Censored and Suppressed – National Review
(Pixabay)
Today is a doozy: Facebook and Twitter decided that their users shouldnt see or be able to read a particular article in the New York Post, and why so many Democrats perceived the Post story as a traumatic flashback to former FBI director James Comeys letter about Hillary Clinton on October 28, 2016.
There Is No Credible Reason for This Kind of Targeted Suppression
The editors of National Review have something important to say about the way two of the largest and most prominent social-media companies, Facebook and Twitter, decided to effectively block access to a news article in the New York Post.
Andy Stone, Facebooks policy communications manager (and, per his bio, a former staffer for Barbara Boxer, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and the House Majority PAC), announced that the social-media giant would begin reducing the distribution of aNew York Postinvestigation into emails purporting that Joe Biden met with a top executive from the Ukrainian natural-gas firm Burisma Holdings at the behest of his son Hunter Biden.
Bad idea.
Instead of simply asking pertinent questions, or debunking thePosts reporting, a media blackout was initiated. A number of well-known journalists warned colleagues and their sizable social-media audiences not to share the story.
By the afternoon, Twitter had joined Facebook in suppressing the article, not only barring its users from sharing it with followers, but barring them sharing it through direct messages as well. It locked the accounts of White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, thePost, and many others for retweeting the story.
There is no credible reason for this kind of targeted suppression. Over the past five years there have been scores of dramatic scoops written by major media outlets such as theNew York Times, theWashington Post, and CNN that were based on faulty information provided by unknown sources that turned out to be incorrect. Not once has Facebook or Twitter concerned itself with the sourcing methods of reporters. Not once did it censor any of those pieces.
The editors conclude the mentality at work in the high commands of Facebook and Twitter further damages the reputation of Big Tech. For another, it renders the industry more susceptible to a new regulatory regime already being championed by some in Congress. Mostly, however, it just makes the story theyre trying to suppress a far bigger deal.
Last night, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey offered a tweet conceding, our communication around our actions on the New York Post article was not great. And blocking URL sharing via tweet or DM with zero context as to why were blocking: unacceptable.
He linked to a series of tweets from the corporate account declaring:
The images contained in the articles include personal and private information like email addresses and phone numbers which violate our rules. As noted this morning, we also currently view materials included in the articles as violations of our Hacked Materials Policy. Commentary on or discussion about hacked materials, such as articles that cover them but do not include or link to the materials themselves, arent a violation of this policy. Our policy only covers links to or images of hacked material themselves. We know we have more work to do to provide clarity in our product when we enforce our rules in this manner. We should provide additional clarity and context when preventing the Tweeting or DMing of URLs that violate our policies.
If you believe that news organizations should never publish anything that was not legally obtained or distributed, you would bar the publication of the Pentagon Papers and President Trumps tax returns.
Note that according to the New York Post, the information wasnt hacked by any traditional definition: The email is contained in a trove of data that the owner of a computer repair shop in Delaware said was recovered from a MacBook Pro laptop that was dropped off in April 2019 and never retrieved. The computer was seized by the FBI, and a copy of its contents made by the shop owner shared with The Post this week by former Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
In fact, the dynamic at work in the New York Post story about the emails regarding Biden is the same as the New York Times scoop about the presidents tax returns. That computer repair shop in Delaware has legal access to the files in the computer (because they were presumably hired by the FBI to fix something) but not legal authority to distribute whats in those files. The New York Times source has legal access to the presidents tax returns, but not legal authority to distribute whats in those tax returns. There is no moral distinction, just a partisan one.
The distinction between being a platform and being a publisher is impossible to ignore, and the longtime insistence from those big tech companies that theyre not publishers is no longer operable. For years, they insisted they were no more responsible for what gets written on Facebook then the people who build bathroom stall walls are for someone writing for a good time call Jenny at 867-5309.
The spectacularly wrongheaded decision-making at Facebook and Twitter is going to set off a lot of deliberately obtuse semantic arguments about whether or not what the companies did can legitimately be labeled censorship, driven by those who insist that only government actions can constitute censorship.
As we all know and are unnecessarily reminded every time one of these controversies comes down the pike, Facebook and Twitter are private companies. Users sign on to operate under the companies rules and judgment. The U.S. Constitution does not guarantee you a right to speak your mind on a private companys online platform. If you go to the New York Times and say, I have a terrific and important freelance article or op-ed or letter to the editor, and the Times declines to run your submission in its pages, no one believes theyve been censored.
But the companies touted themselves as neutral, minimally restrictive platforms and have, year by year, morphed into publishers with broader (and vaguer) limitations on what can be posted and shared on their sites. As I wrote back in 2018, when Apple, Google, Facebook, and Spotify erased most of the posts and videos on their services from raving lunatic/radio- and web-show host Alex Jones, none of the people who run these companies are constitutional scholars specializing in First Amendment cases, nor did they ever aspire to be in that role. They set up and joined these companies to make money and now theyre in the weird position of American Public Discourse Police.
Facebooks slogan used to be, make the world more open and connected. Twitters slogan was, see whats happening. They sold themselves on the notion that you could have a platform, and make your voice heard, no matter who you were. They clearly envisioned a society full of pleasant, relatively polite stamp collectors and poodle owners and wildlife photographers and Trekkies, groups of individuals who would want to connect and share their passions and who would do so in an amiable, harmonious, focus-group-pleasing way that could never harm others.
Except society isnt just made up of nice people with noncontroversial interests and hobbies. Our world has more than a few lunatics, hate groups, conspiracy theorists, Holocaust deniers, violent criminals, and every other unsavory type, and much to the surprise of these companies, they want their voices heard, too! They may be particularly driven to share their views online, because people are so unreceptive to their views when they share them offline.
And for a long while, most people didnt mind Facebook and Twitter and the rest taking a tougher stance to remove lunatics, hate groups, conspiracy theorists, Holocaust deniers, violent criminals, etc. Although sometimes the line between the dangerously unacceptable and simply odd or outlandish is hard to draw. QAnon is a nutty conspiracy theory, but so is the idea that Trump has been an asset of Russian intelligence since 1987. Smart, seemingly normal people can buy into conspiracy theories.
Now that theyve built their user base, Facebook and Twitter and other social-media companies want to change the rules. They want to limit what sorts of political news stories can be shared, which was never how they sold themselves or what they promised. No one complains about the New York Times refusing to publish a letter to the editor, because the Times never sold itself as the place where everyone has a voice and everyone gets a chance to speak their mind.
They might as well update the user agreement language: User agrees to believe all denials from Joe Biden regarding anything involving his sons international business partners.
The Traumatic Flashbacks of Comeys Letter
Why did the tech companies, and quite a few big names in mainstream journalism, go to DefCon One on a story with evidence suggesting Biden lied about meeting a Ukrainian politician?
Allow me to suggest that yesterday, a lot of people had flashbacks to FBI director James Comey sending a letter to Congress announcing the reopening of the email probe on October 28, 2016, eleven days before the November 8 election.
The fact that President Trumps margin over Hillary Clinton was so narrow he won Michigan by 10,704 votes, Pennsylvania by 49,543 votes, and Wisconsin by 27,257 votes means that any one factor can plausibly be labeled the decisive one. Many Democrats reacted to Clintons shocking loss by looking for the most convenient explanation possible. For some, it was Russian disinformation on social media. For others, it was Jill Stein siphoning off votes that Hillary Clinton deserved. For others, it was that the country was full of racist deplorables, even though many of these voters had just cast ballots for Barack Obama twice.
But I suspect quite a few Democrats chose to believe that it was Comeys letter which decided the election. Never mind that Comey wrote another letter, two days before the election, declaring that the reopened investigation had found nothing new or incriminating. (Yes, 24 million Americans cast early ballots in 2016, but thats out of 136 million total votes in the presidential election.)
This is one of the reasons political journalism matters. What happens is important; what we choose to learn from what happens is almost as important. Many elite progressives chose to learn the lesson that late-breaking news stories that look bad for the Democrat can elect the worst Republican in the world, and thus that scenario must be prevented, at any cost.
If a person believes that a big scoop involving the FBI looking into emails of the Democratic nominee led to Trumps election . . . how do you think they will react to the New York Post announcing this week they have a big scoop involving the FBI looking into emails of the Democratic nominee?
ADDENDUM: In the middle of all this, keep in mind that Joe Biden does not believe that Burisma was attempting to influence U.S. policy when they hired his son, that his son was hired on his own merits, and not because his father was vice president, but because hes a very bright guy.
Read the rest here:
Censored and Suppressed - National Review
- Indian cinema: propaganda at the pictures - Index on Censorship - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- NCAC urges the Morton High School Administration to apologize for censoring student's art and to amend school policy - National Coalition Against... - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- The FCC's only Democrat accuses the White House of a 'campaign of censorship' - CNN - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- At UMich, nearly half of professors feel pressured to censor themselves: survey - The College Fix - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Disney Is Choosing Courage Over Capitulation in Face of Trump Administrations Weaponization of FCC to Attack Jimmy Kimmel and The View, Democratic... - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Science Disinformation Gap: The transatlantic battle over social media and censorship - Genetic Literacy Project - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Index honours Virginia Giuffre and Sarah Wynn-Williams with the Freedom to Publish Award - Index on Censorship - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Liam Paynes Former Girlfriend Kate Cassidy Blasts TikToks Censorship of Her Curves - In Touch Weekly - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- How The View could put an end to Trumps war on the media - Salon.com - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Trump Celebrated Colbert Getting Fired. Then He Said Kimmel Was Next. An FCC Commissioner Just Called It "Censorship and Control" - Yahoo - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Demi Moore and Cannes jury push back on creative censorship - Yahoo News UK - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Democratic FCC commissioner tells Disney it is the target of a censorship campaign - AOL.com - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Demi Moore and Cannes jury speak out against censorship in film - The Express Tribune - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- An FCC Commissioner Tells Disney the Agency Is on a Campaign to Censor It - WSJ - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Finally: ABC is fighting back against FCC censorship - Freedom of the Press Foundation - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Democratic FCC commissioner tells Disney it is the target of a censorship campaign - NBC News - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- 'World we live in is touchy': Actor Vrajesh Hirjee on why comedians should self-censor - The Times of India - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- ABC argues Trump administration is trying to chill free speech - NPR - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- FCC Commissioner Gomez Tells Disney CEO Government Agency is Trying to Censor ABC - Media Play News - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Internet is not the same for everyone: the global map of online censorship - Escudo Digital - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- I dare you to censor this, BBC! The biggest and bravest shocks of the TV Baftas - The Guardian - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Big Finance Might Be Dooming the SPLC Even Before Its Day in Court - The Intercept - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Opera censorship has crescendoed to an absurd level - The Telegraph - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Navigating Comedy's Tightrope: Vrajesh Hirjee on Self-Censorship and Storytelling - Devdiscourse - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- FCC Commissioner Accuses Trump Administration of Censoring Disney and ABC - Devdiscourse - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- USS FCC said to be under pressure to censor Disney - Breakingthenews.net - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- World we live in is touchy: Actor Vrajesh Hirjee on why comedians should self-censor - ThePrint - May 11th, 2026 [May 11th, 2026]
- Slavoj iek: I am resigned to the paradox that we need censorship sometimes to preserve freedom - Prospect Magazine - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Voices: Three incidents in one school year reveal a chilling pattern in Utah - The Salt Lake Tribune - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- ABC Learns from Past Mistakes, Takes Stronger Stance Against Carr and Trump's Censorship Campaign - freepress.net - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Miami's Community Justice Project marks 10 years fighting evictions, censorship and anti-protest laws - WLRN - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Censorship at the FDA, CDC - Washington Monthly - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Theyre trying to narrow the worldview of young people: how book bans are on the rise in the US - The Guardian - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- How 1950s Censorship Could Have Stripped James Bond of Its Signature Style - Parade - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Number of nonfiction books banned in schools has doubled, report says - USA Today - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- I can imagine going anywhere: Ai Weiwei, an artist without a country - Index on Censorship - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Imprisoned and critically ill Iranian Nobel prizewinner warned three years ago that prisons were set up to kill - Index on Censorship - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Russia's censor body, Roskomnadzor, wants to block 92% of VPN apps by 2030 and it's investing 20 billion rubles a year to build a permanent VPN... - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- 2014 Hit Comedy Film, Released After Censorship Issues, Ranked No. 1 Banned Movie of All Time - Parade - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Pricing and censorship complaints be damned: Pokmon FireRed and LeafGreen sold over 4 million units in six weeks - Eurogamer.net - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Floridas Anti-DEI Politics Will Destroy the Culture Museums are Created to Support - The Fulcrum - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Belief that words cause lasting harm tied to politics, poor mental health: study - The College Fix - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- FORMULA 1, Montoya versus Verstappen: It has to stop. But censorship is scary. - gpone.com - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Utah's New VPN Laws Could Have A Huge Effect On How You Use The Internet - bgr.com - May 9th, 2026 [May 9th, 2026]
- Chizi, Standup Comic Exiled in China, Wants to Be More Than Just a Rebel Comedian - The New York Times - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Cries of censorship over French plan to vet former spies books - The Times - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Three Justificationsand the AI Accelerantof Indias Digital Censorship Infrastructure - Tech Policy Press - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- The Kulture | Lets Talk About It: Censorship and Creativity - WJBF - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- THE KULTURE | Lets Talk About It: Censorship and Creativity - AOL.com - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iran says X removed verification badges from its foreign ministry accounts - Anadolu Ajans - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Minimal reforms are inadequate: Artistic and artists rights continue to be repressed in Tanzania - Freemuse - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- The quiet push to control AI speech - FIRE | Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Meet the Free Speech Warrior of the Trump Administration - The Free Press - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- California city ordered to pay $1 million in lawyer fees in library censorship lawsuit - East Bay Times - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Letter to the Editor: Cal Poly let the ADL censor and misrepresent my research - Mustang News - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Press Freedom Under Threat: Professor Warns of Censorship & Intimidation in Ghana - Modern Ghana - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Sam Levinson Used Jules To Air Grievances About His Own War With Critics and Censors. The Episode Is Airing While the FCC Does the Same Thing to Trans... - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Tackling takedowns: On the government and online censorship | The Hindu Editorial - The Hindu - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE SEX PARTY - westender.com.au - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- 'Karuppu' clears the censor; the Suriya and Trisha starrer is set for a blasting release on May 14 - The Times of India - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- 1971 Hit Drama Film, Originally Censored in the United States, Ranked Among Most Controversial Films of All Time - Parade - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- California city ordered to pay $1 million in lawyer fees in library censorship lawsuit - The Mercury News - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- MoveOn Targets Disney Headquarters with Mobile Anti-Censorship Billboard - WDW News Today - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- Tackling takedowns: On the government and online censorship - The Hindu - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- FREE INQUIRY OR CENSORSHIP? Indianas intellectual diversity mandate impacting higher-ed instruction - the indiana citizen - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- Reports to police of online violence against women journalists double since 2020, with one in four experiencing related anxiety and/or depression - UN... - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- From Belarus to Gaza we continue to bear witness to the unprecedented attacks on journalists globally - Index on Censorship - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- Why did Israel kill more journalists than any other country in the world last year? - Index on Censorship - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- The EFF criticized a bill that would mandate censorship software for 3D printers, arguing that it 'could destroy the open-source culture.' - GIGAZINE - May 3rd, 2026 [May 3rd, 2026]
- Opinion | We Should All Be Concerned About Whats Happening in India - The New York Times - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- 60 Minutes Star Spills on MAGA-Coded CBS Plot to Censor Truth - The Daily Beast - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- 60 Minutes Star Spills on MAGA-Coded CBS Plot to Censor Truth - The Daily Beast - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Opinion | We Should All Be Concerned About Whats Happening in India - The New York Times - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Trump, Kimmel and the line between freedom of speech and government censorship | CNN Politics - CNN - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Sanjay Dutt's Aakhri Sawal trailer stuck with censor board a week before release - India Today - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- IU, Purdue students honored for censorship fight but future is unclear - IndyStar - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Nearly 30% of researchers in red states self censor Survey - University World News - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- The Gulfs war on information - Index on Censorship - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- EFF Submission to UN Report on the Role of Media in the Context of Israels Policies Toward Palestinians - Electronic Frontier Foundation - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Turkey silences its journalists by forcing them into exile - Index on Censorship - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]