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Posts tagged ‘Free Speech’

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF OCTOBER 20, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF OVTOBER 13, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF OCTOBER 6, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 29, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 15, 2023


Californiaโ€™s Pro-Trans Child Custody Bill Is Pure Emotional Blackmail


BY:ย KYLEE GRISWOLD | SEPTEMBER 15, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/09/15/californias-pro-trans-child-custody-bill-is-pure-emotional-blackmail/

California Gov. Gavin Newsom

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Thereโ€™s a bill sitting on Gavin Newsomโ€™s desk right now that would not only render the First Amendment null and void but also strip parents of their most fundamental rights and responsibilities toward their children. Itโ€™s not a matter of if the far-left California governor will sign it, but when.

The bill, the Transgender, Gender-Diverse, and Intersex Youth Empowerment Act (AB 957) โ€” which last week passed the Senate and then, on a party-line vote, the Assembly โ€” dictates that courts must consider โ€œgender affirmationโ€ in child custody battles. The soon-to-be-law states that in seeking to determine the โ€œhealth, safety, and welfare of the child,โ€ courts must consider โ€œa parentโ€™s affirmation of the childโ€™s gender identity or gender expression.โ€

While some Democrat apologists in the media pretend itโ€™s absurd to think this means conservative parents would ever lose custody of their children by nature of holding conservative values โ€” It doesnโ€™t say judges *have* to side with the loving, accepting parents, you hateful rubes! โ€” we know how this will go. Itโ€™s California, for crying out loud.

But we donโ€™t have to extrapolate much. Other media have dropped the facade and told us exactly where this bill will lead. Hereโ€™s CNBC:

Under the proposed law, parents, who fail to acknowledge and support their childโ€™s gender transition, could face potential consequences, including the loss of custody rights to another parent or even the state itself. The billโ€™s supporters argue that it is in the best interest of children, aiming to create a more inclusive and affirming environment for gender-diverse youth.

Thereโ€™s the quiet part out loud: A mom or dad who opts not to indulge their child in mental illness, who uses the childโ€™s given name, prohibits the use of puberty blockers, or discourages sterilizing hormones or surgery could lose the child not only to the other parent, which is egregious enough โ€” but to theย state.

As Sarah Parshall Perry, senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation, has pointed out, this law would stomp on the Constitutionโ€™s guarantee to free speech and the free exercise of religion. It would โ€œmuzzleโ€ parents and prevent them from rearing their children in accordance with their deeply held beliefs โ€” beliefs, by the way, that have been regarded by both Christians and non-Christians as basic laws of nature and fundamentals of civil society until about five minutes ago. This is more than a legal dilemma for Constitutional scholars and gender-studies midwits to bat around in mahogany rooms and shoddy amici, however. If it feels more nefarious and personal โ€” thatโ€™s because it is. Weโ€™ve seen it before.

Itโ€™s classic Democrat emotional blackmail. Itโ€™s the left waging psychological warfare on its ideological opponents with barely veiled threats.ย Oh, you want to see your own child? Well, thatโ€™s interesting because xir needs some hormones xe says you wonโ€™t provide. You donโ€™t seem too concerned with xirโ€™s health and safety.

This brand of emotional blackmail has already been tested and perfected with the suicide card. That is, the aforementioned gender-studies โ€œexperts,โ€ medical professionals, journalists, and other Very Smart Peopleโ„ข have decided, based on little to no evidence, that transgender medical interventions are the only acceptable course of action for confused kids. In fact, anything short of full โ€œaffirmationโ€ is deadly, they say.

With this conclusion in mind โ€” and at the expense ofย mountingย evidenceย showingย pro-trans policiesย causeย the most harmย โ€” theyโ€™ve devised โ€œresearchโ€ that Democrats then present as unassailable. The methodology of these biased studies is wildly problematic. Pro-trans ideologues habitually equate correlation with causation, fail to treat gender dysphoria as a mental illness and ignore underlying mental health issues such as depression, discount the potential role of wrong-sex hormones in unhealthy ideations, ignore hard facts about the ways puberty eventually resolves almost all dysphoria in minors, discounts rampant social factors, and turns a blind eye to the growing chorus of detransitioners who fell for leftist lies and are now filled with despair.

[READ: Telling Kids To Hate Their Biology Might Be Whatโ€™s Actually Killing Them]

But never let bad science get in the way of an agenda. Would you rather have a live son or a dead daughter?, they manipulate. A lack of acceptance has driven trans suicide rates and self-harm through the roof.

A law this unconstitutional is bound to wind up in the courts. And I suppose we should be thankful thereโ€™s one remaining recourse. But if all conservatives have on their side is a waiting game until the courts eventually slap California lawmakers on the wrist, they have nothing. In fact, getting GOP-opposed laws tied up in the slow gears of the court system is exactly what Democrats are expecting. Theyโ€™re counting on it. The more they can keep conservatives and jurists busy, the more radical laws and policies they can keep shoving out the door. We canโ€™t stop them all. How many poor parents and children will be casualties in the meantime?

But donโ€™t lose the human element in the legislative games. Rabid ideologues and iconoclasts who want to remake America and its children in their own image arenโ€™t afraid to use the most vulnerable among us as pawns. Self-censorship will only be the start. Itโ€™s emotional blackmail, plain and simple. Do what we say, or else.


Kylee Griswold is the editorial director of The Federalist. She previously worked as the copy editor for the Washington Examiner magazine and as an editor and producer at National Geographic. She holds a B.S. in Communication Arts/Speech and an A.S. in Criminal Justice and writes on topics including feminism and gender issues, religion, and the media. Follow her on Twitter @kyleezempel.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 8, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF AUGUST 31, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF AUGUST 25, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF AUGUST 18, 2023


6 Takeaways from the Biden Adminโ€™s Court Quest to Keep Censoring Americans Online


BY:ย JOY PULLMANN | AUGUST 14, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/08/14/6-takeaways-from-the-biden-admins-court-quest-to-keep-censoring-americans-online/

Jen Psaki

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On Thursday afternoon, three Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals judges heard Biden administration arguments to let government keep pressuring social media monopolies to ban ideas they donโ€™t like from the internet. On July 4, a lower court had ordered the Biden administration to cease what it called โ€œarguably โ€ฆ the most massive attack against free speech in United Statesโ€™ history.โ€ The Fifth Circuit paused that injunction on July 14 and heard oral arguments against it on Aug. 10 in Missouri v. Biden.

In this major case likely to hit the U.S. Supreme Court, the Biden administration is fighting to stop American citizens from sharing messages government officials donโ€™t like. This case uncovered reams of White House and other high-level officials threatening internet monopolies with the end of their entire business model if they didnโ€™t ban speech by Democratsโ€™ political opponents.

โ€œItโ€™s far beyond the scope of what people realize,โ€ says a lawyer for the plaintiffs, Zhonette Brown, of the public interest firm New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA).

Internal documents Twitter divulged under new owner Elon Musk provided more proof that social media monopolies are silencing Americans from Tucker Carlson and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to millions of non-famous citizens at the behest of government pressure. Here are some key takeaways from Thursdayโ€™s oral arguments and earlier revelations from this massive First Amendment case.

1. By the Governmentโ€™s Own Definition, Itโ€™s Censoring

Key to Thursdayโ€™s arguments was the question of coercion: Did government demands of internet monopolies equal coercion, or were those merely officials advocating for their views?

โ€œIf the government was doing something like that in a coercive manner, then that could be the subject of a proper injunction,โ€ Department of Justice lawyer Daniel Bentele Hahs Tenny told the court in his opening remarks. โ€œThe problem is that what you would have to do is say, โ€˜Here is what the government is doing thatโ€™s coercive, and Iโ€™m enjoining that.’โ€

Judge Don Willett responded: โ€œHow do you define coercive?โ€

Tenny: โ€œI donโ€™t think thereโ€™s too much disagreement on this point. Coercive is where a reasonable person would construe it to be backed by a threat of government action against a party if it didnโ€™t comply.โ€

Thatโ€™s exactly what the government did, the voluminous documents already discovered in this case show. In just one of the examples, Meta executive Nick Clegg, a former high-ranking U.K. official,ย told his bossesย Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg: โ€œWe are facing continued pressure from external stakeholders, including the White House and the press, toย removeย more COVID-19 vaccine discouraging contentโ€ (emphasis original).

Clegg also characterized to colleagues an interaction with Andy Slavitt, a White House Covid adviser, this way: โ€œ[H]e was outraged โ€“ not too strong a word to describe his reaction โ€“ that we did not remove this postโ€ of a meme about trial lawyers getting 10 years of vaccine-injured clients from government mandates.

2. Government Officials Treated Internet Monopolies Like Their Subordinates

The Fifth Circuit panel demonstrated familiarity with the numerous examples of this kind of government behavior, such as this email exchange between White House digital director Rob Flaherty and Facebook, in which Flaherty swears at Facebook engineers, โ€œAre you guys f-cking serious? I want an answer on what happened here and I want it today.โ€

โ€œWhat appears to be in the record are these irate messages from time to time from high-ranking government officials that say, โ€œYou didnโ€™t do this yet,โ€™โ€ Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod told Tenny. โ€œAnd thatโ€™s my toning down the language. โ€ฆ So itโ€™s like, โ€˜Jump!โ€™ and, โ€˜How high?โ€™โ€

The judges also noted the White House publicly threatened the business model of all online communications monopolies through potentially revoking Section 230 and launching antitrust lawsuits. The lawsuit documentation shows leading Democrats making the same public threats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and multiple U.S. senators.

Joe Biden evenย threatenedย to hold Zuckerberg criminally liable for not running Facebook the way Biden wanted. In office, Biden also famouslyย accusedย Facebook of โ€œkilling peopleโ€ by not doing enough to spread the administrationโ€™s message and suppress opposing messages.ย FBI agent Elvis Chanโ€˜s deposition in this case noted federal officials showed adverse legislation to social media monopoliesโ€™ leaders as examples of what the government would do to them if they didnโ€™t ban Americansโ€™ speech.

โ€œItโ€™s not like, โ€˜We think this would be a good public policy and we want to explain to you why that would be a good policy,โ€ Elrod said. โ€œThere seems to be some very close relationship that theyโ€™re having these โ€” โ€˜This isnโ€™t being done fast enoughโ€™ you know, like itโ€™s a supervisor complaining about a worker.โ€

3. Judges Likened Government Behavior to Mobsters

Tenny claimed there was no โ€œor elseโ€ explaining what the government โ€œwould doโ€ if the internet monopolies didnโ€™t obey, so there was no government coercion present.

โ€œThis is an analogy, probably an inapt analogy, so if youโ€™ll excuse me โ€” like if somebody is in these movies we see with the mob or something. They donโ€™t spell out things but they have these ongoing relationships and they never actually say, โ€˜Go do this or else youโ€™re going to have this consequence,โ€™ but everybody just knows,โ€ Elrod replied. โ€œAnd Iโ€™m certainly not equating the federal government with anybody in illegal organized crime, but there are certain relationships that people know things without always saying the โ€˜Or else.’โ€

Willett followed that up by commenting the case documentation makes it look like the government is โ€œrelying on a fairly unsubtle kind of strong-arming and veiled or not so veiled threats. โ€˜Thatโ€™s a really nice social media platform you got there, itโ€™d be a shame if something happened to it.’โ€

4. Censorship Is Election Interference

The lead attorney for the plaintiffs, John Sauer, initiated this case as Louisianaโ€™s solicitor general. In representing state government interests to the judges, he noted that elected officials have to pay attention to what their constituents are saying online, or they wonโ€™t have a good read on what voters what them to do in office.

โ€œWeโ€™ve gotta be able to craft messages and know what policies weโ€™re adopting to be responsive to our citizens,โ€ he summarized from statements submitted to the court from multiple state officials. โ€œโ€ฆGoing back to 1863, as everyone knows, going back to the Federalist number 56 where [Bill of Rights author James] Madison said it, everyone knows state legislators have a sovereign interest in knowing what their constituents think and feel, and thatโ€™s directly impacted.โ€

When the federal government silences some Americansโ€™ views online, Sauer said, it makes it harder for elected representatives to actually represent them. Two of the state injuries the plaintiffs assert against the federal governmentโ€™s censorship are โ€œInterference with our ability to hear our constituentsโ€™ voices on social mediaโ€ and โ€œinterference with our ability to have a fair and unbiased process for our people to organize and petition the government for grievances.โ€

Court documents also revealed the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, a federal agency, set up a private entity to ban and throttle election-related online speech Democrats dislike. Much of the information choked by this algorithmic censorship operation is true, such as the legitimacy of Hunter Bidenโ€™s laptop, investigations and members of Congress have noted.

โ€œThey invented a whole new word, โ€˜mal-information,โ€™ to justify going after the censorship of true speech and ideas,โ€ Sauer said last month in a public discussion of the case that YouTube banned.

5. Democrats Want Free Speech for Themselves While Banning It for Their Enemies

The oral arguments also got into the FBIโ€™s 2020 election interference in telling online monopolies that The New York Postโ€™s reporting on Hunter Bidenโ€™s laptop was foreign disinformation. Tenny claimed the FBI refused to comment on the laptop because it was a pending investigation.

Yet the FBI and other federal intelligence agencies actually did comment on the laptop by calling it โ€œforeign disinformation,โ€ both privately to the internet monopolies and publicly. This was false, andย the FBI knew it. The lower court ruled this deception constituted coercion because it caused people to act on false information.

As Ben Weingarten notes, these lies and FBI-demanded online content bans to protect them benefitted Joe Biden in the 2020 election:

According to Elvis Chan (pdf), an FBI official leading engagement with the social media platforms, while the bureau didnโ€™t explicitly ask the companies to change their hacked material policies, it did frequently follow up to ask whether they had changed said policies, as the FBI wanted to know how they would treat such materials.

The judges almost broached an important question: If the First Amendment protects the FBIโ€™s lies that Hunter Bidenโ€™s laptop was disinformation, for which not one federal employee has been disciplined, how can it allow for criminalizing the same behavior by average Americans by labeling their views โ€œdisinformationโ€ and โ€œmal-informationโ€?

6. Todayโ€™s Internet Is Still Massively Rigged

Taibbi also noted that court documents show the Biden administration got mad enough to fire the F-bomb at social media companies when the algorithmic censorship they demand affected Bidenโ€™s Instagram account. Instagram instantly fixed the issue for the White House, but not for non-powerful Americans.

Itโ€™s clear from the case documents and other disclosures such as the โ€œTwitter Filesโ€ and โ€œFacebook Filesโ€ that the algorithms controlling what Americans see online are now deeply, massively rigged. That rigging is multilayered. It includes all this government coercion of entities including Apple, Google, LinkedIn, Meta, Snapchat, Tiktok, and Twitter going back to at least 2017, as well as pressure operations from corporate media and internal employee groups.

Beyond algorithm changes, social media monopolies have also changed their terms of service in response to government demands, the NCLA attorneys noted last month. So government control of public discourse will continue even if the Fifth Circuit reinstates the injunction.

Tenny told the Fifth Circuit the Covid-era censorship that ignited this case is over because the government currently deems Covid not an emergency. In court, Sauer cited YouTube banning two weeks ago a video of attorneys discussing this case as more proof this massive censorship persists. He also cited court documents showing Americans still canโ€™t post social media messages about censored topics.

โ€œAttorneys present gave estimates ranging from a few weeks to two months for the panel to ruleโ€ on whether to reinstate an injunction against more of this government behavior, reported Taibbi, who attended the oral arguments in New Orleans, Louisiana. The previous injunction includes exceptions for crimes such as sex trafficking.

โ€œThe government wants to be doing something that it shouldnโ€™t be doing, and they really, really want to be doing it,โ€ said NCLA attorney John Vecchione in the discussion YouTube banned.


Joy Pullmann is executive editor of The Federalist, a happy wife, and the mother of six children. Her latest ebook is “101 Strategies For Living Well Amid Inflation.” Her bestselling ebook is “Classic Books for Young Children.” An 18-year education and politics reporter, Joy has testified before nearly two dozen legislatures on education policy and appeared on major media from Fox News to Ben Shapiro to Dennis Prager. Joy is a grateful graduate of the Hillsdale College honors and journalism programs who identifies as native American and gender natural. Her several books include “The Education Invasion: How Common Core Fights Parents for Control of American Kids,” from Encounter Books.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF AUGUST 11, 2023


Finnish Grandmother Is Back In Court Facing โ€˜Hate Speechโ€™ Charges For Tweeting Bible Verses


BY:ย ELYSSA KOREN | AUGUST 11, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/08/11/finnish-grandmother-is-back-in-court-facing-hate-speech-charges-for-tweeting-bible-verses/

man and woman walking in snow in Finland

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In 2019, Pรคivi Rรคsรคnen did what any one of us might do โ€” she tweeted at her church. Her tweet was simple and peaceful. She questioned the choice to sponsor a local pride parade. She questioned, was this befitting of their Christian faith? And she attached a scripture passage to the tweet.

Rรคsรคnen will be headed to court for the second time on criminal charges of โ€œhate speech.โ€ This longstanding member of the Finnish Parliament, medical doctor, and grandmother has faced onerous prosecution for four years at the hands of Finlandโ€™s government for a tweet.

Subjected to 13 hours of police interrogation, authorities dug into her past, charging her with three counts of โ€œagitation against a minority groupโ€ for the tweet, in addition to a 2004 church pamphlet and 2019 radio appearance. Bishop Juhana Pohjola of Finlandโ€™s Evangelical Lutheran Church also was criminally charged for publishing the pamphlet, which discusses a Biblical-based understanding of marriage and human sexuality. Their charges carried with them tens of thousands of euros in fines and even the possibility of a two-year prison sentence.

In March of last year, the Helsinki District Court delivered a unanimous acquittal, stating clearly that, โ€œit is not for the district court to interpret biblical concepts.โ€ However, the law in Finland allows for legal double jeopardy โ€” prosecutors can appeal all the way to the Supreme Court on the mere basis of dissatisfaction with the verdict. On Aug. 31, Rรคsรคnen and the bishop will be back in court once again. Their legal defense is supported by ADF International.

Without free speech, there can be no freedom, and the enormous implications of this case for fundamental freedoms have triggered international outrage. Finland, regularly ranked as the โ€œhappiestโ€ country on Earth, is known as a stable bastion of European democracy. If this can happen there, then we must all beware.

On Aug. 8, 16 U.S. members of Congress, sent a letter to Rashad Hussain, U.S. ambassadorโ€“atโ€“large for international religious freedom, and Douglas Hickey, U.S. ambassador to Finland, in response to Rรคsรคnenโ€™s โ€œegregious and harassingโ€ prosecution. The letter highlights the severity of whatโ€™s at stake: โ€œThis prosecutor is dead set on weaponizing the power of Finlandโ€™s legal system to silence not just a member of parliament and Lutheran bishop but millions of Finnish Christians who dare to exercise their natural rights to freedom of expression and freedom of religion in the public square.โ€

Free speech is a preeminent American value, but also one well-protected in international law. The U.S. should always stand against the criminalization of peaceful expression and especially should raise concerns when violations of free speech occur in countries we view as allies, especially on human rights. As the legislatorsโ€™ letter states, โ€œNo American, no Fin, and no human should face legal harassment for simply living out their religious beliefs.โ€

Now is the time for the Biden administration to speak out loud and clear. While the administration has acknowledged that it has privately raised concerns over Rรคsรคnenโ€™s case with the Finnish government, it is vitally important that the U.S. government take a public stance in defense of free speech so under threat in this case.

With regard to Rรคsรคnenโ€™s case, the legislatorsโ€™ letter makes clear, โ€œThe selective targeting of these high-profile individuals is designed to systematically chill othersโ€™ speech under the threat of legal harassment and social astigmatism.โ€ Historically, the U.S. has been the strongest bulwark against international violations of freedom of speech. In standing up for Rรคsรคnen, the U.S. government would in turn send a signal that it is standing up for the right of every person who feels the rapidly encroaching winds of censorship.


Elyssa Koren is director of legal communications for ADF InternationalADF UK is supporting the legal defense of Isabel, Adam, and Father Sean. Follow her on Twitter: @Elyssa_Koren

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF AUGUST 4, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JULY 29, 2023


Senator Rand Paul, M.D., Op-ed: Congress Must Stop The Executive Branchโ€™s Heinous Attempts To Censor Americans


BY:ย RAND PAUL | JULY 25, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/07/25/congress-must-stop-the-executive-branchs-heinous-attempts-to-censor-americans/

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The First Amendmentโ€™s mandate that โ€œCongress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speechโ€ is a guarantee that, no matter how inconvenient to those temporarily holding high office, the people have an absolute right to express their thoughts and opinions. Despite this constitutional requirement, over 200 years ago, President John Adams and the Federalists in Congress used the threat of war with France as a pretext to enact into law the Sedition Act of 1798, which made it a crime for Americans to โ€œprint, utter, or publish . . . any false, scandalous, and malicious writingโ€ about the government.

The debate surrounding the Sedition Act was about the nature of freedom of speech. One supporter of the law, Alexander Addison, believed that some opinions were so dangerous that it was in the public interest to suppress them, stating, โ€œTruth has but one side: and listening to error and falsehood is indeed a strange way to discover truth.โ€

An opponent, Thomas Cooper, presciently argued that the purpose of the Sedition Act was to empower one party to โ€œsuppress the opinions of those who differ from them.โ€ Unsurprisingly, all the defendants prosecuted under the Sedition Act would be Republicans.

Sound familiar?

On Independence Day this year, a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction restricting the Biden Administration from collaborating with social media companies to censor and suppress constitutionally protected speech. In his opinion, Judge Terry Doughty stated that the Biden Administrationโ€™s efforts to suppress opinions it opposes โ€œarguably involves the most massive attack against free speech in the United Statesโ€™ history.โ€ It is difficult to disagree with Judge Doughtyโ€™s description.

For years, the Biden Administration demanded social media suppress and censor conservatives who dared question the origins of Covid, the effectiveness of masks and lockdowns, and election integrity, among other issues. The Biden Administration was so zealous in its enforcement of censorship, even parody content did not escape its anti-free speech campaign.

And the Biden administration didnโ€™t ask nicely. When then-White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki publicly called on social media companies to censor speech relating to Covid, she mentioned Bidenโ€™s support for a โ€œrobust anti-trust program,โ€ all but threatening to break up tech giants if they failed to adopt the administrationโ€™s censorship policies. Later, the White House announced that it was reviewing policies relating to whether social media should be held legally liable for spreading so-called misinformation. In other words, the Biden administration effectively told social media โ€œDo our bidding, or else.โ€

The White House was so aggressive that a Twitter representative stated the site was โ€œbombardedโ€ with censorship requests from the executive branch. But that bombardment was not really directed at Twitter โ€” it was a monstrous attack on the free speech rights guaranteed to every American by the First Amendment.

In addition to countless numbers of Americans, I was targeted by the censorship regime. When I posted a video on YouTube to educate the public on the potentially harmful consequences of relying on ineffective cloth masks to prevent transmission of Covid, YouTube took my video down and suspended me for a week.

Americans are a free people and we do not take infringements upon our liberties lightly. The time has come for resistance and to reclaim our God-given right to free expression. Permit me, as a member of the resistance, to present a solution that that restores and protects the First Amendment.

I introduced legislation called the Free Speech Protection Act, which will prohibit federal employees and contractors from using their positions to censor and otherwise attack speech protected by the First Amendment. My legislation will impose penalties for those that violate this rule, as well as empower private citizens to sue the government and executive branch officials for violating their First Amendment rights. Additionally, the bill will mandate frequent publicly accessible reports detailing the communications between an executive branch agency and media organizations, ensure that federal grant money is not used to label media organizations as sources of misinformation or disinformation, and terminates authorities that threaten free speech.

Under my Free Speech Protection Act, the government will no longer be able to cloak itself in secrecy to undermine the First Amendment rights of conservatives, libertarians, liberals, socialists, and all others who wish to exercise their right to free speech and engage in public discourse.

My legislation will make it difficult to hide efforts to censor constitutionally protected speech. Those officials who censor Americans are on notice: if you infringe upon First Amendment rights, under my bill, you will face severe penalties, such as potential debarment from employment by the United States, a civil penalty of no less than $10,000, and revocation of a security clearance. Any administration employee who prizes his livelihood would not dare threaten free speech after my bill becomes law.

Looking back upon his defeat of John Adams for the presidency, Thomas Jefferson wrote, the โ€œrevolution of 1800 . . . was a real revolution in the principles of our government as that of [17]76.โ€ Jeffersonโ€™s victory was a vindication of the First Amendment as he allowed the Sedition Act to expire and pardoned those convicted for expressing their views.

Once again, the American people are called upon to defend the founding principles over which our forebears fought a revolution. To protect free speech, Congress must prohibit the governmentโ€™s collusion with Big Tech and other media organizations. Congress must pass the Free Speech Protection Act.


Rand Paul, MD, is a U.S. senator from Kentucky.

Dennis Prager Op-ed: Pew Research: Democrats Value Free Speech Far Less Than Republicans


Dennis Prager @DennisPrager / July 25, 2023

Read more at https://www.dailysignal.com/2023/07/25/pew-research-democrats-value-free-speech-far-less-than-republicans/

Lorie Smith, a Christian graphic artist and website designer in Colorado, center in pink, speaks to supporters outside the Supreme Court on Dec. 5, 2022, in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

COMMENTARY BY Dennis Prager@DennisPrager

Dennis Prager is a columnist for The Daily Signal, nationally syndicated radio host, and creator of PragerU.

In case you were in doubtโ€”and if you were in doubt, that means you arenโ€™t following what is happening in America to the most important freedom of allโ€”Pew Research has confirmed that Democrats value free speech far less than Republicans do.

Read the following statistics and conclusions and weep for our country:

  • โ€œThe share of U.S. adults who say the federal government should restrict false information has risen from 39% in 2018 to 55% in 2023.โ€
  • โ€œJust over half of Americans (55%) support the U.S. government taking steps to restrict false information online, even if it limits people from freely publishing or accessing information.โ€
  • โ€œSupport for government intervention has steadily risen since the first time we asked this question in 2018. In fact, the balance of opinion has tilted: Five years ago, Americans were more inclined to prioritize freedom of information over restricting false information (58% vs. 39%).โ€
  • โ€œThe partisan gap in support for restricting false information has grown substantially since 2018.โ€
  • โ€œDemocrats and Democratic-leaning independents are much more likely than Republicans and Republican leaners to support the U.S. government taking steps to restrict false information online (70% vs. 39%). There was virtually no difference between the parties in 2018, but the share of Democrats who support government intervention has grown from 40% in 2018 to 70% in 2023.โ€
  • โ€œA large majority of Democrats and Democratic leaners (81%) support technology companies taking such steps, while about half of Republicans (48%) say the same.โ€

But, no one is asking, “Who is the main arbiter of what is, or is NOT, misinformation? There’s the rub.

Here are 10 conclusions:

No. 1: The most important human freedom is freedom of speech. Free speech is what

makes the pursuit of truth possible. It is what makes the advancement of science possible. It constitutes the very definition of a free society. And free speech is what makes human dignity possible. People who cannot say what they believe are dehumanized. They ultimately become robotic beings exemplified by North Koreans.

No. 2: America has been the freest country in the world for all of its history. That is why the French gave America the Statue of Liberty. It is rapidly relinquishing that title.

No. 3: Free speech is seriously threatened for the first time in American history.

No. 4: The threat to free speech comes entirely from the Left.

No. 5: There is no example in history ofย the Leftย attaining power and allowing free speech. From the French Revolution to the Russian Revolution to the Maoist takeover ofย Chinaย to almost any university in America today, wherever the Left comes to power, it suppresses speech.

No. 6: The Left must suppress speech in order to retain power. If it were to allow dissent, it would lose its hold on power.

No. 7: That is why conservative speakers are rarely allowed to speak on college campuses. Left-wing professors, deans, and administrators knowโ€”consciously or subconsciouslyโ€”that an effective conservative speaker can undo years of left-wing indoctrination in just 90 minutes.

No. 8: Given that โ€œDemocrats and Democratic-leaning independents are much more likely than Republicans and Republican leaners to support the U.S. government taking steps to restrict false information online (70% vs. 39%),โ€ the often-stated claim that โ€œthere is little difference between the two partiesโ€ is false.

No. 9: All tyrannies label dissent โ€œmisinformation.โ€ That is what Vladimir Putinโ€™s government labels all dissent in Russia today.

The communist regime in the Soviet Union named its official newspaper โ€œPravdaโ€โ€”the Russian word for โ€œtruthโ€โ€”because in a left-wing tyranny, the left-wing regime determines truth. Anything else is โ€œmisinformationโ€ or โ€œdisinformation.โ€

That Western societies are moving toward Soviet-like suppression of speech is obvious in America and was made particularly clear in 2020, when the then-prime minister of New Zealand, Jacinda Ardern, told her country: โ€œWe will continue to be your single source of truthโ€ and โ€œIf you do not hear it from the government, it is not true.โ€

Fittingly, Ardern was awarded with two teaching fellowships at Harvard Universityโ€”one of them at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, based at Harvard Law School, where she โ€œwill study ways to improve content standards and platform accountability for extremist content online.โ€

No. 10: Liberals are abandoning liberal valuesโ€”in particular, their storied commitment to free speech. There are far more liberals than leftists, but over the past few years the liberalsโ€™ unswerving commitment to the Democratic Party, unswerving commitment to The New York Times, The Washington Post, or virtually any other mainstream news source, and their unswerving opposition to conservatives and the Republican Party has led them to embrace and unswervingly vote for left-wing values.

As for the future, this is what Pew reported regarding young Americans: โ€œThe shares of younger adults who say they support tech companies and the government restricting false information online have increased substantially since 2018 (by 14 and 19 percentage points, respectively).โ€

But there is a better reaction than to weep.

Fight.

COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS

Pastor โ€˜Exilesโ€™ Family to Kenya to Escape Canadian Persecution of Christians


BY:ย JOY PULLMANN | JULY 24, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/07/24/pastor-exiles-family-to-kenya-to-escape-canadian-persecution-of-christians/

Harold and Elise Ristau

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A Canadian pastor has โ€œexiledโ€ his family to Kenya after his government invoked emergency war measures to punish citizens who attended a protest where he prayed and sang the national anthem. Harold Ristau, a decorated veteran and seminary professor, participated in the โ€œtrucker convoyโ€ against lockdowns last February, when The Federalistย interviewed him last. He is now party toย a lawsuitย arguing the governmentโ€™s response to Covid that included treating dissent as terrorism violated Canadiansโ€™ fundamental rights.

โ€œThe fight is far from over,โ€ said Marty Moore, a lawyer for the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF), which is litigating Ristauโ€™s case. More than 14 months after the protest, police arrested another convoy leader this May. Lockdown litigation will likely continue for several more years, Moore said. The same is true across the West.

For peaceably assembling to petition his government for one day last year, Ristau says, he was threatened with the removal of his security clearance and government confiscation of his retirement nest egg, kidsโ€™ college funds, and other life savings. Ristau says heโ€™s also experienced serious damage to his reputation, career, and friendships after the government used anti-terrorism measures against peaceful protesters.

โ€œThereโ€™s no protection, if a pandemic started tomorrow, from future mandates. So thatโ€™s why I was really open to coming here,โ€ his wife, Elise Ristau, said, sitting beside her husband in a recent video interview from Kenya.

Besides dealing with overbearing health restrictions, their children were mocked at school for their familyโ€™s religious and political views, Elise Ristau told The Federalist. After enduring more than two years of severe social and government repression, the Ristaus moved outside Nairobi with their five children last August.

โ€œI donโ€™t know that I can go back and be a Christian in Canada. So thatโ€™s why weโ€™re here in Kenya,โ€ Harold Ristau said. There, the former chaplain with a Ph.D. in philosophy trains Kenyan pastors at the Lutheran School of Theology.

Confiscating Dissentersโ€™ Life Savings

Government use of โ€œdebankingโ€ to punish dissent is growing in the West. Prime Minister Justin Trudeauโ€™s government used it on essentially every convoy participant authorities could identify, said Moore.

โ€œAs soon as they knew your name if you were on the ground [protesting] in Ottawa, they froze your bank account,โ€ Moore told The Federalist. โ€œโ€ฆThe federal government met with the banks, they gave the [protestersโ€™] names to the banks, and the banks were then pushed to freeze the bank accounts of anyone with that name in their banks. It was a fascist collaboration.โ€

Right-leaning British politicians including Brexit leader Nigel Farage recently told the public banks have closed their accounts over their political views.

In May, American whistleblowersย disclosedย the FBI obtained, without any warrants, โ€œa huge listโ€ of citizensโ€™ private banking data in its Jan. 6, 2021 capitol riot investigation. Investigators targeted any American who legally bought a firearm using a Bank of America account all the way back to the 1990s, the whistleblower testified.

Treating a Veteran Like a Terrorist

After the Canadian government announced it would freeze the bank accounts of convoy protesters and their mostly small-dollar donors without legal due process, rumors of bank runs spread. Multiple large Canadian banksย appeared to shut down online operationsย soon after the announcement. Elise withdrew their familyโ€™s savings that Friday, too, she and Harold said. Like thousands of Canadians, they had donated to the convoy. Yet Ristau was the only one of the four plaintiffs in his lawsuit whose accounts were not frozen. He thinks itโ€™s because of his military record.

โ€œSome of the measures that were at least attempted to be invoked are the kind of measures you find to freeze terrorist financing,โ€ Moore noted. โ€œSo peaceful protesters were the equivalent of terrorists and the government leaned on banks in the guise of a national emergency to freeze their bank accounts.โ€

Leftist activists also filed a class-action lawsuit against every Canadian who donated to the convoy. It seeks $300 million in damages. When before the convoy Canada experienced multiple race protests that included violence against stores and police, no class action was filed.

Christians Assisting Government Persecution

Canadian lockdowns kept gyms, restaurants, and liquor stores open but closed churches. Leftist protesters were allowed to yell and sing without masks, and the prime minister kneeled to them, all while provinces banned Christians from singing and chanting in church for years.

Rev. Johannes Nieminen wasnโ€™t allowed to cross provincial borders to perform his pastoral duties, while other Canadians could do so for work, he told The Federalist. After he was denied border entry several times, he said, police finally let him through โ€” but told him he wasnโ€™t allowed to meet with parishioners or hold church services.

โ€œIf Iโ€™m going to go to the grocery store for physical food, Iโ€™m going to the church for spiritual food. If Iโ€™m going to the doctorโ€™s office for physical medicine, Iโ€™m going to church for the medicine of immortality,โ€ Nieminen said. His denomination believes Jesus Christโ€™s body and blood are physically present in the wine and bread of communion, and that Christians are commanded to physically eat these โ€” impossible without gathering in person.

Until moving to pastor in New Mexico this summer, Nieminen was clergy in the same denomination as Ristau, the Lutheran Church Canada. He said lockdowns sharply divided many churches, and even though most Covid measures are now lifted, church leaders have largely failed to seek reconciliation and repentance, as commanded in the Bible.

โ€œWe need to repent. Thereโ€™s been crazy division here, and we need to actually talk about it,โ€ he said.

State-Run Western Churches

Nieminen said pastors who obeyed the government to treat churches worse than liquor stores and gyms taught lay people church is non-essential or can be conducted online. The Bible commands keeping a day of worship, meeting in person, singing hymns and psalms, and physically receiving the bread and wine of communion. Christians have done all these every week since the time of Christ.

Communion is a โ€œsacrament,โ€ an action God commands that produces faith and eternal salvation. Only pastors can deliver it, a tradition going back to Christโ€™s commissioning of His apostles. In all the great pandemics of history, priests and pastors knowingly braved death to bring the sacrament to the dying desperate for the peace and unity with God it promises.

Nieminen said he saw Canadian Christians publicly plead for the sacrament amid lockdowns that nearly lasted three years. They received no response from their pastors, who told Nieminen the pleading parishioners didnโ€™t use the โ€œproper channels.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s that lack of trust in pastors and a church that they see as giving up on them and basically persecuting them,โ€ Nieminen said. โ€œโ€ฆTheyโ€™re being coerced by tyrants to do something against their conscience, and then they go to church and then theyโ€™re hearing the same thing from the church.โ€

Within days of him praying at the protest, says Harold Ristauโ€™s sworn affidavit, fellow clergy began refusing to let him preach and to take communion with him. Some checked with superiors on whether to commune him. Refusing communion to a church member is tantamount to excommunication.

Praying at the protest โ€œdemonstrated I was this political insurrectionistโ€ to some clergy whose beliefs about Covid were shaped by state-funded, anti-Christian media, Harold Ristau said: โ€œPrior to Covid, everyone recognized the media were a bunch of liars who hated Christians, but with Covid suddenly we trust them entirely.โ€

A Political Decision, Not a Health Decision

So far, โ€œnone of the [legal] challenges to worship restrictions on church services have succeededโ€ in Canada, said John Sikkema, a lawyer at the nonprofit firm ARPA Canada.

โ€œCulturally, people find going to the gym very important and less so going to church,โ€ Sikkema noted. โ€œEspecially when some churches donโ€™t seem to care and donโ€™t think itโ€™s necessary.โ€

To secular authorities, keeping the economy going easily trumps the churchโ€™s work of caring for human souls, Sikkema noted. Thatโ€™s why they opened restaurants while restricting churches despite similar health risks: โ€œThatโ€™s not really a health decision, itโ€™s a political decision about whatโ€™s important to the health of your society.โ€

Police regularly showed up at churches on Sunday mornings and fined pastors whose parking lots had too many cars, he said. ARPA Canada and JCCF litigated a number of those cases and were often able to get pastorsโ€™ fines negotiated down to charitable donations.

Most churches that capitulated to government discrimination against Christians were already declining before lockdowns, and disproportionate percentages of their members didnโ€™t go back to church afterward. Churches that kept to historic orthodoxy, on the other hand, tend to have recovered better from post-lockdown membership losses and many have even grown, Nieminen and Sikkema noted.

Religious Freedom Better in Africa

The difficulty of raising their children in rapidly apostatizing Western culture also affected the Ristausโ€™ decision to move across the globe.

โ€œThings are normal here, people have traditional values,โ€ Elise Ristau said of Kenya. โ€œItโ€™s inconceivable to think of transgender mutilation. As a mother and father, we do our very best to keep our kids Christian.โ€

In Canada, Christians are often required to lie or betray their faith to access government grants and licensing credentials, andย avoid punishmentย in many professions, Sikkema said. Many Canadian doctors, lawyers, and teachers, for example, are required to endorse abortion and LGBT sexual acts.ย Canadian doctors and many other health care workersย must help patients obtainย an abortion or doctor-assisted suicide.

In 2018, Canadaโ€™s Supreme Courtย bannedย a Christian law school from opening over Christian sexual standards. The Canadian military is alsoย working to ejectย chaplains over Christian sexual ethics. Just about every Canadian business sports a government-provided pride flag, Nieminen said. Churches that object to transgender mutilation of children have faced naked protesters as families arrive to worship, Sikkema said.

โ€œCanadians are very aware that we donโ€™t have freedom of religion, we donโ€™t have freedom of speech, we donโ€™t have the right to assemble if thatโ€™s in disagreement with the regime,โ€ Nieminen said. โ€œPastors and teachers cannot speak about the morality of human sexuality. That is a reality Canadians live in, and I think thatโ€™s partly why theyโ€™re afraid to speak out.โ€

Christians Welcome in Kenya

The Ristaus had been invited to their current post before lockdowns, but Elise hadnโ€™t wanted to uproot after moving the family so many times for Haroldโ€™s military career. They had bought land in Canada for their dream home and planted more than 1,000 trees on it.

โ€œI had dreamed of this perfect life for myself in Canada,โ€ Elise said. But then โ€œthere was a kind of turning point where I said, โ€˜We can go. Nothing is holding us here.โ€™ It was a โ€˜shake the dust off our bootsโ€™ moment.โ€

From Toronto to Nairobi is approximately 7,500 miles. Flying commercially between the two takes 16 hours or more.

โ€œIn Kenya, I know itโ€™s poor, and thereโ€™s corruption, but weโ€™re not getting arrested for praying silently outside abortion clinics,โ€ Elise said. โ€œFor a Christian in Canada, itโ€™s pretty bleak.โ€


Joy Pullmann is executive editor of The Federalist, a happy wife, and the mother of six children. Her latest ebook is “101 Strategies For Living Well Amid Inflation.” Her bestselling ebook is “Classic Books for Young Children.” An 18-year education and politics reporter, Joy has testified before nearly two dozen legislatures on education policy and appeared on major media from Fox News to Ben Shapiro to Dennis Prager. Joy is a grateful graduate of the Hillsdale College honors and journalism programs who identifies as native American and gender natural. Her several books include “The Education Invasion: How Common Core Fights Parents for Control of American Kids,” from Encounter Books.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JULY 21, 2023


Bidenโ€™s FTC Punished Twitter For Seceding From The Censorship Complex


BY:ย MARGOT CLEVELAND| JULY 17, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/07/17/bidens-ftc-punished-twitter-for-seceding-from-the-censorship-complex/

Twitter owner Elon Musk

Author Margot Cleveland profile

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The Federal Trade Commission inappropriately pressured an independent third-party auditing firm to find Twitter had violated the terms of its settlement agreement with the FTC, a motion filed last week in federal court reveals. That misconduct and the FTCโ€™s own repudiation of the terms of the settlement agreement entitle Twitter to vacate the consent order, its lawyers maintain.ย This latest development holds significance beyond Twitterโ€™s fight with the FTC, however, with the details providing further evidence that the Biden administration targeted Twitter because of its owner Elon Muskโ€™s support for free speech on his platform.

I โ€œfelt as if the FTC was trying to influence the outcome of the engagement before it had started,โ€ a CPA with nearly 30 years of experience with the Big Four accounting firm Ernst & Young (EY) testified last month. The FTCโ€™s pressure campaign left EY partner David Roque so unsettled that he sought guidance from another partner concerning controlling ethical standards for CPAs to assess whether his independence had been compromised by the federal agency.ย Roqueโ€™s testimony prompted attorneys for Twitter to seek documents from the FTC to assess whether the federal agency had repeated its pressure campaign with EYโ€™s successors, but the agency refused to provide any details to the social media giant. Twitter responded last week by filing a โ€œMotion for a Protective Order and Relief From Consent Order.โ€ย 

That motion and its accompanying exhibits provide shocking details of an abusive agency targeting Twitter. When those facts are coupled with the report on the FTC issued earlier this year by the House Weaponization Subcommittee, it seems clear the Biden administration is targeting Twitter because Musk seceded from the Censorship-Industrial Complex.

FTCโ€™s Pre-Musk Enforcement Actions

Thursdayโ€™s motion began with the background necessary to appreciate the gravity of the FTCโ€™s scorched-earth campaign against Twitter. 

More than a decade ago, the FTC entered into a settlement agreement with Twitter after finding Twitter had violated the Federal Trade Commission Act by misrepresenting the extent it protected user information from unauthorized access. That 2011 settlement agreement resulted in a consent order that required Twitter to establish a โ€œcomprehensive information security programโ€ that met specific parameters. The 2011 consent order also required Twitter to obtain an assessment from an independent third-party professional confirming compliance with the terms of the settlement agreement. 

From 2011 to 2019, Twitter operated under the 2011 consent order and received about 10 โ€œdemand lettersโ€ from the FTC seeking additional information. Then in October 2019, Twitter informed the FTC that โ€œsome email addresses and phone numbers provided for account security may have been used unintentionally for advertising purposes.โ€ In investigating that report, the FTC sent Twitter another 15 or so demand letters over a two-year period before filing a complaint in a California federal court on May 25, 2022, alleging Twitter had violated the 2011 consent order and Section 5 of the FTC Act by misrepresenting the extent to which Twitter maintained and protected the privacy of nonpublic consumer information. 

The next day, the court entered a โ€œStipulated Orderโ€ โ€” meaning Twitter and the FTC had agreed to the terms of that order โ€” โ€œfor Civil Penalty, Monetary Judgment, and Injunctive Relief.โ€ That stipulated order allowed the FTC to reopen the 2011 proceeding and enter an updated consent order, which created a new โ€œcompliance structure.โ€

Under the 2022 order, Twitter was required to establish and maintain a โ€œcomprehensive privacy and information security programโ€ to โ€œprotect[] the privacy, security, confidentiality, and integrityโ€ of certain user information by Nov. 22, 2022. The 2022 consent order also required Twitter to obtain an assessment of its compliance with the terms of the court order by โ€œqualified, objective, independent third-party professionals.โ€

Musk Makes Waves

Musk entered into an agreement on April 25, 2022, to purchase Twitter, effective Oct. 27, 2022, and one must wonder if that April agreement prompted Twitterโ€™s then-management to enter the May 2022 consent decree, as Twitterโ€™s prior management handcuffed Musk to the terms of the agreement forged with the FTC. Either way, the May 2022 consent order governed Twitterโ€™s operations under Muskโ€™s new management. 

While the 2022 consent decree remained unchanged after Muskโ€™s purchase became final, the FTCโ€™s posture toward Twitter changed drastically. As Twitterโ€™s Thursday motion detailed, โ€œin the five months between the signing of the Consent Order on May 25, 2022, and Mr. Muskโ€™s acquisition of Twitter, Inc. on October 27, 2022, the FTC sent Twitter only three demand letters.โ€

All three letters concerned a whistleblowerโ€™s claims that Twitter had violated the Federal Trade Commission Act and the 2011 consent order by making false and misleading statements about its security, privacy, and integrity. The FTC waited nearly two months after receiving the whistleblowerโ€™s complaint before serving its first demand letter on Twitter.

FTC Goes Scorched Earth

According to Twitterโ€™s motion for relief from the 2022 consent order, โ€œMuskโ€™s acquisition of Twitter produced a sudden and drastic change in the tone and intensity of the FTCโ€™s investigation into the company.โ€ Among other things, the FTC publicly stated it was โ€œtracking recent developments at Twitter with deep concern.โ€ The FTC also stressed that the revised consent order provided the agency with โ€œnew tools to ensure compliance,โ€ and it was โ€œprepared to use them.โ€

And use them the FTC did: The agency immediately issued two demand letters to Twitter seeking information about workforce reductions and the launch of Twitter Blue. Those demand letters came before Twitter was even required under the 2022 consent decree to have its new programs in place. Since then, Twitterโ€™s attorneys note, the FTC has pummeled Twitterโ€™s corporate owner, X Corp., with โ€œburdensome demand lettersโ€ โ€” more than 17 separate demand letters, with some 200 individual demands for information and documents, translates into a new demand letter every two weeks.

FTC Starts Drilling Former Employees

In addition to the FTCโ€™s flurry of demand letters, it began deposing former Twitter employees โ€” five to date โ€” and is currently seeking to question Musk. The FTC also deposed Roque on June 21, 2023, but the questioning backfired. Twitter learned from that deposition, as its lawyers put it in Thursdayโ€™s motion, โ€œthat the FTCโ€™s harassment campaign was even more extreme and far-reaching than it had imagined.โ€

Roque was the Ernst & Young partner overseeing the assessment it was hired by Twitter to perform โ€” an assessment mandated by the May 2022 consent decree. Twitterโ€™s previous management retained EY in July 2022 to issue the assessment report of its security measures. 

In late February 2023, EY withdrew from the engagement. Many of the FTCโ€™s questions to Roque probed the reasoning for the withdrawal, including the high number of personnel changes and EYโ€™s difficulty in starting the assessment because of Twitter upheaval caused by Muskโ€™s changes.

Deposition Backfires Big Time 

During the FTCโ€™s question of Roque about EYโ€™s withdrawal from the engagement and various emails exchanged by partners, the longtime CPA dropped a bombshell: The FTC had so pressured Roque to reach its preconceived conclusion that Twitter had violated the consent decree that Roque sought help researching the ethical standards that govern CPAs to assess whether EYโ€™s independence had been compromised.

Roque revealed that detail when the FTCโ€™s lawyer quizzed him on the meaning of a chat message exchange he had with fellow EY partner Paul Penler on the evening of Feb. 21, 2023, shortly before the Big Four firm announced it was withdrawing from its engagement to assess Twitterโ€™s compliance with the 2022 consent order. 

While the actual chat message was filed under seal as Exhibit 16 in support of Twitterโ€™s motion, the transcript of Roqueโ€™s questioning was provided to the court, revealing the pertinent aspects of the conversation.

Roque began by asking Penler, โ€œWhere is the best place to confirm independence consideration for attest engagement?โ€ About 15 minutes later, Roque followed up by asking whether specific language about an โ€œadverse interest threatโ€ โ€œcould work for Twitter?โ€ Roque then commented to Penler that โ€œEY interests are not aligned with Twitter anymore because of the FTC.โ€

Mild-Mannered CPA Drops Bombshell 

After showing Roque a copy of his chat exchange with Penler, the FTC attorney quizzed the EY partner on why he had sent the note and what he meant by the various lines. Thatโ€™s when the bomb exploded, with Roque explaining he had contacted Penler โ€” who was with EYโ€™s professional practice group, the internal group that was responsible for ensuring the firm adequately followed professional standards โ€” because Roque had concerns about whether the FTC had threatened his independence.

โ€œAs we were moving forward with this engagement, we had ongoing discussions with the FTC,โ€ Roque explained. โ€œ[D]uring those discussions,โ€ Roque continued, โ€œthe FTC kept expressing their opinion more and more adamantly about the extent of procedures Ernst & Young would need to perform based on their expectations. And there was also expectations around the results they would expect us to find based on the information Twitter had already provided to the FTC and the FTC had reviewed.โ€ 

Those conversations, Roque testified, made him feel โ€œas if the FTC was trying to influence the outcome of the engagement before it had started,โ€ so he was attempting to assess whether EY had an โ€œadverse threat,โ€ meaning โ€œsomebody outside of the arrangement we had with Twitter trying to influence the outcome of our results.โ€ 

FTC Spin Falls Flat

After Roque revealed his concerns about the FTCโ€™s conduct, the lawyer for the federal agency pushed him to backtrack by asking leading questions. Rather than hedge, Roque stood firm, as these exchanges show:

FTC Attorney: โ€œTo be clear, no one from the FTC directed you to reach a particular conclusion about Twitterโ€™s 22 program, correct?โ€

Roque: โ€œThere was suggestions of what they would expect the outcome to be.โ€

* * *

FTC Attorney: โ€œNo one from the FTC actually told you what EYโ€™s report should say in its conclusions, correct?โ€ 

Roque: โ€œThere was a conversation where it was conveyed that the FTC would be surprised if there was areas on our report that didnโ€™t have findings based on information the FTC was already aware of, and if Ernst & Young didnโ€™t have findings in those areas, we should expect the FTC would follow up very significantly to understand why we didnโ€™t have similar conclusions.โ€

Twitterโ€™s Lawyer Pounces

After two fails, the FTC moved on to other questions, but Twitterโ€™s lawyer, Daniel Koffmann, returned to the topic when it was his turn to question Roque. Koffmann asked Roque whether there was a particular meeting with the FTC in which the agency had given him the impression that it โ€œwas expecting a certain outcome in the assessment that Ernst & Young was conducting relative to Twitterโ€™s compliance with the consent order.โ€ 

Roque mentioned two meetings. He described the first, which was in December 2022, as โ€œinterestingโ€ and โ€œsurprisingโ€ because when EY noted that Twitter, under its new ownership, might opt to terminate its contract with the firm, the FTC was โ€œvery adamant about this is absolutely what you will do and this is going to occur, and youโ€™ll produce a report at the end of the day.โ€ Roque found the FTCโ€™s stance โ€œa bit surprising,โ€ since the report was not due for another six to seven months and the federal agency would not know what might transpire during that time period.

Roque further explained that he found the December 2022 meeting โ€œunusualโ€ because the FTC provided โ€œspecificity on the execution of very specific types of procedures that they expected to be performed.โ€

โ€œIt was almost as if they were giving us components of our audit program to execute,โ€ Roque said. While EY could perform such a review, it would be a different type of engagement than the one it had entered with Twitter. Rather, EYโ€™s assessment for Twitter was to access, for instance, how security operates and how the user administration process is managed. In conducting that assessment, the firm would look at specific controls. But the FTC was giving EY very specific tests to run, which was inconsistent with a typical audit, Roque explained.

It was the second meeting, which took place in January 2022, that raised real concerns for Roque. It was then, Roque said, that the FTC โ€œstarted providing areas that they were expecting us to look at.โ€ Roque testified that the FTC โ€œcommunicated that they would expect Ernst & Young to have findings or exceptions or negative results in certain areas based on what they already understood from an operational standpoint, based on information Twitter had provided, and that if we ended up producing a report that didnโ€™t have findings in those areas, that they would be surprised, and they would be definitely following up with us to understand why we didnโ€™t โ€” why we reached the conclusions we did if they were sort of not reflecting gaps in the controls.โ€

Roque would go on to agree with Twitterโ€™s attorney that during the January 2022 meeting, โ€œthe representatives from the FTC expressed that they believed Ernst & Youngโ€™s assessment would lead to findings or exceptions about Twitterโ€™s compliance with the consent order.โ€ 

Twitter Takes FTC to Task

A little over a week after Roqueโ€™s deposition, Twitterโ€™s legal team wrote the FTC a scathing letter noting that Roqueโ€™s alarming testimony โ€œdemonstrates that the FTC has resorted to bullying tactics, intimidation, and threats to potential witnesses.โ€

โ€œIt strongly suggests that the FTC has attempted to exert improper influence over witnesses in order to manufacture evidence damaging to X Corp. and Mr. Musk,โ€ the letter continued, adding that Roqueโ€™s testimony also raised serious questions about whether the FTCโ€™s bias would render any future enforcement action unconstitutional.

The Twitter letter ended by requesting documents and information from the FTC โ€œto evaluate the nature and scope of the FTCโ€™s misconduct and the remedial measures that will be necessary.โ€ Among other things, Twitter asked for communications between FTC personnel and the company that succeeded EY as Twitterโ€™s independent assessor, as well as another company Twitter considered but did not select to replace EY.

The FTC refused Twitterโ€™s request. In its letter denying Musk access to any documents, Reenah L. Kim, the same attorney who allegedly made the statements to Roque, claimed Twitterโ€™s accusations of so-called โ€œbullying tactics, intimidation, and threats to potential witnessesโ€ by the FTC โ€œare completely unfounded.โ€ 

Lots of Legal Implications

Following the FTCโ€™s refusal to provide Twitter the requested documents, Muskโ€™s legal team filed its โ€œMotion for a Protective Order and Relief From Consent Orderโ€ with the California federal court where the 2022 consent decree had been entered. In this recently filed motion, Muskโ€™s attorneys argue the FTC โ€œbreachedโ€ the consent order when it attempted โ€œto dictate and influence the content, procedures, and outcomeโ€ of the court-ordered assessment, which the consent decree required to be both โ€œobjectiveโ€ and โ€œindependent.โ€

To support its argument, Twitter highlighted the FTCโ€™s own language in an earlier letter the agency had sent to Twitterโ€™s prior management team discussing the importance of the same โ€œindependenceโ€ requirement from the first consent decree. That order was clear, the FTC wrote, that โ€œTwitter must obtain periodic security assessments โ€˜from a qualified, objective, independent third-party professional.โ€™โ€

The โ€œassessor must be an independent third party โ€” not an employee or agent of either Twitter or the FTC,โ€ the letter continued, adding that if the auditor were indeed an agent of Twitter, โ€œTwitter would be in violation of the Orderโ€™s requirement that it obtain a security assessment from an โ€˜independent third-partyโ€™ professional.โ€ The FTC then stressed: โ€œThe very purpose of a security or privacy orderโ€™s assessment provision is to ensure that evaluation of a respondentโ€™s security or privacy program is truly objective โ€” i.e., unaffected by the interests (or litigation positions) of either the respondent or the FTC.โ€ 

The FTCโ€™s interference with EYโ€™s independence thus constituted a violation of the 2022 consent decree, Twitterโ€™s legal team argued, justifying the court vacating that order โ€” or at a minimum modifying it. Twitter also argued in its motion that as a matter of fairness, the consent decree should be set aside given the FTCโ€™s outrageously aggressive demands for documents, compared to its posture toward Twitter prior to Muskโ€™s purchase. 

That motion remains pending before federal Magistrate Judge Thomas Hixon, with a hearing set for next month.

Connection to the Censorship Complex

While Twitterโ€™s Thursday motion does not directly connect to the Censorship-Industrial Complex, the FTCโ€™s posture toward Twitter changed following news that Musk intended to purchase the tech giant to make it a free-speech zone. And when Roqueโ€™s testimony is considered against the backdrop of evidence previously exposed by the House Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government, it seems clear the Biden administration sought to punish Twitter for exiting from the governmentโ€™s whole-of-society plan to censor supposed misinformation.

The House subcommitteeโ€™s March 2023 report, titled โ€œThe Weaponization of the Federal Trade Commission: An Agencyโ€™s Overreach to Harass Elon Muskโ€™s Twitter,โ€ established the FTC had requested the names of every journalist Musk had provided access to internal communications, which had led to the earth-shattering revelations contained in the โ€œTwitter Files.โ€ Many of the FTCโ€™s other demands, the House report concluded, also โ€œhad little to no nexus to usersโ€™ privacy and information.โ€ The report thus concluded that the โ€œstrong inferenceโ€ โ€œis that Twitterโ€™s rediscovered focus on free speech [was] being met with politically motivated attempts to thwart Elon Muskโ€™s goals.โ€ 

Know-Nothing Khan

House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, attempted to question FTC Chair Lina Khan on Thursday about the agencyโ€™s apparent interference with EYโ€™s independence and its connection to the federal governmentโ€™s efforts to silence speech.

โ€œThe FTC has engaged in conduct so irregular and improper that Ernst & Young (โ€˜EYโ€™) โ€” the independent assessor designated under a consent order between Twitter and the FTC to evaluate the companyโ€™s privacy, data protection, and information security program โ€” โ€˜felt as if the FTC was trying to influence the outcome of the engagement before it had started,โ€™โ€ Jordan said.

But Khan claimed she knew nothing about Roque or his deposition testimony. 

That doesnโ€™t change the fact that the FTC has been laser-focused on Twitter since Musk revolted against the Censorship-Industrial Complex. Whether Twitter will convince the California federal court that the FTCโ€™s conduct justifies tearing up the consent decree, however, remains to be seen.


Margot Cleveland is The Federalist’s senior legal correspondent. She is also a contributor to National Review Online, the Washington Examiner, Aleteia, and Townhall.com, and has been published in the Wall Street Journal and USA Today. Cleveland is a lawyer and a graduate of the Notre Dame Law School, where she earned the Hoynes Prizeโ€”the law schoolโ€™s highest honor. She later served for nearly 25 years as a permanent law clerk for a federal appellate judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Cleveland is a former full-time university faculty member and now teaches as an adjunct from time to time. As a stay-at-home homeschooling mom of a young son with cystic fibrosis, Cleveland frequently writes on cultural issues related to parenting and special-needs children. Cleveland is on Twitter at @ProfMJCleveland. The views expressed here are those of Cleveland in her private capacity.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JULY 14, 2023


Today’s Politically INCORRECT Cartoons


July 11, 2023

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JULY 7, 2023


12 Times The Biden White House Colluded With Big Tech To Throttle Free Speech, According Toย Missouri v. Biden


BY:ย EVITA DUFFY-ALFONSO | JULY 07, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/07/07/12-times-the-biden-white-house-colluded-with-big-tech-to-throttle-free-speech-according-to-missouri-v-biden/

Big Tech free speech

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A preliminaryย injunctionย issued Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Terry A. Doughty explicitly prohibits the White House and several federal agencies from violating the First Amendment by directing social media companies to censor Americans.ย 

Up to and even after the injunctionโ€™s release, Democrats have insisted that any suggestion the federal government is colluding with Big Tech to censor conservatives (or pretty much any information inconvenient to the current administration) is a โ€œconspiracyโ€ theory. However, in his injunction, Judge Doughty cited shocking evidence that the deep stateโ€™s collusion with Big Tech is very much real. Here are 12 of the dozens of damning instances cited by the judge that demonstrate the severity of our governmentโ€™s illegal partnership with Big Tech.ย 

1. White House Orders RFK Tweet Removal โ€˜ASAPโ€™

On Jan. 23, 2021, the White House requested Twitter remove a tweet by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that was critical of Covid-19 vaccines. โ€œHey folks-Wanted to flag the below tweet and am wondering if we can get moving on the process of having it removed ASAP,โ€ wrote a Biden official. The White House also expressed a desire to โ€œkeep an eye out for tweets that fall in this same genre.โ€

2. White House Requests โ€˜Immediateโ€™ Ban On Biden Family Member Parody Account 

On Feb. 6, 2021, the White House asked Twitter to ban a โ€œparody account linked to Finnegan Biden, Hunter Bidenโ€™s daughter and President Bidenโ€™s granddaughter.โ€

โ€œCannot stress the degree to which this needs to be resolved immediately,โ€ the official wrote to Twitter. โ€œPlease remove this account immediately.โ€ The account was banned within 45 minutes, Doughty noted.ย 

3. Twitter Streamlines White House Censorship Requests  

On Feb. 7, 2021, Twitter provided the White House with a โ€œTwitterโ€™s Partner Support Portalโ€ that, according to the injunction, โ€œexpedited review of flagging content for censorship.โ€ The portal was created because Twitter felt overwhelmed by the large volume of censorship requests coming from the White House and wanted to both prioritize and expedite the administrationโ€™s requests. 

4. Twitter Promises White House It Will Boost Censorship 

On March 1, 2021, after a meeting with White House officials about โ€œmisinformation,โ€ Twitter sent a follow-up email promising that it would do more to suppress โ€œmisleading information.โ€

โ€œThanks again for meeting with us today. As we discussed, we are building on โ€˜ourโ€™ continued efforts to remove the most harmful COVID-19 โ€˜misleading informationโ€™ from the service,โ€ Twitter wrote.

5. Facebook Fulfills White Houseโ€™s Covid Censorship Requests   

Sometime between May and July, a โ€œsenior Meta executiveโ€ sent emails to White House officials, letting them know that Meta was fulfilling White House โ€œrequestsโ€ to censor alleged Covid-19 misinformation. The email also said Meta was โ€œexpand[ing] penaltiesโ€ for โ€œFacebook accounts that share misinformation.โ€

โ€œWe think there is considerably more we can do in โ€˜partnershipโ€™ with you and your team to drive behavior,โ€ Meta wrote.ย 

6. Facebook Agrees to More Sweeping White House Covid Vaccine Censorship Demands

On March 21, 2021, Facebook sent an email to the White House recapping a March 19 in-person meeting during which the Biden administration apparently โ€œdemanded a consistent point of contact with Facebook, additional data from Facebook, โ€˜Levers for Tackling Vaccine Hesitancy Content,โ€™ and censorship policies for Metaโ€™s platform WhatsApp.โ€ In response, according to Doughty, Facebook said it was โ€œcensoring, removing, and reducing the virality ofโ€ anti-vaccine content โ€œthat does not contain actionable misinformation.โ€

7. Facebook Shadowbans Vaccine Content on WhatsApp at Behest of White House

In the same aforementioned email, Facebook also agreed to shadowban anti-Covid vaccine content on Meta-owned WhatsApp. โ€œAs you know, in addition to removing vaccine misinformation, we have been focused on reducing the virality of content discouraging vaccines that do not contain actionable misinformation,โ€ the Big Tech company explained.ย 

8. Facebook Boosts White Houseโ€™s Vaccine Propaganda 

On April 13, 2021, the White House asked Facebook multiple times to โ€œamplifyโ€ pro-vaccine messaging in the wake of a โ€œtemporary haltโ€ of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. โ€œRe the J & J news, weโ€™re keen to amplify any messaging you want us to project about what this means for people,โ€ Facebook wrote back.ย 

9. White House Demands Censorship of Tucker Carlson Post 

On April 14, 2021, a White House official emailed a Facebook executive inquiring into why a Tucker Carlson post with an โ€œanti-vax messageโ€ had not been censored. Facebook responded, stating that while the post did not violate community guidelines, it was being โ€œdemoted.โ€ Another White House official, unsatisfied with the shadowbanning since Carlsonโ€™s post had garnered 40,000 shares, wrote an email demanding an explanation from Facebook. The official also apparently directly called a Facebook executive. Facebook subsequently assured the White House that the video was given a โ€œ50% demotion for seven days and stated that it would continue to demote the video.โ€

10.  Twitter Deplatforms Alex Berenson After White House Calls Him โ€˜Epicenter of Disinfoโ€™

On April 21, officials from the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services met with Twitter for a โ€œTwitter Vaccine Misinfo Briefing.โ€ During the meeting, White House officials โ€œwanted to knowโ€ why journalist Alex Berenson had not been โ€œkicked offโ€ Twitter, calling him โ€œthe epicenter of disinfo that radiated outwards to the persuadable public.โ€ Berenson was later suspended and eventually deplatformed.ย 

11.  Facebook Appeases White House Censorship Demands to Get Back in Bidenโ€™s โ€˜Good Gracesโ€™

In July 2021, after intense public and internal pressure from White House officials, including Press Secretary Jen Psaki and President Joe Biden himself, Facebook waged a mass censorship campaign against the โ€œDisinformation Dozenโ€ and anyone connected to them. The โ€œDisinformation Dozenโ€ are 12 users (one of whom is RFK Jr.) who were apparently responsible for the majority of anti-vaccine content. Around that same time, a Facebook official asked one of Bidenโ€™s senior advisers for ways to โ€œget back into the White Houseโ€™s good graces,โ€ adding that Facebook and the White House were โ€œ100% on the same team here in fighting this.โ€

12. White House Successfully Pressures Twitter to Remove Jill Biden Parody Video

On Nov. 30, 2021, the White House emailed Twitter to flag an edited video of First Lady Jill Biden โ€œprofanely heckling children while reading to them,โ€ according to the injunction. In response, Twitter slapped a label on the video, warning that it had been โ€œedited for comedic effect.โ€ However, that wasnโ€™t enough for the White House. After several back and forths that included the first ladyโ€™s press secretary, Twitter removed the video in December 2021.

The above list is only the tip of the iceberg. The Biden administrationโ€™s colossal war on the First Amendment includes an even wider range of targets, such as the Hunter Biden laptop story, the lab-leak theory, anyone who questions the integrity of the 2020 election, anyone who questions the security of voting by mail, anyone who questions climate change, pro-lifers, people who believe in the sex binary, negative posts about the economy, and general criticism of the president. โ€œIf the allegations made by Plaintiffs are true, the present case arguably involves the most massive attack against free speech in United Statesโ€™ history,โ€ wrote Judge Doughty.


Evita Duffy-Alfonso is a staff writer to The Federalist and the co-founder of the Chicago Thinker. She loves the Midwest, lumberjack sports, writing, and her family. Follow her on Twitter at @evitaduffy_1 or contact her at evita@thefederalist.com.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JUNE 30, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JUNE 23, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JUNE 16, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF JUNE 9, 2023


SUMMING UP HE WEEK OF JUNE 2, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MAY 26, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MAY 19, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MAY 12, 2023


In New Video, Tucker Carlson Announces Upcoming Show on Twitter


BY:ย TRISTAN JUSTICE | MAY 10, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/05/10/in-new-video-tucker-carlson-announces-upcoming-show-on-twitter/

Tucker Carlson

Tucker Carlson, the former Fox News prime-time host who was ripped from the airwaves last month, announced Tuesday he will be taking his show to Twitter.

โ€œThere arenโ€™t many platforms left that allow free speech,โ€ Carlson said in a three-minute video he tweeted. โ€œThe last big one remaining in the world, the only one, is Twitter, where we are now.โ€

Carlson gave few details about the โ€œnew versionโ€ of his former Fox program but added, โ€œWeโ€™ll be bringing some other things too, which weโ€™ll tell you about.โ€

โ€œBut for now weโ€™re just grateful to be here,โ€ Carlson said. As of Wednesday morning, the clip has racked up 78 million views.

Twitter CEO Elon Musk clarified the platform signed no official agreement with Carlson, which could have potentially violated the cable news hostโ€™s contract with Fox. The network sidelined its No. 1 prime-time host two years before the expiration of Carlsonโ€™s employment agreement, meaning they will be paying him $20 million a year not to do his show.

โ€œOn this platform, unlike the one-way street of broadcast, people are able to interact, critique, and refute whatever is said,โ€ Musk wrote in a tweeted statement. โ€œI also want to be clear that we have not signed a deal of any kind whatsoever.โ€

The exact reasons for Carlsonโ€™s abrupt departure remain unknown. Carlsonโ€™s last public appearance before going off the air was in the outskirts of Washington, D.C. The 53-year-old broadcaster gave the keynote speech for the Heritage Foundationโ€™s 50th-anniversary gala. Carlson criticized Big Techโ€™s influence over public opinion by way of censorship.

[READ: Tucker Carlson: โ€˜Information Controlโ€™ Via Internet Censorship Is A Huge Problem For Democracy]

Twitter, however, โ€œhas long served as a place where our national conversation incubates and develops,โ€ Carlson said in his Tuesday video. โ€œTwitter is not a partisan site, everybodyโ€™s allowed here, and we think thatโ€™s a good thing.โ€

Carlsonโ€™s ouster from Fox News last month triggered an immediate nosedive in network ratings. Meanwhile, leftists celebrated, and a far-left member of Congress cheered โ€œdeplatforming works.โ€

โ€œTucker Carlson is out at Fox News. Couldnโ€™t have happened to a better guy,โ€ New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezย toldย her 8.6 million followers on Instagram. โ€œDeplatforming works and it is important, and there you go. Good things can happen.โ€


Tristan Justice is the western correspondent for The Federalist and the author of Social Justice Redux, a conservative newsletter on culture, health, and wellness. He has also written for The Washington Examiner and The Daily Signal. His work has also been featured in Real Clear Politics and Fox News. Tristan graduated from George Washington University where he majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow him on Twitter at @JusticeTristan or contact him at Tristan@thefederalist.com. Sign up for Tristan’s email newsletter here.

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SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MAY 5, 2023


Lawsuit Shows Governmentโ€™s Hands All Over The Election Integrity Partnershipโ€™s Censorship Campaign


BY:ย MARGOT CLEVELAND | MAY 03, 2023

Read more at https://www.foxnews.com/us/atlanta-active-shooter-situation-leaves-multiple-people-injured-police-say

man wearing mask votes in 2020 election
While private platforms did the censoring, the complaint establishes it was the government that initiated and pushed for that censorship.

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The members of the Election Integrity Partnership and Virality Project conspired with state, local, and federal government officials to violate the First Amendment rights of social media users, a class-action lawsuit filed on Tuesday in a Louisiana federal court alleged.

Over the course of the 88-page complaint, the named plaintiffs, Gateway Pundit founder Jim Hoft and Co-Director of Health Freedom Louisiana Jill Hines, detailed extensive direct and indirect government involvement with the defendantsโ€™ censorship activities, allegedly making the private entities and individuals โ€œstate actorsโ€ for purposes of the Constitution. 

Here are the highlights of the governmentโ€™s alleged connection to the defendantsโ€™ censorship activities.

A Bit About the Defendants

Formed in 2020, the Election Integrity Partnership (EIP) describes itself as a partnership โ€œbetween four of the nationโ€™s leading institutions focused on understanding misinformation and disinformation in the social media landscape: the Stanford Internet Observatory, the University of Washingtonโ€™s Center for an Informed Public, Graphika, and the Atlantic Councilโ€™s Digital Forensic Research Lab.โ€ In early 2021, the same four entities expanded their focus to address supposed Covid-19 โ€œmisinformationโ€ on social media, calling the effort the โ€œVirality Project.โ€

In both the run-up to the 2020 election and since then, EIP and the Virality Project pushed Big Tech companies to censor speech. Excepting the University of Washington, which was not named in the class-action lawsuit, the institutions involved in the EIP and Virality Project are private entities, and the individuals running those institutions are non-governmental actors. Thus, without more, the censorship efforts would not implicate the First Amendment.

The Alleged Conspiracy

But there was more โ€” much more โ€” a conspiracy between the defendants, according to the complaint. Those defendants include the Stanford Internet Observatory and the Leland Stanford Junior University and its board of trustees, the latter two of which are allegedly legally responsible for the observatoryโ€™s conduct; Alex Stamos, the director of the Stanford Internet Observatory; Renรฉe DiResta, the Stanford Internet Observatoryโ€™s research manager; the Atlantic Council; the Atlantic Councilโ€™s Digital Forensic Research Lab; and Graham Brookie, the senior director of the Atlantic Councilโ€™s DFRLab. 

In support of the alleged conspiracy, the plaintiffs quoted at length the defendantsโ€™ own words, much of it culled from the EIPโ€™s post-election report, but also pulled from interviews and its webpage. Here we see the EIP boast of its โ€œcoalitionโ€ that exchanged information with โ€œelection officials, government agencies,โ€ and โ€œsocial media platforms.โ€ โ€œThe work carried out by the EIP and its partners during the 2020 U.S. election,โ€ the defendants stressed, โ€œunited government, academia, civil society, and industry, analyzing across platforms, to address misinformation in real time.โ€ 

The united goal, according to the complaint, was censorship. This is clear from Stamosโ€™ Aug. 26, 2020, comment to The New York Times, when the Stanford Observatory director explained that the EIP sought to collaborate with Big Tech to remove โ€œdisinformation.โ€ The EIP further explained that it saw itself filling the โ€œcritical gapโ€ of monitoring supposed election โ€œmisinformationโ€ inside the United States โ€” a gap the EIP recognized existed because the First Amendment prevents the government from censoring speech.

But the EIP did not act alone. In fact, the EIP was created โ€œin consultationโ€ with the Department of Homeland Securityโ€™s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA, with the idea for the EIP allegedly originating from CISA interns who were Stanford students. The CISA then assisted Stanford as it sought to โ€œfigure out what the gap wasโ€ the EIP needed to address. Two weeks before EIP officially launched, Stanford also met โ€œwith CISA to present EIP concept.โ€ 

Government Collaboration with EIP

The government continued to work with EIP after its formation. Both federal and state-level government officials submitted โ€œticketsโ€ or reports of supposed misinformation to EIP, which would then submit them to the social media companies for censorship. EIPโ€™s post-election report identified government partners who submitted tips of misinformation, including CISA, the State Departmentโ€™s Global Engagement Center (GEC), and the Elections Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center, the last of which received reports of disinformation from state and local government officials. EIP would then forward the complaints to the social media companies for censorship. 

CISA also helped EIP by connecting it with election-official groups, such as the National Association of Secretaries of State and the National Association of State Election Directors, both of which represent state and local government officials. CISA facilitated meetings between EIP and those groups as well, leading to censorship requests fed to the EIP and then forwarded to social media companies.

The governmentโ€™s entanglement with the censorship efforts of EIP was more pronounced when it came to the Center for Internet Security because CISA both funded the Center for Internet Security and directed state and local election officials to report supposed misinformation to it. CISA further connected the Center for Internet Security to EIP, resulting in the former feeding the latter a substantial number of misinformation tickets. EIP then pushed those censorship requests to social media companies.

Later, as the 2020 election neared, CISA coordinated with the Center for Internet Security and EIP โ€œto establish a joint reporting process,โ€ with the three organizations agreeing to โ€œlet each other know what they were reporting to platforms like Twitter.โ€ 

Overlapping Personnel

The individuals responsible for EIP, including Stamos, DiResta, and Kate Starbird, all โ€œhave or had formal roles in CISA.โ€ Both Stamos and Starbird are members of CISAโ€™s Cybersecurity Advisory Committee, while DiResta is a โ€œSubject Matter Expertโ€ for a CISA subcommittee. 

Additionally, two of the six CISA members who โ€œtook shiftsโ€ in reporting supposed misinformation to Big Tech companies apparently worked simultaneously as interns for CISA and at the Stanford Internet Observatory and EIP, reporting โ€œmisinformationโ€ to the social media companies on behalf of both CISA and EIP. In fact, the two interns reported โ€œmisinformationโ€ to platforms on behalf of CISA by using โ€œEIP ticket numbers.โ€ One of the CISA interns also forwarded a detailed report of supposed โ€œmisinformationโ€ from the Election Integrity Partnership to social media companies using CISAโ€™s reporting system. 

Coordination with Virality Project

As noted above, after the 2020 election, the Election Integrity Project replicated its censorship efforts to combat so-called Covid โ€œmisinformationโ€ through the Virality Project. The Virality Project used the foundations established with the governmentโ€™s assistance for the EIP and continued to collaborate with government officials and Big Tech.

The Virality Project boasted of its โ€œstrong ties with several federal government agencies, most notably the Office of the Surgeon General (OSG) and the CDC.โ€ The Virality Project also identified โ€œfederal health agenciesโ€ and โ€œstate and local public health officialsโ€ as โ€œstakeholdersโ€ who โ€œprovided tips, feedback and requests to assess specific incidents and narratives.โ€ And as was the case with the Election Integrity Project, the Virality Project flagged content for censorship by social media companies, including Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram, through a ticket system.

While it was those private platforms that censored Hoft, Hines, and an untold number of other Americans, the class-action complaint establishes it was the government that initiated and pushed for that censorship, while hiding behind EIP and other organizations. And because EIP allegedly conspired with the government to silence the plaintiffsโ€™ speech, the class-action lawsuit seeks to hold it liable too. 

The defendants have some time before responding. When they do, theyโ€™ll likely seek to have the lawsuit tossed, arguing they arenโ€™t the government and thus could not violate the First Amendment. The detailed allegations of collaboration with the government make it unlikely they will succeed on a motion to dismiss, however, which will mean the plaintiffs will be entitled to discovery โ€” and thatโ€™s where weโ€™ll likely see the real evidence of a conspiracy. 


Margot Cleveland is The Federalist’s senior legal correspondent. She is also a contributor to National Review Online, the Washington Examiner, Aleteia, and Townhall.com, and has been published in the Wall Street Journal and USA Today. Cleveland is a lawyer and a graduate of the Notre Dame Law School, where she earned the Hoynes Prizeโ€”the law schoolโ€™s highest honor. She later served for nearly 25 years as a permanent law clerk for a federal appellate judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Cleveland is a former full-time university faculty member and now teaches as an adjunct from time to time. As a stay-at-home homeschooling mom of a young son with cystic fibrosis, Cleveland frequently writes on cultural issues related to parenting and special-needs children. Cleveland is on Twitter at @ProfMJCleveland. The views expressed here are those of Cleveland in her private capacity.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF APRIL 28, 2023


Today’s Politically INCORRECT Cartoon by A.F. Branco


A.F. Branco Cartoon โ€“ Free Agent

A.F. BRANCO |ย onย April 26, 2023 | https://comicallyincorrect.com/a-f-branco-cartoon-free-agent/

Fox News abruptly removes Tucker Carlson as they move to more center-left Programming.

Tucker Leaves Fox News
Political cartoon by A.F. Branco .

DONATEย to A.F.Branco Cartoons โ€“ Tips accepted and appreciatedย โ€“ $1.00 โ€“ $5.00 โ€“ $25.00 โ€“ $50.00 โ€“ $100 โ€“ it all helps to fund this website and keep the cartoons coming. Also Venmo @AFBranco โ€“ THANK YOU!

A.F. Branco has taken his two greatest passions, (art and politics) and translated them into cartoons that have been popular all over the country, in various news outlets including NewsMax, Fox News, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, and โ€œThe Washington Post.โ€ He has been recognized by such personalities as Rep. Devin Nunes, Dinesh Dโ€™Souza, James Woods, Chris Salcedo, Sarah Palin, Larry Elder, Lars Larson, Rush Limbaugh, and Presiden

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF April 21, 2023


Today’s Politically INCORRECT Cartoon by A.F. Branco


A.F. Branco Cartoon โ€“ Farcebook

A.F. BRANCO |ย onย April 19, 2023 | https://comicallyincorrect.com/a-f-branco-cartoon-farcebook/

Twitter owner Elon asks Facebook to open up the books and reveal the deep state and Democrat collusion.

Facebook Government Secrets
Political cartoon by A.F. Branco ยฉ2023.

DONATEย to A.F.Branco Cartoons โ€“ Tips accepted and appreciatedย โ€“ $1.00 โ€“ $5.00 โ€“ $25.00 โ€“ $50.00 โ€“ $100 โ€“ it all helps to fund this website and keep the cartoons coming. Also Venmo @AFBranco โ€“ THANK YOU!

A.F. Branco has taken his two greatest passions, (art and politics) and translated them into cartoons that have been popular all over the country, in various news outlets including NewsMax, Fox News, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, and โ€œThe Washington Post.โ€ He has been recognized by such personalities as Rep. Devin Nunes, Dinesh Dโ€™Souza, James Woods, Chris Salcedo, Sarah Palin, Larry Elder, Lars Larson, Rush Limbaugh, and President.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF APRIL 14, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF APRIL 7, 2023


SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MARCH 31, 2023


Study: Free Speech On Twitter Worse Under Elon Muskย 


BY:ย EVITA DUFFY-ALFONSO | MARCH 30, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/03/30/study-free-speech-on-twitter-worse-under-elon-musk/

Study: Free Speech On Twitter Worse Under Elon Muskย 
A new study from the Media Research Center found Twitter is more oppressiveย since Elon Musk acquired the platform.

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Following theย Twitter censorshipย of Federalist CEO Sean Davis, several journalists, and a sitting member of Congress who all reported on the โ€œTrans Day Of Vengeanceโ€ after the Nashville Shooting, the Media Research Center (MRC) published a shocking study about โ€œfree speechโ€ on Twitter. Despite many claims to the contrary, the MRC found the company has becomeย moreย oppressiveย since Elon Musk acquired the platform.ย ย 

According to data from the MRCโ€™s Free Speech Americaโ€™sย CensorTrack.orgย database, there have been 293 cases of documented censorship since Musk took over from Nov. 4, 2022, through Mar. 4, 2023. This is 67 more cases than the 226 instances reported by CensorTrack.org from pre-Musk Twitter during the same time last year.ย 

The Media Research Center also found Twitterโ€™s methods of censorship recently became more severe. โ€œIn 245 of the 293 (84%) documented cases of censorship on CensorTrack.org, Twitter locked usersโ€™ accounts, and in nearly all cases users were required to delete the content to regain access to their accounts,โ€ reports the MRC. โ€œUnder the old Twitter regime, by contrast, only 136 of the 226 (60%) documented cases of censorship consisted of locked accounts.โ€

An astounding 62 percent of the censorship cases under Muskโ€™s leadership involved tweets critical of transgenderism. โ€œAt least 182 of the 293 (62%) documented cases of censorship recorded in the CensorTrack.org database for Twitter under Musk involved users being censored for speech critical of the leftโ€™s woke โ€˜transgenderโ€™ narrative,โ€ writes the MRC.

On Tuesday, Federalist CEO Sean Davis, other journalists, and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene were locked out of Twitter for reporting on the โ€œTrans Day Of Vengeanceโ€ following the deaths of three children and three staff members at a Christian school in Tennessee at the hands of a transgender shooter.

Twitter claimed Davisโ€™ objectively true tweet reporting on the panned โ€œTrans Day Of Vengeanceโ€ violated the appโ€™s rules โ€œagainst violent speech.โ€ Not only did Twitter lock Davis out of his account, but it also defamed him by falsely claiming he had โ€œthreatened, incited, glorified, or expressed a desire for violence.โ€ โ€œTwitter has a right to ban me for whatever reason it wants, but it doesnโ€™t have a right to viciously lie about me,โ€ Davis wrote, addressing the ban. 

Davis has also been subjected to Twitterโ€™s insidious shadow banning that carried over from the platformโ€™s previous regime. And Federalist Senior Editor John Davidson has been locked out of his account for a full year because he tweeted the biological fact that Rachel Levine, the Biden administrationโ€™s transgender assistant secretary for health, is a man. Both Davis and Davidson have made appeals since Musk purchased the company over, but both remain censored on Twitter.

A year ago, Musk claimed he saw Twitter as the โ€œde facto town squareโ€ and that โ€œfailing to adhere to free speech principles fundamentally undermines democracy.โ€ Unfortunately, as the anecdotal evidence and data from MRC show, Muskโ€™s โ€œfree speech absolutistโ€ Twitter rebrand has failed to live up to the hype.

โ€œNo amount of lofty rhetoric or grandiose plans from Musk about his love of free speech and facts can compete with the cold, hard reality that the service he owns doesnโ€™t just oppose free speech; Twitter detests it,โ€ wrote Davis. 


Evita Duffy-Alfonso is a staff writer to The Federalist and the co-founder of the Chicago Thinker. She loves the Midwest, lumberjack sports, writing, and her family. Follow her on Twitter at @evitaduffy_1 or contact her at evita@thefederalist.com.

Judge Duncanโ€™s Struggle Session Shows Why We Need Fiercer Protection of Free Speech


BY:ย SAMUEL MANGOLD-LENETT | MARCH 27, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/03/27/judge-duncans-struggle-session-shows-why-we-need-fiercer-protection-of-free-speech/

Judge Kyle Duncan
The Stanford disruptorsโ€™ objective was to destroy American civil society and replace it with leftist authoritarianism, preventing dissent.

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The culture of free speech that for so long characterized American academia is dead. Increasingly, struggle sessions and violent eruptions are how the nationโ€™s best and brightest choose to handle the ideas, individuals, and situations that make them uncomfortable.

Earlier this month, Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Kyle Duncan was invited by the Stanford Federalist Society to their law school to give a talk titled โ€œCovid, Guns, and Twitter.โ€ What ensued is what has become the norm. A coalition of the dysgenic and well-dressed filled a lecture hall to shout down and demean a federal judge while a school diversity administrator chastised him with prepared remarks.

Disagreement is OK and clearly would have been welcomed by Duncan, but when students feel emboldened to tell a federal judge, โ€œWe hope your daughters get raped,โ€ as one individual allegedly did, a course correction is desperately needed.

On Friday, Duncan addressed this very topic in a talk titled โ€œFree Speech and Legal Education In Our Liberal Democracyโ€ at the University of Notre Dameโ€™s Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government. 

โ€œThis is a talk about another talk,โ€ Duncan quipped to inform those in the audience who were unaware that he would be, in part, discussing the incident at Stanford.

In a general defense of student protests, Duncan stated, โ€œItโ€™s a great country where you can harshly criticize federal judges and nothing bad will happen to you. โ€ฆ The students at Stanford and other elite law schools swim in an ocean of free speech. โ€ฆ Has any group of people ever been so privileged?โ€ 

Continuing, the judge referenced a memo published on March 22 by the dean of Stanford Law, Jenny Martinez, in which she condemned the disruptions and โ€œthreatening messages directed at members of [the Stanford Law] communityโ€ and pledged to adopt stricter policies regarding event disruption.

Martinezโ€™s memo specifically contrasts student protests with malicious disruptions, noting that universities, as institutions, have unique obligations to curtail the latter in the pursuit of academic freedom through the enforcement of conduct codes and administrative policies. And as Duncan noted, a rigid commitment to the cause of academic freedom is absolutely vital to both the preservation of the university system and American society. 

The universities that, at one point in time, were renowned for their unyielding commitment to free speech and the relentless pursuit of excellence in all things, to this day โ€” despite the diminishing quality of graduates โ€” still churn out leaders in every single sector.

Noting the undeniable trend of woke radicalization among young people in elite universities and the threat it poses to the maintenance of civil order and liberal democracy, Duncan asked, โ€œWhat would happen if the cast of mind in that Stanford classroom becomes the norm in legislatures, in courts, in universities, in boardrooms, in business, in churches?โ€

โ€œWe must resist this at all costs,โ€ Duncan continued. โ€œOtherwise, we will cease to have [the] rule of law.โ€

Toward the end of her memo, Martinez also ruled out disciplining the individuals who disrupted Duncanโ€™s lecture at Stanford Law, as it would be onerous to discern which students โ€œcrossed the line into disruptive heckling while others engaged in constitutionally protected non-disruptive protestโ€ and that university administrators sent โ€œconflicting signals about whether what was happening was acceptable or not.โ€

Instead, the offending students โ€” along with the rest of the law schoolโ€™s student body โ€” will be required to attend a โ€œmandatory half-day session in spring quarter for all students on the topic of freedom of speech and the norms of the legal profession.โ€ 

In the final moments of his speech at Notre Dame, Duncan mentioned he was โ€œcautiously encouragedโ€ by this measure as it indicated Stanford Lawโ€™s leadership was in some form committed to fighting for the foundational principles of American academia. He also noted that the point of the struggle session wasnโ€™t purely to intimidate or dissuade him. After all, heโ€™s a federal judge โ€” he has life tenure; his future is secure. 

The point of heckling Duncan, denying him a chance to make his case, and even wishing rape upon his children was to make an example out of him and to intimidate the students who invited him to speak. The disruptors want to destroy what is left of American civil society and replace it with an even more omnipresentย wokeย authoritarianism, further preventing the dissemination of dissent. In order to accomplish this, they need future generations of leaders โ€” their classmates โ€” to be afraid, so they jeer and they threaten.ย 

This ethos, one that is undeniably a well-established, if not the dominant, worldview on American campuses, cannot be remedied through scolding. Half-day sessions โ€œon the topic of freedom of speech and the norms of the legal professionโ€ might knock some sense into a couple of dozen Stanford Law students, but what about every other campus in the U.S.? 

Days after the incident at Stanford Law, militant Antifa groups descended upon the University of California, Davis, in an attempt to prevent Charlie Kirk, founder of the conservative student organization Turning Point USA, from speaking on campus. Prior to the event, Gary May, the chancellor of UC Davis, circulated aย videoย claiming Kirk โ€œadvocated for violence against transgender individuals.โ€ Ultimately, the militants were unsuccessful in their attempts, but unlike at Stanford, the disruptors attemptedย violenceย and destroyed public property in the pursuit of denying an individualโ€™s right to free speech.

How much longer can we continue to delude ourselves about free speech? There are, to be sure, legal protections for speech, but the leftists who control the institutions where these protections are most needed (academia, Big Tech, et al.)  actively eschew and chip away at them in collaboration with the federal government.

A more muscular approach to protect the speech of Americans is needed. 

In 2019, President Donald Trump issued an executive order requiring American universities โ€œto foster environments that promote open, intellectually engaging, and diverse debate [ ] through compliance with the First Amendmentโ€ in order to access specific federal funds

But even this, as we can see, didnโ€™t โ€” rather, it couldnโ€™t โ€” address the underlying ideological issues at play. 

Sure, threatening to cut off federal grants might encourage university administrators to be more vigilant in their defense of (or less hostile in their attacks on) free speech. But, at the end of the day, the left controls these institutions and interprets โ€œfree speechโ€ in a way that is fundamentally at odds with the American founding and the First Amendment; speech must be contained within their preferred paradigm, or else it and anything descending from it is an affront to their very existence and must be eradicated.

Back at Stanford Law, Tirien Steinbach, the diversity administrator who chastised Duncan, has been put on leave, and per Martinezโ€™s memo, an explicit role of other Stanford Law administrators moving forward โ€œwill be to ensure that university rules on disruption of events will be followed, and all staff will receive additional training in that regard.โ€

So perhaps Duncan is right to be somewhat optimistic.


Samuel Mangold-Lenett is a staff editor at The Federalist. His writing has been featured in the Daily Wire, Townhall, The American Spectator, and other outlets. He is a 2022 Claremont Institute Publius Fellow. Follow him on Twitter @Mangold_Lenett.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MARCH 24, 2023


Time Is Running Out to Speak Freely About Free Speech in America


BY:ย MARGOT CLEVELAND | MARCH 20, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/03/20/time-is-running-out-to-speak-freely-about-free-speech-in-america/

man holding a finger up to his lips in shushing motion in black and white
Americans need to have an important discussion about free speech now โ€” before the Censorship Complex makes it impossible to do so.ย 

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The Censorship Complex โ€” whereby Big Tech censorship is induced by the government, media, and media-rating businesses โ€” threatens the future of free speech in this country. To understand how and why, Americans need to talk about speech โ€” and the governmentโ€™s motive to deceive the public. 

To frame this discussion, consider these hypotheticals:

  • Two American soldiers training Ukraine soldiers in Poland cross into the war zone, ambushing and killing five Russian soldiers. Unbeknownst to the American soldiers, a Ukrainian soldier filmed the incident and provides the footage to an independent journalist who authors an article on Substack, providing a link to the video. 
  • Russia uses its intelligence service and โ€œbotsโ€ to flood social media with claims that the Ukrainians are misusing 90 percent of American tax dollars. In truth, โ€œonlyโ€ 40 percent of American tax dollars are being wasted or corruptly usurped โ€” a fact that an independent journalist learns when a government source leaks a Department of Defense report detailing the misappropriation of the funds sent to Ukraine.
  • A third of Americans disagree with the continued funding of the war in Ukraine and organically prompt #NoMoreMoola to trend. After this organic hashtag trend begins, Russian operatives amplify the hashtag while the Russian-run state media outlet, Russia Today, reports on the hashtag trend. 
  • Following the collapse of the Silicon Valley Bank, the communist Chinese government uses social media to create the false narrative that 10 specifically named financial institutions are bordering on collapsing. In reality, only Bank A1 is financially troubled, but a bank run on any of the 10 banks would cause those banks to collapse too.

In each of these scenarios โ€” and countless others โ€” the government has an incentive to deceive the country. Americans need to recognize this reality to understand the danger posed by the voluntary censorship of speech.

Our government will always seek to quash certain true stories and seed certain false stories: sometimes to protect human life, sometimes to protect our national defense or the economy or public health, sometimes to obtain the upper hand against a foreign adversary, and sometimes to protect the self-interests of its leaders, preferred policy perspectives, and political and personal friends.

Since the founding, Americaโ€™s free press provided a check on a government seeking to bury the truth, peddle a lie, or promote its leadersโ€™ self-interest. At times, the legacy press may have buried a story or delayed its reporting to protect national security interests, but historically those examples were few and far between. 

Even after the left-leaning slant of legacy media outlets took hold and โ€œjournalistsโ€ became more open to burying (or spinning) stories to protect their favored politicians or policies, new media provided a stronger check and a way for Americans to learn the truth. The rise of social media, citizen journalists, Substack, and blogs added further roadblocks to both government abuse and biased and false reporting. 

Donald Trumpโ€™s rise, his successful use of social media, and new mediaโ€™s refusal to join the crusade against Trump caused a fatal case of Stockholm Syndrome, with Big Tech and legacy media outlets welcoming government requests for censorship. With support from both for-profit and nonprofit organizations and academic institutions, a Censorship Complex emerged, embracing the governmentโ€™s definition of โ€œtruthโ€ and seeking to silence any who challenged it, whether it be new media or individual Americans โ€” even experts. 

The search for truth suffered as a result, and Americans were deprived of valuable information necessary for self-governance. 

We know this because notwithstanding the massive efforts to silence speech, a ragtag group of muckrakers persisted and exposed several official dictates as lies: The Hunter Biden laptop was not Russian disinformation, Covid very well may have escaped from a Wuhan lab, and Trump did not collude with Putin. 

But if the Censorship Complex succeeds and silences the few journalists and outlets still willing to challenge the government, Americans will no longer have the means to learn the truth. 

Consider again the above hypotheticals. In each of those scenarios, the government โ€” or at least some in the government โ€” has an incentive to bury the truth. In each, it could frame the truth as a foreign disinformation campaign and offer Americans a countervailing lie as the truth. 

A populace voluntarily acquiescing in the censorship of speech because it is purportedly foreign misinformation or disinformation will soon face a government that lies, protected by complicit media outlets that repeat those lies as truth, social media websites that ban or censor reporting that challenges the official government narrative, hosting services that deplatform dissenting media outlets, advertisers that starve journalists of compensation, and search engines that hide the results of disfavored viewpoints.

The window is quickly closing on free speech in America, so before it is locked and the curtain thrown shut, we must talk about speech. We need to discuss the circumstances, if any, in which the government should alert reporters and media outlets to supposed foreign disinformation and how. We need to discuss the circumstances, if any, under which Big Tech should censor speech.

Americans need to have this discussion now โ€” before the Censorship Complex makes it impossible to do so. 


Margot Cleveland is The Federalist’s senior legal correspondent. She is also a contributor to National Review Online, the Washington Examiner, Aleteia, and Townhall.com, and has been published in the Wall Street Journal and USA Today. Cleveland is a lawyer and a graduate of the Notre Dame Law School, where she earned the Hoynes Prizeโ€”the law schoolโ€™s highest honor. She later served for nearly 25 years as a permanent law clerk for a federal appellate judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Cleveland is a former full-time university faculty member and now teaches as an adjunct from time to time. As a stay-at-home homeschooling mom of a young son with cystic fibrosis, Cleveland frequently writes on cultural issues related to parenting and special-needs children. Cleveland is on Twitter at @ProfMJCleveland. The views expressed here are those of Cleveland in her private capacity.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MARCH 17, 2023


Itโ€™s OK to be WHITE, Maybe


By: Lawrence Johnson | March 13, 2023

ย Read more at https://theblacksphere.net/2023/03/its-ok-to-be-white-maybe/

homer Simpson, cancel culture, Kevin Jackson

โ€œWhy, you littleโ€ฆ Iโ€™ll teach you to laugh at something thatโ€™s funny!โ€ -Homer Simpson

As a society, we understand very well the term, โ€œfree speech isnโ€™t free.โ€ This double-entendre statement has arguably been more applicable in the past several years than in any other time in history. That all freedoms come at a cost, most understand, but the freedom to say what you believe or think, is literally under siege these days.

In such cases, due to terms like, โ€˜misinformationโ€™ and โ€˜disinformation,โ€™ it need not even be a lie; an imagined slight is all it takes. This quote from โ€œThe Simpsonโ€™s movieโ€ back in 2007 references an ideology that at the time, seemed far-fetched. However, as life imitates art in 2023, simply laughing at something funny or speaking unpopular truths can end a career.

During the last weekend of February 2023, the popular comic strip โ€œDilbertโ€ was dropped by nearly 80 newspaper outlets across the country after what many considered a โ€˜racist rantโ€™ by its creator, Scott Adams.

According to News One, โ€œIt followed an incident in which Adams, on his program โ€œReal Coffee with Scott Adams,โ€ reacted to a recent survey by Rasmussen Reports that concluded only 53% of Black Americans agreed with the statement โ€œItโ€™s OK to be white.โ€ If only about half thought it was OK to be white, Adams remarked, this qualified Black Americans as a โ€œhate group.โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t want to have anything to do with them,โ€ Adams added. โ€œAnd I would say, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to white people is to get the hell away from Black people, just get the fโ€” away  because there is no fixing this. This canโ€™t be fixed.โ€

Adams later doubled down on his statements, writing on Twitter that โ€œDilbert has been canceled from all newspapers, websites, calendars, and books because I gave some advice everyone agreed with.โ€

According to Forbes, this was the timeline of events:

  • February 22: Adams spends several profanity-laden minutes telling white people to โ€œget awayโ€ from Black people after reading a Rasmussen poll that found that only 53% of Black respondents agreed with the statement, โ€œItโ€™s okay to be white.โ€
  • February 24: Some newspapers and publishing groups, including the USA TODAY Network and Advance Local Group, decide to stop publishing Dilbert, removing the cartoon from over 200 papers across the country.
  • February 25: The Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, the Philadelphia Inquirer and the San Antonio Express-News, among others, drop Dilbert.
  • February 25: Adams expands on his remarks in an almost two-hour interview with online personality Hotep Jesus.
  • February 26: Adams links to Saturdayโ€™s interview and tweets heโ€™s only accepting criticism from people who know the full context, claiming that much of the coverage against him is โ€œfake news.โ€
  • February 26: Elon Musk tweets support of Adams, claiming: โ€œFor a *very* long time, US media was racist against non-white people, now theyโ€™re  racist against whites & Asians.
  • February 26: The National Cartoonists Society disavows โ€œall forms of racism and discriminationโ€ (Dilbert won the Societyโ€™s highest honor, the Reuben Award, in 1998).
  • February 27: Adams is dropped by publishing company Andrews McMeel Universal, whose chairman and CEO tweeted that the company supports free speech but not โ€œcommentary rooted in discrimination or hate.โ€
  • February 28: Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin Random House, cancels the September release of Adamsโ€™ Reframe Your Brain, the Wall Street Journal reports.

Cancel Culture Gone Crazy

Though Adams has been derided for his outspokenness before, this was something new. In a matter of only four days, an iconic comic strip with millions of devoted readers is erased from newspapers all over America. Amazing how damaging thinking aloud can be.

Whether audiences of media, social and otherwise realize it, we are at an inflection point. While it may appear hyperbolic, unless youโ€™ve been sleeping- we should all be concerned. One of the best things that Americans and those seeking to be citizens of this country once appreciated was our Constitution.

Within that document sits a list of Amendments, and these contained rights that bestowed freedoms on every American. Among those are rights against illegal search and seizure, the right to bear arms, and of course- the freedom of speech.

No doubt most of us have watched over time as those rights (mentioned and not mentioned) have not just eroded, but rather, simply been taken away. If the adage, โ€œabsolute power corrupts absolutelyโ€ tells us anything, our Constitution, as is, may have a shelf life, with a looming expiration date.

Weighing In

While this writer does not agree entirely with Scott Adamsโ€™ feelings or assessment, he has every right to say it, much like a Klansman in full-hooded garb, can, and has the right to walk into an all-black-neighborhood and yell, โ€œI HATE NIGGERS!โ€ from the top of his lungs- at his own peril. And while โ€œThe Simpsonsโ€ is not anyoneโ€™s paragon of virtue, hope or even familial example, Homerโ€™s words still ring no less true.

As we watch black-and-white films of civil rights attacks from the 60โ€™s, and cringe at the Holocaust atrocities of the 40โ€™s, we dare not be so naรฏve to miss the fact that history is repeating herself. However, donโ€™t be fooled. It isnโ€™t through angry words and rhetoric that this is occurring, and not even because of those colleges and venues that boycott and allow the shouting down of speakers.

It wonโ€™t be due to judges being mocked and bullied from outside their own homes, or pro-lifers being accosted because of praying in front of abortion clinics. No, it will be because of those that knew it happened, those
that heard it happened, those that saw it happen, and those sat by as it happened-and did nothing.

Unfortunately, this is not the first time this has happened; stay tuned.

No, Age-Appropriate Library Restrictions Are Not โ€˜Book Bansโ€™


BY:ย RAHEEM WILLIAMS | MARCH 15, 2023

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/03/15/no-age-appropriate-library-restrictions-are-not-book-bans/

kids section of a library where media claim book bans are taking effect
A public, taxpayer-funded entity refusing to purchase and disseminate a book does not constitute a โ€˜ban,โ€™ contrary to media reports.

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Reports of book banning have proliferated throughout the media. Understandably, such claims should raise concern among free speech advocates. The ability to freely disseminate knowledge and challenge the status quo is a fundamental pillar of a free society. An illiberal act such as a book ban should be met with scorn by those who truly care about advancing society. However, behind claims of rampantly spreading censorship, a key question has been left unanswered. Whatโ€™s a book ban?

The word ban is generally understood to mean a prohibition of a certain behavior, substance, or object. However, due to First Amendment constitutional protections and corresponding case law, itโ€™s illegal for any government entity to outlaw the possession of a book. With very rare exceptions, there are no penalties for owning, buying, and selling books in America.

Yet media reports claim book bans are spreading like wildfires in states such as Florida and Texas. So how can that be?

Which Books Are Banned?

The issue is primarily a cultural tug-of-war taking place in public school libraries. The discovery of sexually explicit books on school bookshelves nationwide has sparked controversy.

Pen America is easily the most cited organization when it comes to book bans. The self-proclaimed โ€œfree speechโ€ advocacy group is mentioned in almost every media report on the subject. Yet few Americans understand the very expansive definition of a โ€œbook banโ€ utilized by the organization. Pen America considers books โ€œchallenged for review,โ€ but still available for student use, as โ€œbannedโ€ even if the books havenโ€™t been removed from the library. Pen America considers any book thatโ€™s available but age-restricted as โ€œbanned.โ€ Moreover, several school districts have refuted the popular book ban list produced by Pen America, claiming the list contained books that were never removed from circulation in their respective libraries.

An expansive view of โ€œbook bansโ€ creates a few problems. Thereโ€™s an assumption that the government has a responsibility to produce and distribute every book in existence to school children free of charge. This may sound great until you consider that books often contain inaccurate, poorly sourced, or controversial information. I doubt anyone of reason would consider the exclusion of books such as Hitlerโ€™s โ€œMein Kampfโ€ (a Nazi manifesto), โ€œThe Anarchist Cookbookโ€ (a bomb-building guide), and โ€œThe Turner Diariesโ€ (a white supremacy recruitment novel) from our public K-12 libraries to be an illiberal attempt to suppress free speech.

Does Ideology Influence Book Selection?

Nonetheless, thereโ€™s reason to believe some librarians have injected their own bias into the procurement process. Writer Kirk Cameron has had his Christian childrenโ€™s books rejected by publicly funded libraries that openly embrace drag queen story hours featuring pro-transgender book titles. At the time of writing, Pen Americaโ€™s website produced nothing on the aforementioned controversies surrounding the rejection of conservative-themed books.

Additionally, the American Association of School Librarians grants an annualย โ€œSocial Justiceโ€ย award of $2,000 to librarians and $5,000 for new books to school librarians for devising a โ€œprogram, unit, or event in support of social justice using resources of the school library.โ€ย Although one may agree with the decisions of a publicly funded library to promote or demote a certain viewpoint, it requires a substantial degree of denialism to pretend viewpoint discrimination isnโ€™t happening.

Who Should Pick the Books?

A 5-4 Supreme Court Decision in Board of Education, Island Trees Union Free School District v. Pico (1982) restricts school boards from removing books on the basis of subject matter, recognizing school libraries as special free speech zones. However, the dissenting justices argued that, because books can be obtained outside the school library and school board officials are democratically elected to handle affairs related to the management of the school, there are no First Amendment implications concerning the exclusion of certain materials. Furthermore, the view of school libraries as being crucial free speech zones seems antiquated in the age of social media and smartphones.

Maybe itโ€™s time to question the idea that a government agency refusing to disseminate a book constitutes a ban of any sort. Public school libraries are taxpayer-funded entities. In our democratic society, we vote for policies that reflect our values and preferences. These voter preferences should manifest as we set priorities in public school education.

Just as many jurisdictions may refuse to provide bomb-building instruction, gunsmithing guides, and white supremacy manifestos to their students, school boards everywhere should be allowed to make reasonable value judgments concerning objectionable content.

Educators and librarians are humans with biases and policy preferences just like the rest of us. Deferring to them with no community oversight doesnโ€™t prevent viewpoint discrimination; it just ensures it goes unchallenged.


Raheem Williams is a policy analyst at the Center for Urban Renewal and Education (CURE). He has worked for several liberty-based academic research centers and think tanks. He received his B.A. in economics from Florida International University and his M.A. in financial economics from the University of Detroit Mercy.

SUMMING UP THE WEEK OF MARCH 10, 2023


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