The Babylon Bee is one of Americas best news outlets. Sure, technically its satire, but it has an unerring knack for going straight to the heart of an issue and teasing out whats important. In my book, that makes it a lot more useful than the New York Times or the Washington Post. Plus, the articles are better written too. Now, we have a new reason to like the Bee: Following the Fifth Circuits decision holding that HB 20, the Texas law prohibiting social media viewpoint discrimination, the Bees CEO, Seth Dillon, is promising to go after Twitter for banning it from the platform.
The Fifth Circuit accepted the theory that the social media outlets have moved into the status of common carriers because they are the primary means by which most Americans obtain and share information. That means that they can no longer hide behind the claim that, as private corporations, they can do whatever they want.
Image: Rachel Richard Levine. YouTube screen grab.
The decision is a huge deal because it effectively ends social medias viewpoint discrimination. A federal district court has emphatically ruled that it is unconstitutional for social media outlets to engage in viewpoint discrimination and censorship. Of course, the Supreme Could can still overturn the ruling but, for now, it stands. Ads by topple
Meanwhile, in March 2022, Babylon Bee published an incredibly funny article naming Rachel Levine Man of the Year to counter USA Todays ridiculous decision to name him Woman of the Year. Levine, of course, is a man named Richard who aggressively pushes for transing children under the guise of healthcare. For that reason, reminding people who and what he really is was a great joke, and the Bee did it in a delicate and classy way.
The people at Twitter, however, were not amused. How dare the Bee focus Americans attention on the fact that Levine is a kind of creepy old guy in a dress? So, Twitter locked the Babylon Bees account:
Twitter locked the account of a right-leaning parody site, The Babylon Bee, after it awarded Rachel Levine, the transgender Biden administration official, the title of man of the year.
The Babylon Bee story was a reaction to USA Todays naming of Levine, who is US assistant secretary for health for the US Department of Health and Human Services, as one of its women of the year last week.
Twitter says it will restore the account, which has more than 1.3 million followers, if the Bee deletes the tweet, but CEO Seth Dillon says he has no intention of doing so.
Were not deleting anything, Dillon tweeted from his personal account. Truth is not hate speech. If the cost of telling the truth is the loss of our Twitter account, then so be it.
Dillon made the correct and principled decision. However, theres a cost to losing a Twitter account. It drives traffic to sites and traffic buys advertising clicks, which are the lifeblood of most internet sites.
With the Fifth Circuit having spoken, though, Dillon has plans, big plans, and Twitter is not going to like them. Using his personal Twitter account, Dillon laid out exactly what has happened and what will happen:
That sounds like a promise, doesnt it? I sincerely hope that the suit isnt just about unlocking the account. It should, instead, provide a detailed accounting of the revenue lost because of Twitters unconstitutional viewpoint