Archive for April, 2021

The Age of Censorship VideoAge International – videoageinternational.net

By Dom Serafini

The late U.S. president Ronald Reagan used to tell and retell a joke about an American bragging to a Russian about the fact that he could pay a visit to him at the White House, and banging his fists on his table, tell him, Mr. President I dont like the way youre running our country. The Russian answered that he too can go to the Kremlin and tell Mikhail Gorbachev, Mr. President, I dont like the way Reagan is running his country.

The point of the joke is that in Russia then and now there is no liberty, no democracy, and no freedom of speech.

Indeed, Americans and Europeans alike like to think that they live in states where freedom of the press and freedom of expression are observed. On the other hand, Russians, Chinese people, and Iranians, just to name a few, live under dictatorships, otherwise called authoritarian states, with no freedom of the press, of liberty, or of expression.

While people in democratic states think they enjoy free press, those in authoritarian states know that their media is controlled, and thus, those who can, tend to follow the media imported (mostly illegally) from democratic states, believing that it is fair and balanced. At least this is what happened years ago. Today, however, people in authoritarian states are starting to believe that even the so-called free press is biased, full of fake news, and most importantly, censored and full of propaganda (read advertising) that determines elections and public policies.

Trying to look impartially at various forms of censorship we can identify five forms of widely used censorship: State Censorship, Corporate Censorship, Social Censorship, Privacy Laws, and Libel Laws.

State Censorship is what is practiced in countries like Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, and the like. In these states, censorship takes different forms, like direct and indirect media ownership, and various strategies such as restricting news and conditioning news. It even extends to film, theater, and text messaging. In China, for example, a department of the Chinese Communist Party (one of the countrys multiple censorship organs) employs two million people to monitor and censor content.

In democracies, censorship takes different forms, but at all levels it begins with self-censorship and denying access, keeping in mind that, by definition, an editor cannot be impartial.

Then there is the so-called Corporate Censorship, where corporate owners of media control the news by selecting those who report it, by establishing an editorial line (e.g., progressive or conservative), and by limiting access to only those who reflect their values. Corporate Censorship tends to take guidance from governments, especially with regard to foreign policies. The most recent examples come from the Iraqi War, the Syrian War, and the bias towards authoritarian states. Corporate Censorship is a topic widely discussed in academia and explained in books such as Puerto Rican scholar Giannina Braschs United States of Banana. In addition, in the U.S., the First Amendment protects against censorship from the government, but does not protect against Corporate Censorship or from non-public outrages, like hate speech.

Social Censorship is now emerging in established democracies, which is enforced by the sarcastically called Political Correct Police Force, and complemented by advocates of Cancel Culture. Left-leaning influential groups have the power to fire people, embarrass noncompliant individuals, and discredit those who deviate from the sanctioned school of thought.

Additionally, in countries like Italy, for example, censorship is widely applied by threating libel suits, which could threaten the survival of small publications. Italy is also unique because most professional journalists are licensed by the state. Plus, like in authoritarian states, defamation is a criminal offense in Italy. (In the U.S., its a civil issue.)

In China, defamation is used to prosecute people for having slandered the people of China, by expressing views not in accordance with the government mandates.

Finally, democracies especially those in Western Europe have strict privacy laws, which tend to protect the rich and powerful, who have lots to hide from the public.

Illustration by Bill Kerr licensed underCC BY-SA 2.0.

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The Age of Censorship VideoAge International - videoageinternational.net

YouTube rejects internal request to censor rapper YG over robbery lyrics – The Guardian

YouTube has rejected a proposal from within the company to remove a video by successful Los Angeles rapper YG, which features lyrics about targeting Asian neighbourhoods for robbery.

Employees had requested the 2014 track, Meet the Flockers, be removed, following the 16 March shooting in Atlanta that killed eight people, six of them Asian women, as well as a wider wave of anti-Asian hate crime in the US.

The track begins with the lines: First, you find a house and scope it out / find a Chinese neighbourhood, cause they dont believe in bank accounts.

In an internal email reported by Bloomberg, two executives wrote: Our hate speech policy prohibits content promoting violence or hatred against protected groups, for attributes like race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity and expression In this case, this video receives an EDSA [Educational, Documentary, Scientific or Artistic] exception as a musical performance.

The executives, anonymised by Bloomberg on security grounds, said they find this video to be highly offensive and understand it is painful for many to watch especially given the ongoing violence against the Asian community, but wanted to avoid setting a precedent that may lead to us having to remove a lot of other music on YouTube.

YG, who has scored five US Top 10 albums since 2014, has not commented on the decision.

The track has previously been criticised by Jane Kim, a San Francisco politician who called for it to be banned in 2016.

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YouTube rejects internal request to censor rapper YG over robbery lyrics - The Guardian

Republicans Have Been Waiting for a Matt Gaetz Scandal to Break – The Daily Beast

After Rep. Matt Gaetz accused a Florida lawyer of a $25 million extortion scheme to make sex trafficking allegations disappear, Republicans on and off Capitol Hill on Wednesday largely kept their mouths shut.

Gaetzthe Trump-loving, Fox News-grinning, 38-year-old Florida Republicanhas a less-than-sterling reputation among his congressional colleagues. More than a half-dozen lawmakers have spoken to these reporters about his love of alcohol and illegal drugs, as well as his proclivity for younger women. Its well-known among Republican lawmakers that Gaetz was dating a college studentone over the age of consentin 2018. She came to Washington as an intern.

In response to these allegations and a question about whether he had ever had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old while in Congress, Gaetz told The Daily Beast late Wednesday night:

The last time I had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old, I was 17. As for the Hill, I know I have many enemies and few friends. My support generally lies outside of Washington, D.C., and I wouldnt have it any other way.

As for his few friends in Washington, The Daily Beast found that to be true. One former GOP staffer said Wednesday that their office had an informal rule to not allow their member to appear next to Gaetz during TV hits, fearful of the inevitable scandal that would come out one day.

On Tuesday, it might finally have dropped.

According to The New York Times, Gaetz is under investigation by the Justice Department for potentially having a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old girl. While Gaetz has denied the existence of a 17-year-old lover, hes been less offended about the suggestion that hes dated women much younger than him while in Congress. And hes openly admitted that hes paid for flights and hotels for women to visit him.

Ive been, you know, generous as a partner, Gaetz said Tuesday.

Now, Gaetz may be finding generosity in short supply among his colleagues. Only two House Republicans jumped to his defense on Wednesday: Judiciary Committee ranking Republican Jim Jordan (R-OH), who himself has been accused of turning a blind eye to sexual assault; and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), who has repeatedly boosted the QAnon conspiracy theory accusing Democrats of abusing children.

While Greene compared the Gaetz allegations to a witch hunt and the conspiracy theories and lies like Trump/Russia collusion, Jordan was more muted. I believe Matt Gaetz, he said in a statement to CNN.

GOP aides noted to The Daily Beast that Jordan has been one of Gaetzs closest allies in Congressand the most he would offer was that tepid statement and his support for Gaetz staying on the Judiciary Committee.

I dont think a lot of people are going to go out of their way to defend him, especially with this outlandish-sounding defense.

More importantly, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) wasnt exactly jumping to Gaetzs corner.

McCarthy said on Fox News that he wanted to wait for the facts before meting out any punishment, like removing Gaetz from committees, but the GOP leader also offered that, If it comes out to be true, yes, we would remove him.

Those are serious implications, McCarthy said.

It was not surprising to some observers that the wagons didnt circle around Gaetz in the explosive 24 hours after the scandal, even as the congressman produced documents that lent some weight to his extortion claims. I dont think a lot of people are going to go out of their way to defend him, especially with this outlandish-sounding defense, one GOP staffer said. I dont think youll find a lot of people who are desperate to keep him involved in Republican politics.

The cartoonishly scandalous perception of Gaetz is so commonplace that sometimes its visible, literally, in the halls of Congress. A Hill source sent The Daily Beast a photo of a trash bin outside Gaetz's office as lawmakers cleared out their offices at the end of a recent session. At the top of the heap was an empty Costco-size box of Bareskin Trojan condoms.

While hes openly courted a number of women in Washington, Gaetz has not exactly made it a priority to court fellow lawmakers since arriving in Congress in 2017. He even wears his reluctance to win friends and influence GOP lawmakers as a badge of honor.

I dont really socialize with my colleagues, Gaetz said in a 2019 profile in BuzzFeed News.

One person he does actively socialize with is the 45th president. He proved quick to defend Donald Trump at nearly every opportunity, yes, but even quicker to criticize his GOP colleagues for insufficient Trump support. At the same time, hes also run afoul of Trump: he was reportedly iced out of the White House in 2020 when he backed a resolution curbing the presidents ability to wage war with Iran, after Democrats said they would give Gaetz a vote on one of his amendments if he would support the overall war powers bill.

The rift was short-lived, however, as Trump looked for Capitol Hill allies during the early days of the COVID crisis and Gaetz was more than happy to defend the president.

His desire to be on TV most days of the week has shown lawmakers what Matt Gaetzs primary goal is in Congress: the promotion of Matt Gaetz. He rarely partners with colleagues on bills and has yet to see any legislation he authored become law. Constant rumors about his ambition to seek higher office in Floridaor even Alabamaunderscored the perception he didnt prioritize the job.

Even the Republican Party doesnt like him very much.

Four years into his House career, Gaetzs theatrics have put off Democrats and Republicans alike. His visit to Wyoming in February to host a rally condemning House GOP Conference Chair Liz Cheney (R-WY) for her vote to impeach Trump rubbed many the wrong way, even if they opposed Cheneys vote.

Even the Republican Party doesnt like him very much, said a Republican operative familiar with the Florida congressional delegation.

Still, Gaetz does have alliestheyre just less interested in defending him at the moment than they are in attacking the media.

Reached by phone on Wednesday, Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor and GOP presidential candidate, said he thinks the New York Times is a joke and has no confidence in their reporting. Huckabee was an early backer of Gaetzshe hosted a fundraiser for the congressman in 2018 at his beach home not far from the congressmans hometownand is reportedly close with his family.

He said it didnt happen, Huckabee told The Daily Beast. Until proven otherwise, I think he deserves the same consideration of the presumption of innocence and due process as anybody else.

Back home in Gaetzs deep red Florida district, the story is also landing with a skeptical audience. John Roberts, the chair of the Escambia County Republican Party, said he doubted any reporting from the Times and other mainstream media after the Trump era. Republicans arent here saying, Oh dear whats happening, Roberts told The Daily Beast. Everyones like, Oh, another smear job.

But even Robertswho leads the GOP organization in the largest county in the district where Gaetz and his father, former state Sen. Don Gaetz, have been fixtures for decadesclaimed he did not personally know the congressman, saying he has talked with him a few times briefly.

Weve been very supportive of him politically. Im just very skeptical of this whole thing, Roberts said.

The most deafening silence, though, is that of another Florida resident: the former president.

Gaetz is perhaps Trumps biggest defender in Congress. In February, Gaetz offered to resign his office if it meant he got the opportunity to defend the ex-president at his impeachment trial. And a story where the New York Times attacks a GOP politicianwhen that politician is actually the victimalmost seems made for Trump.

But so far, the ex-president has remained on the sidelines, waiting to see what comes out next. So has his son, Don Jr., who is an influential Gaetz ally, too. He has tweeted numerous times since Tuesday evening, but offered no defense of the congressman.

As much as Trump would probably like to slam the media for allegedly inaccurate and irresponsible reporting, it appears hes unwilling to attach his name to Gaetz right now the way that Gaetz has attached his name to Trumps.

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Republicans Have Been Waiting for a Matt Gaetz Scandal to Break - The Daily Beast

Opinion | Republicans Have an Agenda All Right, and They Dont Need Congress for It – The New York Times

Similarly, in the 2014 case Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, the Supreme Court held that businesses seeking a religious exemption from a law may have it holding, for the first time, that such exemptions may be allowed even when they diminish the rights of others. That case permitted employers with religious objections to birth control to deny contraceptive coverage to their employees, even though a federal regulation required employer-provided health plans to cover contraception.

Before Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the Supreme Court, however, a majority of the justices were very reluctant to grant religious exemptions to state regulations seeking to limit the spread of Covid-19. Yet after she became a justice, the courts new majority started granting such exemptions to churches that wanted to defy public health orders.

Its plausible that the Republican Party did not campaign on its old legislative agenda in 2020 because it was busy rebranding itself. Under Mr. Trump, Republicans attracted more working-class voters, while Democrats made gains in relatively affluent suburbs. So Mr. Ryans plans to ransack programs like Medicaid arent likely to inspire the partys emerging base.

And yet the courts conservative majority is still pushing an agenda that benefits corporations and the wealthy at the expense of workers and consumers.

Its easy to see why government-by-judiciary appeals to Republican politicians. Theres no constituency for forced arbitration outside of corporate boardrooms. But when the court hands down decisions like Circuit City or Epic Systems, those decisions often go unnoticed. Employers score a major policy victory over their workers, and voters dont blame the Republican politicians who placed conservative justices on the court.

Judges can also hide many of their most consequential decisions behind legal language and doctrines. One of the most important legal developments in the last few years, for example, is that a majority of the court called for strict new limits on federal agencies power to regulate the workplace, shield consumers and protect the environment.

In Little Sisters v. Pennsylvania (2020), the court signaled that its likely to strike down the Department of Health and Human Services rules requiring insurers to cover many forms of medical care including birth control, immunizations and preventive care for children. And in West Virginia v. E.P.A. (2016), the court shut down much of the E.P.A.s efforts to fight climate change.

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Opinion | Republicans Have an Agenda All Right, and They Dont Need Congress for It - The New York Times

New Claremont essay reveals how Republicans are rejecting America – Vox

The right-wing rebellion against American democracy is often subtle, expressing itself through tricky changes to election law without a full-throated acknowledgment of what lawmakers are actually doing. But sometimes, the mask slips and someone in the conservative movement openly tells you whats really going on.

One such slippage took place last week when the American Mind a publication of the Claremont Institute, an influential conservative think tank based in California published an incendiary essay arguing that the country has already been destroyed by internal enemies.

Most people living in the United States today certainly more than half are not Americans in any meaningful sense of the term, Glenn Ellmers, the essays author, writes. They do not believe in, live by, or even like the principles, traditions, and ideals that until recently defined America as a nation and as a people. It is not obvious what we should call these citizen-aliens, these non-American Americans; but they are something else.

These seditious citizens are opposed, according to Ellmers, by the 75 million people who voted in the last election against the senile figurehead of a party that stands for mob violence, ruthless censorship, and racial grievances, not to mention bureaucratic despotism.

If Trump voters and conservatives do not band together and fight a sort of counter-revolution, then the victory of progressive tyranny will be assured. See you in the gulag.

What exactly this counter-revolution entails is unclear, but Ellmers has some tips. Learn some useful skills, stay healthy, and get strong, he writes. One of my favorite weightlifting coaches likes to say, Strong people are harder to kill, and more useful generally.

Ellmerss essay has been widely discussed in American media and intellectual circles, due to its bracing honesty about the modern rights worldview and the prominence of the outlet that published it. Claremont is an influential institution of the right; one of its publications, the Claremont Review of Books, published the notorious Flight 93 essay arguing that the 2016 election was a choice between Trump and national extinction. (2016 is the Flight 93 election: charge the cockpit or you die, that essay declared in its opening line.)

In the post-Trump era, the type of hard-right politics preached in Claremont publications is simply conservatism writ large, as Jane Coaston writes in a Vox essay on the California right. Theyve become the intellectual organ of Trumpist conservatism an organization whose mission looks more and more like manufacturing an intellectual justification for the GOPs right-wing populist.

The rhetoric of national emergency and decline that you hear in Claremont publications permeates mainstream GOP rhetoric. Minutes before the January 6 assault on Capitol Hill, former President Donald Trump told his assembled supporters that if you dont fight like hell, youre not going to have a country anymore. In a 2019 speech, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) warned that we have come again to one of the great turning points in our national history, when the fate of our republican government is at issue. In a 2020 Facebook post, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy declared that Democrats want to defund, destroy, and dismantle our country.

As absurd as it may seem, Ellmerss essay should be taken seriously because it makes the anti-democratic subtext of this kind of conservative discourse into clearly legible text. And it is a clear articulation of what the movement has been telling us through its actions, like Georgias new voting law: It sees democracy not as a principle to respect, but as a barrier to be overcome in pursuit of permanent power.

Inasmuch as there is a central argument in Ellmerss piece, it is this: The label conservative no longer accurately captures what the American right should be about. This is because conservatism implies preserving or protecting something already in place, when in fact America is so hopelessly corrupted that theres little worth saving.

The US Constitution no longer works, Ellmers writes. What is actually required now is a recovery, or even a refounding, of America as it was long and originally understood but which now exists only in the hearts and minds of a minority of citizens.

Many traditional conservatives, in his mind, are blind to this fact. Trumps victory represented the true people rising up against an establishment that was unwilling to openly state how precarious the countrys situation is:

The great majority of establishment conservatives who were alarmed and repelled by Trumps rough manner and disregard for norms are almost totally clueless about a basic fact: Our norms are now hopelessly corrupt and need to be destroyed. It has been like this for a whileand the MAGA voters knew it, while most of the policy wonks and magazine scribblers did not and still dont. In almost every case, the political practices, institutions, and even rhetoric governing the United States have become hostile to both liberty and virtue. On top of that, the mainline churches, universities, popular culture, and the corporate world are rotten to the core. What exactly are we trying to conserve?

Trumps main failing, on Ellmerss telling, is not that he was destructive but that he was too ignorant and poorly advised to attack the right targets.

As if coming upon a man convulsing from an obvious poison, Trump at least attempted in his own inelegant way to expel the toxin, Ellmers writes. By contrast, the conservative establishment, or much of it, has been unwilling to recognize that our body politic is dying from these noxious norms.

Ellmers is not all that interested in the mechanisms of how and why the country has become so broken. He doesnt really explain in any detail the nature of the nefarious forces that have polluted most American minds; he rails against the progressive, or woke, or antiracist agenda that now corrupts our republic and takes it as a given that his audience will agree that this threat is apocalyptic.

He is more interested, instead, in rallying the forces of Real America against enemies he describes in strikingly dehumanizing terms.

If you are a zombie or a human rodent who wants a shadow-life of timid conformity, then put away this essay and go memorize the poetry of Amanda Gorman, Ellmers writes. Real men and women who love honor and beauty, keep reading.

Ellmers is hardly the only person on the right to see the opposition in a starkly negative light. A February poll found that a solid majority of Republicans, 57 percent, preferred to describe Democrats as enemies rather than as the political opposition. One of the central attitudes underpinning democracy that sometimes the other side wins, and thats okay is buckling on the right.

The implications of Ellmerss worldview are chilling. In a January 2020 essay, he predicted more in sorrow than in anger, of course that a civil war is coming.

Not for the first time in our nations history, if this state of affairs continues force may be embraced as the only alternative when reason fails, Ellmers writes. We must fervently hope that things will change before they become violent. But if the clueless attitudes of our sclerotic elite remain unaltered, it is not hard to see whats on the horizon.

If the extremism of Ellmerss essay strikes you as similar to what youve heard from authoritarian political movements of the past, youre not alone.

John Ganz, a perceptive critic of American conservatism, recently wrote that Ellmerss essay should properly be termed fascist. Excommunicating a large percentage of the population from the body politic, describing once-idyllic society hopelessly corrupted by the forces of change, describing ones enemies as animals or diseases, invoking the threat of physical force in a political context these are all historically hallmarks of fascist rhetoric.

This analysis holds despite the fact that Ellmers speaks in a democratic idiom, portraying himself as a defender of the American democratic tradition against its enemies. Ganz notes that calls to restore freedom, liberty, and even democracy were used by fascist intellectuals and movements in interwar Germany, France, and Italy because they were culturally powerful a way of recruiting the people to ones way of thinking by speaking their language.

In the US context it also makes sense that the reactionary mind would inevitably mythologize a truer version of our republican and democratic traditions as the author does in this piece, because those are the basic symbols of our political tradition, he writes. In the French context, many fascist and para-fascist groups declared fealty to the republican tradition, which is as nearly predominant in that country as it is in our own.

One does not need to go to Europe to see political oppression defended in democratic terms. In 1963, Alabama Gov. George Wallace delivered an inaugural address in Montgomery, casting the Souths long tradition of oppression of African Americans as integral to southern freedom:

Today I have stood, where once Jefferson Davis stood, and took an oath to my people. It is very appropriate then that from this Cradle of the Confederacy, this very Heart of the Great Anglo-Saxon Southland, that today we sound the drum for freedom as have our generations of forebears before us done, time and time again through history. Let us rise to the call of freedom- loving blood that is in us and send our answer to the tyranny that clanks its chains upon the South. In the name of the greatest people that have ever trod this earth, I draw the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny . . . and I say . . . segregation today . . . segregation tomorrow . . . segregation forever.

Ellmerss essay is in line with this tradition, identifying freedom as a right that only a certain section of the population deserves. Those outside of it, either because they come from the wrong background or think the wrong way, have no just claim on our political system. When they wield power, it is by definition oppression.

In some ways, this is the central animating idea of the broader conservative movement in America. Ellmers is a radical who sees himself as opposed to establishment conservatism, but in reality, many on the broader right share a more attenuated version of his worldview and pursue the disempowerment of their political opponents.

Barack Obamas 2008 victory, and the attendant talk of a coalition of minorities and young voters creating a permanent Democratic majority, helped spread anxieties about declining electoral power on the political right. After the 2010 midterm elections, which swept Republicans into power in statehouses across the country, they acted drawing gerrymandered maps and passing laws, like voter ID, seemingly designed to suppress Democratic-leaning constituencies.

The state-level Republican lawmakers were often quite honest about their aim of locking Democrats out of office.

I think electing Republicans is better than electing Democrats, former North Carolina Rep. David Lewis, who chaired the states recent redistricting committee, once said. So I drew this map in a way to help foster what I think is better for the country.

The January 6 attack on the Capitol was a pure expression of Ellmers-ism, a violent lashing out against a system that conservatives believe to be fraudulent and corrupt. The new round of voter suppression bills represents the more subtle 2010 variant of Republican anti-democratic attitudes: that the system can be rigged such that the Democratic threat is locked out of power for good.

There are at least eight proposals from Republican lawmakers in state legislatures around the country to seize partisan control over electoral administration. One of the most egregious examples, in Georgia, was passed into law last week. More broadly, there are over 250 state bills under consideration that would curtail voting rights in one way or another.

That these proposals are justified in the language of restoring confidence in elections and preventing fraud does not make them actually defensible in democratic terms anymore than Ellmerss thinly-veiled pining for a civil war is democratic because he wants to wage it in defense of a warped conception of liberty.

In a sense, Ellmers is right that Americas political system no longer works. Hes just wrong about who broke it and why.

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New Claremont essay reveals how Republicans are rejecting America - Vox