Thank goodness for the First Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution, which protects what our Founders viewed as our God-given rights
to free exercise of religion, free speech, freedom of the press, peaceable
assembly, and to petition the government for redress of grievances.
However,
while efforts to infringe upon those and other rights are not unheard of, the
attacks on them currently form a far more serious threat than perhaps at any other
time, and certainly the most serious in many decades.
There
has been ample news coverage of instances where Christian bakers and florists were
forced to bake cakes or produce flower arrangements for gay weddings, contrary
to their religious beliefs.
A decorated Army chaplain is facing what his attorneys are
calling a “career-ending punishment” after he explained to a soldier that he
could not conduct a marriage retreat that included same sex couples, but was
willing to find someone else to do it.
Somehow, no matter how many people are available and willing
to provide these services, those wanting a particular service view it as a horrible
crime if a person refuses to perform it on religious grounds.
These days, certain “preferences” held by relatively small
groups are thought to be of even greater importance than those rights set in
stone by our Founders.
Some
small efforts at balancing these breaches have occurred, but one’s ability to
practice his or her religion in the customary fashion is only sometimes protected,
these days.
These
breaches of the First Amendment’s protections are serious enough, but what is
happening on social media, on college campuses and elsewhere regarding free
speech and free access to information is much worse, if for no other reason
because of its broad swath of free speech encroachments that are being slashed through
our culture.
Burgess Owens, a conservative African-American entrepreneur and
10-year veteran of the NFL, appeared at Hobart and William Smith Colleges
recently. He told the audience, “I grew up in the Deep South during Jim Crow
segregation laws. I can tell you how racism looks, how it feels, and what it
means. You guys today can go anyplace you want to — any restaurant, any
college.”
Well, that was too much for the audience. A female attendee asked
him to repeat his first name, and after he did so, she said, “Oh, I thought it
was ‘Tom,’” as in Uncle Tom. Cute.
Student activists at Lewis and Clark College in Portland,
Oregon, made good on their threat to disrupt an address by conservative Christina
Hoff Sommers. What makes this one worse is that it was at the Law School. Yes,
that’s right: students studying the law denied Sommers her free speech right.
The Leftist
operators of Google, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube social media platforms think
the way to persuade people to their ideas is to cheat them out of contrary
opinions.
The
Media Research Center has produced a report titled “Censored” on how and to
what extent popular social media are trying to “persuade” people to their way
of thinking, not through the common sense of their ideas or the power of their argument,
but by keeping people from seeing other points of view.
Authors
Ashley Rae Goldenberg and Dan Gainor tell us that social media influences our
worldview and can even influence elections. “Americans are seeing the results
everywhere online. Conservative spokespeople, political candidates, even
members of Congress, are falling victim to censors and the top tech firms are
to blame.”
The
article addresses claims of liberal bias and censorship against Twitter,
Facebook, Google and YouTube individually, listing the claims and evaluating
them, showing that the claims are supported by evidence.
These
include such things as that Twitter censors conservative tweets pro-life ads,
and censors content that governments find objectionable.
Liberal
attitudes are at the core of Facebook and it censors pro-life advertising. Facebook’s
algorithms filter what things its members can see, and it also blocked the “Diamond and Silk” girls’ posts, calling
their content “dangerous.” Have you ever seen Diamond and Silk? Dangerous?
Google’s
fact-checking system and algorithm contain an anti-conservative bias, and its
News Lab partners with the radical Southern Poverty Law Center to identify
“hate.”
Charges
against YouTube mirror those previously mentioned for the other three media.
Is
it that these folks have so little faith in their way of thinking that they
don’t trust it to stand up against contrary ideas? Or do they not want to go to
the trouble of actual debate and take a chance on losing in the marketplace of
free ideas?
Whatever
the motivation, using their ability to control what their customers or users
see is truly otherworldly.
Liars,
cheaters and cowards, oh my!
Faced with unpopular ideas, so many in our country are
convinced that the appropriate reaction is to hold their breath, sob
uncontrollably, stomp their feet, run to their safe space and demand that the
speaker of these ideas shut up.
Private businesses or organizations can control what their
Websites show. No argument there. The question, however, is not whether they
can, but whether they should? Politics and business is a bad combination, and
in these instances is quite dangerous.
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