Posted on 02/05/2021 6:42:12 AM PST by Heartlander
What has become of American journalism?
In the aftermath of the January 6 Capitol incident, social media was quick to pass judgment not only on those who entered the rotunda, floor, and congressional offices but also on those who merely attended or even supported the gathering in Washington. Retribution was swift, most notably for Trump’s more prominent supporters, with calls for the firings of attendees who could be identified, and the boycotting of businesses whose executives publicly supported the president’s reelection campaign and subsequently voiced support for the widespread notion that the November 3 election was anything but free and fair. These social purges are more vicious in the age of tech, as My Pillow entrepreneur, Mike Lindell, will certainly be able to attest. Examples abound.
The rather obvious implication of Seren Morris’ January 25 Newsweek story, headlined “MyPillow Products Are Still Being Sold by These Companies,” for example, is that action should be taken against these companies so as to discourage their continued support of Lindell’s product. Although Twitter merely flagged Lindell’s election fraud claims as “disputed,” Morris twice states as fact that Lindell’s claims were false. Morris also appears to admit that the boycotts were based on “Lindell’s support for former President Trump’,” not just the events of January 6. Lindell had already lost Kohl’s and Bed, Bath and Beyond as distributors for his products and he, along with several other noteworthy conservative voices, was permanently suspended from Twitter.
Morris’ column is intended to be a pirate’s map of sorts, not only reminding readers of Lindell’s alleged sins, but marking with an “X” the spots where conservative Lindell’s business interests are located. The article was published on the heels of Parler’s deracination. It’s clear that more stringent restrictive measures are close at hand, as defenders of free thought, association, and speech are marked for elimination as if they were toxic waste sites buried together on the metaphysical map.
It is said that history repeats itself.
Opened in March 1933, Dachau was the first of the Nazi concentration camps. It was built to gather, incarcerate, and then execute political dissidents. The voices who defied the Third Reich were permanently silenced.
The Nazis incarcerated enemies of the state from across the social strata: trade unionists, Communists, clergy, politicians, professors, artists, writers, and finally Jews. Oppositional luminaries, like Martin Neimöller, author of the famous poem “First They Came,” after surviving internment, wrote about the horrors of Dachau having witnessed starvation, executions, and the escalation of the Nazi purge.
The meaning of Neimöller’s poem seems to have been forgotten in the United States. Perhaps because while we can recall widescale injustices—slavery, the Japanese internment camps, and Jim Crow come to mind—there is nothing in our experience approaching the Nazis’ systemic form of murder.
Could such a genocide happen here? We imagine it cannot at our peril.
Of course, there are many cold steps to traduce between angry boycotts and deplatformings based on political differences and calls for elimination on the same grounds. But it is useful to remember that Twitter, Google, Amazon, and Apple have eclipsed the power of some nation-states. While many companies have a global reach, these conglomerates negotiate with foreign governments on their own terms and in their own interests. They market a form of tyranny that exploits American preoccupation with social conformity and acceptance. Conservatives are the new “other.” We are said to have violated these shared spaces by having expressed beliefs we have been informed are offensive.
The message is that nobody should associate with conservatives. Our expressed beliefs are so offensive they are sometimes even said to justify physical violence (“punch a Nazi” is a mantra of Antifa in response to Trump supporters).
Americans struggle with the dichotomy between social acceptance and reverence for individualism that exists in our culture. Most of our heroes, real and fictional, are iconoclasts. These rebels fight personal and professional circumstances that oppress the human spirit—like racism, crime, poverty, sexism, and myriad other hardships to achieve success. Values like hard work, risk-taking, fidelity, and tolerance are generally accepted as part of the national fabric, but those have been replaced by a reverence for victimization, intolerance (deceptively called “tolerance”), and hand-outs to encourage dependence on government.
Part of this is an outgrowth of Madison Avenue proselytizing. We all want to smell good and, to be regarded as desirable by those around us. We have extended that natural and laudable desire not to offend others to ideological positions—senseless to the fact that in doing this, we demonize half the country as morally repugnant.
The Biden Administration, so keen on “unity,” had nothing to say about Parler’s erasure and made no statement about the vilification and persecution of Lindell. Lindell has become a lightning rod for left-wing criticism. He is not an educated man. He has struggled with substance abuse and has broken marriages. He is also unashamed of being a Christian conservative, and will not denounce his friendship with Trump.
Lindell, in many ways, is an American everyman. His targeting by Newsweek, Twitter, and other publishers is meant to serve as an example of what happens when anyone challenges the moral shortcomings in the Left’s corrupt message.
America should have outgrown this type of ostracism. We don’t hang witches, nor do we send the Anne Hutchinsons of our country to face the wilds because they don’t conform to what social and governmental magistrates dictate. Americans generally strive for fairness. It is why the Civil Rights Movement succeeded.
It was unconscionable to turn water cannons on men, women, and children, and to burn down houses of worship. It is equally unacceptable to allow these corporate entities to decide who is American and who is not.
Yes.
Thanks,,,
Many years ago, I worked with a woman (call her Magda, not her real name) who grew up in wartime Germany. She related the following story (I paraphrase)
We civilians were cleaning up after an Allied bombing raid. As people do, I was having a conversation with another teenage woman. It went along the usual lines, where are you from, what do your parents do.
She told me her parents were in Auschwitz. I asked her where that was. She replied "That's where you go in through the gate and out through the chimney." I had no idea what she was talking about.
Magda then said to me "You have to remember that we had a controlled press. Nothing the government did not want you to know was ever reported.:"
Keeping in mind that the Democrat Party controls the press, could it happen here?
The digital battle is not lost yet. Remember Alta Vista?AOL? Palm Pilot? The current incumbents can and probably will be replaced in the future. How fast that happens depends entirely on how quickly consumers adopt the newcomers. One of the biggest mistakes Trump made was not cross posting to other services. He should be on Gab now, but he seems to be content to just sit there. I guess we will have to wait until Parler comes back, and they will. They will come back harder and stronger and in order to shut them down they will have to resort to tactics that are more akin to bullying the power company into shutting off their juice. Then things will get interesting.
In the mean time, every company with an IT department worth their salt is thinking about what they would do if Amazon or Microsoft decided to shut them off.
Have a look at rightforge.com.
“In thru the Gate,
Out thru the Chimney.”
.
Chillingly Unforgettable.
Yes - digital first.
But it won’t be long until it becomes a PHYSICAL reality.
Be prepared. It’ll come on quickly once it starts.
“Have a look at rightforge.com.”
There you go. Once people get up with friendly hosting services or stand up their own servers, I predict the next battle will shift to DNS. Epik seems to be the only registrar left who won’t give in to the mob. That leaves us with a single point of failure. Not good.
The core of the problem.
“Of course, there are many cold steps to traduce between angry boycotts and deplatformings based on political differences and calls for elimination on the same grounds. But it is useful to remember that Twitter, Google, Amazon, and Apple have eclipsed the power of some nation-states. While many companies have a global reach, these conglomerates negotiate with foreign governments on their own terms and in their own interests. They market a form of tyranny that exploits American preoccupation with social conformity and acceptance. Conservatives are the new “other.” We are said to have violated these shared spaces by having expressed beliefs we have been informed are offensive.”
Ping. Limbaugh cites American Greatness now and then. It is a credible website.
I was reading up about Nord-VPN. Their servers are in Panama because the laws are very good for them there. You can find out the details why on the internet. So PANAMA looks like a place to put Parler's servers and they will be back. Now if the USA gets really nasty under Biden-Harris-Dems I suppose they can still block Parler from the USA?? But we are not near there yet. My opinion. Russia has successfully blocked some VPN services. Just find out the VPNs servers and block them all I suppose even if the VPN uses a few hundred.
Could it happen here? Sometimes I wonder how much of it is already happening and nobody ever reports on it.
p
“Now if the USA gets really nasty”
Nord VPN is supposed to be pretty good. But remember, their servers are all over the place, including the US. I suppose if the US demanded to “bug” them, they could just pull out, then you would have to use one of their servers in another country. Your VPN provider pulling out of the US is actually one of those canary in the coalmine things to watch for. I think what might happen is that the US “licences” VPNs, so you will have to have to have a permit and you will have to give them the “keys” so they can eavesdrop. This will be interesting because VPNs are what makes teleworking possible. Many if not most companies will fall in line like they have for political correctness. The rest will have to either stop teleworking or most likely leave the US. As for individuals, what would be the point of having one? I suppose you could deprive Google of some datapoints, but that’s about it.
“Just find out the VPNs servers and block them”
Most likely they would block the protocols. That would go for Tor, as well. I suppose you could try to obfuscate, use unconventional ports, etc, but I suppose AI would soon follow that could detect if something “funny” is going on.
“Their servers are in Panama”
The more I think about it, the more I want to liquidate everything and go down there and be with those servers.
fwiw from Wikipedia
“NordVPN is based in Panama, as the country has no mandatory data retention laws and does not participate in the Five Eyes or Fourteen Eyes alliances.”
Others out there are testing the waters of Internet 2.0 as a communications system without a central control point. Some pass along general guidelines of how to follow that path.
https://chiefio.wordpress.com/2021/02/02/pirate-freedom-conservative-box/
Here’s the podcast covering rightforge:
Finding Creative Internet Solutions In A World Controlled By Big Tech
Federalist Radio Hour
On this episode of The Federalist Radio Hour, Martin Avila talks with Senior Editor Chris Bedford about his new company RightForge and how Big Tech’s crackdown on conservative sites inspired him and others to create their own platform that can accommodate a wider variety of viewpoints.
Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/federalist-radio-hour/id983782306?i=1000506999701
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For now, I assume rightforge could strike a deal with Mr. Monster at EPIK.
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