Marianne Klowak and Mark Zuckerberg’s tardy confessions were welcome, but they were merely a garnish on the tableau we’re currently watching unfold around the Western world, as it races to achieve peak authoritarianism. Yesterday, CNN ran a story headlined, “
Brazil begins to block X as Elon Musk’s feud with judge deepens.”
Straight from central casting (villains department) comes Brazilian Supreme Court judge Alexandre de Moraes, who appears to be a Brazilian law unto himself. The dispute began last month when Moraes ordered Twitter/X to subject itself to government controls or face criminal prosecution.
In response to those threats, Elon Musk refused to comply. The space billionaire promptly closed X’s offices in Brazil, to protect the company’s workers from being arrested. Judge de Moraes then ordered all of Starlink’s Brazilian bank accounts to be frozen, even though StarLink is a completely different company than Twitter with a completely different ownership structure—apparently just because Musk was involved.
Now it’s personal.
Musk then announced that StarLink, now unable to collect user fees, would provide internet service to Brazilians for free. De Moraes responded by ordering a bankrupting daily fine against any Brazilian citizen who accesses Twitter through StarLink or any other way.
No Twitter for you!
“De Moraes’ defenders,” CNN reported, “have said his actions aimed at X have served to protect democracy.” Because, of course, the last thing democracy needs these days is citizens informing themselves outside of official government-controlled channels.
Brazil is becoming only the latest jurisdiction where free speech and free thought are under relentless assault by Western governments that were ostensibly originally organized to protect those very rights. Our survey begins by noting the developments in the birthplace of modern Western Civilization, Great Britain.
Headline from yesterday’s UK Spectator:
How about Canada, that freedom-loving country where U.S. liberals used to flee to avoid being drafted?
Last month’s headline from the Atlantic:
Or consider France, whose official slogan is “
liberté, égalité, fraternité” —the first of which, liberté, means “freedom.” This week, French authorities criminally charged —meaning, a potential
prison sentence— Telegram’s founder, for
derivative speech offenses France was criticized this week
by no less ironically a source than the (anti-Putin) Moscow Times:
Next, see Germany.
July headline from Jurist:
In June, EU President Ursula von Leyen darkly warned that the “core tenets of our democracy” were under threat, so she unveiled plans for a “European Democracy Shield” — to counter online disinformation and foreign interference.
It’s going great!
Headline, also from June, from Tech Policy Press:
Unsurprisingly, the study cited by Tech Policy’s article found that
almost all speech censored by official government action in the EU
wasn’t even illegal — not even under those country’s draconian speech laws:
How could this happen? How did we get here? First of all, during the pandemic, the government of the freedom-loving United States of America taught all these other governments how it’s done. Second, when you give unaccountable bureaucrats
any laws to censor citizens, such as pandemic-era disinformation laws, they will
always twist the speech laws to conform to whatever political shape is required to meet the needs of the controlling party’s next election cycle.
For instance, just two weeks ago, we watched EU technocrats try to twist their hate speech laws to stop Europeans from watching Elon Musk’s interview with President Donald Trump. They threatened Musk with the vague charge of “amplification of harmful content.” Fortunately,
Musk told them to bugger off.
Headline from Politico:
The fact that
any speech law, sooner or later (usually sooner) will ultimately be abused is the precise reason why the Founders were so very perfectly clear when they drafted the First Amendment of our Constitution. In relevant part, it says, “Congress shall make
no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.”
No. Law. Zero, zilch, nada.
None.
No laws. Not for hate speech, disinformation, misinformation, malinformation, or any other kind of speech inconvenient to the narrative, no matter how unfairly critical of the government it may be.
That’s why the U.S., more and more, once again, despite all odds and internal enemies, is becoming the world’s final, shaky redoubt of freedom. Because outside America, where our Constitution’s grace does not extend, the dark night of fascism falls once more, dimming the light of liberty to a faint flicker.
That’s why the upcoming U.S. election is also the most important election facing Brazilians, English, French, Germans, and all the rest, even though they won’t get to vote. (Well, not unless they illegally crossed the border and got hooked up with a good NGO, but that’s a different story.)
If America falls, liberty’s faint flicker will be fully and finally extinguished, social media will become neo-Pravda, and the world will fall into murky blackness where
people routinely get jailed for tweeting a meme.
Having failed to cough up a new pandemic with which to plague the 2024 election cycle, global censorship has become the globalists’ last gasp. To me, it resembles another pandemic-style overreach, and, I believe, is doomed to fail. But they’re not going down without a fight.
The best news of all is that the enemies of freedom are terrified of free speech
because it works. It’s our most effective weapon, and it’s the easiest weapon to deploy, because all we need do is
keep talking.
They want a fight? A fight is
exactly what they are going to get. Bring it.
Special C&C Freedom Edition: how the globalists hope to capture the 2024 elections and what to do about it.
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