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4play See other 4play Articles Title: Facebook's New Announcement on Satire Doesn't Bode Well for the Babylon Bee... Last week, Facebook announced that it would clarify the satire exception to its Hate Speech Community Standard. While this is welcome news for the expansion of content on Facebook, the platform also suggested it would act as a kind of satire police, ruling out certain kinds of satire that punch down or communicates hateful ideas. Almost as if on cue, Slate published an article on Tuesday attacking The Babylon Bee for you guessed it punching down. In responding to a satirical meme that Facebook removed for Hate Speech, the platforms oversight board made a few recommendations for expanding and then policing satire on the platform. Facebook should include the satire exception, which is currently not communicated to users, in the public language of the Hate Speech Community Standard, the board recommended. Facebook agreed to do this. Facebook should make sure that it has adequate procedures in place to address satirical content and relevant context properly including by providing content moderators with additional resources, the board also suggested. Recommended: The Babylon Bee Scores a Major Victory Over The New York Times In response, Facebook pledged to implement a new satire framework, which our teams will use for evaluating potential satire exceptions. Regional teams will be able to provide satire assessments. Facebook previously began to develop a framework for humor and satire, including over 20 engagements with academic experts, journalists, comedians, representatives of satirical publications, and advocates for freedom of expression. The discussion of punching down came in this context: Stakeholders noted that humor and satire are highly subjective across people and cultures, underscoring the importance of human review by individuals with cultural context. Stakeholders also told us that intent is key, though it can be tough to assess. Further, true satire does not punch down: the target of humorous or satirical content is often an indicator of intent. And if content is simply derogatory, not layered, complex, or subversive, it is not satire. Indeed, humor can be an effective mode of communicating hateful ideas. (emphasis added) Facebook made this announcement last Thursday. This Tuesday, Slate published an article seemingly encouraging Facebook to go after The Babylon Bee. Slates Parker J. Bach rightly explained that the Bees satire is not misinformation, the reporter claimed that conservatives are more vulnerable to misinformation and conspiracy theories because they see the legacy media as untrustworthy. Recommended: Snopes Plays Satire Police, Slams Babylon Bee for Joke About Erica Thomas and Chick-fil-A Bach also suggested that the Bee uses the wrong kind of satire: The site has a nasty tendency to punch down with humor parts of its audience finds refreshingly politically incorrect. The site is often ironically misogynistic, as when it defended the place of women soldiers in the American military by reporting how they dont throw grenades well, so the enemy will never know what to expect and how you can pay them way less, which gives you more money for weapons and ammo. The site is also frequently antagonistic toward the LGBTQIA+ community, with quizzes like What Gender Are You (Spoiler alert: the only possible answers are man and woman, with the outcome solely determined by the question What chromosomes do you have?) and countless identifies as jokesfor example, Man Identifies as Woman Just Long Enough to Voice Valid Opinion on Abortion. Bach concludes the article with these lines: Critics accusing the Babylon Bee of misinformation arent just missing the joke; theyre missing the problem. The Babylon Bee isnt trying to fool its audience about the content of its made-up news storiesbut it is letting them believe theyre correct. So, good satire must only mock the privileged, and it must sow doubt among conservatives? Seth Dillon, the Bees CEO, raised the alarm on Twitter. The image on the left is Facebook saying (just a few days ago) that true satire doesnt punch down. The image on the right is @Slate (yesterday) saying The Babylon Bee has a nasty tendency to punch down. If you cant see where this is going next, youre blind, Dillon tweeted. Recommended: Facebook Threatens Satire Site Babylon Bee over CNN Story That Snopes Rated False The Left has tried and failed to mischaracterize us as misinformation, so now theyre repositioning to attack us from another angle, Dillon told PJ Media. If punching down is not allowed on Facebook, then what better way to suppress our content than to say we have a nasty tendency to do just that? Here we have a perfect example of how the media and Big Tech are working together to protect their sacred cows. Dillon effectively countered the claim that The Babylon Bee is punching down by attacking transgender orthodoxy. They say we antagonize the trans community (punching down). Utter nonsense. Were attacking the top-down tyranny of the Lefts progressive agenda and the destruction its wreaking throughout society, enabled and fueled by all the most powerful people and institutions, the CEO noted. If thats not punching up, I dont know what is. But more importantly, the Lefts prohibition of punching down is speech suppression in disguise. Its people in positions of power protecting their interests by telling you what you can and cannot joke about, Dillon added. The very notion that conservative satire involves punching down while liberal satire ostensibly involves punching up arguably smuggles in the assumptions of intersectionality and Marxist critical race theory. The punching down criticism suggests that transgender people are inherently disadvantaged in American society, that they are less powerful than their critics. Yet Democrats and leftists in institution after institution have rushed to foist transgender ideology on Americans, from Barack Obama and Joe Biden to district court judges to Merriam-Webster dictionary. While people who identify as transgender do face unfair hostility in some instances, so do evangelical Christians. It would be just as wrong for Facebook to censor satire mocking conservative Christians as it would be for the platform to censor satire mocking transgenderism. By the way, the Babylon Bee is an equal-opportunity offender, mocking both the LGBT movement and conservative Christians. Facebook would not be the first to appoint itself the satire police. Snopes has repeatedly targeted The Babylon Bee, declaring in one instance, Were not sure if fanning the flames of controversy and muddying the details of a news story classify an article as satire. It appears Snopes has been trying to deplatform the conservative satire site, in part by claiming that the Bees satire is somehow not satirical enough. Facebook has previously attacked the Bee, of course. Last October, Facebook demonetized the satire site, claiming that a satirical article that quoted Monty Python and the Holy Grail constituted an incitement to violence. Recommended: SHOCK: Facebook Declares War on the Babylon Bee While the misinformation attack appears to be subsiding, Facebook seems quite happy to play the satire police. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#2. To: Ada (#0)
Satire is lost on ignorant readers. They're incapable of "getting it."
10 (More) Times The Babylon Bee's Prophecies Were Fulfilled
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