It is only private organizations like youtube and twitter that are doing it now - but what is to stop the government from
getting into the act?
If you want to say "the US has funded bioweapons labs in the Ukraine" they are now banning you on youtube etc.
It appears that S K <skpflex1@gmail.com> said:
It is only private organizations like youtube and twitter that are doing
it now - but what is to stop the government from
getting into the act?
The first amendment, of course, which in most cases forbids the government >from limiting your speech
If you want to say "the US has funded bioweapons labs in the Ukraine" they >>are now banning you on youtube etc.
Who is "they"?
Youtube is owned and run by Google, who is not the government.
Both the first amendment and 47 USC 230 protect the right of any
private entity, such as Google, not to say what they don't want to
say. If the want to remove a Youtube video because your haircut is
ugly, they can do that.
It is only private organizations like youtube and twitter that are doing it now - but what is to stop the government from getting into the act?
If you want to say "the US has funded bioweapons labs in the Ukraine" they are now banning you on youtube etc.
... > Private entities like YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Ebay, etc. can make their own rules: "my property, my rules". If you don't like those rules,
you are free to go elsewhere, and there are plenty of
Conservative-leaning websites (e.g.,infowars). Yeah, I know, it takes a
fair amount of money to start a new social media site. But ya know,
there's a lot of conservatives with a lot of money. Trump could take
some of his billions and start one, if he cared about anything besides himself. Charles Koch could take some of his $58 billion, hire a bunch
of programmers and designers, and launch a right-leaning (or "no holds barred") website.
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