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Refusing to Censor Speech Isn't the Same as Agreeing with It
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If someone said something I found annoying or offensive, my mother taught me, the appropriate response was to allow them to finish speaking and reply with a calm, considered counterargument. Now you’re supposed to talk over them until they shut up.

Or, better yet, cut their mic and show them the door.

Censorship has become a bipartisan norm. Why waste the time and energy to conceive and articulate an intelligent rebuttal when you can make your opponent shut up?

Alan Dershowitz, a nationally known former Harvard Law professor, announced that he was leaving the Democratic Party because the party’s organizers allowed pro-Palestinian speakers to address the Democratic convention in Chicago. “They had more anti-Jewish, anti-Zionist people who were speaking, starting with (Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez) — a miserable, anti-Zionist bigot,” Dershowitz said on “Talkline with Zev Brenner.” “Then of course they had (Sen. Elizabeth) Warren, who is one of the most anti-Jewish people in the Senate. Then they had Bernie Sanders, one of the most anti-Jewish people in the Senate.” (Sanders is Jewish.)

“(B)y giving them platforms, what it says is that when AOC does call Israel a genocidal country and rails against it, she now has the imprimatur of the Democratic Party,” he argued.

On the opposite side of the ideological divide, high-profile podcaster and ex-Fox News host Tucker Carlson caught flak for hosting Darryl Cooper, a Holocaust revisionist, on his show on the social media platform X. Rep. Mike Lawler of New York told The Jewish Insider: “Platforming known Holocaust revisionists is deeply disturbing.”

I’m a leftist. Some of my fans lost their minds when I invited former Klansman David Duke to guest on my old talk-radio show on KFI Los Angeles. Feeling betrayed, they accused me of amplifying and tacitly endorsing a voice of the racist far right. I recall the exchange as vigorous and challenging, a rare opportunity to hear ideas on both sides of a variety of issues aired in an intelligent format.

The way I saw it, many Americans share Duke’s far-right views whether they hear them on the air or not. This was a chance to expose the existence of these thoughts to blissfully unaware liberals and workshop arguments against them. I would do it again in a heartbeat — but I’d become the target of even more venom now.

Platforming speech is not the same as endorsing what is said.

Platforming is the act of providing a means of public expression. A newspaper that publishes an interview with or even just a short quote by a person gives them a platform. A college that invites someone to give a speech or participate in a panel discussion is engaged in platforming, as is a cable network that decides to add a channel to its lineup.

None of these actions is a tacit endorsement.

Nor can it be.

Unless it limits its opinionists to a single voice or aggressively enforces a rigid set of ideological strictures upon a group of them — no one need apply unless they are, for example, socially liberal, fiscally conservative and opposed to military adventurism except in Myanmar — any newspaper that simultaneously platforms one writer who disagrees materially with a second writer (and a third and a fourth) creates contrasts and disagreements. Inherently, because no institution can simultaneously endorse conflicting points of view, no endorsement has occurred.

Many news stories include quotes by both a Democrat and a Republican. If platforming the Democrat is an endorsement, how should one explain the appearance of the Republican? Most universities host speakers representing a range of views on a variety of subjects, many of them controversial. It makes no sense to imply that those institutions agree with everyone they invite on campus.

Until fairly recently, most Americans appreciated the value of showcasing a spectrum of ideological and stylistic views in public fora. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis famously wrote in 1926 that the solution to offensive speech was “more speech, not enforced silence.” Today what we call Brandeis’ counter-speech doctrine — the answer to bad speech is good speech, not censorship — is in grave danger. Rather than argue against their opponents, cultural and journalistic gatekeepers are increasingly resorting to telling those with whom they to disagree to STFU.

Censorship drives dangerous rhetoric underground. It conveys a sense that purveyors of “mainstream” opinion are contemptuous of others, unable to defend their views, possibly intellectually feeble, and just plain bullies. Mostly, it doesn’t work.

After the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, Twitter suspended 70,000 accounts, including that of then-President Donald Trump. Facebook acted similarly. A year later, in 2022, liberal censors claimed victory. “The best research that we have suggests that deplatforming is very powerful,” Rebekah Tromble, director of the Institute for Data, Democracy and Politics at George Washington University, told NPR. “It means that really prominent actors who helped stoke the Stop the Steal campaign that led to the insurrection have much less reach, get much less audience and attention. And that is very, very, very important.”

Was it? Trump, the biggest Jan. 6er of them all, is also the undisputed kingpin of the Republican Party, in whose primaries he ran unopposed. Running neck-and-neck against Vice President Kamala Harris, he may easily be reelected.

ORDER IT NOW

The belief that editors, producers, tech CEOs and other gatekeepers control enough outlets to deny their enemies an outlet to a significant audience is a profoundly flawed assumption. To whatever extent this was true in an era of four television news networks and cities with a morning and afternoon paper and not much else — and, even then, there were underground presses and alternative newsweeklies like The Village Voice — the internet has blown that idea to smithereens. Al Jazeera, the Qatar-based cable news network whose American channel was shut down after the War on Terror-era Bush administration leaned on U.S. broadcasters, disseminates live news from Gaza and other global hotspots via its website, which is one of the biggest in this country. InfoWars, Alex Jones’ “fringe” news site, gets over 15 million monthly visits despite Jones’ epic legal defeat at the hands of parents whose children were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School, who were awarded $1.5 billion. Any government or other corporate entity that tries to control information narratives in an era of fragmented media is playing whack-a-mole with a million rodents.

As long as there’s an audience for what someone has to say, you can’t keep a good — or bad — man down.

Ted Rall (Twitter: @tedrall), the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, co-hosts the left-vs-right DMZ America podcast with fellow cartoonist Scott Stantis.

 
• Category: Ideology • Tags: Censorship, Freedom of Speech 
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  1. What a shitlib bore this guy is. What is he doing on this site??

  2. Refusing to Censor Speech Isn’t the Same as Agreeing with It

    Ted Rall is a Leftist blogger. “Free Speech” is not a Leftist value. Rather, the Left are generally fond of thought crime enforcement and frequently leverage the emotionality and irrationality of the beleaguered masses to stifle discourse and, when possible, ruin the lives of people who say things that upset Leftist sensibilities. The title of Rall’s article is a statement of an extremely basic, fundamental prerequisite to amiable discourse between disagreeing parties. A simplistic, common sense truism like “you don’t have to violently silence everyone you disagree with” is not even worth the effort of saying out loud to most readers of Unz.com. In Ted’s world, on the other hand, this article is counterintuitive and runs against the grain of demotic Leftist political instincts. Freedom of speech is a cause celebre of self-perceived renegade Leftists who think they are being brave by opposing the knee-jerk bloodthirst of the demotic outrage mobs of the Left.

  3. meamjojo says:

    “I’m a leftist. Some of my fans lost their minds when I invited former Klansman David Duke to guest on my old talk-radio show on KFI Los Angeles.”

    You are wrong Rall. You don’t offer a platform to small timers like David Duke who have no ability to gain much attention outside of their staunch supporters. Why help people like this gain even one new convert?

    • Replies: @BuelahMan
  4. Sadly free speech has always been more of an ideal than a reality. A Boston newspaper editor who published a series of exposes in 1769 on the hypocrisy of the revolutionary leaders was intimidated by a “Sons of Liberty” lynch mob to flee the country. The virtue-signaling Abolitionist loudmouth William Lloyd Garrison was nearly lynched on Boston Common while the police looked on. But theses kinds of things don’t fit the myth and so vanish down the memory hole. Today when liberals call for censorship and one of the few voices for freedom in Congress is the rightwing loony tune Marjorie Taylor Greene, and we believe the most dangerous enemies of freedom are our own fellow citizens, we are deep in uncharted territory.

    This may be the time that Ben Franklin predicted when he introduced the new federal constitution in 1787, saying the imperfect compromise government it created “can only end in Despotism, as other forms have done before it, when the people shall become so corrupted as to need despotic Government, being incapable of any other.”

    In this context, for those who rant about Rall’s politics, in Guerin’s 1936 book Fascism and Big Business is this succinct analysis, “Socialism is less a religion than a scientific conception. Therefore it appeals more to intelligence and reason than to the senses and the imagination. Socialism does not impose a faith to be accepted without discussion; it presents a rational criticism of the capitalist system and requires of everybody, before his adherence, a personal effort of reason and judgment. It appeals more to the brain than to the eye or the nerves; it seeks to convince the reader or listener calmly, not to seize him, move him, and hypnotize him.” Steinbeck commented that socialism never caught on in America as it did in other industrialized nations because our cultural myth does not allow us to see ourselves as an oppressed proletariat, but rather as temporarily embarrassed millionaires.

  5. No, goyim. You don’t understand. You have to allow people who only ever lie and who explicitly will not stop trying to kill every member of your race until none are left to talk as much as they want. You cannot ever censor or ban them. They must be allowed to keep promoting their objectively failed ideologies forever, and you must put up with their hoaxes until the end of time, or until they trick enough people to take power, whereupon they will kill you and erase everything you have ever done, banning truth for all eternity. You have to allow this. You are evil if you don’t allow objective, metaphysical evil to control you.

    Drink bleach, commie.

    • Thanks: Antediluvian Doomer
  6. Scum all around sucking up to Zion.

    Dems, GOP, Evangelicals, HBD, GloboHomo, etc.

    Pathetic.

    How MAGA Became Just as CRINGE as Blue MAGA – w/ Kim Iversen


    Video Link

  7. BuelahMan says:
    @meamjojo

    How dare anyone usher even a single anti-jewish word aloud? Otherwise the big guys like memehomo will usher a fatwa against the Ralls of the world. One best simply agree with every fanatical thought memewhoremo issues.

  8. Free speech and rational argument are vestiges of the enlightenment project. At its core, the enlightenment was an attack on religion masquerading as a discussion of how democratic politics should be carried out. Fact is truth is non-negotiable. The paradigm example of the sharing of truth is a church service. At church, you don’t give a few moments to the devil to make his case. The devil is never platformed in a church.

    The problem we have in the US today is that “history” is being contested. There is only one correct story for what happened. However, to know the correct story we need technology beyond what we have today. There are often different versions of what was said or even what happened. That is why there is a contest. To pick an example, as monumental as the Holocaust was, both Churchill and Eisenhower left it out of their WWII memoirs. How is that possible? Or dropping the Atomic bomb on Japan, McArthur, Eisenhower, Leahy, and Nimitz all thought it was a bad idea. Truman did it anyway. What kind of an idiot was Truman?

    The place we fight about platforming is where we discuss what is our negotiated history. Those who seek to deny a platform generally have the worst evidence on their side of the historical debate.

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