I can get on board with this. I agree it’s bad to silence someone for simply being conservative. If Ron Paul’s page was calling on “Patriots” to stop some sort of steal, I think that could be a different story, but just revoking service for ****s and giggles isn’t a great look.
Another question I have for the “our freedoms are at stake” crowd: to what extent are private companies meant to give us a platform going forward? I understand that we’ve never faced this particular dilemma as nothing has ever been as intertwined as social media is, but what kind of platform do they owe us? One of the main differences I find between a legal right to free speech and a moral obligation to defend free speech is what is owed to us. If I wanted to address the nation in Congress, I wouldn’t find a platform. If I wanted to go on television and find a platform for my thoughts, I wouldn’t necessarily find one. Why is Facebook or Twitter so different that they must provide a platform?
A more humble comparison is a letter to the local paper. Maybe the paper publishes it. Maybe it doesn't. No one screams freedom of speech if it doesn't.
Thank you, I like this comparison more. In any case, I don’t think it’s being fully appreciated that several for-profit companies have this much market share. As a result, I think the wrong questions are being asked. The question to me isn’t whether or not Twitter or Facebook should be moderating their sites as they see fit, but instead how we continue to allow such a small number of companies and people control so much of the world. The only reason these companies’ decisions matter so much is that they’ve become a central part of our lives. A renewed focus on breaking up monopolies and oligopolies would serve the public interest a lot more than focusing on which opinions Twitter admins don’t want to host.
The moment there was a competitor to Twitter those three companies colluded to shut it down
The moment there was a competitor to Twitter those three companies colluded to shut it down
The moment there was a competitor to Twitter those three companies colluded to shut it down
Parler wasn't a competitor to twitter.
The moment there was a competitor to Twitter those three companies colluded to shut it down
Another question I have for the “our freedoms are at stake” crowd: to what extent are private companies meant to give us a platform going forward? I understand that we’ve never faced this particular dilemma as nothing has ever been as intertwined as social media is, but what kind of platform do they owe us? One of the main differences I find between a legal right to free speech and a moral obligation to defend free speech is what is owed to us. If I wanted to address the nation in Congress, I wouldn’t find a platform. If I wanted to go on television and find a platform for my thoughts, I wouldn’t necessarily find one. Why is Facebook or Twitter so different that they must provide a platform?