NY/CIA Times: Free Speech Ain’t All it’s Cracked Up to Be
You gotta love this, including the fact that the NYT psyop author’s byline reads in part:
‘Emily Bazelon is a staff writer for the magazine and the Truman Capote fellow for creative writing and law at Yale Law School.’ Or: Hello, Judith Miller!
‘The New York Times attacks the First Amendment and embraces censorship of “disinformation”, Kevin Reed, wsws.org, Oct. 28, 2020 (w/ permission to repost; my bolds for easier reading)
“In a lengthy essay published on October 18, the New York Times has come out against free speech rights guaranteed by the First Amendment to the US Constitution and called for government censorship to stop the spread of “disinformation.”
The cover story, which appeared in the online edition of the New York Times Magazine under the headline, “The Problem with Free Speech in an Age of Disinformation,” was written by Emily Bazelon, a staff writer, who has also contributed to the Atlantic, Vogue and the Washington Post .
Bazelon states that the “problem with free speech” is that the “US is in the midst of an information crisis caused by the spread of viral disinformation.” She defines viral disinformation as “falsehoods aimed at achieving a political goal,” as opposed to misinformation that “refers more generally to falsehoods.”
While Bazelon never gets around to explaining precisely what the “political goal” of disinformation is, she presents the primary concern as being “the overwhelming amount of information, the anger encoded in it — these all serve to create chaos and confusion and make people, even nonpartisans, exhausted, skeptical and cynical about politics. ” [Emphasis added].
In other words, Bazelon and the New York Times fear that the information available online today—especially on social media platforms—makes it possible for millions of people who are angry and politically alienated from the capitalist two-party system to seek a left-wing and socialist alternative to the Democrats and Republicans.
In a significant passage, Bazelon explains, “It’s an article of faith in the United States that more speech is better and that the government should regulate it as little as possible. But increasingly, scholars of constitutional law, as well as social scientists, are beginning to question the way we have come to think about the First Amendment’s guarantee of free speech. They think our formulations are simplistic—and especially inadequate for our era.”
Although they are hiding behind “scholars of constitutional law” and “social scientists,” Bazelon and the Times ’ assault on the guarantee in the Bill of Rights that the government “shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press” could not be clearer. They are stating that the free speech protections in the First Amendment are too “simplistic.” They are “inadequate” for the present day, and some speech must be censored.
In particular, Bazelon argues for suppressing speech “which may be doing more damage to the discourse about politics, news and science.” She continues: “It encompasses the mass distortion of truth and overwhelming waves of speech from extremists that smear and distract.” [Emphasis added].
Since her essay has been published by the Democratic Party-connected Times, readers may erroneously conclude that Bazelon is writing about the “extremists” among the far-right and fascistic supporters of Donald Trump and the Republican Party, who spread falsehoods about the deadly coronavirus pandemic and lies about mail balloting in the 2020 presidential election. However, while Bazelon is calling for censorship of the right wing, this is not her primary target.
In a veiled reference to left-wing criticism of the Democrats, Bazelon says that concerns about “overwhelming waves of speech from extremists” actually “spans the ideological spectrum.” Attempting to tie the growing popular support for socialism to ongoing and unsubstantiated claims of Russian interference in US elections, she writes that the problem of “troll armies,” including “a flood of commenters often propelled by bots,” are “grimly effective at muting critical voices.”
Who are these “critical voices” being “grimly” muted? They are none other than the corporate media establishment—including the New York Times —seeking to keep mass opposition to the fascistic Trump administration within the confines of the two-party system. For Bazelon and the Times, commenters who criticize the Democratic Party from the left must be labeled as “troll armies” and “bots,” who do not qualify for constitutionally protected free speech rights.
Attempting to justify her attack on these basic democratic rights, Bazelon quotes constitutional scholar Tim Wu of Columbia University, who recently wrote that “use of speech as a tool to suppress speech is, by its nature, something very challenging for the First Amendment to deal with.” Citing Wu, Bazelon writes that “perhaps our way of thinking about free speech is not the best way.”
She then goes on to argue that the previous democratic conception of “good ideas” winning out in the “marketplace of ideas” has been made obsolete by “unfettered speech.” The First Amendment was adequate as long as the distribution of news and information was controlled by a handful of newspaper publishers and radio and television broadcasting companies within a government-regulated environment—but not anymore, she says.
The expansion of the internet “weakened media regulation” and enabled “a few American tech companies to become the new gatekeepers.” The US government gave “platforms like Google, Facebook and Twitter” too much freedom to do whatever they wanted. Rather than millions or billions of people participating in online political discussion in a “virtual public square,” Bazelon writes that the social media platforms have enabled an environment where “Lies go viral more quickly than true statements.”
In reality, the problem for Bazelon is not the promotion of lies and disinformation—something that the New York Times has specialized in for decades—but the promotion of the “wrong” information. This is a newspaper that has, for example, relentlessly promoted the massive lie of Russian interference in US elections going back to 2016 without ever presenting factual evidence to prove the allegation.
The Times was also a prime perpetrator of the lie of “weapons of mass destruction” that preceded the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. The newspaper has also supported the persecution and locking up of journalists who have exposed the lies and crimes of US imperialism, most notably Julian Assange.
One can assume that such falsehoods are considered by Bazelon to be “good ideas,” but woe to the “extremists” who expose these media lies and publish the truth online and on Twitter or Facebook.
The embrace of censorship by the Times comes as no surprise given the now infamous statement by the paper’s executive editor Bill Keller regarding First Amendment rights exactly one decade ago. On November 29, 2010, Keller wrote, “Freedom of the press includes freedom not to publish, and that is a freedom we exercise with some regularity.”
The fact is that the New York Times has emerged over the past four decades as the public relations arm of the CIA and the US military-intelligence state. Long gone are the days when the Times published the Pentagon Papers in 1971 and exposed the crimes of US imperialism in Southeast Asia and the unconstitutional actions of several US Presidents based on the principle that the press had a First Amendment right—and an obligation—to publish information that is significant to the public’s understanding of government policy.
Now, nearly fifty years later, with a few words changed here and there, the Times’ essay on the First Amendment is indistinguishable from a screed from a tsarist censor or the official pronouncement of the Inquisition. The fundamental position put forward is that the state, with the collaboration of online and social media tech companies through “banning” and “third party fact checking,” must determine what information is “true” or “false.”
This is the complete opposite of the meaning of the First Amendment, which holds that the people must decide what is “true information” and what is “disinformation” and the state must not interfere in this democratic process.
In wrapping up their brief for political censorship arising from “America’s information crisis,” the Times and Bazelon conclude by calling on federal, state and local government to fund corporate-controlled newspapers and radio and TV stations. She also endorses various government actions being taken to censor online content.
These actions include the Trump administration’s effort to abolish Section 230 immunity, which protects online service providers from being prosecuted for content posted on their platforms by users, the House Judiciary Committee investigation into the antitrust practices of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google, and the anti-Chinese campaign for the divestiture of the short-form video-sharing platform TikTok from its Beijing-based owner ByteDance.
The open attack on free speech rights by the New York Times is consistent with its position last week when Facebook and Twitter both censored posts linked to an article in the New York Post about Democratic Party US presidential candidate Joseph Biden and his son. In an unprecedented act, Twitter shut down the Post account as well as that of White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany and blocked all sharing of links to the Post article.
Although Twitter was forced to reverse itself, the New York Times refused to refer to the actions by the social media companies as censorship and argued that the accuracy of the Post article had not yet been established by “third party fact checkers.”
The fundamentally reactionary and undemocratic argument advanced by the Times and Bazelon is that the government and social media platforms must intervene online and establish for the public what are “good” and what are “bad” ideas. They claim that when “good ideas” of the ruling establishment are rejected as false as a result of online debate and commentary, the opposition views should be identified as harmful “unfettered speech” and blocked.
As we have maintained on the World Socialist Web Site, all censorship initiatives by the US government and social media platforms are ultimately directed against the development of socialist politics and organization within the working class. All factions of the ruling political establishment and the corporate media defend the capitalist system and have no problem spreading lies about history, war and the struggles of the international working class.
The attack by the New York Times on the First Amendment demonstrates that, should Joseph Biden succeed in defeating Donald Trump in the 2020 elections—and successfully remove him from the White House—a Democratic Party administration will extend the assault on democratic rights in the US that has been deepening over the past 25 years.”
Now I have no idea how Reed distilled this mile-long screed as far as he did, but here it is: ‘Free Speech Won’t Save Our Democracy; The Problem of Free Speech in an Age of Disinformation’, Oct. 13, 2020, NYT
Emily Bazelon is a staff writer for the magazine and the Truman Capote fellow for creative writing and law at Yale Law School. Her book “Charged” won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in the current-interest category and the Silver Gavel book award from the American Bar Association.
But then, under the banner of the Bezos-owned Washington WallStreet Post:
‘Democracy Dies in Darkness’.
(cross-posted from Café Babylon)
Comments
Ministry of Truth
This is how freedom dies.
I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.
exactly
Ministry of Truth.
i f'ed up, and i'll try to blame the fact that i broke my walmart cheaters a couple days ago, so i'm using some crap weaker and scratches ones. but the original title of the NY CIA Times psyop is: 'Free Speech Will Save Our Democracy; The First Amendment in the age of disinformation'
and they'd quoted the Wall Street Post liberally, including having exposed the 'right-wing' Project Veritas, but this as well:
then i remembered the WaPo also having been pushing 'Prop or Not' and found:
The Washington Post promoted a blacklist by the shady anonymous group PropOrNot, which smears alternative media websites as “Russian propaganda” while listing US government-funded outlets as “allies”, m. blumental, nov. 25, 2016:
Beazelon had also quoted agitprop Avaaz (10 zillion members!) as well as an updated Integrity Initiative.
#CompromisedFactFindingNGOs.
So, in other words
the "establishment" is losing the information war and they need the big bad gubberment to step in and decide for us "children" what is news, and what is good information.
C99, my refuge from an insane world. #ForceTheVote
at the very least...
the Two Amerikan Papers of Record* want the Government to Decide Truth from Lies, or decide themselves.
as if this weren't enough: The Propaganda Multiplier:
Prop or Not:
An Initial Set of Sites That Reliably Echo Russian Propaganda
We have used a combination of manual and automated analysis, including analysis of content, timing, technical indicators, and other reporting, in order to initially identify (“red-flag”) the following as Russian propaganda outlets. We then confirmed our initial assessment by applying whatever criteria we did not originally employ during the red-flag process, and we reevaluate our findings as needed.
Spoiler alert: it's a very long list!
I was thankful when I first saw that list when it first came
out. It was a big sign saying do not look at these sites, so I promptly went down the list checking out each one and found quite a few I hadn't heard of that I started following, and with a some exceptions, to this day I have them bookmarked.
I gotta think there were many more people that did the same thing compared to a much smaller number that never got curious and checked them out on their own.
With all the assumed notoriety of the listed sites how could many resist just a little peek?
Thanks for posting the list so I can go thru the list again, I'm sure there are some I've forgotten after my computer at the time finally crashed for good and I lost the links.
you're so welcome!
please pay the cashier $1.99 as you go out the door.
i, for one, would never be caught dead clicking into those evil propaganda sites, though!
I'm kicking myself
It was pretty funny, they had sent him an email requesting he write articles, and he didn't even do a whois search to find out who owned the domain on this online "magazine". Another Russian online marketing company.
I'll post it if I can find it...
C99, my refuge from an insane world. #ForceTheVote
if the bloke had been
pwned, my guess is that RT.com would have carried it. ; ) not that i have any idea what a 'who is' search is, though.
Maybe this link from Moon of Alabama will help
https://www.moonofalabama.org/
If that's true...
In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.
Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!
Sounds right to me
Then you had events like CNN exposing that YouTube was showing advertisements on like Nazi channels. Directing attacking their financial model. This began the great age of demonetizing independent people and outlets by removing their ability to make money by their content. I am surprised that someone like Jimmy Dore has not been totally shut down.
But one of the things about the editorial is that is misinformation or disinformation really a problem for "The Commons"? Consider Twitter. Amazing stats that shows Twitter is NOT the all encompassing entity deciding elections and brands of toothpaste.
Sizing Up Twitter Users U.S. adult Twitter users are younger and more likely to be Democrats than the general public. Most users rarely tweet, but the most prolific 10% create 80% of tweets from adult U.S. users
If one is immersed in Twitter, it seems like the entire world is on it at the same time. And in fact, most Americans either don't use it sparingly use it except for a prolific minority.
Take a look at the most retweeted tweets over the last several years, including this year. Where are the billions and gazillion tweets toppling nations and the subscriber rates to the NYTimes?
List of most-retweeted tweets
In essence NYT wants to control the political opinions of activists, competing journalists, and political elites (never shall a president abuse Twitter wink wink).
Thanks, OBAMA
So did Obama reverse the Smith-Mundt act before Brennan told Obama that Hillary was making up Russian disinformation against Trump or after? Look at what he has unleashed on the country.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists.
~Hannah Arendt
hoo, boy; i need some
educating on that one, snoop. can you help me out? i did find a bit on 'The Horrible Smith-Mundt Modernization Act of 2012 (SMMA', but my eyes went crossed trying to understand it, and there seem to be so many opinions about what it meant.
i do remember bubba clinton's hideous 'commodities futures modernization act', which ended up being part of the 2008 meltdown.
Meanwhile...
Glenn Greenwald resigns from The Intercept
The Intercept, of course, has a response:
https://twitter.com/ElaheIzadi/status/1321908065675939841
More:
https://twitter.com/ErikWemple/status/1321896097099489283/photo/1
(which I can't copy and paste easily)
Can't find Greenwald's rejoinder to any of this, at least not yet.
“The loyal Left cannot act decisively. Their devotion to the system is a built-in kill switch limiting dissent.” - Richard Moser
i dunno, but both your
tweets noting the intercept's response are employed by the washington post. i don't know what to make of his 'resignation', myself, cuz i think the bloke is a wanker.
Glenn Greenwald resigns from the Intercept following dispute over Biden story; While the crusading journalist claimed censorship, his former editors accused him of trying to publish unsupported innuendo' wapo, oct. 29
the Intercept's editor betsy reed had no problem publishing maz hussain's glowing tribute to the White Helmets, i will say. #WhattaRag. how many whistleblowers did that place out? how many are already serving time?
this is one of GG's tweets about it, you can read others:
why did they close all access the snowden files...then re-open them briefly?
RT has the story up
already, plus a few tweets: this is his:
and WTH? bah, humbug.
a reminder: 5 fearless investigative journalists hated and smeared assange, including GG, namomi klein, micah lee...and 2 others whose names i've forgotten. on edit: robert mackey as well, but this diary is full of too many Intercept names to begin to sort through.
to GG he was known as 'the bad whistleblower, while snowden was 'the good whistleblower', i guess since they vetted every revelation thru the MIC/national security state.
bet their coverage of the extradition hearings would have earned contributions, nonetheless.
did GG resign from the Intercept Brazil as well?
on slow-brain edit: GG woupld oten tweet: Love him or Hate him: Press Freedom!
OTOH, julian was supportive of snowden, and didn't one of the WikiLeaks team escort ed to russia?
And now Greenwald and Klein are on "opposite sides"
Interesting.
There is no justice. There can be no peace.
pardon, but i'm
not taking your meaning, amiga. opposites sides of what?
Opposite sides of the censorship issue
She's for censorship (by her bosses), he's against it.
There is no justice. There can be no peace.
oh, thank you for
explainig that; i hadn't known.
hold that thought;
i'll be back in 2 or 3 hours: irony ensues.
@NaomiAKlein
21h Glenn was not "censored" - he was edited, and edited well. Crying censorship is a marketing ploy to gin up subscribers for his new Substack. Are people really going to fall for it?
and yes, i'd finally found it:
https://greenwald.substack.com/p/my-resignation-from-the-intercept (20,000 words?)
pretty cynical of miz klein,
but given their long bonds, pretty damned hilarious. but GG was right about there being so being biden supporters at TI, at least min naomi's case;
silly to add to a dead thread, but:
all i'd found readily was:
i did get to thinking about this diary
i'd pasted together in mid-October and the parallels to the NYT and WaPo:
'Censorship & Thought Crimes® Rising ★★★', in which online crowd-sourced bellingcat and Shamnesty Int'l trounced roger waters for his alternate views on the OPCW reports on assad gassing syrians...
and beeley and eva bartlett being threatened with a lawsuit by the BBC for outing the White Helmets. plus caitlin johnstone on the NY Post articles on hunter biden's laptop and
and via whitney webb, and doesn't facebook owns youtube? or is it google? so much censorship.
but as an entirely new version of the White Helmets body-snatchers is coming out soon, vanessa beeley will be under the gun again. goddam.
and remember: four separate OPCW whistleblowers...are not enough to quash that fucked up NGO.
If Daniel Ellsberg
brought the Pentagon Papers documents to the NY Times today, the NYT would undoubtedly refuse to publish it. And they definitely would not take the US government to court to get a Supreme Court decision confirming the paper's right to publish those documents.
The NYT no longer wants that right. They want power and the ability to rub elbows with the elite.
"Don't go back to sleep ... Don't go back to sleep ... Don't go back to sleep."
~Rumi
"If you want revolution, be it."
~Caitlin Johnstone
undoubtedly, my friend.
we can only hope that WikiLeaks will carry on in the future no mattter what happens to julian assange. iirc, judge vanessa baraitser will drop her hammer down and make her
pre-decision known mid-january.so many mornings i wake up and imagine we'll be told of the deaths of political prisoners julian and/or leonard peltier.
via RT.com,
‘BBC's upcoming White Helmets ‘documentary’ gears up to be a character assassination of those who challenge Syria war narratives’, Vanessa Beeley, RT com. oct. 24, 2020
some brief excerpts:
The next step will be criminalization of "misinformation"
Speech has been criminalized in the EU on espousing certain beliefs. The biggest example is Julian Assange. In Australia a pregnant woman was arrested for posting about anti-lockdown protests.
There will be a formalization of the criminalization of speech in our near future unfortunately. Twitter will be reduced to posts on Korean boy bands and DNC press releases.
i'd seen a photo of this
in the Twittervese:
as to the rest of your prescient comment, i hear bob dylan:
It's not dark yet, but it's gettin' there. thanks, mr. webster.
ah, close enough for a closing song. good night, all. food night, julian; good night moon.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZgBhyU4IvQ]
i'll dd this from aaron mate,
then get back to RL chores:
file under same shit, a new day:
aplogies;
that didn't work; instead:
more from the Twittersphere
for posterity:
@_whitneywebb
Oct 8, 2019
An objective analysis of those facts speaks volumes, I'll leave it at that. Suzie says the EFF, not Omidyar, behind FPF decision to block WL, but EFF is longtime recipient of Omidyar $ and part of Omidyar Network. Also, Trevor Timm first connected Greenwald + Omidyar aft Snowden
Diane4Peace #FreeAssange! @Soozieceu
Oct 6, 2019
TY. Vry disappointed in both Greenwald & Snowden. IMO both are disingenuous in their "support" 4 #Assange. I think we can give a lot, not all, credit to Omidyar for being behind their shared cowardice & piling-on the smear campaigns against Julian. Suzie doesnt agree w me either.
@RedKahina 19h
@AviLewis
basically admits he's setting up someone he calls "Lucy Ella" to be assassinated as a "spark" for global color revolution, he'll shut down oil & food to all humanity, then wipe most of us out with Covid23. Survivors: slaves on his plantation.
@RedKahina
This TRIUMPHAL boast that they shut down all oil production &all food to all humanity, is not something that should be considered a joke. They mean it. They've done it before : to Iraq, to Gaza , to DPRK, they're strangling Venezuela, Syria, Iran, they will strangle everyone
@RedKahina
They plan a worldwide lockout and global starvation. They have started already. Americans have seen meat double in price and think it's a blip. No , soon there will be no meat. They are going to _besiege_ and starve the entire global working class. They already restrict oxygen
jeremy @loffredojeremy
Oct 27 Naomi wants us to be on UBI so we can sit at home, eat Bill Gates impossible burgers watch her Intercept propaganda films
not tweets:
‘What the Supreme Court got right; It's best for the government to stay out of the business of restricting political advocacy', glenn greenwald, jan 22, 2010, salon.com
'Silencing the Whistle: The Intercept Shutters Snowden Archive, Citing Cost
' The closing of The Intercept’s Snowden archive will likely mean the end of any future publications, unless Glenn Greenwald’s rather absurd promise of finding “the right partner … that has the funds to robustly publish” is fulfilled' by Whitney Webb, march 30, 2019
obviously i'd known miz klein
(canadian election meddling) is endorsing )joe fracking biden, but i hadn't know this biden-esque imperial BS she' endorsing:
and while they were entirely similar, for all that's holy...i hadn't known she'd produced this rubbish as well; note the stereotypes and 'amerika=corps' cheesey jobs):
‘A Message From the Future With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’ •Apr 17, 2019
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9uTH0iprVQ]
and she's the cover story on Vanity Fair, too; oh, yes, she's running for Prez in 2024. you couldn't pay for advertising like this puff piece: ‘AOC’s Next Four Years; The history-making congresswoman addresses her biggest critics, the challenges that loom no matter who wins, and what she’s taking on next, vanity fair, dec. 2020
some excerpts:
a bit ago i'd remembered this:
‘Glenn Greenwald: ‘…it’s just kind of time for me to do other things’, July 15, 2014> by wendyedavis, café babylon
bits and bobs:
For ten months neither Jeremy Scahill nor Matt Taibbi have published a word there, although when I asked GG about it on a current thread, saying that their absence seemed akin to farmers with friends in high places being paid by the federal government to not grow certain crops, and that they both seemed quite busy Tweeting sports scores, he answered:
Glenn Greenwald
11 Jul 2014 at 3:35 pm
“Matt is in the process of building his magazine. It takes longer than one might think. It certainly took longer than I thought it was. But he’s making good progress.
Jeremy is busy on several stories and I expect you’ll hear from him before too long.
Daily blogging is much different than either trying to build a new, innovative media outlet from scratch or from doing hard-core investigative journalism. The latter two tasks take lots of time, effort and energy to do them right.”
......................
Sure, we tried to understand (and many championed) GG taking time to write a book, go on a lengthy book and teevee tour to tout it, then tout his movie deal/s, one of which was with the makers of ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ whom he had earlier lavishly excoriated as…something or other.
Some of grew irritated by the time some of interviews were published, wondering seriously what the hell was up, anyway. Take some excerpts from his interview with GQ, ‘The Man Who Knew too Much’, ha:
Fearless journalism, saving the most telling and egregious sins against our privacy for last.
Given the references he’d made to colors in the sky, etc., some speculated that he’d publish all the separate names who were under NSA spying around the 4th of July. He tweeted that it was coming early one morning, then by evening, said it would be delayed while they checked out some additional claims by the government. When at last it came, it concerned the naming of five distinguished Muslin Leaders of the 202 Muslims the documents showed were under NSA scrutiny. And those of his commentariat who wondered if this were the big finale, or if it would get the same traction as he’d claimed, were made to feel like bigots. Well, eye of the beholder and all of that. But then he finally did Tweet to the media that this wasn’t the Biggie:
Just after the publication of that revelation, GG did an interview with Wired magazine’s Kim Zetter, excerpts of which follow (i'll include ONE):
Yes, we know that the good Edward Snowden said that all he’d ever wanted was ‘a conversation’, and that once one began, he’d declared his mission accomplished. But a couple things of interest popped up recently from him, one attributed to him, correctly or not, by GG via NPR: ‘We’ve Erred on the Side of Caution’:
From Alexa O’Brien’s ‘Emails & new warrants raise questions about investigators’ conduct in Manning & WikiLeaks criminal probe,’ July 12, 2014, this video among the many recently discovered to have been on Chelsea Manning’s youtube channel. “…an emotive animation created by Joaquin Baldwin about a voodoo doll who “must find the courage to save his friends from being pinned to death. In the video the voodoo doll sacrifices itself to save the life of its fellows.” Beyond heart piercing, given…everything. Thank you, Chelsea; you did us all a great service.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6ejPG-i03I&feature=emb_logo]