw down their arms immediately when invaded and have allowed savage, third world, , stone age people to take over their country.
    The people of Urope are getting exactly what they deserve for voting in useless low IQ leaders like Macron and Johnson or for allowing a near totalitarian EU government in Brussels that would make Hitler jealous. They could have probably taught Hitler a thing or two.
    I say, let europe go their own way, piss on 'em. Russia will pass them by while they are grubbing for food in a dumpster but at least they got their pro nouns right.

  26. AaronBonn   3 years ago

    I have been saying for quite a while now that we should be including free speech clauses in our trade agreements. Censorship policies of foreign nations that affect our own media market and information space should be considered trade restrictions and should be responded to in trade negotiations accordingly.

    1. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      get rid of trade agreements entirely. The fed gov has no business telling me what terms I can or must accept from foreign entities.

  27. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

    Remember folks that liberties are the real threat to Democracy ™, not totalitarianism in the name of equity.

    1. soldiermedic76   3 years ago

      On that note, I see Reason has decided to run another story on evil Republicans today.

  28. Its_Not_Inevitable   3 years ago

    "That free speech free-for-all is going to mean less speech for marginalized groups."

    Does she see the contradiction in her own statement? Free speech free-for-all / less speech for? Does she think we're this stupid?

  29. Nominalis   3 years ago

    Drugs are bad.
    Climate Change is real.
    You're transphobic.

    There, I'm safe.

    1. Libertariantranslator   3 years ago

      The exact technical term is "Over There"... Many conscripts doubted the safety of mustard-gas trenches.

  30. Libertariantranslator   3 years ago

    If you compare the maps, this European Union Tuccille refers to looks a whole lot like the Third Reich that consolidated into a dominant organization by 1940. It too had a dominant Propaganda Ministry headed by a club-footed altruist who married into the Quandt fortune. Goebbels swore that the National Socialist Reich was christianity's only conceivable alternative to communism and coerced all who questioned or denied the utterance, remember?

  31. Carter Mitchell   3 years ago

    Fuck the EU.

  32. Art Stone   3 years ago

    Once AI is involved, the algorithm tells you absolutely nothing. The decision-making is based on the data. Since the huge collection of data is constantly changing in real time, you can't even predict what decisions will be 5 seconds from now. The personal data of each user also heavily influences what they see.

    I'm pretty sure the eu's GDPR would prevent Twitter from handing over user data to the government.

  33. JohnZ   3 years ago

    Boys and girls, it ain't gonna matter soon anyway. France is gonna declare war on Italy soon for not making nice to migrants and allowing all those third world stone age savages into their country.
    So Macron is threatening Meloni with serious finger shaking and foot stomping." No more cheese for you Ites" Macron screamed
    It's gonna be a hoot watching France invade Italy ....like watching the Keystone Cops vs the Marx Brothers.
    Joe Biden has sent in VP Harris to set things smooth again.

  34. Liberty Lover   3 years ago

    If You Have Not Been Taught to Think for Yourself, Then Disinformation is Scary

    …”There is no such thing as “disinformation” or “misinformation”. There is only information you accept and information you do not accept. You were not born with a requirement to believe everything you are told; rather, you were born with a brain that allows you to process the information you receive and make independent decisions.”…

    I've never met a woke liberal that can think for themself, all they do is parrot CNN and MSNBC talking points. When challenged all I hear "I don't want to talk about it anymore".

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