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First Amendment

FIRE Highlights the Blatant Hypocrisy of State Officials Who Decry Government Meddling With Social Media

Even as they attack the Biden administration's crusade against "misinformation," Missouri and Louisiana defend legal restrictions on content moderation.

Jacob Sullum | 3.11.2024 2:15 PM

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Former Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey against a background of a building and a tree | Missouri Attorney General's Office
Former Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey (Missouri Attorney General's Office)

Next Monday the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments in Murthy v. Missouri, which poses the question of whether federal officials violated the First Amendment when they persistently pressured social media platforms to curtail "misinformation." That is what the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit concluded last September, and the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) is urging the justices to affirm that decision.

FIRE says the 5th Circuit was right to conclude that Biden administration officials engaged in "significant encouragement" of speech suppression and that they crossed the line between persuasion and coercion. But the organization's brief also highlights the First Amendment "hypocrisy" of the lead plaintiffs in this case, which it says "inadvertently" reinforces their argument.

Murthy v. Missouri, originally known as Missouri v. Biden, began with a federal lawsuit that Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt and Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry, both Republicans, filed in May 2022. Schmitt, now a senator, was succeeded in January 2023 by another Republican, Andrew Bailey, who took over the case. Landry, now Louisiana's governor, was succeeded by Republican Liz Murrill in January 2024.

Even as they oppose government control of social media in Murthy, FIRE notes, Missouri and Louisiana are asking the Supreme Court to uphold it in Moody v. NetChoice and NetChoice v. Paxton. Those cases involve First Amendment challenges to Florida and Texas laws that restrict Facebook et al.'s content moderation decisions in the name of promoting ideological diversity. During oral arguments in the NetChoice cases last month, most of the justices seemed inclined to agree that the two states are attempting to override the platforms' constitutionally protected editorial discretion.

The contradictory positions taken by Missouri and Louisiana in Murthy and the NetChoice cases suggest those states "believe the First Amendment permits them to do directly what it prohibits other government actors from doing indirectly," FIRE lawyers Robert Corn-Revere and Abigail Smith write. "In fact, they argue not just that the First Amendment permits state regulation of private speakers, but that state regulation is necessary for free speech to exist. This argument—that regulation is free speech—is distinctly Orwellian."

While decrying "their political opposition's use of informal measures to steer
the public debate," the attorneys general of Missouri and Louisiana "are at the same time asking this Court in the NetChoice cases to approve formal state control of online platforms' moderation decisions, saying it presents no First Amendment question at all," FIRE says. "Unbelievable."

The hypocrisy does not end there. The "same officials" who describe the Biden administration's interactions with social media companies as "arguably…the most massive attack against free speech" in U.S. history, Corn-Revere and Smith note, have "actively and repeatedly issue[d] threats and use[d] their official authority to suppress speech they oppose."

The day after Bailey welcomed U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty's July 2023 ruling against the Biden administration as a blow to "bully-pulpit censorship," FIRE says, he "signed a letter along with six other state AGs threatening Target Corporation for the sale of [LGBTQ]-themed merchandise as part of a 'Pride' campaign, warning ominously" that selling those products "might violate state obscenity laws." The items to which Bailey et al. objected "included such things as T-shirts with the words Girls Gays Theys" and "what the letter described as 'anti-Christian designs,' such as one that included the phrase Satan Respects Pronouns," Corn-Revere noted in a Reason essay last July. "The claim that such messages could violate obscenity law would embarrass a first-year law student. And by signing on to the Target letter while simultaneously issuing press releases praising Doughty's decision, Bailey showed his attitude toward constitutional freedoms is, well, flexible."

The point of that letter "was not to make a coherent legal argument," FIRE's brief says. "It was to get Target's leadership to think long and hard about the risks the company might run by expressing messages powerful government officials didn't like." In other words, it bore more than a passing resemblance to the official bullying that Bailey was decrying in his lawsuit against the Biden administration.

There's more. Last December, Bailey "announced a fraud investigation into the advocacy group Media Matters because it had criticized the social media company X for allegedly placing advertisements adjacent to extremist or neo-Nazi content, thus causing a number of advertisers to withdraw from the platform." Bailey and Landry sent "follow-up letters to the advertisers to alert them to Missouri's investigation and urg[e] them to ignore the claims made by Media Matters."

Although Bailey and Landry "tried to frame their actions as a defense of free speech, their explanations rang hollow given their nakedly partisan objectives and coercive tactics," FIRE says. "They described Media Matters as an organization dedicated to 'correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. Media,' but with a 'true purpose' of 'suppressing speech with which it disagrees.'" Bailey complained that "the progressive mob" was demanding "immediate action" in response to Media Matters' criticism, saying the response from advertisers was hurting "the last platform dedicated to free speech in America."

In short, FIRE says, Bailey and Landry "were simply flexing state muscle to take sides in a culture war dispute." The brief quotes Reason Contributing Editor Walter Olson, who observed that "the most risible bit of the letter—better than satire, really" was Bailey's claim "to be standing up for free speech by menacing his private target with legal punishment for its speech."

Defending the First Amendment "can be a source of consternation because it requires you to share your foxhole with political opportunists," Corn-Revere and Smith write. "They see free speech principles as nothing more than tools they can cynically exploit for temporary partisan advantage, and their headspinning inconsistencies mock notions of neutrality." But far from undermining their argument in Murthy, "their inconsistent behavior and situational approach to First Amendment interpretation stand as monuments for why this Court must use this case to reinforce principles that will bind all government actors, including the state AGs who brought this case."

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NEXT: Florida Lawmakers Vote To Raise Stripping Age to 21

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason.

First AmendmentFree SpeechSocial MediaCensorshipMisinformationJoe BidenMissouriLouisianaSupreme CourtFacebookTwitterTexasFloridaFoundation for Individual Rights and Expression
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  1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

    No shit governments should stop overreaching and leave private property alone. So let's completely ignore the problems created by the government which provoked this latest government outrage, shall we?

    Let's leave slavery alone, OK? No need to interfere with the property rights that the government created, right?

    1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

      "No shit governments should stop overreaching and leave private property alone."

      Agreed! THIS is why freedom-lovers and Government-Almighty-coercion haters should TIGHTLY close up ranks in support of Section 230!!! Close up ranks TIGHTLY against BOTH SIDES!!!

      1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

        Oh, bullshit. §230 is only "necessary" because government makes it impossible for anyone to hold Big Tech accountable for violating its own terms of service. §230 is just another typical statist bandaid to pay lip service to the idea that government protects people.

        1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

          Your TOS from the top of these comments, in part, reads... "We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time."

          This is Reason.com asserting a thing called "property rights"!!! Marxists, take a hike! Start your OWN web site! Go-Daddy will help you, if you PAY for your property rights!!!

          1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

            Jackass. Look at Big Tech, their advertising promises to the public of staying in touch with family, friends, customers, and so on. They are promising, in effect, that if you sign up with them, they will not arbitrarily cancel posts or delete accounts. Who would sign up if they told the truth? "We can cancel your communications and delete your accounts with no recourse or right of appeal on your part, with no explanations."

            You think Reason is Big Tech? Grow up.

            1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

              "They are promising, in effect, that if you sign up with them, they will not arbitrarily cancel posts or delete accounts."

              In invisible ink? Or in ink that is ONLY visible for Marxists-who-lust-after-YOUR-web-site?

              PLEASE start yer OWN web site! Go-Daddy will help you, as they have helped me!

    2. I woke up when Hillary talked about Reconstruction   1 year ago

      How about being topical A MONTH AGO

      BLM proposes to open 22 million acres in Western states to solar development

  2. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

    In the one case, Louisiana and and Missouri are objecting to the federal government trying to bully social media platforms into censoring the speech of the platform users. In the other they are trying to prevent the platforms from censoring their users. The point of what they are trying doing is consistent in trying to maximize freedom of speech for the users of the plaforms. You can disagree with this as a goal, but it seems to be internally consistent and therefore not a case of hypocrisy. A charge of hypocrisy does not apply if the People involved do buy into your premises that the platforms are the only party which has free speech/press rights here.

    1. Rossami   1 year ago

      I was going to comment but you said it better. Thank you.

      (That said, typo in your last line. Should be "... if the People involved do not buy into your premises...")

      1. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

        Ugh, you are correct that I forgot that "not".

        1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

          And, along with Marxists of ALL kinds, you are willing to tell "property rights" to go to HELL!!! "Your" web site belongs to 51% of the voters. so... You come HERE to try to persuade the dog-pile to pile onto YOUR dog-pile... Might makes right, and dog-bites make right... To TAKE OVER those who.... WAAAA!!!! TOOK DOWN MY POSTS!!!! (That I posted, without paying a DIME!!! Ask for yer money back!!!).

    2. SRG2   1 year ago

      Both cases involve governments attempting to compel social media companies, in one case, telling them what to do, in another, telling them what not to do.

      1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

        No matter how much the lefties want to have their cake and shove it down everyone else throat too, media platforms are the modern public square. There is no refuting that Twitter advertised itself as the public square while waging a campaign of suppression against viewpoints it deemed harmful to the public interest, in many cases where they were not in violation of the TOS.

        It has been understood in the US since at least the 1970s that the government allowing censorship in the public square is equivalent to the government sanctioning censorship. Even if you don't believe that, the government still has an interest in enforcing individuals' rights under the media provider's TOS.

        1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

          Twitter is owned by Elon Musk (and associates), not the public. The public square is typically owned by the city it was located in. Ownership, it matters.

          Now Truth Social, that is the public square and the owner should be forced to nationalize it!

          1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

            https://www.techdirt.com/2020/06/29/as-predicted-parler-is-banning-users-it-doesnt-like/

            Shit depends on whose ox is getting gored!!! Fresh beef party for the whole town... So long ass shit is YOUR ox getting gored!!!!

        2. SRG2   1 year ago

          Even if you don’t believe that, the government still has an interest in enforcing individuals’ rights und

          Yes, but as the article makes clear, there are critics on the right who are now guilty of similar infringement on rights they -rightly - accused the left of. And yet you seem unable to criticise these righties. So both they and you are hypocrites.

          1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

            You tell 'em, SRG2!!! Go, SRG2, go!!!

            Sad to say, hypocrites can SNOT see their own hypocrisy! Stupid can SNOT see stupid! Evil people can SNOT see their own evil! Thus has shit been for 10,000 or 100,000 years or more! MORE shit to cum!!!

            (Get yerself an underbrella; shit is STILL cumming down!!! Have ye EVER seen the rain, and the pain, cumming down??!? The sad part is, shit is SOOOO totes SNOT needed at ALL!!! Udderly senseless, shit is!!!)

          2. JesseAz   1 year ago

            The companies are not speaking shrike. They don't claim they are speaking with 230 posts her their own words in front of the USSC.

            1. SRG2   1 year ago

              Still not shrike, you lying cunt.

              I never mentioned speech - I was careful to say "similar". But as usual you're guilty of situational illiteracy.

      2. Nobartium   1 year ago

        No different than how utilities are regulated, and courts have long upheld those regulations.

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Even for 1a claims they have. In fact the collusion we saw from the Twitter files and other Social Media groups would extend 1a protections to users from those companies. Volokh has discussed this in the past.

          This article goes into some of the cases that have extended 1A requirements on companies that serve as a public front, which social media does.

          https://thefederalist.com/2024/03/05/texas-blew-it-in-big-tech-case-before-the-supreme-court/

          The entire argument that censorship is free speech while the same companies claim posts aren't their speech to avoid liability is amazing to me.

        2. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

          “Phone companies are required to carry all speech. It’s called “common carrier”, and it’s what Facebook, Twitter, and others should be considered.” (So have said, similar past idiots).

          Idiotic in SOOO many ways!!! Child-porn posts MUST be left up? Solicitations for murder for hire must be left up?
          And LOOK, doofus, Ma Bell carrying my PRIVATE conversation with Aunt Mildred can NEVER cause Ma Bell to be suspected of blessing my racist shit that I say to Ma Bell!!! Ma Bell will NEVER lose (advertising or other) revenue over what I say to Aunt Mildred!!! These things are NOT true of publically viewed posts!!! And that is a HUGE difference! Just HOW stupid and evil ARE you anyway, liar?

          Has shit EVER occurred to your tiny near-invisible brain that there is NO chance that Ma Bell will be boycotted, because they heard you admiring Hitler or Stalin on a private line, and therefore, some idiots will think that Ma Bell adores Hitler and Stalin?
          And… PREPARE your tiny brain now… SOME people just MIGHT boycott Reason.com or FacePoooo because Reason.com or FacePoooo did NOT take down your Adolf-Adoring and Hitler-Humping posts!!! Hello, SOME messages are viewable by a wide audience, and SOME are NOT!!! IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE!!!! HELLO?!?!!

          1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

            No one ever claimed common carrier requires supporting illegal activities. Taxi drivers aren't required to transport bank robbers.

            1. JesseAz   1 year ago

              The argument isn't about illegal posts either. It is about political speech. Sqrsly hates that.

              1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

                https://reason.com/2024/02/29/new-york-times-staffers-bullied-a-conservative-writer/

                Welcome to my nightmare! Looks like SCROTUS will SCROTE ‘EM good and hard, moist likely, and rule against Texas and Florid-Duh soon on their STATE micro-management of web sites and their moderation policies. (Interstate commerce comes to mind, and Balkanization of the internet ass well.)

                Can you imagine if SCROTUS gets it WRONG, and does SNOT SCROTE ‘EM good and hard?!?! Red states will outlaw “hurting the baby feelings” of sore-in-the-cunt cunt-sore-va-turds, by taking THEIR posts down, and blue states will outlaw “hurting the baby feelings” of people who were called by their WRONG preferred pronouns! People who moderate forums will be unable to freely travel to “enemy” states, for fear of the Long Arms of The Law!!! Comrades, ALL of your data will be TRACKED, and inputs from snitches and narcs will be collected, to BUST all of these CRIMINAL forum-moderators, on BOTH sides!!!

            2. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

              Are YOU prepared to pay $35/word for posts to Reason.com, if Government Almighty (ass opposed to the web site owners) becomes responsible (via 154,092 pages of law) for determining exactly which posts do, and which do not, violate the law? Because exactly THAT will result if we tear down S-230, and replace it with BOTH SIDES trying endlessly to pussy-grab each other!!!

      3. Rossami   1 year ago

        True, because SCOTUS precedent and social consensus are both settled that corporations have free speech and association rights but that those rights are diminished when compared to the individuals that those corporations serve.

        Now if you want to take on all common carrier precedents and reverse essentially all anti-discrimination law in favor of a purist approach to property owners' rights, I won't stop you and might even support you. But until you make that argument explicitly, we're working within the existing precedents. Telling a company what not to do is (sometimes) allowed while telling them what to do is (often) not.

      4. I woke up when Hillary talked about Reconstruction   1 year ago

        As if there were no connection between the media companies and the government officials.
        "founder Mark Zuckerberg used large donations to mobilize Democratic voters in swing states during the 2020 general election"
        That is triple control: The social platform,the candidates, and the already-in-place govt officials defining what is and is not controllable.

    3. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Yeah. It is odd to me. They spent so much energy here defending censorship by these companies only to finally reluctantly admit it happening. Now they are against states maximizing individual freedoms over corporations who were censoring at the behest of government.

      These collusion are still happening. CISA still exists.

      1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

        OPEN QUESTIONS FOR ALL ENEMIES OF SECTION 230

        The day after tomorrow, you get a jury summons. You will be asked to rule in the following case: A poster posted the following to social media: “Government Almighty LOVES US ALL, FAR more than we can EVER know!”

        This attracted protests from liberals, who thought that they may have detected hints of sarcasm, which was hurtful, and invalidated the personhoods of a few Sensitive Souls. It ALSO attracted protests from conservatives, who were miffed that this was a PARTIAL truth only (thereby being at least partially a lie), with the REAL, full TRUTH AND ONLY THE TRUTH being, “Government Almighty of Der TrumpfenFuhrer ONLY, LOVES US ALL, FAR more than we can EVER know! Thou shalt have NO Government Almighty without Der TrumpfenFuhrer, for Our TrumpfenFuhrer is a jealous Government Almighty!”

        Ministry of Truth, and Ministry of Hurt Baby Feelings, officials were consulted. Now there are charges!

        QUESTIONS FOR YOU THE JUROR:

        “Government Almighty LOVES US ALL”, true or false?

        “Government Almighty LOVES US ALL”, hurtful sarcasm or not?

        Will you be utterly delighted to serve on this jury? Keep in mind that OJ Simpson got an 11-month criminal trial! And a 4-month civil trial!

        1. Junkmailfolder   1 year ago

          Not enough copy pasting or ctrl-f replacing certain words with dirty words.

  3. Thoritsu   1 year ago

    I tend to agree, prohibit the government from interfering with online information HOWEVER…

    The arguments presented in this article, which is bereft of any specifics, are precisely analogous to saying: “It is hypocritical to allow parents to serve alcohol to children at home, but be against it being managed for everyone by the government.”

    No, it is not, and no it is not. This article reads like the Watchtower.

    1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

      Allowing private web site owners to set their own web site policies is the same as speech cunt-roll from Government Almighty? Or not? Which side of the fence do you shit upon? Shit's not clear, to me at least!

      So then perhaps parental supervision and Government Almighty supervision are exactly alike? Government Almighty LOVES US ALL, perhaps, just EXACTLY the same ass MomDad does?

      Twat could POSSIBLY go wrong when Making these kinds of assumptions? I, for one, WELCOME the supervision of our new Government Almighty MomDad Overlards!!!!

      Scienfoology Song… GAWD = Government Almighty’s Wrath Delivers

      Government loves me, This I know,
      For the Government tells me so,
      Little ones to GAWD belong,
      We are weak, but GAWD is strong!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      My Nannies tell me so!

      GAWD does love me, yes indeed,
      Keeps me safe, and gives me feed,
      Shelters me from bad drugs and weed,
      And gives me all that I might need!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      My Nannies tell me so!

      DEA, CIA, KGB,
      Our protectors, they will be,
      FBI, TSA, and FDA,
      With us, astride us, in every way!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
      My Nannies tell me so!

    2. I woke up when Hillary talked about Reconstruction   1 year ago

      All this fakeo cocktail party chatter...I tend to agree...are you drinking with your little finger in the air ??? Do you agree? No,I TEND 🙂

  4. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

    When, in the USA, we have access to 1.14 billion web sites… Number of web sites today… https://siteefy.com/how-many-websites-are-there/ … I don’t care much about supposed censorshit! We also have phone calls, pamphlets, letters, word of mouth, smoke signals, telegraphs, Morse code, cryptic codes on the back-sides of stop signals, messages on cereal boxes, nano-molecules in your vaccines, tin-foil hats, ESP, clairvoyance, text messages, and… Now I will show my advanced years… EMAILS!!!!

    I wish that the whining crybabies would JUST SHUT UP about HOW horribly bad censorshit is today!!! In the USA at least… We have MORE access to MORE lies, every day! We can freely access more lies than you can shake your dick at!

  5. TJJ2000   1 year ago

    Yes... THIS ARTICLE. Anyone who can't see these things being nothing more than a bipartisan attempt at controlling media (Gov-Media) is a fool. They might complain about those other 'icky' people but the very foundation is to CONTROL the media and VOID the peoples 1st Amendment Rights.

    Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    NOTHING about 'Age'. Stop passing treasonous USC laws that void the USA (defined by the US Constitution). Every politician who violates their oath of office should be impeached immediately. I'm sick of this sh*t empire conquering and destroying this once great nation.

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