I am surprised this made it to SCOTUS. When the government is demanding it, it becomes a 1st amendment issue. Meta is acting as an agent of the government. This should have never happened.
I am surprised this made it to SCOTUS. When the government is demanding it, it becomes a 1st amendment issue. Meta is acting as an agent of the government. This should have never happened.
You know what? Me, too!
So, let’s figure it out! And then maybe we can figure out what Justice Jackson is thinking.
Missouri and other folks are basically arguing the Biden administration unduly influenced social media companies to censor speech on covid-19, vaccine safety and efficacy, and election integrity. It’s understood that the government has an interest in providing truthful information, and it’s fine if they ask social media companies to voluntarily do various things to promote the public’s interest in truthful information. But Missouri is arguing that the Biden administration crossed that line, turning social media companies into state actors, and social media company’s censoring of speech amounts to a violation of the First Amendment. In short, the question at hand is whether social media content moderation, when requested by a government administration, constitutes a violation of speech.
Now referring to the article and what Justice Jackson asked:
It’s extremely unlikely she was asking a basic questions answerable by “a sophomore at Brown”. That’s an uncharitable view that assumes that she, a Supreme Court Justice, is an idiot. Instead, from my perspective, she’s asking if the defendants recognize that the government has a stake in defending the public interest. Like, if according to the defendant’s logic, if merely asking social media companies to engage in more stringent content moderation to protect the public from misinformation, without any sort of coercion or other elements that would effectively make them do it and leave the decision to social media companies to implement the government’s suggestions—if the mere act of asking constitutes a violation of free speech? Are they arguing that the First Amendment hamstrings the government in every case to combat misinformation?
Naturally, conservative media takes advantage of American ignorance to flip the script from Justice Jackson attempting to illuminate the scope of the right’s conception of free speech as absolute which is evidently harmful and dangerous into a trivial question of whether it hamstrings the government.
You can find more information with reference links at my Perplexity.AI search thread.
They threatened the companies if they did not comply. That is what the lawsuit is about.
Well, the 5th Circuit found that to be the case…but the 5th Circuit is where the law goes to be corrupted, so I’m extremely skeptical that actually happened. Like, the FBI merely asking constitutes an implicit threat:
That’s nonsense, and yet…here we are…
Good. That’s the fucking point of it and worthless rats like her who can’t see it shouldn’t be running the show.
So, there are absolutely no circumstances when the government can do anything to promote the public’s interest in health and safety through factual information? None at all? Zero?
Sure. The government is free to speak it’s own stance on its own platform. Can’t you people who just want to blindly worship whatever the government says stick to watching cspan or whatever and fuck off of private platforms?
Only if you agree to stop being so ignorant and falling so easily for misinformation (as defined by me, obviously). Deal?
Like when Biden said you can’t catch Covid if you are vaccinated? Or you won’t die? Both are false. Or when fauci said cloth mask are effective ? They are not.
That’s why an open debate is important. People need to be informed and able to have effective conversations about the topic.
You’re talking about the content of what the government is asking. I’m asking about the act of asking itself, as was Justice Jackson.
Yes, but…there are various indications that open debate is often a platform for misinformation. Furthermore, people often either can’t or won’t distinguish between what’s false and what’s true. Or rather, their test for veracity is identity rather than reality…like when Fauci said cloth masks were effective and you believed they weren’t. That’s a case in point.
Yes. The act of asking is itself the problem. Justices should not be asking questions of whether or not we should discard the constitution just because it makes her political masters have a hard time enacting their garbage.
Your report on my post was warranted. Noted. Warning to myself for violation for Rule #1.
But also, your response is hyberbolic and conspiratorial and, as a consequence, entirely unhelpful. The hyperbole of discarding the constitution and the conspiracy of her having political masters masks the missing connections between what Justice Jackson is asking and what you saying she’s doing. You’re talking to someone who doesn’t do not agree with you, so rather than making massive, unwarranted leaps in logic, let’s try increments.
We’ll start at the beginning: So, there are absolutely no circumstances when the government can do anything to promote the public’s interest in health and safety through factual information? None at all? Zero?
I didn’t believe anything. The science shows they don’t work. They isn’t a belief. That’s a fact. Studies before the pandemic showed that to be true, studies during the pandemic showed that to be true and studies after the pandemic came to the same conclusion.
Fauci even admitted he knew he was lying.
I get you people like 1984 but we don’t need to make it how we run our country.