The Bipartisan Urge To Control Online Speech
Democrats and Republicans are united in thinking their political agendas trump the First Amendment.

According to the Biden administration, federal officials who urged social media companies to suppress "misinformation" about COVID-19 and other subjects were merely asking platforms like Facebook and Twitter to enforce their own rules. But according to the social media users whose speech was stifled as a result of that campaign, it crossed the line between permissible government advocacy and censorship by proxy.
The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to resolve that dispute by deciding whether a federal judge and an appeals court were right to conclude that the administration violated the First Amendment when it sought to limit the influence of content it viewed as dangerous. The case is one of several controversies that illustrate the bipartisan urge to control online speech.
Two other cases on the Court's docket involve Florida and Texas laws that, like the Biden administration's anti-misinformation crusade, aimed to shape private content moderation decisions. While Joe Biden demanded removal of posts he thought social media companies should not allow, Republicans who backed these state laws insisted that the platforms allow speech they otherwise might be inclined to remove.
A Democratic president was offended by conservative speech that contradicted his agenda. Republican legislators and governors, meanwhile, were angry at social media companies they perceived as biased against conservatives. Although those situations might look different, they raise the same basic issue.
Should social media companies be free to set and enforce their own content rules, or should politicians have the power to override those decisions? The answer seems clear if you think the First Amendment protects editorial discretion, as the Supreme Court has repeatedly held.
New York legislators rejected that proposition when they enacted a 2022 law that requires social media platforms to police "hateful" speech, which is indisputably protected by the First Amendment. A federal judge enjoined enforcement of that law in February, and New York is now asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit to intervene.
While attempts to censor "hate speech" are mainly a Democratic thing, members of both major parties agree that they should not have to put up with irksome criticism when they use their social media accounts for official purposes. Politicians ranging from Donald Trump to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) have asserted the prerogative to block users whose opinions annoyed them.
That practice, the banished critics argued, violated their First Amendment right to participate in public forums created by thin-skinned government officials. In a 2019 case involving then-President Trump's personal Twitter account, the 2nd Circuit agreed.
"Once the President has chosen a platform and opened up its interactive space to millions of users and participants," the appeals court said, "he may not selectively exclude those whose views he disagrees with." Although that case became moot after Trump left office, the underlying issue persisted, as reflected in two cases that the Supreme Court will hear during its current term.
Another point of bipartisan agreement: When it comes to protecting the youth of America from online content that politicians think they should not see, the First Amendment goes out the window. The Kids Online Safety Act, which a Senate committee unanimously approved in July, would impose an amorphous "duty of care" on interactive platforms, online games, messaging applications, and streaming services, demanding "reasonable measures" to "protect" against and "mitigate" a long list of potential "harms" to users younger than 17.
That ambiguous mandate would be enforced by federal regulators and by state attorneys general with a wide range of views about which content is appropriate for minors. In practice, it would undermine the right to engage in anonymous speech and encourage restrictions on constitutionally protected content for adults as well as children.
That danger did not dissuade 46 Democrats and Republicans from cosponsoring the Senate bill—further evidence that we cannot trust either party to respect freedom of speech. Although they sometimes differ on the details, they are united in believing that political imperatives trump constitutional guarantees.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Vote everyone out, every time.
Bipartisan letter to control the internet:
Totally both sides!
“Should social media companies be free to set and enforce their own content rules, or should politicians have the power to override those decisions?”
Politicians overrode private decisions with the creation of the constitution, all laws do actually.
The question is, why do we allow both private and government interests to violate the constitution?
Lefty shits: CENSOR! CENSOR! CENSOR!
Not lefty shits: No, stop doing that.
Reason and other lefty shits: Not lefty shits are just as bad! Boaf sidez!
Except it is not. You usually get a "both sides" framing when there are attempts to suppress free speech from the Left. And the Left is usually criticized in a passive voice and an instititution is called out on the carpet rather than specific officials and politicians. When they criticize the GOP on fee speech issues, they blame a specific pol, like Trump or DeSantis and in an active voice, and they do not see the need to balance the criticism with an example of what they consider Democrats behaving badly.
The federal government demanding that social media platforms moderate their user's speech with an extremely heavy hand to the effect that some topics are effectively banned from the most popular forums of public discourse and laws saying such heavy handed moderation is not allowed, especially if the social media platforms are acting as a cartel are not in any way, shape or form, equivalents, Sullum. The former has the effect of shutting down free speech for the users of the platforms. The latter has the effect of protecting the ability of the users to speak, and hold the platforms to their promise as virtual "public squares".
“While attempts to censor “hate speech” are mainly a Democratic thing, members of both major parties agree that they should not have to put up with irksome criticism when they use their social media accounts for official purposes. Politicians ranging from Donald Trump to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) have asserted the prerogative to block users whose opinions annoyed them.
That practice, the banished critics argued, violated their First Amendment right to participate in public forums created by thin-skinned government officials. In a 2019 case involving then-President Trump’s personal Twitter account, the 2nd Circuit agreed.”
By which the standing judicial precedent is that there is not an absolute right to editorial control over your personal social media as pertains to the people that use it. On the other hand, that was journalists asserting special rights for their profession against a figure they despised. AOC was quite surprised that such restrictions might apply to her, as a Democrat and left leaning media darling.
https://reason.com/2023/10/25/america-funded-it-rand-paul-blasts-fauci-and-the-media-for-suppressing-the-lab-leak-theory/?comments=true#comment-10289615
Democrats bad.
Republicans good.
Anyone who says Republicans bad is Democrat.
Reason says Republicans bad.
Reason is Democrat.
QED
Would it kill you to engage an actual argument being made rather than argue against strawmen?
Strawcasmic strikes again.
No, but hopefully cheap liquor will.
THIS JUST IN: Grabbers-Of-Pussy now want Ram Johnston for Sprecher des Reichstag, but will settle for "life begins at erection" Mike Johnson. Mike is from the same Louisiana that put up a memorial to the brave White Supremacists who murdered over a hundred blacks at Colfax on Easter 1873. Saving Klansmen from prosecution for murder and Reconstruction violations while Comstockism caused northern voters to lynch republicans at the polls became Job One. All antislavery and pro-suffrage Amendments were gutted by the Republican Supreme Court in order to quash the indictments in Cruickshank v. U.S. Yet Hayes STILL lost to Tiden in both the popular and electoral votes.
Need mommy sweetie?
Pou pussy. Your precious democrats are being maligned.
> The Bipartisan Urge To Control Online Speech
When those few of us libertarians left in the commentariat yell "Boaf Sides!", this is what we mean. The impulses of both sides is to invoke government, to intervene with government, to control the other side with government. The libertarian impulse is to stop and ask if there is a peaceful way to solve the problem without the use of police or soldiers getting involved.
For matters of speech there is simply no need for police or soldiers, or jails or prisons, or fines or taxes. The very very few exceptions are already covered by existing law (child porn, fraud, etc).
Don't like Woke? Sorry, you don't have the moral authority to call in the government police to stop their speech.
Now perhaps you're like my mother, who says "I don't want to arrest them all! I just don't want to let them speak!" But laws against speech mean the POLICE will get involved! That's how this stuff works! If you want your desired law to be enforced, then you want law enforcement to get involved! I mean, duh!
Face it, Boaf Sides want the cops to be cracking the skulls of those they disagree with. That is not liberty, that is not freedom, that is authoritarianism. Boaf Sides.
Ah! I get it: Reason's Moot Lewser and Frag Cowpies buttons are irritating Landover Baptist and Alabama Von Meeces anarco-nazi Comstockists. Ergo, that is, by force, the same "roolz" that said The Don and Occasional Cortex had to let shitposters crowd their comments before a fellow Grabber-Of-Pussy bought the Twitfeed should now, mutatis mutandis, apply to Sullum here on Reason. Rotsa ruck with that one.
lol fuck off with the both sides on censorship what fucking planet are you conducting analysis on?
the platforms allow speech they otherwise might be inclined to remove.
Oh weird, I've been duly informed by several Libertarian sources that *the* solution to bad speech is *more speech*.
It must be tough on these companies having all these hackers breach their systems and put speech they oppose on their platforms. If only there were a way they could prevent the speech from getting on their platforms in the first place...
And the magazine talks about DeSantis beclowning himself.
Those are not even remotely alike.
Yet another wacky Reason editorial.
It’s intellectually dishonest to frame Democrats’ using government threats to force private companies to to censor public debate on their behalf and Republican complaints that doing so is censorship as both being censorship. Resisting censorship is not censorship. And it’s not interefering in their “editorial process” to ask the Democrats to stop interfering in that very same process.
Of course Sullum ignores the glaring inconsistency in the position of editorial freedom he claims social media companies want to protect, viz., that they operate under Congressional immunity based on THEIR claim that they are not publishers of content (and hence have no editorial role, much less discretion) and that they are merely akin to telephone wires which act as carriers, not publishers, of information. If he would have done a modicum of research he would have been aware of this.
I find this article to be misinformation, and I’m going to get Top Men in US Intelligence to draft and sign a letter claiming it’s a Russian “misinformation campaign”.
Oh fuck me that’s right, I can’t do that, I forgot I’m not the US Democrat Party.
I understand the issue about freedom of speech, but at least the government was trying to save lives. The misinformation was killing people. Vaccine and masks were politicized with the result the Covid death toll of Republicans rose far greater than for Democrats. Republicans were listening to the misinformation at it was costing them their lives. https://politicsofthelastage.blogspot.com/2022/12/update-on-covid19-mask-and-vaccine.html
Social media is destroying our ability to handle global and societal threats by bringing into the conversation people without expertise tossing about anecdotal data.
https://politicsofthelastage.blogspot.com/2023/10/social-media-in-year-2020-was-swarming.html
Democrats LOVE to self-project.
What [WE] do is all YOUR faults!