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Public Forums Should Be Open and Uncensored
Townhall.com ^ | May 26, 2018 | Paul Driessen

Posted on 05/26/2018 5:41:55 AM PDT by Kaslin

President Trump may not block even rude or obnoxious criticism from his Twitter account, because it is a public forum that is protected by the First Amendment, US District Court Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald has ruled. The President’s use of his Twitter account to comment on important policy, personnel and personal announcements made it a public forum, akin to a park or town square, she concluded.

Blocking unwanted tweets is thus viewpoint discrimination, which public officials are not permitted to engage in. Indeed, his Twitter account is not just a public forum. It is also “government space,” and thus may not be closed off, Judge Buchwald continued – rejecting a Justice Department argument that, since Twitter is a public company, it is beyond the reach of First Amendment public forum rules.

Free speech proponents hailed the ruling as a groundbreaking decision, saying it expands constitutional protections deep within the realms of social media. The executive director of Georgetown Law School’s Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection called it “a critical victory in preserving free speech in the digital age.” Blocking people from responding critically to presidential tweets is unconstitutional, because it prevents them from participating personally and directly in that forum, others said.  

The Justice Department said it disagreed with the decision and was considering its next steps. A better suggestion: Embrace the decision. Expand on it. Assess how these District Court principles and free speech guidelines can be applied other vital free speech arenas. Take it as far as you can.

Some will then predictably want to construe the decision narrowly, saying it applies only to government officials, perhaps especially conservatives who support this president. Conservatives, the White House and the Trump Administration need not and should not be bound by such self-serving assertions.

As Supreme Court and numerous lower court decisions have interpreted the Civil Rights Act and other laws, no person may employ race, color, creed, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, disability status or other categories, to discriminate in admissions, hiring or anything else under any program or activity receiving any form of federal financial assistance, including loans or scholarships. Those that do discriminate will lose their Internal Revenue Service non-profit status and their government funding.

Should that list of categories not include one of the most vital and fundamental civil rights of all – the one addressed and protected by the very first amendment to the United States Constitution? The right of free speech and free assembly, especially regarding one’s beliefs, interests and political viewpoints, and one’s ability to participate in discourse and debate over important political and public policy matters?

Our colleges and universities were once society’s crucible for developing and thrashing out ideas. Sadly, as anyone with a milligram of brain matter can attest, they have become bastions of one-sided ideological propaganda and intolerance. Every conceivable element of “diversity” is permitted and encouraged – nay, demanded – except for that most vital and fundamental civil right of free speech and open, robust debate.

That right now applies only to liberal-progressive-leftist views and ideologies. Anything that challenges or questions those teachings is vilified, denounced and silenced, often violently – as being hurtful, hateful, objectionable or intolerable to liberals. Faculty members are hired, protected, promoted or fired based on their social, scientific or political beliefs. Viewpoint discrimination, bullying and mobbing are rampant.

It’s time for pushback. Judicial and Executive Branch decisions and guidelines hold that even private universities that receive federal money for faculty research, student loans and scholarships, or campus facilities, are subject to Civil Rights Act rules. Presidents, administrators and faculty members of public universities are arguably public officials. Campuses and classrooms are clearly public forums.

If they tolerate or encourage viewpoint bullying, mobbing or violence, they are violating the civil rights of students, professors and speakers whose views have been deemed inappropriate, discomforting, hurtful or intolerable to the fragile sensitivities of climate alarmist, pro-abortion, atheist and other liberal factions.

Judge Buchwald’s ruling and the reactions of free speech advocates provide useful guidelines to buttress this approach. The Trump Administration, state attorneys general and free-speech/individual rights organizations should apply them to help restore intellectual rigor and open discourse to our campuses.

The ruling and reactions could also help expand constitutional protections even more deeply in the realms of digital age social media. As they suggest, today’s most popular social media sites have become our most vibrant and essential public forums: today’s parks, town squares and town halls. People, especially millennials, rely on them for news, information and opinions, often as substitutes for print, radio and television (and classrooms). But they now seem far better at censorship than at education or discussion.

Google algorithms increasingly and systematically send climate realism articles to intellectual Siberia. Unless you enter very specific search terms (author’s name, article title and unique wording), those sly algorithms make it difficult or impossible to find articles expressing non-alarmist viewpoints.

Google thus allies with the manmade climate cataclysm establishment – which has received billions of taxpayer dollars from multiple government agencies, but has blocked Climate Armageddon skeptics from getting articles published in scientific journals that often publish papers that involve hidden data, computer codes and other work. Even worse, it facilitates repeated threats that skeptics should be jailed (Bill Nye the Science Guy and RFK Jr.), prosecuted under RICO racketeering laws (Senators Warren and Whitehouse), or even executed (University of Graz, Austria Professor Richard Parncutt). 

Google is a private entity, there are other search engines, and those seeking complete, honest research results should see if those alternatives are any better. But there is something repugnant about mankind’s vast storehouses of information being controlled by hyper-partisan techies, in league with equally partisan university, deep state, deep media, hard green and other über-liberal, intolerant elements of our society.

Meanwhile, Google YouTube continues to use its power and position to block posting of and access to equally important information, including over 40 well-crafted, informative, carefully researched Prager University videos – because they contain what YouTube reviewers (censors) decreed is “objectionable content” on current events, history, constitutional principles, environmental topics and public policy.

Scholar-educator Dennis Prager sued YouTube for closing down yet another vital public forum to views that question, contest or simply fail to pay homage to liberal ideologies and agendas.

District Court Judge Lucy Koh concluded that YouTube did indeed apply vague standards and the arbitrary judgments of a few employees, and did indeed discriminate against Prager U by denying it access to this popular social media platform and digital public forum. However, she ruled that Google YouTube is a private company, and thus is under no obligation to be fair, to apply its services equally, or to refrain from imposing penalties on viewpoints with which its partisan officers and employees disagree.

In other words, YouTube may operate as a public forum but it is a private business and thus may discriminate as it wishes – since it does not bake cakes or provide food or overnight accommodations … or deal with any civil rights that Judge Koh wants to include among protected constitutional rights.

These actions are the hallmarks of communist, fascist and other totalitarian regimes that seek to control all thought, speech, economic activity and other aspects of our lives. They drive policies that further limit our freedoms, kill countless jobs, and cost us billions or trillions of dollars in lost productivity.

The Left is clearly afraid of conservative ideas and principles. It refuses to participate in discussions or debates that it might lose, and instead resorts to mobbing, bullying and violence to silence our voices.

Up to now, lower courts have not always been supportive of the analysis and prescriptions presented in this article. But appellate courts and the Supreme Court have yet to weigh in on the Trump Twitter, Prager YouTube, Google search bias and similar cases. So we are still in uncharted territory.

Conservatives, climate chaos skeptics and true free speech advocates should help create the legal precedents, while also pressing forward to build their own social media forums, and exposing, ridiculing, embarrassing and challenging the dominance of the Intolerant Left.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: censorship; cyberspace; forums; internet; presidenttrump; twitter
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1 posted on 05/26/2018 5:41:55 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

As Twitter has now been officially declared a public forum it can no longer ban people based on their political speech as it denies those being banned from interacting with government officials.


2 posted on 05/26/2018 5:48:13 AM PDT by Skywise
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To: Kaslin
I'm against embracing a bad decision just because we might be able to twist it to our advantage. Among other things, this decision seemingly prevents a politician from blocking large volumes of spam directed at his official accounts by political enemies.

We might see well-coordinated attacks on the ability of politicians and government agencies to conduct their business because their official accounts are flooded with obscene and malicious content - perhaps hundreds or even thousands of nuisance messages.
3 posted on 05/26/2018 5:50:08 AM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Kaslin

The left always finds a way to exempt itself from the rules it imposes on others.


4 posted on 05/26/2018 5:51:38 AM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Kaslin

Will the judge’s ruling apply to Facebook, Google and other social media and public sites that routinely censor and/or marginalize Conservative & Christian thought and worldviews? Probably not.


5 posted on 05/26/2018 5:55:37 AM PDT by JesusIsLord
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To: Kaslin

This ruling is good news and a step in the direction of establishing that forums like Twitter, Facebook, and Youtube are public forums, albeit privately owned, and must not discriminate. The logical next step is that they need to take their hands off of censorship, banning, and otherwise restraining otherwise legal discourse—give conservatives equal access and play, allow full expression so long as it is legal—not actionable threats, etc. This is really good news. Now we need to get the same judge or others to impose this ruling on behalf of the rest of us. Watch these companies scream though it will likely save them millions of dollars in backing off their censureship efforts.


6 posted on 05/26/2018 5:56:05 AM PDT by Reno89519 (No Amnesty! No Catch-and-Release! Just Say No to All Illegal Aliens! Arrest & Deport!)
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To: Kaslin

I know the “private enterprise” argument. But we now live in a digital world where cyberspace is in many ways the same as geography. Twitter, Google, Facebook, even Amazon are the new town squares and malls.

I know there is the sippery slope of government deciding Internet rules, but cyberspace is now weaponized by the Left.


7 posted on 05/26/2018 5:59:00 AM PDT by DaxtonBrown
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To: Kaslin

What a great idea!

“A better suggestion: Embrace the decision. Expand on it. Assess how these District Court principles and free speech guidelines can be applied other vital free speech arenas. Take it as far as you can.”

President Trump should congratulate Judge Buchenwald on her “forward thinking” decision and demand expansion of this theory as stated in the article. Give the FBI something useful to do. Sic them on folks that block others on social media platforms. Depriving one of their First Amendment rights is a serious matter!

Shove the Left’s nose in it...


8 posted on 05/26/2018 6:11:20 AM PDT by moovova
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To: Kaslin

Tyrants used to have things done to them.


9 posted on 05/26/2018 6:11:50 AM PDT by wastedyears (Joe McCarthy was right.)
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To: Steve_Seattle

>>We might see well-coordinated attacks on the ability of politicians and government agencies to conduct their business because their official accounts are flooded with obscene and malicious content - perhaps hundreds or even thousands of nuisance messages.

I already see it. My congressman, Ted Yoho, is very active on FB as a way of communicating. But, every single day, his posts are flooded with comments from two names. Every legitimate constituent who replies to Yoho with something positive gets an almost-instant response from one of the two names. The paid trolls use typical Progressive hyperbole where everything that Yoho does “will kill millions” etc.

But, these paid-activist trolls are the reason why this freedom-killing judge made the ruling. I wonder if the judge’s court room is a free and public space where no speech can be stifled?


10 posted on 05/26/2018 6:13:22 AM PDT by Bryanw92 (Asking a pro athlete for political advice is like asking a cavalry horse for tactical advice.)
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To: Kaslin

If the judge has ruled that for Twitter it should hold through on other forums. I’ve seen Trump speak on CNN and people have commented, YET I HAVE NOT BEEN PERMITTED TO COMMENT. CNN is blocking from doing so.


11 posted on 05/26/2018 6:15:47 AM PDT by jdsteel (Americans are Dreamers too!!!)
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To: Bryanw92

I suspect this judge’s decision will only apply to conservatives.


12 posted on 05/26/2018 6:18:17 AM PDT by marktwain (President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
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To: moovova
Shove the Left’s nose in it...

I agree. But lets direct it against college campuses.

13 posted on 05/26/2018 6:19:01 AM PDT by SKI NOW
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To: DaxtonBrown

>>Twitter, Google, Facebook, even Amazon are the new town squares and malls.

Big difference there. Are they a town square or a mall? I say that they are malls, and malls have owners who set rules for the public use of the space. Likewise, a store inside the mall sets the rules for public use of that space.

I agree with you that the Left has weaponized cyberspace. Look at us. We’re hiding out in a 20 year old message board forum that is a comfortable and safe space for us to preach to the choir. Imagine if all the great Conservative minds of FR suddenly entered Twitter as an invading force instead of sitting around the digital equivalent of some little VFW post on a road that was bypassed by the highway 25 years ago, sipping our beer and bitching about how it used to be.

It is interesting that the internet was invented to move atomic bomb secrets quickly from lab to lab so America could fight the Commies and now the Commies have weaponized that against us.


14 posted on 05/26/2018 6:25:28 AM PDT by Bryanw92 (Asking a pro athlete for political advice is like asking a cavalry horse for tactical advice.)
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To: Kaslin

I can block but the President can’t?

Oh, if we only had a blocking device on FR!


15 posted on 05/26/2018 6:25:48 AM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: marktwain

>>I suspect this judge’s decision will only apply to conservatives.

They always do because we let them.

Trump’s battle cry should be, “The judge has made his ruling. Let him enforce it.”


16 posted on 05/26/2018 6:26:41 AM PDT by Bryanw92 (Asking a pro athlete for political advice is like asking a cavalry horse for tactical advice.)
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To: Kaslin

Trump had this account long before becoming President, and continues to pay for it himself. To call this”government space” is absurd beyond belief. Such would, IMHO, be an unconstitutional taking under the 5th Amendment.


17 posted on 05/26/2018 6:28:27 AM PDT by Ancesthntr ("The right to buy weapons is the right to be free." A. E. van Vogt)
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To: Skywise
As Twitter has now been officially declared a public forum it can no longer ban people based on their political speech as it denies those being banned from interacting with government officials.

Sure it can. Any non-leftist speech is by definition hate speech. Not only is hate speech not protected by the 1st Amendment, it is illegal and prosecutable to the fullest extent of the law.

Haven't you learned the rules of the game yet?/s
18 posted on 05/26/2018 6:28:30 AM PDT by yuleeyahoo (Those are my principles, and if you do not like them...well I have others. - Groucho Marx)
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To: Bryanw92
"I wonder if the judge’s court room is a free and public space where no speech can be stifled?"

I checked her website the other day, and she doesn't even post an email address or Twitter account, so the only way to contact her office is by phone, which obviously significantly reduces your ability to contact her.
19 posted on 05/26/2018 6:32:57 AM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Kaslin

Facebook, Youtube and twatter are public forums, and are protected by the First Amendment. Logical conclusion. So you can sue them for blocking you, kicking you off, or demonetizing you.


20 posted on 05/26/2018 6:33:40 AM PDT by I want the USA back (Doing more of what fails is the definition of liberalism and insanity.)
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