Censors mimicking the Soviet model

 Rebekah Koffler:

Make no mistake, the recent Joe Rogan vs. Spotify scandal is not about COVID and what constitutes proper medical protocols to fight it. It’s about the future of free speech in America.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki’s statement on Tuesday, directing Big Tech and Spotify to do “more” to eradicate alleged COVID “misinformation” on the “Joe Rogan Experience” podcast, suggests that the future of the First Amendment is bleak. A representative of a ruling party dictating to a private company what content is “accurate” and what is not, is a clear sign that the US government has embraced censorship.

Just like the Soviets, the benevolent authoritarians want to “protect” you from the bad influence of the Rogan type “rogues.” Consider that the Rogan interview deemed wrongheaded by America’s elites was not with some charlatan but with a medical doctor, a clinician, Dr. Robert Malone. Malone’s thought crime is that he doesn’t sing in unison with the “The Science” espoused by Tony Fauci, who has been stood up as the COVID Minister of Propaganda whose every word must be accepted as truth.

As someone who grew up behind the Iron Curtain, in the former USSR, I am all too familiar with the dangers of censorship, a hallmark of communist totalitarianism. There’s a reason why repressive states like Russia and its predecessor, the Soviet Union, cling to it. That is how the ruling class stays in power. Totalitarian states do not tolerate alternative viewpoints because they don’t want their subjects to engage in critical thinking, which can lead to the end of their regimes. Therefore, they control what the people say, write, and even think by punishing those whose opinions stray from an established orthodoxy.
...

We must not say wrong things about COVID because someone could get sick or die. But there are risks to life, and risks to freedom. The suggestion that something must be accepted as truth so that bad things don’t happen is exactly the kind of leverage the communists used to deny free speech.

The attacks on Rogan, who is a mixed-martial-arts commentator, comedian, and entertainer, for the alleged “misinformation” reminds me of how viciously the Soviet government attacked dissidents, such as the renowned author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, whom the Soviets expelled from the country for novels that spoke truth to power. Solzhenitsyn then moved to America, where he could freely express his views, at a time when freedom of speech was a given.
...

It is not an accident that the “guardians of truth” in the White House, Hollywood, Big Tech and American press equivalents of Soviet Pravda and Izvestiya are coming after Rogan and Spotify with the zeal of Russia’s Vladimir Putin chasing down and poisoning his opponents. Joe Rogan, who has the world’s largest podcast, with an estimated 11 million listeners per episode, is a gigantic threat to the establishment.
...

Censorship also has a perverse effect.  When people are trying to censor it makes others doubt the censors.  When someone like Fauci can be so wrong so often and the government and its Big Tech colluders try to censor those who disagree with Fouci, their own credibility become suspect.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Should Republicans go ahead and add Supreme Court Justices to head off Democrats

29 % of companies say they are unlikely to keep insurance after Obamacare