Once again I find myself at odds with some ideas here. Isn't Twitter a private good, and thus the owners of Twitter are perfectly entitled to restrict the use of their product in any way they deem appropriate.
I mean, Malema and co. are certainly not entitled to come onto my property and say whatever they want.
I get to tell them to shut the hell up or go somewhere else. Aren't twitter doing the same thing?
I know we are in favour of "freedom of speech", but we also all know that "freedom" does not mean the freedom to do anything and everything, and neither does freedom of speech.
Certainly private people are allowed to censor people on their private property without being criticised as being against freedom of speech? What right are they infringing on?
Personally I would not want Twitter to censor anything,
but if you want an alternative to Twitter, make your own.
I don't see how Twitter are now against freedom of speech.
If they are, it would be akin to me called anti-freedom, when I tell a person using my property to use it the way I want it to be used or go somewhere else.
On 28 Jan 2012 at 0:27, Sean Alexander wrote:
Date sent: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 00:27:28 -0800 (PST)
From: Sean Alexander <sean.ale...@gmail.com>
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
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> To view this discussion on the web visit
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I agree, attempting to suppress mere criticism and expression of
dislike seems almost like a bit of a "fascist impulse". I re-read it
and I cannot see anything in Jaco's original post that appears to be
outright incorrect - e.g. I don't seem to see any false claims -
could you clarify which part specifically you think is actually
incorrect, Sean?
> I don't see how Twitter are now against freedom of speech. If they
> are, it would be akin to me called anti-freedom, when I tell a person
> using my property to use it the way I want it to be used or go
> somewhere else.
It seems to me the situation is more akin to if you had private
property and the government told you, say, that you were not allowed
to have, say, Nazi sympathizers on your property. Twitter is a
private organization. Government is effectively 'on their property'
(in fact, in many countries presumably very literally 'on their
property' and with guns IF they do not comply) and forcing them to
make their programmers do this and that, in order to enforce their
restrictions on freedom of speech against the populace.
> It seems to me the situation is more akin to if you had private
> property and the government told you, say, that you were not allowed
> to have, say, Nazi sympathizers on your property.
Actually a better example would be 'not allowed to have Jews on your
property' since that actually happened.
> Here are your words... "And now we find ourselves with yet another
> private institution enforcing government's assault on basic freedoms."
>
> What "basic freedom" are they infringing on. Either you have the right
> to say whatever you want on someone else's property or "system" if you
> will, or you don't. Quite frankly you don't. You are wrong on this
> one. Don't try and turn the argument around against me. Its quite
> simple, either they have infringed on some right or they haven't. If
Read Jaco's statement again, it says 'another private institution
enforcing government's assault' --- Twitter is not "infringing" in
this sentence, they're "enforcing". The government is the party
"infringing" in this sentence. I'm sorry Sean, but it's very plain
English.
> they haven't, don't argue they have and then have a hissy fit when
> someone points out that they haven't.
Jaco's statement is perfectly correct, let's break it down into
parts:
1. The origin of the 'assault' is government - as this is to comply
with local censorship laws
2. The 'assault' is against a basic freedom - freedom of speech
3. Twitter is a private institution
4. Twitter is helping (albeit most likely involuntarily) to enforce
this 'assault' - i.e. they are now an extended "arm of the law".
5. 'And now we find ourselves with ...' ... yes, we do now find
ourselves with this, so that part is also correct.
Person A: 'It is an individual's right to evict Jews from his
property, if he wants'
Person B: 'Government just passed a law that you must evict Jews
from your property'
Person A: 'Great! Government is clearly merely enforcing our
individual private property rights! Why are people complaining?'
On 28 Jan 2012 at 17:36, Jaco Strauss wrote:
Date sent: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 17:36:17 +0200
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
From: Jaco Strauss <jacos...@gmail.com>
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
> Groups "LibertarianSA" group.
> Not only do I think it is spineless, but also pretty unenforceable as
> per my examples.
...
> That change is their choice. Criticizing it is mine. Your gripe is
> harder to figure out.
Not sure I agree with this part, as I suspect more likely that
they're probably being forced to do this by local laws / regulation
(but I'm assuming so). If that's the case, then I'm not sure they
have much choice in the matter.
On 28 Jan 2012 at 17:11, jacos...@gmail.com wrote:
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi"
content....
To: "Libsa" <li...@googlegroups.com>
From: jacos...@gmail.com
Date sent: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 17:11:07 +0000
So Jaco, to be totally consistent you can't pay a single cent in tax. Otherwise you to are supporting the states actions by giving in to force like Twitter has. And if you have employees and you collect their PAYEE then you are a spineless private individual doing governments dirty work.(your words, just a change of context)
On 28 Jan 2012 at 21:27, Erik Peers wrote:
Date sent: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 21:27:01 +0200
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
From: Erik Peers <erik...@gmail.com>
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
>
If I understand you correctly Twitter should stay out of China rather than be complicit in restricting free speech?
On 28 Jan 2012 at 20:47, jacos...@gmail.com wrote:
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
To: "Libsa" <li...@googlegroups.com>
From: jacos...@gmail.com
Date sent: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 20:47:56 +0000
>
> No Erik, I live in SA and if I don't pay I go to jail. Twitter doesn't
> *have* to go to china. Staying out of china won't see them going to
> jail. Quite the contrary ;-)
>
> And they have been flaunting the German anti nazi legislation for years.
> You don't find the change of heart suspicious, if not downright
> deplorable?
> Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device
>
Of course, we've been round this block before, I recall a similar
debate from when Google entered China, censoring their search
results. Google caught a huge amount of flak, yet there was nary a
peep regarding their competitors like MS and Yahoo who were already
in there and censoring away since years earlier :/.
On 28 Jan 2012 at 21:40, jacos...@gmail.com wrote:
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
To: "Libsa" <li...@googlegroups.com>
From: jacos...@gmail.com
Date sent: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 21:40:37 +0000
>
> Yes you understand me correctly.
> Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device
>
> From: Erik Peers <erik...@gmail.com>
> Sender: li...@googlegroups.com
> Date: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 23:18:29 +0200
> To: <li...@googlegroups.com>
> ReplyTo: li...@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
>
> If I understand you correctly Twitter should stay out of China rather
> than be complicit in restricting free speech?
> On 28 Jan 2012 5:47 PM, <jacos...@gmail.com> wrote:
> No Erik, I live in SA and if I don't pay I go to jail. Twitter
> doesn't *have* to go to china. Staying out of china won't see them
> going to jail. Quite the contrary ;-)
>
> And they have been flaunting the German anti nazi legislation for
> years. You don't find the change of heart suspicious, if not
> downright deplorable?
> Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device
>
I this not the sanctions vs constructive engagement argument? What will do more good for free speech, if Twitter boycotts or if Twitter enters China with restrictions?
http://mashable.com/2012/01/31/google-twitter-country-censorship/
On 29 Jan 2012 at 8:02, jacos...@gmail.com wrote:
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
To: "Libsa" <li...@googlegroups.com>
From: jacos...@gmail.com
Date sent: Sun, 29 Jan 2012 08:02:14 +0000
> British Airways didn't boycott SA, but also did not segregate their
> flights in terms of race. A few years ago, however, they started to
> segregate some middle eastern flights on gender, in compliance with
> backward sensitivities.
>
> In my opinion the former engagement had been constructive, the latter
> not.
>
> Jaco
> Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device
>
S.
-----Original Message-----
From: li...@googlegroups.com [mailto:li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
David Joffe
Sent: 02 February 2012 00:08
To: Libsa
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
Hot on the heels, Google to use a similar method to Twitter to censor blogs:
http://mashable.com/2012/01/31/google-twitter-country-censorship/
On 29 Jan 2012 at 8:02, jacos...@gmail.com wrote:
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
To: "Libsa" <li...@googlegroups.com>
From: jacos...@gmail.com
Date sent: Sun, 29 Jan 2012 08:02:14 +0000
> British Airways didn't boycott SA, but also did not segregate their
> flights in terms of race. A few years ago, however, they started to
> segregate some middle eastern flights on gender, in compliance with
> backward sensitivities.
>
> In my opinion the former engagement had been constructive, the latter
> not.
>
> Jaco
> Sent from my BlackBerryR wireless device
> > Sent from my BlackBerryR wireless device
> >
> > From: Erik Peers <erik...@gmail.com>
> > Sender: li...@googlegroups.com
> > Date: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 23:18:29 +0200
> > To: <li...@googlegroups.com>
> > ReplyTo: li...@googlegroups.com
> > Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi"
> content....
> >
> > If I understand you correctly Twitter should stay out of China
> rather
> > than be complicit in restricting free speech?
> > On 28 Jan 2012 5:47 PM, <jacos...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > No Erik, I live in SA and if I don't pay I go to jail. Twitter
> > doesn't *have* to go to china. Staying out of china won't see
> them
> > going to jail. Quite the contrary ;-)
> >
> > And they have been flaunting the German anti nazi legislation for
> > years. You don't find the change of heart suspicious, if not
> > downright deplorable?
> > Sent from my BlackBerryR wireless device
> > > Sent from my BlackBerryR wireless device
Jaco I think you are missing the point – because there is competition, if I don’t like being branded as a terrorist, I can go to Yahoo.
John R Pretorius
--
On 2 Feb 2012 at 11:39, Stephen vJ (Gmail) wrote:
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
From: "Stephen vJ \(Gmail\)" <sjaar...@gmail.com>
To: <li...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: RE: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi"
content....
Date sent: Thu, 2 Feb 2012 11:39:21 +0200
Organization: Personal - Gmail
Yes, I would actually. In fact, that is my point. Google, Twitter and others are welcome to discriminate between us, just as I discriminate between them. I think I have rather discriminating taste when it comes to others and I am rather proud of that. There are (or were) societies in which you would be considered an outcast for thinking that killing and eating humans, especially of the virgin variety, was abnormal. Some cultures find it acceptable to spit in the streets, some to promote nationalization and some to make fires and roast cows in their back yards. What barbarians we humans are ! And I'm fine with that - who are we to judge others ? What makes our subjective preferences better than those of the folks around us ? As long as their preferences are not imposed on me by force or threat, that is great. In this case, Google is not a public service which you or anyone else has a right to. If you are a Nazi sympathiser, you can go join other Nazi's over at Yahoo. Google chooses not to associate with racists, thus I will find Google to be a much nicer place as a result of the absence of Nazis. The Nazi's will find a smaller number, but stronger concentration of like-minded buggers over there... which will make rounding them up later so much easier. Improvements all around then.
S.
From: li...@googlegroups.com [mailto:li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jaco Strauss
Sent: 02 February 2012 12:01
--
The blame should be on the governments which force them to do these things,
not on them for doing it.
> So you want us to denounce Google and Twitter for complying with local
> regulations ? Why should we not denounce you for paying taxes then ?
Where did I say that, are you imagining things perhaps?
On 2 Feb 2012 at 12:55, John Pretorius wrote:
From: "John Pretorius" <jrp...@gmail.com>
To: <li...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: RE: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
Date sent: Thu, 2 Feb 2012 12:55:35 +0200
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
>
> Jaco I think you are missing the point - because there is competition, if I don't like being branded
> So you want us to denounce Google and Twitter for complying with local
> regulations ? Why should we not denounce you for paying taxes then ?
> The blame should be on the governments which force them to do these
> things, not on them for doing it.
OK, Stephen, my mind is officially blown .. I just quickly scanned
through my posts in this thread over the last few days on this very
topic, and I have made NO LESS THAN SEVEN individual posts stating
specifically and consistently that Twitter was merely complying with
local laws and under threat of force (heck, I have practically been
spamming my point to the list). My first post on the matter was:
"Twitter isn't doing it voluntarily, they're doing it to comply with
local censorship regulations (also known as 'at the barrel of a
gun'). Both Twitter and its users are kinds of victims in the
situation."
Respectfully: I had wondered before, but now it's blatantly clear:
You really do not even bother to read someone's position AT ALL
before simply pulling a response right out of your a.. and making
false implication about what they are saying. It must be easy to win
debates when you're always arguing against your own entirely
fictional strawmen. I mean this with the utmost respect - I don't
think you are a fool at all - but really, up your game a bit in
sticking to and applying reason within debate ;)
- David
-----Original Message-----
From: li...@googlegroups.com [mailto:li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
David Joffe
Sent: 02 February 2012 16:06
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
- David
- David
On 2 Feb 2012 at 16:19, Stephen vJ (Gmail) wrote:
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
From: "Stephen vJ \(Gmail\)" <sjaar...@gmail.com>
To: <li...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: RE: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi"
content....
Date sent: Thu, 2 Feb 2012 16:19:49 +0200
Organization: Personal - Gmail
> Tit for tat.
Of course it is a joke.
--
> 2. You do not have immunity from the consequences of expressing
> yourself freely. At the most fundamental level, my opinion (and
> everyone else's) of you will be modified by what you say, freely (take
> note Jaco and David).
Please point out where I've crossed any kind of line. I've done
nothing wrong and stand behind whatever I've said - if you've seen
fault somewhere, I assure you you have made an error in judgement.
- David
> 2. You do not have immunity from the consequences of expressing
> yourself freely. At the most fundamental level, my opinion (and
> everyone else's) of you will be modified by what you say, freely (take
> note Jaco and David).
If you think less of *me* for doing nothing other than standing by
what is correct, stating what is correct, and standing by it, well
I'm afraid that reflects on you, not on me.
Whoo! You kids really get quite excited about your freedom to express yourselves.
Some points:
1. Everyone has freedom of expression, if still physically able to express themselves. Watch Bruce Willis crapping out his captors in any number of gory flicks, no matter how many times they punch him in the face. I just said "diddly diddly poo" and nobody could stop me.2. You do not have immunity from the consequences of expressing yourself freely. At the most fundamental level, my opinion (and everyone else's) of you will be modified by what you say, freely (take note Jaco and David).
And, of course, I am free to express my new opinion of you to anyone who will listen (but may be putting my own reputation at risk as a result). If you're Bruce Willis, expressing your opinion of the mafia boss may get you another smack in the head. If you're a chinese citizen, expressing your opinion may get you 10 years in jail. As libertarians we should be defending the right of people to say whatever they want, without consequences, other than to their reputation.3. You do not have a right to express yourself using my property without my permission.
You may not snatch my loud-hailer from me to shout your own opinion. That is not a freedom of expression issue, it is a property issue. Likewise, you may not insist that my system must carry your opinion whether I like it or not.
(For example, it is my right to censor anyone I (dis)like on this libsa googlegroup since I "own" it). Nobody denied this It is Google's right to stop providing this service to me for whatever reason. Nobody denied this either I may not demand that others be of service to me (except when I have a valid contract with them). How is this relevant to the thread? Have you read it? Yes, I can express an opinion when they don't provide the service that I darn well want, and I can stamp my little feet too, but that may just end up lowering other people's opinion of me. It certainly does not give me any rights over the providers of a service that I do not own.
But that is just my opinion. I hope you think better of me having read it, but I can't demand that you do.Trevor Watkins
On 4 February 2012 17:04, <jacos...@gmail.com> wrote:
Thought so. All your posts since you asked the question about "force" I reckon.....
On a humorous level they definitely make more senseSent from my BlackBerry® wireless deviceFrom: "Stephen vJ \(Gmail\)" <sjaar...@gmail.com>Sender: li...@googlegroups.comDate: Thu, 2 Feb 2012 23:48:58 +0200To: <li...@googlegroups.com>ReplyTo: li...@googlegroups.comSubject: RE: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....Of course it is a joke.
S.
From: li...@googlegroups.com [mailto:li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jaco Strauss
Sent: 02 February 2012 17:28
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "LibertarianSA" group.
To post to this group, send email to li...@googlegroups.com.
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1. Two of the largest 'personal online publishing' services in the
world (Blogger and Twitter) are implementing technologies that make
enforcing various global censorship laws much easier (technology
sure to find its way into more and more online services). This
should be a concern (you would think) to anyone who cares about
freedom of expression.
2. It appears to me particularly unlikely that they are doing this
voluntarily. As I've pointed out approximately eight times now, they
are doing this to comply with local censorship laws - i.e. they are
being forced to do it. This is thus NOT a case of private companies
deciding the terms of doing business with its users - this is a case
of governments *dictating* the terms of business.
3. Jaco has a right to complain as much as he wants (contrary to the
ongoing false claims, he hasn't "demanded" that they should be
"forced" as private companies to "carry his message" - I keep seeing
these false accusations flowing, unaccompanied by evidence) and
complaining about such large losses to the cause of the freedom of
expression in a fact-based way is actually a good thing.
4. As I've already pointed out, my view differs from Jaco in that I
see both these companies and their users as largely victims in this
scenario. This is borne out by facts - local censorship laws aren't
just "pretty-please, it-would-be-nice" "requests".
5. Using Nazis, someone we can all supposedly agree to dislike, is
obviously a PR move to sugarcoat this. In fact, parts of Europe have
censorship laws of Nazi views ... it's not because these companies
suddenly woke up and decided that they morally felt like fighting
Nazis - it's possible, but that would sure be a stretch, and would
make one wonder why they need the technology to be that complex as
to slice up the Net on so many country lines.
6. The only people I can see "snatching loud-hailers" from anyone is
governments, in the form of local censorship laws. Neither Jaco nor
myself has "snatched a loud-hailer" from anyone, how bizarre. And
Google and Twitter are compelled to snatch loud hailers by force;
they are as a matter of fact now 'the arm of the law'.
7. Yes, Google and Twitter's "property rights" should allow them to
decide what content is carried on their servers. That's not what's
happening; their property rights are being violated by the
government, not by those complaining about censorship. That
government can come in to a business like Google or Twitter and
force them to carry or not carry certain messages, as "libertarians"
you should be "fighting for" their right not to have that happen.
8. My response to Stephen might have seemed extreme but if one
bothers to try understand the "context", I stand by it "in context",
and in fact I'm the one still politely waiting for a retraction of
Stephen's obviously mistaken misrepresentation.
9. The people of Twitter and Google and the people of various
countries have a *natural right* to do business with one another
(e.g. for those people to use the services of these companies) at
terms THEY agree to, without interference providing they are not
committing any crimes in the process of doing so. The interference
to all of their ability's to to exercise their natural rights in the
form of local censorship laws and technologies like 'the great
firewall' constitutes a violation of natural rights on both sides.
We shouldn't even be thinking ask if/why Twitter 'should be allowed
to enter', but rather, if/why they should NOT have been allowed to
enter ... violating their natural rights should be a CRIME and we
really should be demanding that the criminals be prosecuted, if we
had any moral sense at all. (But I understand if we've all been
brainwashed by now to be convinced that we may only ever act "by
permission" from some government agency - it takes some conscious
unbrainwashing to stop thinking in those terms.)
- David
On 6 Feb 2012 at 8:18, Jaco Strauss wrote:
Date sent: Mon, 6 Feb 2012 08:18:44 +0200
Subject: Re: [Libsa] Re: Twitter to restrict "pro-Nazi" content....
From: Jaco Strauss <jacos...@gmail.com>
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Send reply to: li...@googlegroups.com
> In other words, if a country has banned, for example, war propaganda,
> like South Africa, then in theory Twitter have said that they don't
> want to anger the South African government by providing a platform on
> which the South African citizens may promote war propaganda, and thus
> commit a crime. So our IP addresses are banned from posting such
> content, in theory. I have no idea how suh a thing would be enforced
> in practice.
Just to clarify, this is technically trivial to implement. We've
implemented country detection (though not for censorship purposes)
in some of our online services - it's really easy these days, and
even the free Geo-IP databases are of fairly good quality.
> In any case we could always create a new Twitter Account and use a
> free proxy to get around it.
No actually you can't, because the main point being discussed here
is not relating to segregating POSTERS, but rather, segregating all
VIEWERS. In other words, when a South African VISITS Twitter (or
Blogger) from a South African IP address, they see a special
filtered version in which everything the South African government
claimed was objectionable, has been hidden (and likewise for any
individual country - e.g. presumably in countries like Saudi Arabia
sites that are pro-womens-rights may be invisible). You are just not
going to get any significant number of citizens on free anonymizing
proxies, it isn't going to happen.
> Which is well within their rights to do and does not contradict any
> right that I am aware of, either legally in South Africa or from a
> Libertarian viewpoint of rights (Or at least how I understand it).
If I own an online personal publishing company and government holds
a gun to my head and forces me to create a segregated service
against my wishes, it's rather beside the point that it was within
my right to create a segregated service had I so wished in the first
place.
And this is not voluntary. Local censorship regulations are not
"please, we'd appreciate it, pretty please with a cherry on top"
laws. When we are talking about regulations, let's not beat around
the bush and sugarcoat it - we are talking about initating force and
implementing prior restraint against the natural rights of humans.
The real criminals are the ones interfering with the exercise of
rightful action / natural rights (against both the companies and
their users), and I strongly believe that moral outrage (and
corrective action) should always be targeted at the real criminals
(implementors of 'great firewalls' and other such crap), never at
the victims (e.g. Twitter) or at the innocent bystanders catching
shrapnel (their users). It's important to correctly identify who the
victims are in a given situation. Expressing outrage at someone who
is merely complaining about the whole situation (e.g. Jaco), while
saying not a peep about the real criminals interfering with rightful
action, I don't know, it grates my moral senses. I'm not a moral
relativist (nor a moral nihilist in the practical sense), I think we
can deduce that some things are morally wrong, and forcing a company
to implement censorship, thereby interfering with rightful action,
is morally wrong.
> That was my whole point. A private company cannot "commit the crime of
> censorship", which in my mind, means depriving you of the right to
> free
I can't see who you are replying to, the context is gone, but just
to be clear, nowhere did I even remotely say or imply a private
company 'committed the crime of censorship'. I did say that these
companies have unwittingly become 'the arm of the law' - but that is
something quite different to committing a crime, and is merely a
neutral statement of fact with no value judgement and no claim or
accusation of liability.
And no matter how one spins this, it's a blow to the cause of
freedom of expression.
The fact that governments can force companies to enact censorship,
and then in the process even manage to convince 'libertarians' that
its hands are squeaky clean because you know, morally it's just
"private companies exercising their right to block content" - oof -
it's amazing and stomach-churning - they really have us all
thoroughly confused and right where they want us.
Wow, finally, an admission that this is not "just" a "property
issue", contrary to your previous message (where you said, quote,
"That is not a freedom of expression issue, it is a property issue"
while arguing that this was somehow just Twitter exercising their
private rights). We're making progress. Thanks for finally starting
to say a little bit of what I've been saying since the very first
email, though it's strange that you say "I beg to differ" when you
start finally agreeing with me.
> However, Twitter can't be accused of any non-consensual act or attack
> on rights or freedom - they can only be accused of cowardice.
And where did I say that Twitter can be accused of attacks on
freedom? Please, quote me on where I said that. Honestly, do you
even read what I write before you respond? Flabbergasted, and
unfortunately really just have no more time for this - discussion is
one thing when people read what you write, it's another when people
just respond to fictional strawmen that are in their head. I defy
you to tell me where Twitter can be 'accused of attacks on freedom',
I've gone literally blue in the face now saying otherwise and this
is still the type of response I get. This is my last email on this
topic.