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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: Alex Jones and the rise of corporate censorship The banning of Infowars is an alarming act of capitalist intolerance. o were now trusting the capitalist class, massive, unaccountable corporations, to decide on our behalf what we may listen to and talk about? This is the take-home message, the terrible take-home message, of the expulsion of Alex Jones Infowars network from Apple, Facebook and Spotify and of the wild whoops of delight that this summary banning generated among so-called liberals: that people are now okay with allowing global capitalism to govern the public sphere and to decree what is sayable and what is unsayable. Corporate censorship, liberals new favourite thing how bizarre. We live in strange times. On one hand it is fashionable to hate capitalism these days. No middle-class home is complete without a Naomi Klein tome; making memes of Marx is every twentysomething Corbynistas favourite pastime. But on the other hand we seem content to trust Silicon Valley, the new frontier in corporate power, to make moral judgements about what kind of content people should be able to see online. Radicals and liberals declared themselves very glad that these business elites enforced censorship against Jones and Infowars. We should be celebrating the move, said Vox, because it represents a crucial step forward in the fight against fake news. Liberals for capitalist censorship! The world just got that bit odder, and less free. Ads by Kiosked Over the past 24 hours, Jones and much of his Infowars channel has been summarily banned in the excitable words of Vox from Apple, Facebook, Spotify and YouTube. Initially, Facebook and YouTube had taken only selective measures against Jones. In response to a Twitterstorm about his presence on these platforms, they took down some of his videos. But then Apple decided to ban Jones entirely removing all episodes of his podcast from its platform and the other online giants followed suit. Or as the thrilled liberal commentary put it: The dominoes started to fall. Despite having millions of subscribers, despite there being a public interest in what he has to say, Jones has been cast out of the world of social media, which is essentially the public square of the 21st century, on the basis that what he says is wicked. This is censorship. There will of course be apologists for the corporate control of speech, on both the left and right, who will say, Its only censorship when the government does it!. They are so wrong. When enormous companies that have arguably become the facilitators of public debate expel someone and his ideas because they find them morally repugnant, that is censorship. Powerful people have deprived an individual and his network of a key space in which they might propagate their beliefs. Aka censorship. Ads by Kiosked Must-reads from the past week No, we are not addicted to smartphones James Woudhuysen Tech No, we are not addicted to smartphones Theyre not book-burners theyre morons Ieuan Joy Free speech Theyre not book‑burners theyre morons Sarah Jeong and the battle of the Twittermobs Christian Butler Sarah Jeong and the battle of the Twittermobs The UK has abandoned the presumption of innocence Jon Holbrook Law The UK has abandoned the presumption of innocence Related categories Free speech It doesnt matter what you think of Jones. It doesnt matter if you think he is mad, eccentric, and given to embracing crackpot theories about school shootings being faked. You should still be worried about what has happened to him because it confirms we have moved into a new era of outsourced censorship. It shows that what was once done by the state is now done by corporations. The illiberal, intolerant cleansing from public life of ideas judged to be offensive or dangerous has shifted from being the states thing to being the business elites thing. Witness how many campaigners for censorship now seek to marshal capitalist power to the end of erasing voices they dont like from the Dump Farage campaign that wants corporations to withdraw their advertising from LBC until it dumps Nigel Farage as a presenter to the calling on Silicon Valley to deprive the oxygen of publicity to offensive broadcasters. In essence, so-called liberals and sections of the political class now want corporations to do their dirty work for them. They want the capitalist elites to do what it has become somewhat unfashionable for the state to do: ban controversial political speech. What an extraordinary folly this is. To empower global capitalism to act as judge, jury and executioner on what may be said on social-media platforms, in the new public square, is to sign the death warrant of freedom of speech. What if these bosses decide next that Marxist speech is unacceptable? Or that Zionist speech is dangerous? In green-lighting the censorship of Jones, we grant corporate suits the moral authority to censor pretty much anything else, too. People on both the liberal left and the libertarian right argue that what has been done to Jones is acceptable because this is simply a case of businesses deciding freely who they should associate with or provide platforms to. This is disingenuous. This was not a clean, independent business decision it was a rash act of silencing carried out under pressure from a moralised mob that insisted Jones words are too wicked for public life. This isnt the free market in action its the bending of capitalist power to the end of enforcing moral controls on speech. There is one very interesting thing that will spring from this incident: we will witness the severe limitations of right-wing libertarianism. Libertarians obsession with the state, their belief that things are only bad if the state does them, means they are incapable of arguing against capitalist authoritarianism, and in fact even support it on the basis that this is the free market being the free market (even though it isnt). Libertarianism is devastatingly ill-prepared for the new authoritarianism, for tackling the rise of outsourced censorship and informal intolerance. For good or ill, the social-media sphere is the new public sphere. The expulsion of people from these platforms is to 2018 what a state ban on the publication or sale of certain books was to 1618. How can we convince the owners of social media to permit the freest speech possible and to trust their users to negotiate the world of ideas for themselves? This is the question we should be asking ourselves, rather than concocting more ways to encourage these corporate overlords to censor and blacklist. Brendan ONeill is editor of spiked. Find him on Instagram: @burntoakboy Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ada (#0)
If these "Social Media" giants thought that Alex Jones was inciting anger among the people (by exposing them and their government sponsors) they have just opened PANDORAS BOX. Americans will not tolerate censorship irrespective of the arguments put forth by these companies. We are people that value a normal and moral society. Though I may disagree with queers and transgenders, lying politicians and bureaucrats, I haven't ever committed a violent act against them. Truth is, we have allowed this shit to go on too long and it's gotten out of control. It's being funded by the very people these zombies that hate normalcy used to hate ! Social Media is married to the deep state. It spies on its members, and now will decide what you and I are able to see and hear. If the globalist controllers think for a minute that this will stand they have another thing coming. It is definitely time for the silent majority to be heard loud and clear !
#2. To: noone222 (#1)
I hope this is true but cannot be sure.
Well said, thank you.
The problem confronting decent folks is so monumental that very little remedy is available - perhaps Divine Intervention only, and whenever has that happened? Americans not only are in denial or asleep, they are in a coma. They do not want to know. Sorry - nothing new there, and I always appreciate your posts. Katy, bar the door, I do not wear ignominy well ! John Milton, back in 1643, said " Truth ... never comes into the world but like a bastard, to the ignominy of him that brought her forth".
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