Jeffrey A. Tucker
I’ve followed the work of
economist Robert Reich for decades. Long before he was Labor Secretary under
the Clinton administration, he was writing fascinating books on industrial
organization and American living standards. Agree or disagree, I always learned
from him and enjoyed the challenge of grappling with ideas that challenged my
assumptions about the world. I’ve always regarded him as an honest observer.
This weekend, he wrote an
article for the UK newspaper the Guardian in which he calls for social media platform X to be banned and for its
owner Elon Musk to be arrested for allowing “disinformation” and
“misinformation” on the platform.
“Regulators around the world
should threaten Musk with arrest if he doesn’t stop disseminating lies and hate
on X,” he wrote.
Reich is among many in the
censorship camp who have proclaimed certain views to be dangerous to public
order and therefore worthy of prosecution.
Reich’s call to jail Musk comes exactly at the time when the seemingly unthinkable happened in Brazil. A Supreme Court judge named Alexandre de Moraes, who apparently exercises autonomous autocratic power, outright banned the entire platform in the country. It is the most popular news application in the country. He further imposed criminal penalties on anyone who uses the app through a Virtual Private Network at $10,000 per day.
It is unenforceable of course,
but it opens up possible investigations of every single political dissenter in
the country. Already there have been grave questions surrounding the legitimacy
of the 2022 election that took President Jair Messias Bolsonaro out and brought
to power President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. The voting results provoked the
largest public protests in the country’s history, and hardened a resistance
that has depended on alternative news sources, simply because the mainstream
news in the country appears largely government-controlled.
It is not even controversial
to say it plainly: This censorship is not about blocking falsehoods and
misinformation. It is about entrenching a certain political perspective, that
of Lula and his party. In the backdrop of the ban on X, the government had leaned
hard on every other social media platform to ban many accounts and throttle
alternative voices. They were secret orders, and issued as such, but every
platform complied.
Believing such requests were
contrary to Brazilian law, which Elon Musk has pledged to follow as he must, X
refused to block accounts simply because a judge told him to. After all, the
Brazilian constitution says the following:
“Art. 5 IX—the expression of
intellectual, artistic, scientific and communication activities is free,
regardless of censorship or license; Art. 220. The manifestation of thought,
creation, expression and information, in any form, process or vehicle, shall
not suffer any restriction, in compliance with the provisions of this
Constitution. [Section] 2 Any and all censorship of a political, ideological
and artistic nature is prohibited.”
Presuming those words to be
the law, Elon refused to ban accounts and incurred the wrath of Lula’s party.
Elon is hardly alone in facing this choice in the world of communication
technologies. Every platform has a deep record of contact with government agents,
in most every country. Most comply, which is why the Internet in general is a
different place than it was five years ago. What’s been called the “Censorship
Industrial Complex” is built out, global, and highly effective.
Elon paid $44 billion for
Twitter precisely because he wanted it to serve as a bulwark against the
incursions on free speech. This has cost him immensely in terms of advertising
dollars. The advertising consortia boycotted the platform. And keep in mind why.
It is not because his rebranded platform was tilted politically to the right.
It is because it permits the freedom to speak within the bounds of the law.
That is not what the powers that be want these days.
Notice that the U.S. State
Department has not expressed any real opposition to what is happening in
Brazil, which is deeply disturbing. Ten and 15 years ago, the United States was
the leading champion of free speech throughout the world. It insisted on social
media that was open and free of government influence, even to the point of
condemning Russia for demanding a backdoor to Telegram, even congratulating the
CEO Pavel Durov for leaving the country.
Those days appear to be over,
as many U.S. elites—Robert Reich among them—have tacitly approved of what is
happening in Brazil. Certainly the Democratic ticket has had nothing to say,
while the Republicans are now at least making an issue of it.
I’ve been in close contact
with Brazilians throughout this ordeal. They are scared. They feel they are
next on the list, not because they supported the 2022 “insurrection,” which was
really a mass protest. My friends have never publicly doubted the outcome of
the election. And yet as opponents of Lula’s brand of socialism, they feel
themselves to be targeted. And they warn that the United States could be next
on the list.
It does appear these days that
free speech hangs by a very thin thread. It’s helpful to imagine how things
would be if Elon had not stood up and said no. All the other platforms fully
went along without saying anything publicly even if they resented the bullying
privately. Elon and X are being targeted precisely because he stood up and
flatly said that the actions of the government contradict the laws of the
country, which he has sworn to follow.
As of this writing, X is
banned in China, North Korea, Russia, Turkmenistan, Myanmar, Venezuela, Iran,
and now Brazil. It is banned in all these countries for one reason only: It
permits people to be exposed to a variety of points of view. What’s at issue
here is simple. It is politics. In all these countries, you can have all kinds
of opinions on food, music, and technology, but you must stay away from
politics and, in some cases, religion, but even that is connected to politics
too.
Freedom and democracy depend
fundamentally on an informed public, which in turn exercises influence over the
regime under which people live. That is the basic idea of post-feudal systems
of governance. If we don’t have that, we have autocracy or totalitarianism.
Some countries are fine with that. But presumably Western nations favor a
different course, which is why free speech has such an exalted position in law.
Now this commitment is being
put to the test, especially with communication tools that have opened the range
of people’s opinions as never before. We believe that people have the right to
speak and the right to hear. It is quite the commentary on our times that it
has required the courage and commitment of one man who happens to be a
multi-billionaire to make it real for the rest of us.
Because of my many travels in
Brazil and because several of my books have been translated to Portuguese, I’ve
developed a special interest in this case. It has startled and saddened me to
see that The New York Times’ own coverage has tilted in favor of restrictions.
I truly never thought I would live to see the day when such a fundamental
postulate of civilized living would come into question and be so threatened in
our time.
I want the freedom to read and
comment on the works of Robert Reich. But according to his own words, he does
not want you or me to have the right to read perspectives that contradict his
own views. No one wins from this game. A forced consensus is not a stable one.
If the censors win, they will inherit control of a distrustful and angry
population. No one benefits from that.
Jeffrey A. Tucker, The Epoch Times, 5-9-2024
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