jusplay4fun wrote:In the US, Freedom of the press is a constitutional right guaranteed by the First Amendment (to the US Constitution) and we Americans take that and other Rights very seriously.
In the 17th release of the “Twitter Files,” journalist Matt Taibbi disclosed that the U.S. government is funding a group that has supported the censorship of dissenting viewpoints on social media, including those of U.S. citizens.
Using third-party groups gives the government added cover — to a degree. The government is not allowed to engage in censorship, but Twitter has shown that censorship-by-surrogate has its own potential risks, including the possible legal status of a company as an agent of the government. While Twitter, as a private company, is not controlled by the First Amendment, it can become an agent of the government and trigger constitutional protections.
As with intelligence operations, censorship programs are best carried out behind layers of third-party groups. We do not know the full extent of the government’s knowledge of the latest blacklisting operation to be disclosed, or any similar projects.
https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/3 ... ip-effort/
jusplay4fun wrote:I would go on to say that the US was likely the FIRST nation to give such rights in the WORLD and most of the world (outside North America and Europe) does not value such.
Freedom of speech is a natural right that simply exists. No state can give or grant it, states can only agree not to abridge or trample on it.
In any case, Sweden was the first. In 1766 the Swedish parliament enacted the Freedom of the Press Act. The U.S. was second in 1791 with the First Amendment.
But these are words on paper. The press are propagandists for the state, and press that fail to parrot the state's talking points are tolerated when they're merely a nuisance and destroyed otherwise, especially if they challenge the war machine. Julian Assange has been in confinement for more than a decade and this is nothing new. In the run-up to the War of 1812, anti-war activists -- including "Light Horse Harry" Lee, an undisputed hero of the Revolution who once commanded 100 American dragoons to victory over an entire regiment of the enemy -- were arrested and jailed for publishing anti-war op-eds in a newspaper. Lee was beaten so badly in jail he later died of his wounds.