Biden and Harris, Along With Liberals in Brazil and Europe, Quashing Free Speech in the Name of Disinformation
Every two-bit authoritarian in history has justified censoring its citizens as a way of protecting them from the menace of disinformation.

In 2019, Vice President Harris told CNNâs Jake Tapper that social media companies âare directly speaking to millions and millions of people without any level of oversight or regulation and it has to stop.â
Does it?
Every two-bit authoritarian in history has justified censoring its citizens as a way of protecting them from the menace of disinformation.
Yet social media sites, contra the reliably illiberal Ms. Harris, arenât âdirectly speakingâ to anyone. Millions of individuals are interacting and speaking to millions of other individuals. Really, thatâs what grinds the modern leftâs gears: unsupervised conversations.
Take the Brazilian Supreme Court panel that unanimously upheld the decision by one of its justices to shut down Elon Muskâs X over alleged âmisinformationâ fears.
We must assume that the Democratic Partyâs presidential nominee, who once promised to ban guns via an executive order, agrees with Justice de Moraesâs decision to shut down a social media platform for refusing to bend to the stateâs demands of censorship.
The Associated Press reports that the Brazilian high courtâs decision âundermines the effort by Musk and his supporters to cast Justice Alexandre de Moraes as an authoritarian renegade who is intent on censoring political speech in Brazil.â
Really? Because it seems to me that the state shuttering one of the popular social media sites unmistakably qualifies as a ban on political speech, whether one person is responsible or an entire government.
And make no mistake, it is politically motivated. âJust because the guy has a lot of money doesnât mean he can disrespect this (country),â the Brazilian president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, argued.
Well, the South American nationâs constitution, like ours, apparently protects free expression â making no distinction between the poor and rich: âAny and all censorship of a political, ideological, and artistic nature is prohibited.â
You can tell Brazil is super serious about the matter because the bullet point appears in Chapter V, Article 220, or page 148 in my translated copy.
Letâs concede, however, that Justice de Moraes isnât any kind of renegade, merely a conventional Brazilian autocrat. In the same way, Mr. Musk isnât merely another billionaire but a tech chief executive who generally views free expression as a neutral principle.
I suppose the best evidence for this claim is the fact that even as Brazil bans Mr. Muskâs site, he allows the far-left president to have an account on X with 9 million followers.
In Europe, free expression is also ostensibly protected by the constitution. Well, the right is contingent on ânational security,â âterritorial disorder,â âcrime,â âhealth,â and other highly malleable issues that ultimately allow police officers in the United Kingdom and Germany to show up at your door and throw you in prison for offensive posts.
As Justice Antonin Scalia once pointed out, âEvery Banana Republic has a Bill of Rights.â The question is: How close are we to being one?
Uncomfortably close is the answer.
Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg recently admitted that senior Biden administration officials ârepeatedly pressuredâ Facebook to âcensorâ Covid content, including âhumor and satire,â during the pandemic. Mr. Zuckerberg vowed that he would never let his company be pushed around again. Iâm sorry if we donât take him at his word.
Tech companies enjoy unencumbered free association rights and are free to keep or kick off anyone they desire from their platform, as they should. Before Mr. Muskâs purchase of Twitter, now known as X, contemporary left-wingers celebrated the independence of social media platforms. âIf you donât like it, build your own Twitter,â they would say.
Okay. Only when corporations, who often spend tens of millions each year at Washington rent-seeking and lobbying for favorable regulations, take marching orders from state officials and giant federal bureaucracies on the contours of permissible speech, we have a big problem.
If presidential candidates truly cared about âdemocracy,â theyâd be advocating anti-cronyism laws and forbidding government officials from interfering with or pressuring private entities on speech.
Yet, these days, many Americans no longer view free expression as a neutral, liberal virtue worth defending. Foremost among them, apparently, is the Democratic presidential ticket.
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