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Free Speech

Free Speech Coalition Slaps Censorious E.U. Commissioner Who Threatened Elon Musk

The European Union is an engine of global control-freakery.

J.D. Tuccille | 8.23.2024 7:00 AM

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European Union Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton | Olivier Corsan/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Olivier Corsan/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

Earlier this month, European Union Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton raised eyebrows when he publicly warned Elon Musk to respect the E.U.'s censorship laws during a then-pending interview with U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump. Even for the E.U., which has been slipping not-so-slowly towards soft totalitarianism, the attempt to extend E.U. jurisdiction to North America was a high water mark for presumption. Now a coalition of civil libertarians is calling Breton out for his disregard for freedom of speech.

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The EU Can Censor It if Europeans Might See It?

"I am writing to you in the context of recent events in the United Kingdom and in relation to the planned broadcast on your platform X of a live conversation between a US presidential candidate and yourself, which will also be accessible to users in the EU," Breton wrote to Musk August 12 in a letter made available on X. The letter warned of the requirements of European law including the Digital Services Act (DSA), especially regarding broadly defined "harmful content," as well as pointing out that X is already undergoing proceedings over what officials in Brussels consider "illegal content" and "disinformation."

"As the relevant content is accessible to EU users and being amplified also in our jurisdiction, we cannot exclude potential spillovers in the EU," Breton continued. "Therefore, we are monitoring the potential risks in the EU associated with the dissemination of content that may incite violence, hate, and racism in conjunction with major political—or societal—events around the world, including debates and interviews in the context of elections."

The letter also invoked concerns about the effects of X content on rioting in the United Kingdom—which is another country not part of the E.U. (though it has its own creeping censorship regime). It was, quite explicitly, an attempt to extend the European Union's increasingly restrictive speech controls past its borders using the excuse that, in the digital age, content legal elsewhere, but not in the E.U., might catch the attention of a resident of that unfortunate quasi-super-state. That bothered more than a few people.

You Can't Censor the World

"We are particularly concerned by your attempt to use the DSA to stifle freedom of expression beyond the European Union because of what you call 'spillovers,'" a coalition of organizations and individuals responded to Breton this week. "Warning an online platform that streaming an interview with one of the two key candidates in the United States presidential election may be incompatible with an online safety law is more characteristic of an autocratic nation than a democracy."

While Breton inserted a few platitudes in his threatening missive to Musk about "freedom of expression and of information," the civil libertarians weren't impressed. They dismissed his "abstract references to ensuring freedom of expression" as "not sufficient to guarantee freedom of expression" and cautioned that his "loose paraphrase of the carefully crafted language of the DSA risks casting a long shadow upon free expression and exceeding the authority given to you."

The letter was signed by The Future of Free Speech, TechFreedom, Insitute H21, The Copia Institute, Justitia, Adam Smith Institute, Center for Political Studies, Istituto Bruno Leoni, and individuals including former ACLU President Nadine Strossen. The signers are based in the European Union, the U.K., and the U.S., reflecting shared concerns by people already under the rule of Brussels, and those over whom the E.U. seeks to extend its reach. The inclusion of European organizations is important, since they may get a hearing from national governments and E.U. parliamentarians who have some say in Brussels.

Europe's Far Reach

This isn't the first time we've seen European control-freakery slip its leash and extend across the EU's borders. The continent's ambivalent attitude towards free expression has increasingly affected online conversations as platforms that operate globally adopt rules intended to satisfy the most-restrictive major jurisdiction—almost always the E.U. These rules are then applied to everybody, since it's easier to do so than to create virtual borders with different regulations for the residents of countries with greater and lesser degrees of freedom.

"The Brussels Effect refers to the EU's unilateral power to regulate global markets," Columbia University Law School's Anu Bradford, an authority on the issue, wrote in 2019. "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."

Censorship isn't the only European regulatory preference exported by the Brussels Effect. The E.U.'s tendency to intrusive regulation hobbled Microsoft's ability to secure its software, worsening the impact of the recent CrowdStrike software update fiasco.

"As the issue with CrowdStrike shows, the impact of European regulation is no longer isolated to just Europe," the Cato Institute's Jennifer Huddleston wrote earlier this month. "As with many regulatory compliance requirements, it may not be technologically or economically feasible to simply offer a different product in Europe."

Of course, Breton wasn't just relying on the E.U.'s market clout. He openly demanded that Musk apply European speech restrictions to a conversation with a former, and possibly future, president of the United States. He insisted "DSA obligations apply without exceptions or discrimination to the moderation of the whole user community and content of X (including yourself as a user with over 190 million followers) which is accessible to EU users."

Pushback, Principled and Profane

Telling a U.S. citizen based in Texas that his social media posts are subject to European content rules may have been a step too far even for Breton's E.U. colleagues. European Commission spokesperson Ariana Podesta insisted Breton acted on his own, without consulting other officials. Politico reported that Breton's "own staff were back-pedaling hard."

For his part, Musk responded to Breton with a pithy meme from Tropic Thunder. It urged: "Take a big step back and literally, fuck your own face!"

That's a sentiment E.U. busybodies should take to heart every bit as much as they should the free-speech coalition's demand that "the European Commission and national authorities should ensure that the DSA is not applied in a way that harms freedom of expression not only in Europe but globally."

In terms both principled and profane, the control freaks of the world should be told to get lost.

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: That Doesn't Sound Like Us

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

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  1. Longtobefree   9 months ago

    Well, we know from history that a timely, strongly worded letter will always stop fascism, don't we?

  2. Stupid Government Tricks   9 months ago

    This made me laugh.

    Even for the E.U., which has been slipping not-so-slowly towards soft totalitarianism

    Reminded me of Brexit and so many lefties caterwauling about Britain becoming independent and throwing off its EU shackles.

    I wonder how many remainers still would rather be part of the more tolerant EU, and how many leavers wish they had stayed in the EU. I don't remember any predictions of the current state of affairs.

    1. Miss Ann Thrope (She/It)   9 months ago

      Sadly, there are many remoaners that want to rejoin the Fourth Reich. Not least is the new prime minister, his minions.

      1. JohnZ   9 months ago

        You had better be careful of what you say or British top cop Mark Rowland will have you arrested for wrong think and crime speak.

        1. damikesc   9 months ago

          Which is why I advocate an official response is that even THREATENING that will sever all alliances with us completely.

    2. Overt   9 months ago

      You don't seem to understand that 40% of the US, and 50% of the UK see administrative elites as a good thing.

  3. Wizzle Bizzle   9 months ago

    Hmmm... Which side of the aisle in America do these policies mirror? I remeber something about policing misinformation and banning accounts, but I just can't quite recall who did it.

    Oh well. I'm sure that's not really relevant for American readers of a website whose views might possibly be suppressed.

    1. Miss Ann Thrope (She/It)   9 months ago

      It was for our own good!

    2. JohnZ   9 months ago

      They spelled it out quite clearly at the DNC convention. Komrade Tim will take the top job of making sure everybody is on the same page....or else.

  4. Miss Ann Thrope (She/It)   9 months ago

    "European Commission spokesperson Ariana Podesta insisted Breton acted on his own, without consulting other officials."

    Why did I just get a mental image of a bull and a toilet bowl?

  5. flag58   9 months ago

    Australia tried the same thing till their own courts ruled against it.

    1. JohnZ   9 months ago

      Screw Australia, the land of beta soy boys and wannabe dictators.

    2. LIBtranslator   9 months ago

      No problemo. Venezuela's Suprema corte just upheld Maduro's ballot count. It ruled that Trump won in 2020 and that Bolsonaro too was reelected caudillo of Brazil. Let's see what they say about Australia's at-gunpoint voting law and election procedures.

  6. tb11   9 months ago

    Tsk, JD. Still telling that untruth about poor little Microsoft being unable to secure its kernel because of the big bad EU? But hey, I get it - as long as a trusted corporation MS is making a public claim to that effect, and it suits your rhetorical purposes, why not throw it along with all the other anti-EU arguments?

    I'm disappointing to see that you are choosing compelling-sounding-narrative over actual truth-telling in your reporting, something Reason generally declaims as the greatest sin of the mainstream media.

    We are, at least, in agreement that unelected European (or Australian) bureaucrats shouldn't be censoring American political speech.

    P.S. There were only 15 comments, so let's not pretend you didn't read them or are unaware of any counterclaim's to MS's poor-me exculpatory defense.

    1. LIBtranslator   9 months ago

      Lotsa freshly-minted anonymous anarco-MAGAt sockpuppets unlinked to any published blog or political website. How unusual for an election year!

  7. JohnZ   9 months ago

    That Breten has the audacity to threaten Americans over their First Amendment rights indicates these little wannabe tyrants have gotten out of line. Maybe a little retaliatory action is what's needed:
    Get the U.S. out of NATO and the U.N.
    Remove all military bases throughout Europe and Britain. Bring all our people home and place them on the southern border. Let the E.U. go it alone, see how that works for them.
    order all E.U. representatives to leave and go back to their little fiefdoms.
    F***'em. We don't need the E.U. or the U.N. and for that matter the W.H.O.

  8. SMP0328   9 months ago

    [Thierry Breton] insisted "DSA obligations apply without exceptions or discrimination to the moderation of the whole user community and content of X (including yourself as a user with over 190 million followers) which is accessible to EU users."

    This jackass wants to control all online speech. He needs to be reminded that he lives in the European Union, not the World Union. We stopped being within any European jurisdiction as of July 4, 1776.

  9. Kungpowderfinger   9 months ago

    I imagine the grift will become a lot less lucrative for EU “leadership” if, say, a certain deplorable American pulls US financial support out of NATO. As he threatened once before, IIRC.

    No wonder the squirts across the pond feel they need to threaten US media, and influence our elections.

  10. LIBtranslator   9 months ago

    The EU is acting on American precedent. After the failed Boxer Revolt against foreign dope dumping, China leveraged U.S. influence against Europeans by boycotting our exports. TR promptly signed a “Pure” Drugs law and got the Hague to press for a global ban on opium. After this caused WW1 with huge profits, the billy-baton was passed to the League of Nations opium cartel. Those worthies, eager for most of Germany’s share, so overreached as to get German corporations to fund the Hitler party. Since THAT war the UN has been using the billy-baton to tell the world at gunpoint to burn all crops distasteful to our entrenched looter Kleptocracy and censor all media on such subjects. Amerika has censored and drug-dictated the world for over a century, setting the example Europe now follows.

    1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   9 months ago

      Uh huh. And then what happened, grandpa hank?

    2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   9 months ago

      So, “The Hague” caused WWI, at Teddy Roosevelts request?

      The Hague didn’t exist until 1920, and Roosevelt was out of office in 1909.

      This was one of your more accurate and lucid efforts, I’ll give you that

    3. JohnZ   9 months ago

      The Hague, Teddy Roosevelt???
      Someone fell asleep during history class.
      Opium had nothing to do with WW1 and certainly nothing to do with the rise of Hitler and national Socialism.
      That piece of fictional writing isn't even worth the time it took to create it.
      Lay off the booze for a while.

  11. Public Entelectual   9 months ago

    Breton's point of departure seems to be the great African statesman who assured his citizens:
    "There is freedom of speech, but I cannot guarantee freedom after speech."

    "

  12. JohnZ   9 months ago

    The E.U. and for the most part liberals everywhere are embracing totalitarianism as a means to control people first through censorship and now by jailing anyone who dares speak out.
    Countries in the west are not as free as people believe they are and it's going to become much worse if they don't wake up. Even writing this would get me tossed into a prison for the crime of wrong think.

  13. MWAocdoc   9 months ago

    I'm thinking all of the "platform" providers in the EU could find some common ground here to "slap" Breton for real. What do you think would happen to communications in the EU if every high tech company stopped all services to everyone inside the EU, let's say tomorrow? Do you think there would be anywhere in the EU Thierry could hide from the howling mobs who were no longer able to text, email, watch cable or satellite video, transfer funds or do any online banking? Do you think there might be a sudden reversal of the tough talk authoritarian policy in the EU?

  14. Wally   9 months ago

    The UK is setting violent criminals free to create room to lock up the people that say mean things about said violent criminals online.
    The story of our time is western governments turning the security apparatus against its most patriotic citizens while it floods their countries with the 3rd world.

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