This document is part of an archive of postings on Tongue Tied, a blog hosted by Blogspot who are in turn owned by Google. The index to the archive is available here or here. Indexes to my other blogs can be located here or here. Archives do accompany my original postings but, given the animus towards conservative writing on Google and other internet institutions, their permanence is uncertain. These alternative archives help ensure a more permanent record of what I have written.

This is a backup copy of the original blog. See here for backups of my other blogs



"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" -- 1st amendment



October 24, 2024

Another deletion by Google

They have deleted my Oct 6th post on "Dissecting Leftism"

It was about election rigging

Still available in my backups:

http://jonjayray.com/oct24.html

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October 23, 2024

Microsoft Word accused of censoring after telling users that terms like 'maternity leave' are not inclusive enough

Technology giant Microsoft has been accused of censoring terms such as 'maternity leave' because they are not inclusive enough.

The tool, which can suggest alternatives to improve writing such as synonyms and grammatic corrections, now appears to have expanded to detecting when a user's language is 'not inclusive'.

When typing 'maternity leave', users are now instead told to use 'birth-related leave', 'parental leave' or 'childbirth leave'.

And when referring to paternity leave - the time off taken by a father - it suggests 'child-bonding leave' as an alternative.

When users type 'maternity leave', they are greeted with a message that says: 'Inclusiveness. This term may not be inclusive of all genders'.

The prompts are only on an opt-in basis, meaning users can disable them if they do not want to see alternative options.

Taking to social media, some branded the suggestions as an 'absolute joke'.

The inclusivity tool, which is part of Microsoft's AI function, was launched in 2019 but has recently come under fire after a screenshot of its maternity suggestions was uploaded to social media.

The suggestions are available on all Microsoft software, which includes Word, Outlook and Powerpoint.

Toby Young, the director of the Free Speech Union, told the Telegraph: 'This is a particularly insidious form of language policing, reminiscent of 1984. It's as though there's a censor in your computer scolding you for departing from politically correct orthodoxy.'

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October 22, 2024

Channel Seven star is forced to delete offensive slur about Lidia Thorpe

King Charles and Queen Camilla have another busy schedule ahead of them for their fifth and final day in Australia.

It comes after a chaotic day in Canberra on Monday where independent senator Lidia Thorpe made a wild outburst at the King following his speech in Parliament House.

The senator and Indigenous rights activist repeatedly shouted 'you are not my King' while also labelling Charles a 'genocidalist' and cried out 'f*** the colony' as she was dragged out of the Great Hall by security.

Ms Thorpe has defended her actions and said she will continue to 'fight for justice' until a treaty is made.

High-profile entertainment reporter Peter Ford unleashed on Lidia Thorpe following her sudden outburst towards the King at Parliament House on Monday.

He has since been forced to remove a tweet where he labelled the independent senator a 'skank', but did not apologise for the remark.

'So yesterday in commentary about Lidia Thorpe I used a word in this space that some people (who I trust not ‘outraged’ people on Twitter) thought was unfair,' he wrote on X on Tuesday morning.

'Although it’s a word you’d hear on Kath and Kim I have deleted it. I wanted to make a point not cause offence. Cheers. PF.'

He'd taken aim at Ms Thorpe over her rant towards the King and called her the offensive remark in two separate comments on X.

'She's such a skank,' he said in one post.  'Nice thoughts, but no she's still a skank,' he said in another.

When another X user accused him of being misogynistic, the entertainment reporter doubled down.  'You may not like the term - and think it unfair - but it’s not misogynistic,' he replied.

At the time of Ms Thorpe's interruption of the reception at Parliament House, Ford called her a 'shocker'.

'So everyone must respect the Welcome To Country ceremonies. But Lidia - who signed oath to the Crown - doesn’t have to respect the reigning Monarch when choosing to be in his presence,' he wrote.  'What a shocker she is!'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13985023/king-charles-queen-camilla-australia-visit-Sydney-live.html



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October 21, 2024

Hot mic catches organizer chastising host over 'cut' joke about Trump in Al Smith Dinner monologue

Comedian Jim Gaffigan straddled a fine line between bawdy humor and outright offense when he supplied the punchlines at a charity political dinner featuring former President Donald Trump on Thursday evening.

He could not resist joking about the infamous 'grab them by the p***y' controversy of the 2016 election - despite being in front of an audience of New York's top Catholic clergy and former first lady Melania Trump at the Al Smith Dinner.

'You know, during the first and only debate, President Trump talked about migrants taking cats and eating them,' said Gaffigan.

'You know, if you’re keeping track at home, this is the second time grabbing a kitty has been part of a campaign issue.'

As might have been expected, Melania's eyes widened at the mention, a smattering of boos rang around the hall - and then a female voice could be heard saying: 'We talked about leaving that out.'

Another shot revealed the owner of the voice to be Mary Callahan Erdoes, vice chairperson of the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation

She pursed her lips in an effort not to laugh ... before failing and smiling broadly.

Gaffigan took the invitation to get a bigger response.

'I was gonna leave that out,' he said, to peals of laughter.

The white-tie dinner is an annual charity event in memory of New York's first Catholic governor.

Notables in the crowd included Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, New York Mayor Eric Adams, and state AG Letitia James.

Vice President Kamala Harris skipped the event, sending a video skit in her stead.

Trump tore into his election rival for not being present.

'My opponent feels like she does not have to be here, which is disrespectful to the event and in particular to our great Catholic community – very disrespectful,' Trump said.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13976211/al-smith-dinner-donald-trump.html

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October 17, 2024

Columnist sacked over ‘grope’ comments to ABC radio program

Fired for cynicism

Prominent Crikey columnist and correspondent-at-large Guy Rundle has been sacked after its publisher was told about an offensive text he sent in to Radio National’s Breakfast Show this week, adding to years of messages sent to the program.

Rundle’s message, sent to the show on Thursday, said rising sexual assault complaints are because “every grope is now a sexual assault”.

This led to ABC managing director David Anderson expressing his concern in a note to Crikey publisher Private Media’s chair Eric Beecher and chief executive Will Hayward, highlighting the message, alongside a long-term pattern of messages directed at the Radio National breakfast show and its host, Patricia Karvelas.

Hayward condemned Rundle in a statement provided to this masthead, saying the company was appalled to hear Rundle’s comment on Radio National, and confirming he would no longer be published by Crikey, despite not being employed on a full-time basis.

“Rundle is a writer with significant talents and a body of insightful and challenging work, but we condemn those kinds of comments and our working relationship has become untenable,” he said. “Therefore, we will no longer be publishing his work.”

https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/crikey-columnist-sacked-over-grope-comments-to-abc-radio-program-20241019-p5kjm5.html

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October 16, 2024

The Babylon Bee sues California for silencing satire

California’s Democrats are being sued for shutting down satire.

At the centre of the 72-page lawsuit is the right to freedom of speech for the Babylon Bee and lawyer Kelly Chang Rickert.

Representing Rickert and the Babylon Bee is Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF). They said that the catalyst for the case was legislation recently adopted by Governor Gavin ‘Nuisance’ Newsom.

‘[These] laws censor freedom of speech by using vague standards to punish people for posting certain political content online,’ the ADF argued.

This includes, ‘political memes, parodies of politicians and apply around election time’.

They are designed, ADF explained, to censor speech through subjective standards like prohibiting pictures and videos ‘likely to harm’ a candidate’s ‘electoral prospects’.

California’s Democrats fast-tracked their own version of the Misinformation and Disinformation (MAD) laws in September.

Bills AB 2839 and AB 2655 were made law after an ad (of unknown origin) parodying Kamala Harris, triggered Newsom.

He criticised Elon Musk for resharing the video, and boasted:

‘Manipulating a voice in an ‘ad’ like this one should be illegal. I’ll be signing a bill in a matter of weeks to make sure it is.’

Ironically, AB 2655 was dubbed ‘Defending Democracy from Deepfake Deception’.

AB 2839, sponsored by 12 Democrats, was marketed as protecting elections from deceptive media in advertisements.

Citing AI and election interference, they claimed that ‘fake images or files can skew election results’ and promote election denial conspiracies.

Therefore, in order to secure election integrity, California has decided that it must ban satirical content critical of candidates ‘for a limited time before and after elections’.

This serves to ‘prevent the use of deepfakes and disinformation meant to prevent voters from voting and deceive voters based on fraudulent content’.

A federal court has since put a halt on AB 2839, citing concerns about freedom of speech in response to an unrelated lawsuit put forward by YouTuber Christopher Kohls.

ADF described the laws as ‘forbidding political expression under the label of ‘materially deceptive content’.

Newsom’s law renders satire pointless by effectively demanding comical content come with trigger warnings.

Additionally, ‘AB 2655 converts social media platforms into California state snitches.’

Big Tech will be required to file ‘field reports’ with big government ‘about user posts, then remove or label them false’.

The Babylon Bee v Comrade California lawsuit argues, that Newsom’s MAD laws, ‘threatens the heart of public discourse’.

‘The First Amendment protects this freedom because it trusts the American people to be able to think and decide for themselves in the context of debating political candidates and issues.’

Slamming their point home, ADF said:

‘California officials don’t share that trust. They want to be the arbiters of political truth online.’

Defending satirical political content, ADF added:

‘The end [goal] of satire is often to criticise or mock an idea, event, or person for the purpose of correction and improvement.’

To this end, satire utilises wit, shock, and awe, in order to ‘provide social commentary in order to expose underlying truths’.

Satirists provide sharp relief, and brevity in an otherwise bloated, and cloudy stream of morose data, and cliched, overdone sloganeering.

Thus, ADF argued, ‘Satirists tell the truth with a smile, so that [they] will not repel people but cure them of their ignorance which is their worst fault.’

The Babylon Bee is based in Florida, however, most of its editing and video work is produced in California.

ADF’s lawsuit aims to stop the enforcement of both laws.

Although they have the veneer of defending democracy, these laws appear to exist with the sole purpose of defending Democrats.

When announcing the important lawsuit, Alliance Defending Freedom said the law is ‘humourless, authoritarian censorship of political speech and satire’.

‘The Founders didn’t give us the First Amendment so politicians like Newsom could appoint themselves fact checkers and humour police. So, we’re taking action,’ they concluded.

The Babylon Bee’s CEO, Seth Dillon, told Daily Wire’s Ben Shapiro, he never thought the company would ever get so big, let alone be at the epicentre of the fight to save freedom of speech.

In a separate X post, Dillon remarked, ‘It shouldn’t be necessary to defend comedy in court, but here we are.’

https://www.spectator.com.au/2024/10/the-babylon-bee-sues-california-for-silencing-satire/

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October 14, 2024

English backpacker shocked to find Aussies don't like being called 'champ'

To me it is a polite usage

An English backpacker has found himself befuddled by various aspects of Aussie culture after moving Down Under, from our sense of humour to our obsession with early morning exercise. Most recently, he has put our aversion to a seemingly inoffensive word in his smartphone's spotlight, putting a video out on TikTok asking others to explain what is so offensive about it.

Speaking through hair so floppy it would put a storage disk to shame, the backpacker named Kyle said: "if you call [Australians] "champ" they're going to want to punch you in the face."

"Australians: explain it to me in the comments because I found out but I didn't exactly get the reason why and it's very interesting," he added.

Australians were quick to explain that, over here, calling someone a "champ" or "boss" is generally considered over-familiar at best, and patronising and condescending at worst.

"Champ is passive aggressive to Aussies," one social media user said, while another added: "Champ is like belittling; it’s patronising like buddy."

https://www.escape.com.au/news/english-backpacker-shocked-to-find-aussies-dont-like-being-called-champ/news-story/baadaae46b7f0ebee0fbe7f35169744a

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October 13, 2024


Western Sydney University chancellor Jennifer Westacott has slammed anti-Israel campus protesters, two of whom were arrested and charged for allegedly assaulting security guards.

“Western Sydney University condemns anti-Semitism in any form, full stop,” Ms Westacott told The Australian.

“We condemn Islamophobia, hate speech, intimidation and violence in any form, full stop. I cannot be clearer than that.

“We will not tolerate these behaviours on our campuses. This is now a police matter and we are fully co-operating with the police investigation.

“The safety and wellbeing of students is our priority. Universities should be places of intellectual challenge and the contest of ideas, but they must never be places of fear or intimidation.”

Peak Jewish groups have expressed outrage at Western Sydney University protesters who claimed to name a campus building after the slain former leader of Hamas’s political wing. In a social media comment, the protesters confirmed their banner, which read “Haniyeh’s building”, was a reference to Ismail Haniyeh, the former leader of Hamas’s political wing who was assassinated this year.

The protesters have scheduled a “cops off campus” protest on Friday at the university campus, saying two of its members were “violently arrested” in a case of “racial profiling”.

“Ismail Haniyeh was the leader of Hamas, a terrorist organisation listed in Australia, just like ISIS and al-Qa’ida,” Zionist Federation of Australia chief executive Alon Cassuto said. “Imagine students glorifying bin Laden on campus a year after 9/11.

“Failures in university leadership across Australia have emboldened students to think they can get away with glorifying a genocidal terrorist leader with no consequences. Western Sydney University must come out strongly … to condemn this behaviour and send a clear message to all students that this will not be tolerated.”

The Executive Council of Australian Jewry condemned the protesters for being “some of the most ignorant and brainwashed people imaginable”.

“It has taken a year for the anti-Israel movement to drop any pretence of supporting peace and Palestinian statehood,” ECAJ co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said. “It is now plain for all to see they’re only interested in war and Jewish destruction.

“In time they will undoubtedly turn up as Greens candidates or researchers for ‘human rights organisations’ but their proud support for a murderous anti-Semitic psychopath will follow them.”

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/western-sydney-university-chief-jennifer-westacott-we-will-not-tolerate-hate-speech-on-campus/news-story/5a7ffbd4becdbd69c4174e312ecdab56

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October 10, 2024

How Foreign Censorship Threatens American Free Speech

On the eve of a highly-anticipated live X “Spaces” conversation between Elon Musk and former president Donald Trump, the powerful European Union Commissioner Thierry Breton warned in August that authorities would be “monitoring” the conversation for “content that may incite violence, hate, and racism.”

While reminding Musk that the EU was already investigating X for alleged failures “to combat disinformation,” Breton said he and his colleagues “will not hesitate to make full use of our toolbox … to protect EU citizens from serious harm.”

The European Commission distanced itself from Breton, who would eventually resign his post while facing scrutiny from U.S. lawmakers for threatening Musk and Americans’ free speech and interfering in domestic politics. But the EU probe of X, which could result in crippling fines, persists.

Although litigation, congressional oversight efforts, and reportage led by the Twitter Files have helped expose the U.S. government’s efforts to pressure social media companies to censor protected political speech, the recent rumblings from Europe underscore the escalating challenges American-based social media platforms are facing from foreign authorities – not just from repressive regimes such as China and Iran, but also from the EU, the U.K., Brazil, and other democracies.

Free speech advocates warn that foreign demands that tech companies comply with their censorious legal and regulatory standards that violate the First Amendment’s protections will hamper the ability of Americans to communicate freely in the digital public square. Facebook’s Community Standards, for example, “apply to everyone, all around the world.” Academics have termed the tendency of companies to apply the strictest local guidelines globally as the “Brussels Effect.”

Mike Benz, a former State Department cyber official and executive director of the Foundation for Freedom Online, argues that foreign efforts to cast populist narratives on matters such as election integrity, immigration, and public health as mis- and dis-information constitute a surreptitious “transatlantic flank attack” on American speech.

However, evidence suggests that U.S. authorities and U.S.-supported NGOs that have sought greater restrictions on speech have, at minimum, indirectly supported these foreign efforts, creating a backdoor method to suppress protected speech at home.

For instance, the White House pressured platforms to censor content pertaining to COVID-19 and election integrity. Agencies from the Justice Department to the Securities and Exchange Commission and Federal Communications Commission have probed Musk’s enterprises during the Biden years.

Defining Illegal Content

The U.S. government has used the FBI and the State Department, among other agencies, to coordinate counter-disinformation efforts globally with other nations. The goal is said to build “a more resilient global information system, where objective facts are elevated and deceptive messages gain less traction,” in the words of  Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

As a State Department spokesman told RealClearInvestigations, “The United States is committed to advancing a rights-respecting approach to technology that mitigates potential harms while maintaining the free and open use of digital platforms.”

“We are concerned by actions to limit access to information anywhere in the world,” the spokesman added.

The European Union’s Digital Services Act is seen by champions of stringent content moderation standards and critics alike as the strongest global effort to regulate speech.

Adopted in 2022 and praised by former President Barack Obama and his Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the measure imposes a slew of regulatory requirements on the more than a dozen social media platforms and search engines that have at least 45 million users in the EU.

It requires these platforms to take measures to counter “illegal content online,” not only responding to user-flagged posts but those fingered by “specialised ‘trusted flaggers’” for removal, according to a European Commission Q&A.

“Illegal content,” the Commission writes, includes “illegal hate speech” and other prohibited rhetoric, pursuant to EU law or those within any of its 27 member states. Platforms also must take “risk-based action,” including undergoing independent audits to combat “disinformation or election manipulation” – with the expectation those measures should be taken in consultation with “independent experts and civil society organisations.” The Commission says these measures are aimed at mitigating “systemic issues such as … hoaxes and manipulation during pandemics, harms to vulnerable groups and other emerging societal harms” driven by “harmful” but not illegal content.

The DSA also references a Code of Practice on Disinformation, under which Big Tech companies such as Google, Meta, and Microsoft have agreed to demonetize purported disinformation pursuant to European Commission guidance.

https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2024/10/08/global_crackdown_how_foreign_censorship_threatens_american_free_speech_1063521.html

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October 09, 2024


Patricia Karvelas forced to apologise after one-word blunder on her live radio show


ABC star Patricia Karvelas has been forced to apologise live on air after her guest used the word 'schizophrenic' to describe a policy.

Ms Karvelas made the apology on Wednesday morning, just hours after Anthony Albanese apologised for mocking Tourette syndrome during Question Time.

'My guest, a couple of guests ago ... used the word schizophrenic in describing policy,' she said.

'I can understand why people are offended by [it] and then I repeated it, and then I can only apologise for myself, of course, and I do apologise for that.'

Ms Karvelas hosts ABC radio national breakfast on weekday mornings.

The gaffe comes after the Prime Minister was called out for a comment he made during Question Time on Tuesday, while answering a question on whether Labor would tax owner-occupied family homes.

Facing interjections from shadow treasurer Angus Taylor who was repeatedly saying: 'Rule it out,' Mr Albanese directed his attention at the Hume MP.

'This nonsense that they carry on with ... have you got Tourette's or something?' said Mr Albanese, drawing laughter from some in the chamber.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13939317/Patricia-Karvelas-forced-apologise-one-word-blunder-live-radio-show.html

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8 October, 2024

Meta is officially the global arbiter of ‘truth’ – yes, you should be afraid

Last month, the US Department of Justice charged two employees of the Russian state media outlet RT with violating the Foreign Agent Registration Act and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

The charges allege the individuals paid $14.7 million to a US right-wing social media company to create and distribute nearly 2000 social media videos across TikTok, Instagram, X and YouTube that contained covert pro-Russian messaging on topics like the Ukraine war, immigration, and domestic US policies.

Following the charges, Meta announced it was imposing a long-anticipated ban on RT and another Russian media organisation, Rossiya Segodnya, across its platforms, which include Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Threads, for “foreign interference activity”.

Citing a web of deception and covert influence operations, Meta made it clear the decision didn’t come from nowhere. As far back as 2017, the US government sounded the alarm on RT and forced it to formally register as a “foreign agent”.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken pulled no punches in his assessment of the charges, accusing RT of being a “de facto extension of Russia’s intelligence apparatus” with “cyber operational capabilities and connections to Russian intelligence”. In international relations and diplomacy, these are fighting words.

The Kremlin’s response, via spokesperson Dmitry Peskov, was telling. “Meta is discrediting itself with these actions,” he said, adding, “Such selective actions against Russian media are unacceptable. This complicates prospects for normalising our relations with Meta.”

The subtext of Peskov’s statement was clear: in the eyes of some, Meta is not just another company making a business decision; it’s a geopolitical actor wielding partisan influence.

The RT and Rossiya Segodnya bans are another round in an already contentious debate regarding social media giants and the power they hold. On one end of the spectrum, we have those who see such actions as a necessary step in combating state-sponsored disinformation.

On the other end, free speech advocates view the ban with great alarm, seeing it as a dangerous precedent for tech giants acting as “arbiters of truth”. Elon Musk, who proclaims himself to be a free speech absolutist (whenever it’s convenient for his self-image), posted to his own platform X: “If we lose freedom of speech, it’s never coming back.”

For all the melodrama that surrounds him, Musk’s sentiment is one that resonates with users who fear that the disinformation cure might be worse than the disease.

As the Australian Human Rights Commission has pointed out, “Drawing a clear line between truth and falsehood is not always simple, and there may be legitimate differences in opinion.” In other words, one person’s disinformation might be another’s hard-hitting exposé. There has to be an objective truth, but moderating for it isn’t an easy prospect.

What makes this situation particularly thorny is the global reach of platforms such as Facebook and Instagram. When Meta makes a decision, it doesn’t just impact a handful of users or a single channel – it has consequences around the globe. Through the ban, RT alone lost more than 7.2 million followers on Facebook, and another million on Instagram.

According to the Australian Media Literacy Alliance, 80 per cent of Australians are concerned about the spread of disinformation on social media. So, the pressure to address the issue of disinformation on social media platforms is mounting, from both users and public agencies.

Social media and the internet have given a voice to millions who were once left out of the conversation. They have brought together communities across the globe and made information more accessible than ever before – something we couldn’t have imagined even a few decades ago.

What makes these platforms so powerful is their ability to cultivate open expression and tear down barriers. It’s a noble idea, and worth defending. But for every heartwarming story of long-lost school friends reunited or grassroots movements gaining traction, there is a Cambridge Analytica scandal, or disinformation spreading like wildfire. And Meta has now, in effect, become a gatekeeper of global discourse, a role it is neither suited to, nor was elected to fulfil.

The ban on RT and Rossiya Segodnya won’t be the last word when it comes to online disinformation. The challenge now is in maintaining the openness of the internet, while curbing harmful content and propaganda.

Defending Russia’s propaganda as free speech is shortsighted nonsense. But Meta’s ban raises pertinent questions about where and how we draw the line for online expression, the role of governments in policing the digital realm, and the responsibility platforms have in combating and responding to disinformation in an era when truth seems increasingly elusive.

https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-america/meta-is-officially-the-global-arbiter-of-truth-yes-you-should-be-afraid-20241006-p5kg6k.html

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October 07, 2024

Amazon Retracts Ban of Dr. Paul Marik's "Cancer Care"

This evening I received an e-mail from Dr. Marik, who explained that Amazon’s ban of his book “Cancer Care” has been retracted. The e-book is again available for purchase. This great news comes almost exactly a week after I wrote about the ban in my post Amazon Excommunicates Dr. Paul Marik. I’d like to think that my protest, which was very widely shared, may have contributed to the retail Leviathan’s decision to retract the ban.

I hope that our oligarchic overlords will come to understand that—as much power and money as they possess—they won’t get away with banning books by great scholars while also pretending to be benevolent. Everyone who still has his brain will see this for what it is—namely, a brutal act of tyranny that ONLY the bad guys in history have done.

Congratulations, Dr. Marik, for your victory for free speech and for providing helpful and possibly life saving information to cancer patients. Put one in the win column for the good guys!

https://petermcculloughmd.substack.com/p/amazon-retracts-ban-of-dr-paul-mariks

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October 06, 2024

The Left’s Open Declaration of War on Free Speech

Leftists are becoming increasingly totalitarian in their antipathy for freedom of speech. It’s an obstacle to their desire for power, so it must be crushed.

An exaggeration, you say?

Just listen to what high-profile leftists have been openly saying about denying you your right to information on both sides of the political equation.

Former presidential candidate and Obama Secretary of State John Kerry has gotten the most attention recently, mainly because of how bluntly he railed against our most fundamental freedom. But former Clinton Secretary of Labor Robert Reich has been just as repressive—and more detailed. And Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., has been her usual self as she demands censorship without much specificity.

Kerry made his comments at a World Economic Forum panel on green energy on Sept. 25. A conservative comedian trying to satirize the views of the haughty ruling class could not have come up with better material.

As Kerry put it, “The dislike of and anger over social media is just growing and growing and growing, and it’s part of our problem, particularly in democracies, in terms of building consensus around any issue,” Kerry lamented, apparently referring to abhorrence of freedom by members of his ilk.

“It’s really hard to govern today!” The problem, he said, was that the internet and social media have liberated people to choose from different sources of information, adding competition. Little over two decades ago, the country was held hostage to the views of the journalists working at three networks and a handful of national newspapers.

Kerry pines for those days. “The referees we used to have to determine what’s a fact, and what isn’t a fact, have been eviscerated to a certain degree, and people self-select, where they go for their news, or for their information, and you get into a vicious cycle,” said the man who came within 19 Electoral College votes of becoming president in 2004. “So, it’s really, really hard, much harder, to build consensus today than at any time in the 40 to 50 years I’ve been involved in this.”

He continued, “There is a lot of discussion now about how you curb those entities, if people go to only one source, and the source they go to is sick and has an agenda and it’s putting out disinformation, our First Amendment stands as a major block to the ability to hammer it out of existence.”

Kerry’s solution?

What we need is to win the ground, win the right to govern by hopefully winning enough votes that you’re free to be able to implement change. … Democracies are very challenged right now, and have not proven that they can move fast enough, or big enough, to deal with the challenges that we are facing, and to me, this is part of what this race, this election is all about—will we break the fever in the United States?

Reich also discussed his desire to hammer persnickety sources of information out of existence with a global audience. Writing in the leading newspaper of the British Left, The Guardian, he engaged in a bit of disinformation himself by mischaracterizing the actions of the man he’d like hammered out, X owner Elon Musk.

Musk and former President Donald Trump “have both floated the idea of governing together if Trump wins a second term,” wrote Reich, whereas, in fact, as Reich admitted himself, all Musk has done is recommend that Trump have in a second term a “government efficiency commission” in which Musk “would be happy to help out.” But apparently unaware that he was committing the same crime he accused Musk to be guilty of, Reich went on with his recommendation for how officials around the world should “rein in Musk.”

The first one was for people to boycott Musk’s electric vehicle, Tesla, and his social media company, X. But Reich wants much more. “Regulators around the world should threaten Musk with arrest if he doesn’t stop disseminating lies and hate on X,” he wrote. As for the U.S. government, it “should terminate its contracts with him, starting with Musk’s SpaceX,” wrote Reich, who published his screed weeks before the U.S. government had to come to SpaceX, hat in hand, asking it to retrieve two astronauts stranded by NASA.

Ocasio-Cortez has been far less trenchant and specific. The young representative, who’s been repeatedly dinged by left-leaning PolitiFact for spreading falsehoods, also wants to “rein in” media she considers guilty of spreading misinformation.

“We’re going to have to figure out how we rein in our media environment so that you can’t just spew disinformation and misinformation,” she posted on social media. “It’s one thing to have different opinions, but it’s another thing entirely to just say things that are false, so that is something that we’re looking into.”

Unfortunately, these unhinged comments by American politicians don’t come in a vacuum.

There is a sustained attack on freedom of information from Brazil to our ally the United Kingdom to next door in Canada. Of course, that makes it all the more important that we speak up for freedom.

https://www.dailysignal.com/2024/10/05/the-lefts-open-declaration-of-war-on-free-speech/

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October 02, 2024

Capitol riots not threat to democracy, Harris ‘censorship’ is: Vance

Republican J.D. Vance has dodged a question on the January 6 Capitol riots and whether the election results will be challenged again, saying the issue lies with the Democrats’ “threat of censorship”.

“I believe we actually have a threat to a threat to democracy in this country, but unfortunately it is not the threat Kamala Harris and Tim Walz want to talk about, [it] is the threat of censorship,” he said.

“It is Americans casting aside life-long friendships because of disagreements over politics, it’s big technology companies silencing their fellow citizens.

“And it is Kamala Harris saying that rather than debate and persuade her fellow Americans, she’d like to censor the people who engage in misinformation.”

https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-america/us-vice-presidential-debate-live-updates-j-d-vance-tim-walz-face-off-for-first-time-in-new-york-20241001-p5kf10.html

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