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In June, the US Supreme Court reversed a lower court’s decision that barred the US government and its agencies from coordinating with social media to censor and suppress views that don’t follow the government’s narrative.
But free speech is not only in trouble in America. As David Thunder points out, free speech is in trouble on both sides of the Atlantic.
In the UK, Kier Starmer’s government is using recent civil unrest as an excuse to prosecute people for social media posts. In Ireland, the government is adamant it will strengthen its “hate speech” legislation. And in the EU, the Internal Market Commissioner suggested an interview between Elon Musk and Donald Trump might fall foul of Europe’s Digital Services Act.
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Free Speech in Trouble on Both Sides of the Atlantic
By David Thunder, 24 August 2024
It’s been a troubling summer, on both sides of the Atlantic, for those of us who care about free speech.
On 26 June, the US Supreme Court vacated a lower court judgment in Murthy v. Missouri[1] that barred officials from the White House, CDC, FBI, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (“CISA”), and the Surgeon General’s office from encouraging social media platforms to censor constitutionally protected speech.
Justice Samuel Alito, in a dissenting opinion that was joined by two other justices, highlighted the history of State-sponsored censorship unveiled in the case, and the stark implications of the majority ruling:
For months in 2021 and 2022, a coterie of officials at the highest levels of the Federal Government continuously harried and implicitly threatened Facebook with potentially crippling consequences if it did not comply with their wishes about the suppression of certain covid-19-related speech … The Court … permits the successful campaign of coercion in this case to stand as an attractive model for future officials who want to control what the people say, hear, and think.
Supreme Court Of The United States: Murthy, Surgeon General, et al. V. Missouri et al, Justice Alito dissenting opinion, 26 June 2024, Pg. 38
If we cross the Atlantic to America’s traditional allies, Ireland and Britain, things are far from rosy. The Irish government is adamant that it has not given up on its ambition to “strengthen” Ireland’s hate speech legislation, in spite of the fact that the Hate Offences Bill held up in the Senate (which I reported on in May 2023) proved extremely controversial due to some extremely draconian elements within it, including the right of officials to order the arrest of a private citizen for unpublished material that could “incite hatred” if published.
The British government has been using the UK anti-immigration riots, sparked by the Southport murder of children by the 17-year-old son of a Rwandan couple, as a pretext for prosecuting citizens for social media posts they believe could stir up “hatred” toward immigrants, or foment further rioting.
The fact that the line between incitement to “hatred” and legitimate political discourse is impossible to draw in an impartial and legally precise way is, of course, of no concern to prosecutors and politicians leading the UK into a censorious dystopia. Furthermore, the narrative that the anti-immigrant protests across the UK are just the handiwork of “far right” elements conveniently ignores the fact that there is huge public discontent with the UK’s immigration policies, as I explain in a recent post.
As if all of this was not enough, the EU Internal Market Commissioner, Thierry Breton, made an extraordinary intervention concerning a planned Twitter/X interview between X CEO Elon Musk and presidential candidate Donald Trump, suggesting that the interview might fall foul of Europe’s Digital Services Act.[2]
Although the EU Commission subsequently distanced themselves from Breton’s remarks, this intervention was a clear demonstration (in case we needed it) that the vague language of the Digital Services Act, with its allusion to the need to mitigate the risks of “disinformation,” “hate speech,” and threats to “civic discourse” and “public security,” was bound to be interpreted in an ideologically and politically partisan manner, as I explain in THIS post.
About the Author
David Thunder is an Irish political philosopher based at the University of Navarra with a passion for freedom and self-government. He publishes articles on his website HERE and articles and videos on his Substack page, ‘The Freedom Blog’, which you can subscribe to and follow HERE.
Note:
[1] In May 2022, Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt and Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration and its agencies, including the Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, for coordinating with social media companies to suppress free speech and censor conservative views on issues such as covid-19, election integrity and vaccine policies.
The case went through the Western District of Louisiana and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. The district court granted a preliminary injunction against several Biden administration officials and agencies, prohibiting them from contacting social media services to request the blocking of material, except for cases involving illegal activity.
In June, the Supreme Court of the United States (“SCOTUS”) reversed the district court’s ruling stating that the states lacked standing to bring the lawsuit. The Court found that the states failed to demonstrate a concrete and particularised injury, as they did not show that they or their citizens were directly affected by the alleged government pressure on social media companies.
The ruling has significant implications for future lawsuits alleging government censorship or viewpoint discrimination.
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Categories: Breaking News, World News
The increasing nonsense with the speech issue is ridiculous. It is one of the Four Freedoms in the UK, ie; the freedom of speech! Perhaps the standard of school teaching and parental upbringing is such that the government feels it must poke its nose in and advise?
[…] READ MORE AT THE EXPOSE […]
[…] https://expose-news.com/2024/08/28/free-speech-is-in-trouble/ […]
This is the newest manufacturered distraction by govts.
Hi,
Yeah it doesn’t look good , my guess / opinion is censorship will pick up slot of steam as time goes by,
They by 2027 a person will need an Id internet number to access the internet in united states maybe it’s world wide I don’t know.
Here’s an article about how a reporter was arrested for asking a question to Vice President Kamala Harris Who is a Democrat President candidate
https://babylonbee.com/news/reporter-who-asked-kamala-a-question-charged-with-hate-crime
When you remove free speech you are permitting people to be abused by the system AKA government. That is what has started to happen in all western societies that you become no different to the uighurs in China.
There is no accountability by government so all that is left is violence against the government / society that would persecute you/. Or you tell me a way to object to the oppression.
Then you get censorship creep, so what starts up only on a few unfortunate souls the more and more people angry against the government so does the censorship.
That is how this plays out and to overthrow the shackles of slavery being imposed upon you is to carry out direct violent acts against anything supporting this system of tyranny.
The above is what Starmer has brought to society, a society of slaves who if they speak out of turn are thrown in concentration camps. Concentration camps because the UK does not have enough jails as it is.
https://x.com/robinmonotti/status/1793568491456668057?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
Hi Mark,
I agree with your comment.
And your comment also reminded me of indoctrination / brainwashing.
And In your comment you give impression your aware of how things are in china also.
I Just found this article about how Chinese High School Students go to school for 12 hours a day and it dawned on me that’s the Chinese way to get the Chinese people to work 12 shifts in the huge Chinese factories…
Here’s a link if you’re interested.
https://nsliy-interactive.org/2016/11/01/a-day-in-chinese-high-school
Unable to post on Facebook!
[…] Free speech is in trouble on both sides of the Atlantic In June, the US Supreme Court reversed a lower court’s decision that barred the US government and its agencies from coordinating with social media to censor and suppress views that don’t follow the government’s narrative. But free speech is not only in trouble in America. As David Thunder points out, free speech is in trouble on both sides of the Atlantic. […]
Thanks for fixing the Trinity reader, now it works perfectly !!
Hi Richard, thank you for keeping us updated on the situation.
We have the same problem in Australia too!!
[…] Read More […]
[…] Free speech is in trouble on both sides of the Atlantic. In June, the US Supreme Court reversed a lower court’s decision that barred the government and its agencies from coordinating with social media to censor/suppress views that don’t follow their narrative. Also see Labour Party decides to create fear. Keir Starmer, in a few months, has managed to divide and destroy the United Kingdom. Hardworking, high-tax-paying citizens fear that anything they might think, do, or say could end in a jail term. […]