Monday, July 31, 2023

Disinformation and Censorship

 


Disinformation and Censorship, 1984–2023

Americans’ free speech is threatened as never before.

Peter Van Buren, The American Conservative 

Orwell, again. 1984 seems written for the Biden era. Underlying it all is the concept of disinformation, the root of propaganda and mind control. So it is in 2023. Just ask FBI Director Chris Wray. Or Facebook.

George Orwell’s novel explores the concept of disinformation and its role in controlling and manipulating society. Orwell presents a dystopian future where a totalitarian regime, led by the Party and its figurehead Big Brother, exerts complete control over its citizens’ lives, including their thinking. The Party employs a variety of techniques to disseminate disinformation and maintain its power. One of the most prominent examples is the concept of “Newspeak,” a language designed to restrict and manipulate thought by reducing the range of expressible ideas. Newspeak aims to replace words and concepts that could challenge or criticize the Party’s ideology, effectively controlling the way people think and communicate (in our own time and place, think of “unhoused,” “misspoke,” LGBTQIAXYZ+, “nationalist,” “terrorist”).

Orwell also introduces the concept of doublethink, which refers to the ability to hold two contradictory beliefs simultaneously and to accept them both as true. This psychological manipulation technique allows the Party to control the minds of its citizens and make them believe in false information or embrace contradictory ideas without questioning (think mandating masks that do not prevent disease transmission). The Party in 1984 alters historical records and disseminates false information through the Ministry of Truth. This manipulation of historical events and facts aims to control the collective memory of the society in a post-truth era, ensuring that the Party’s version of reality remains unquestioned (think war in Ukraine, Iraq, El Salvador, Vietnam, all to protect our freedom at home.)

Through these portrayals, Orwell highlights the dangers of disinformation and its potential to distort truth, manipulate public opinion, and maintain oppressive systems of power. The novel serves as a warning about the importance of critical thinking, independent thought, and the preservation of objective truth in the face of disinformation and propaganda.

Disinformation is bad. But replacing disinformation with censorship or replacement with other disinformation is worse. 1984 closed down the marketplace of ideas. So for 2023.

In 2023 America, the medium is social media, and the Ministry of Truth is the executive branch, primarily the FBI. Topics that the FBI at one point labeled disinformation and sought to censor in the name of protecting Americans from disinformation include, but are not limited to, the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop, the Covid lab-leak theory, the efficiency and value to society of masks, lockdowns, and vaccines, speech about election integrity and the 2020 presidential election, the security of voting by mail, and even parody accounts mocking the president (for example, one about Finnegan Biden, Hunter Biden’s daughter).

When asked before Congress to define disinformation, FBI Director Christopher Wray could not do it, even though it is the basis for the FBI's campaign to censor Americans. It's a made-up term with no fixed meaning. That gives it its power, as “terrorism” was used a decade or so earlier. Remember “domestic terrorism”? That stretched to cover everything from white power advocates to January 6 marchers to BLM protesters to Moms for Liberty. It just can't be all those things all the time, but it can be all those things at different times, as needed.

The term “hate speech” is another flexible tool of enforcement, which is why efforts to codify banning hate speech under the First Amendment must be resisted so strongly. Same for QAnon. We’ve heard about QAnon for years now but still can’t figure out if it even exists. To read the mainstream media, you would think it is the most powerful and sinister thing one can imagine, yet it seems to be imaginary, another Cthulhu. Do they have an office, an email address, a lair somewhere?

In simple words: The government is using social media companies as proxies to censor the contrary thoughts of Americans, all under the guise of correcting misinformation and in direct contrivance of the First Amendment.

How bad does it get? As part of its 2023 investigation into the federal government’s role in censoring lawful speech on social media platforms, the House Committee on the Judiciary issued subpoenas to Meta, Facebook and Instagram’s parent company, and Alphabet, Google and YouTube’s parent. Documents obtained revealed that the FBI, on behalf of a compromised Ukrainian intelligence service, requested and, in some cases, directed, the world’s largest social media platforms to censor Americans engaging in constitutionally protected speech online about the war in Ukraine.

Another tool of thought control is the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which was supposed to be used to spy on foreigners but has been improperly used against thousands of Americans. Over 100,000 Americans were spied on in 2022, which is down from the nearly 3 million spied on in 2021.

Does all that sound familiar? An amorphous threat is pounded into the heads of Americans (communism, Covid, terrorism, disinformation) and in its name nearly anything is justified, including in the most recent battle for freedom, censorship. The wrapper is that it is all for our own protection—Biden himself accused social media companies of “killing people,” the more modern version of the terrorism era’s “blood on their hands”—with the government assuming the role of knowing what is right and correct for Americans to know.

The target in name is always some Russki-type foreigner; in reality, what happens is the censorship of our own citizens, who are tarred with the suspicion of being “pro-Putin.” Yet Meta’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, admitted that the government asked Facebook to suppress true information. He said during the Covid era that the scientific establishment within the government asked “for a bunch of things to be censored that, in retrospect, ended up being more debatable or true.”

Under President Joe Biden, the government has undertaken “the most massive attack against free speech in United States history.” That was the extraordinary conclusion reached by a federal judge in Missouri v. Biden. The case exposed the incredible lengths to which the Biden White House and its federal agencies have gone to bully social media platforms into removing political views they dislike. The White House is appealing and obtained a stay, hoping to retain this powerful tool of thought control right out of 1984. A victory for censorship of Americans and their thoughts could be the greatest threat to free speech in American history.


Peter Van Buren is the author of We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, Hooper’s War: A Novel of WWII Japan, and Ghosts of Tom Joad: A Story of the 99 Percent.

Monday, July 24, 2023

Biden Family’s History of Influence-Peddling

 


The Biden Family’s History of Influence-Peddling, Explained

Before Ukraine, the president’s playbook seems to have worked like a charm in Romania.

Andrew C. McCarthy, National Review

It was the spring of 2014, and Kyiv was in tumult. For all its talk about democracy, the Obama administration had enthusiastically supported the mass protests in western Ukraine that, on February 21, had ousted the democratically elected president, Viktor Yanukovych.

Progressives have memory-holed much of this history. The Obama State Department and its European counterparts had an embarrassingly notorious hands-on role in the Maidan revolution and the new Ukrainian government that emerged in its aftermath. Predictably, this meddling in another nation’s domestic politics, to the point of toppling the elected government, was exploited by Vladimir Putin to rationalize Russia’s responsive aggression in eastern Ukraine — the annexation of Crimea and the border war that exploded into today’s full-out war when Moscow launched its February 2022 invasion.

Though more Euroskeptic than his political rivals in Kyiv, Yanukovych had leaned toward entering Ukraine into a political association and trade agreement with the European Union. As I detailed in Ball of Collusion, this prompted a furious reaction from the Kremlin, which was always in a natural position to leverage its neighbor’s dependence on Russian goodwill for energy supplies, safe commerce, and domestic tranquility. Putin thus threatened that if Yanukovych made his bed with the West, he would block Ukraine’s imports, slash its exports, cut off its energy lines, bleed its economy, and drive it into collapse. Yanukovych succumbed, ditching the European deal in favor of an alternative Russian pact. This accommodation, to fend off the bear on the border, triggered the internal strife that led inexorably to Yanukovych’s abdication and flight to safety in Moscow.

The post-Soviet history of Eastern Europe teaches that chaos is good for the profiteers.

Already one of the developed world’s most corrupt countries, Ukraine was in utter chaos when President Obama made his vice president, Joe Biden, an infamous hack with the pretensions of a geopolitical strategist, his point man for American policy there. Not exactly a boon for America, but it was a windfall for the Biden family business of cashing in on “the big guy’s” political influence.

In these badlands, standing up a new government — basically consisting of the people who were besieged by the ousted government — looks more like a battle of competing mafia protection rackets than an exercise in spontaneous democracy. For a corrupt company such as Burisma, it would mean new regulators demanding payoffs, in conjunction with the government’s existing extortionate demands.

As a confidential informant explained to the FBI (an explanation recorded in a Form 1023 report controversially made public this week), bribery is such a deep-seated part of business culture in Ukraine and Russia that businesses customarily account for it in budgeting — the Russian word for the line item is podmazat, which literally means to “oil, lubricate, or make things run smoothly.” Indeed, when Biden took the point on U.S. policy toward Kyiv, our close allies in Britain were about to pounce on Burisma’s well-heeled founder and CEO Mykola “Nikolay” Zlochevsky — in their ongoing bribery probe, the Brits would soon seize $23 million he’d squirreled away in London bank accounts, as Eastern European oligarchs were then wont to do.

Zlochevsky, then 48, had been a minister in Yanukovych’s government. He knew the long knives would be out for him — and not just from the new regime. The new Poroshenko government’s U.S. State Department patrons had put Zlochevsky on a “ban list,” preventing him from traveling to America. With his Ukrainian allies out of power, Zlochevsky would need new, potent allies to protect him and Burisma from his suddenly empowered Ukrainian rivals.

Joe Biden may not know much, but he knew that.

He also knew that the anti-corruption racket is a profitable one for people in power. The game works like this: You inveigh against corruption, ostensibly to encourage a corrupt but supposedly reforming regime to clean up its act; that, of course, increases the pressure on the regime’s corruption targets (e.g., those who’ve bribed their way to fortune); those targets, already no strangers to paying off whomever must be paid off, become more willing to pay the anti-corruption poseurs.

As the House Oversight Committee has shown (see preliminary report, pp. 11–17), Biden appears to have made this work like a charm in Romania.

In 2014 and 2015, when not railing at officials in Kyiv about corruption, he was railing at officials in Bucharest about corruption. At the time, one of their most high-profile corruption targets was Gabriel Popoviciu, a real-estate tycoon ultimately convicted of paying a bribe to acquire a highly desirable lot at a bargain price. While Vice President Biden pressured Romania to ratchet up anti-corruption prosecutions, Popoviciu paid Hunter Biden to use his connections to fend off the Romanian prosecutors.

As the committee documents, the payments were structured to conceal the fact that they were coming from Popoviciu: multiple payments over time by the Romanian tycoon’s business (Bladon Enterprises Limited) to the Bidens’ business partner, Rob Walker. Because smaller money transfers draw less regulatory attention, Walker parceled out Popoviciu’s transfers into smaller payments and doled them out, over time, to various Hunter Biden accounts and accounts of business associates, and even sent $10,000 to an account of Hallie Biden — Beau Biden’s widow with whom Hunter was romantically involved. All in the family.

Amazing how this works: After the vice president congratulated President Klaus Iohannis on the strides Romania was making to crack down on corruption, Hunter stepped up efforts for Popoviciu — the incumbent vice president’s son using his contacts to beseech State Department officials to help a Romanian corruption target’s lawyers get a meeting with Romanian anti-corruption prosecutors. In the midst of the payments from Popoviciu detailed by the committee (which stretched from November 2015 through the end of his father’s term in office), Hunter wrote in one email on behalf of his Romanian client, “He is in my estimation a very good man that’s being very badly treated by a suspect Romanian justice system” (emphasis added). I’m sure you’ll be shocked to hear that the Romanian courts didn’t see it that way, upholding Popoviciu’s nine-year prison sentence.

With Romania and the committee report as background, should we really be all that surprised about the allegations that emerged this week implicating Joe Biden in Ukrainian bribery schemes?

On April 16, 2014, with Kyiv still in upheaval, Vice President Biden was visited at the White House by Hunter and Devon Archer, Hunter’s longtime chum and business partner (who is now looking at prison time, in addition to tens of millions of dollars in fines and restitution costs, after recently losing the appeal of his 2022 federal fraud conviction over a $60 million fraud scheme). Just five days later, Vice President Biden was in Ukraine to conduct various meetings and — well, wouldn’t you know it — the very next day (April 22) it was announced that Archer had been named to the Burisma board of directors, with Hunter’s installation to that board already quietly in the works.

The press lauded Joe Biden as the face of American policy in Ukraine. We don’t know everyone he met with on his visit to Ukraine, nor everyone he spoke with about it. We do know, however, that Zlochevsky told the FBI’s informant he had spoken with both Joe and Hunter Biden about placing Hunter in a lucrative position on Burisma’s board — though the younger Biden, who’d just been ousted from a cushy Navy appointment over his cocaine use, had no experience in the energy sector.

Burisma’s chief financial officer was Vadim Pozharsky. That’s a name you want to remember. The FBI’s informant attended a business meeting with Burisma executives in late 2015 or early 2016, during which Pozharsky explained that the company had hired Hunter to “protect us, through his dad, from all kinds of problems.” As we shall see, this is completely consistent with statements we know Pozharsky has made.

Hunter did not formally join his partner Archer on the Burisma board until May 12, 2014. In the intervening three weeks, two important things happened. First, the aforementioned British seizure of Zlochevsky’s accounts in London on April 28. Second, well, Burisma started paying up.

As related in a report compiled by Senators Chuck Grassley (R., Iowa) and Ron Johnson (R., Wis.), the funds started rolling in with a quarter-million-dollar transfer on May 7 to the law firm Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, where Hunter (who went to law school) was “of counsel” (see report, pp. 66–68). Not coincidentally, Boies Schiller is the same firm used by Hunter in the Popoviciu caper. In all, Burisma paid Hunter Biden and Archer over $4 million combined. A big chunk of it came during Joe Biden’s vice presidency. And — mirabile dictu — it seems, for some unfathomable reason, that Hunter’s salary was halved once his father was out of office.

The day Hunter formally joined Burisma’s board, he and Archer were sent an “urgent issue” email by Pozharsky. After alluding to their recent meetings together in Lake Como in Lombardy, Pozharsky reminded his new partners about the new Ukrainian regime’s tormenting of Zlochevsky, which he referred to alternatively as “blackmailing” and as efforts to extort him for money. Because these tactics had been unsuccessful, the regime had now moved on to “concrete” legal actions aimed at “intimidating” Burisma’s commercial contacts and “destabilizing” its business. Consequently, Pozharsky stressed, “we urgently need your advice on how you could use your influence to convey a message/signal, etc., to stop what we consider to be politically motivated actions.”

Hunter responded that he was with Archer in Doha, Qatar, and asked for more information about “the formal (if any) accusations being made against Burisma.” “Who,” he asked, was “ultimately behind these attacks on the company? Who in the current interim government could put an end to such attacks?” Meantime, Hunter and Archer immediately began work on trying to get Zlochevsky removed from the State Department’s ban list in hopes of helping him obtain a visa — a project for which they enlisted Boies Schiller’s help.

By December, however, even with the U.S. vice president’s son on his board, Zlochevsky apparently decided to deal with his troubles the old-fashioned way: by paying a $7 million bribe to officials at the office of Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Vitaly Yarema. State Department official George Kent learned about the bribe, reporting it to his superiors and the FBI. He also raised the concern with the vice president’s office that Hunter Biden’s association with Zlochevsky was compromising the Obama administration’s anti-corruption efforts.

I know you’ll be stunned to hear this, but Vice President Biden took no action.

Hunter and Archer, of course, continued working for Burisma and Zlochevsky. In early 2015, they began planning a dinner party in Washington at which Vice President Biden would stop by and meet a number of their business associates. The dinner was held in the private Garden Room of CafĂ© Milano in Georgetown on April 16, 2015. Notwithstanding the mounting bribery allegations against Zlochevsky, Hunter invited Pozharsky. Thus did the Burisma CFO get a coveted meeting with the sitting U.S. vice president. Pozharsky gushed in an email the following day, “Dear Hunter, thank you for inviting me to DC and giving an opportunity to meet your father and spent [sic] some time together.” Pozharsky was soon headed to the airport but asked Hunter to meet for coffee before he departed.

Alas, Pozharsky was not gushing when he emailed Hunter, Archer, and their partner Eric Schwerin nearly six months later, on November 2. Instead, he was bemoaning the lack of “concrete tangible results that we set out to achieve in the first place” — referring, obviously, to Burisma’s installation of Hunter and Archer on its board in order to help Zlochevsky. Having looked at planning documents Hunter and his associates had just provided, Pozharsky complained that they failed to

offer any names of top US officials here in Ukraine (for instance, the US Ambassador) or Ukrainian officials (the President of Ukraine, chief of staff, Prosecutor General) as key targets for improving Nicolay’s [i.e., Zlochevsky’s] case and his situation in Ukraine.

Of course, Pozharsky conceded, maybe this was intentional. After all, one should avoid naming names in such documents. That said, what was written was unimportant only as long as “all parties in fact understand the true purpose of the [Burisma] engagement and all our joint efforts.” It was critical, he asserted, for everyone to “be on the same page re our final goals.” Pozharsky thus demanded a list of “concrete deliverables,” including “meetings/communications resulting in high-ranking US officials in Ukraine (US ambassador) and in US publicly or in private communication/comment expressing their ‘positive opinion’ and support of [Zlochevsky]/Burisma to the highest level of decision makers” — repeating that this meant Ukraine’s president, chief of staff, and prosecutor general.

Pozharsky concluded this remarkably blunt email with the hope that “widely recognized and influential current and/or former US policy-makers” would come to Ukraine in the coming weeks to help achieve this “ultimate purpose to close down for any cases/pursuits against [Zlochevsky] in Ukraine.”

These are not the demands, and this is not the tone, of friends who are seeking a favor but of hard men who are paying dearly for a service and who are running out of patience — wondering whether it’s worth continuing to pay.

In a few short weeks, Burisma appears to have gotten what Pozharsky was demanding. Vice President Joe Biden came to Kyiv in early December and met with Ukraine’s president and other top officials. He threatened to withhold $1 billion of U.S. funding unless, within six hours, the regime fired Viktor Shokin — the prosecutor who was investigating Zlochevsky and Burisma.

Mind you, at the time, Ukraine was under siege by Russia. Perhaps you recall Donald Trump’s being impeached by Democrats for withholding aid from Kyiv while it was struggling to fight off Putin’s aggression in the east. But Biden was going to withhold $1 billion . . . over a prosecutor?

We know Biden did this because he bragged about it in a 2018 interview at the Council on Foreign Relations. Never having been the sharpest tool in the shed, he thought this helped him by showing his toughness as he prepared for his presidential run. He claimed it was all about — all together now — fighting corruption! In character, moreover, Biden exaggerated his role in getting the prosecutor axed. Shokin was not fired in six hours; it took four months of arm-twisting, and the threat by Christine Lagarde, director of the International Monetary Fund, to withhold $40 billion of Ukrainian aid — again, to fight corruption, it was said — had more to do with it than did Biden’s gambit.

That said, here we have Biden beating his chest about how he strong-armed Kyiv to fire the prosecutor who was then investigating Zlochevsky’s company — which we now know was then beseeching Biden’s son to persuade top U.S. officials to weigh in on Burisma’s behalf with top Ukrainian officials. If Biden’s very clear admission was not on video, does anyone doubt that he would now deny having said any such thing, just like he vehemently denies ever discussing the business dealings he risibly continues to claim were his son’s and not his own?

In early 2016, when the FBI informant met with Zlochevsky in Vienna, he asked about Shokin’s investigation of Burisma, which had gone public. “Don’t worry,” the informant recalled Zlochevsky responding, “Hunter will take care of all those issues through his dad.” Subsequently, he elaborated that he’d paid $10 million in bribes to the Bidens — half for the then–vice president, half for his son.

Mind you, that wasn’t going to be enough. Though Zlochevsky said he found Hunter useless (his dog, he said, was smarter), Burisma still needed to keep the vice president’s son on the board “so everything will be okay.” If that’s true, then the already obvious is explicit: Hunter’s lucrative sinecure was part of the bribe. And we know Hunter was on the board and was paid millions.

In a later phone call, Zlochevsky told the FBI informant that he wasn’t worried about law-enforcement heat over the bribes he said he had been forced to pay the Bidens. He claimed to have saved texts and recordings that would prove the coercion. Did he really? We can’t say . . . but is it really that hard to believe? Not if you’ve read the WhatsApp message in which Hunter makes extortionate demands of a Chinese business partner with, he claims, his father sitting right there beside him and ready to make the partner’s life miserable.

And Zlochevsky says his payments to the Bidens were structured in such a labyrinthine manner, using multiple companies and bank accounts, that it would take investigators “ten years” to trace the bribe dollars to Joe Biden. Does that really sound so unbelievable once one has studied the House Oversight Committee’s preliminary report? Bear in mind the Popoviciu payment scheme and the dozens of others like it with Chinese and other “business partners”: transaction after transaction in which millions of dollars come the Bidens’ way in exchange for no apparent comparable value.

Nothing, that is, except Joe Biden’s political influence.


ANDREW C. MCCARTHY is a senior fellow at National Review Institute, an NR contributing editor, and author of BALL OF COLLUSION: THE PLOT TO RIG AN ELECTION AND DESTROY A PRESIDENCY. @andrewcmccarthy

Myth of the Starving Shoplifter

 


Myth of the Starving Shoplifter

Retail crime is driven by reduced penalties and organized gangs, not economic hardship.

Steven Malanga, City Journal 

A recent video on Twitter showed a supermarket employee tussling with a shoplifter who had filled her bag with items. As the employee pulled the bag from her hand, she cried, “I have to feed my family!” That’s a common refrain from shoplifters these days, echoed in media headlines proclaiming that people have turned to stealing to put food on the table—despite a U.S. social safety net that includes $185 billion in spending on food stamps and other nutrition-assistance programs. In truth, America’s exploding shoplifting problem predates our current economic difficulties. Much of the stealing, store owners and security experts say, has less to do with putting food on the table than with a rise in organized theft, and it’s having a particularly adverse effect in cities where criminal-justice reforms have made it easy to get away with.

Retail theft in America has grown to a $94 billion epidemic, according to the National Retail Federation—a staggering 90 percent increase since 2018. Retailers say that the problem gained momentum about a decade ago, when states began decriinalizing low-level shoplifting, raising the value of goods that a person must steal to enable prosecutors to bring felony charges. More than two-thirds of states now treat shoplifting as a misdemeanor if someone boosts less than $1,000 in goods, and 15 states have raised their limit to $1,500 or more. More than 70 percent of surveyed retailers reported that shoplifting spiked in their stores after these changes. Bail reforms that free without bond those arrested for shoplifting have also contributed to the problem. An official of the Association of Certified Anti–Money Laundering Specialists says that retail theft is now “a low-risk and high-reward line of business.”

Rampant shoplifting is undermining retailer profits and vaporizing jobs. Walmart announced the closure of its only store in disorder-plagued Portland, Oregon, along with four stores in crime-wracked Chicago. Target, which estimated that retail theft cost it half a billion dollars last year, is shuttering stores in several cities, including Baltimore. Rite Aid is shutting down stores in New York City after the company’s chief executive described how hard it is to stop theft there. Whole Foods closed its flagship San Francisco store after one year because of rampant theft. The CEO of Home Depot told Wall Street analysts that shoplifting threatens its bottom line. “The country has a retail theft problem,” he said.

Organized retail crime now accounts for about half of store losses from theft. It has nothing to do with obtaining food for families; it’s about reselling stolen items for profit. Underlying the crime wave is the emergence of a sophisticated illegal infrastructure for recruiting shoplifters—everyone from gang members to illegal aliens—and disposing of the goods they heist. Gone are the days when petty criminals needed to sell goods through “fences” like legendary London underworld figure Ikey Solomon, so notorious for selling stolen goods from his Bell Lane jewelry shop that Charles Dickens based Fagin in Oliver Twist on him. Much of the merchandise grabbed today by shoplifters, called “boosters,” is sold by operators online—where they are hard to detect or track down. The illegal industry also includes “cleaners,” who strip goods of security devices or repackage stolen items, and money launderers, who process the transactions.

Many operations initially thrived selling on third-party online platforms like Amazon and eBay, where they blend in among legitimate sellers. The federal INFORM Consumers Act, passed last December, now requires these markets to collect information from third-party retailers. So the fencing business is moving to classified-advertising sites like Craigslist and to Facebook Marketplace, according to the National Retail Federation. While incidents of stealing luxury goods—like the flash mob that stripped a Louis Vuitton store in San Francisco in 2021—make headlines, the real money is in everyday items from mass-market retailers. A Craigslist search by security experts found that the top item under listings that appeared to be stolen merchandise were Tide Pods. Also high on the list were diapers, makeup, and baby formula. Even so, a Washington Post story headlined “Stealing to Survive” jumped to the wrongheaded conclusion that a rise in shoplifting was linked to economic need because much of it involved everyday products like baby formula.

Social media has contributed to cultural shifts that portray shoplifting as a “harmless” property crime that damages only “rich” companies. Social-media sites offer tips and how-to videos on shoplifting. They also increasingly feature anticapitalist rhetoric among young people, who claim that shoplifting is a way of “tackling the system.” In England, a TikTok “shoplifting challenge” sparked a spate of attacks on local shops. The discussion site Reddit has hosted conversations on “best practices,” including instructions to avoid being stopped by a door-checker at Walmart and why stores of the supermarket chain Publix are easy marks.

The consequences are growing. Beyond massive retailer losses, states and cities are forfeiting some $15 billion annually in sales taxes. And more than half of retailers surveyed last year said that shoplifting incidents are becoming more violent. Last November, a shoplifter killed a security guard in a Maryland supermarket who tried to detain him, and another murdered a Home Depot guard in April. In San Francisco, authorities declined to press charges against a security guard who killed a shoplifter in Walgreens because they determined that the guard’s life was in danger.

Under pressure, the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement have begun focusing on organized retail crime, especially “smash and grab” rings. Retailers are also lobbying for passage of the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, which establishes a unit within Homeland Security to address the issue. Some states are also cracking down.

It remains to be seen, however, whether these efforts will be enough to reverse the incentives created by de facto retail-theft decriminalization and revolving-door bail “reform” policies.


Steven Malanga is the senior editor of City Journal and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.


Thursday, July 20, 2023

The Biden Family Caricatures

 


The Biden Family Caricatures

Victor Davis Hanson, The Blade of Perseus

The Biden first family seems determined to confirm every stereotype of their antisocial behavior—to the point of dysfunctionality.

During the 2020 campaign at least eight women alleged that then presidential candidate Joe Biden in the past had serially and improperly touched, kissed or grabbed them.

One, Tara Reade alleged she was sexually assaulted by Biden, who denied the charge.

Yet Biden himself finally was forced to apologize for some of his behavior. Or as he said at the time, “I get it.”

He claimed that he would no longer improperly invade the “private space” of women and had meant no harm.

But Biden’s obnoxious conduct extended well beyond the eight accusers.

Women as diverse as former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, and Biden’s own daughter-in-law Kathleen Buhle, have both alleged in their memoirs that Biden made them feel uncomfortable through his intrusive touching and embraces.

On several occasions, Biden developed a strange tic of becoming too physical with young girls. He habitually attempted to hug them while blowing in their hair.

His daughter Ashley wrote in her diary that she feared her past adolescent showers with her father had been inappropriate. Even as president, Biden has weirdly called out young girls in his audiences to note their attractiveness.

On one occasion, the president interrupted his speech to address a female acquaintance—enlightening the crowd that, “We go back a long way. She was 12 and I was 30, but anyway…”

As a result, Biden has likely been warned repeatedly to forgo intimate references to young women.

He has no doubt also been advised by his handlers to stop all close, supposedly innocent contact with young girls and children—if for no other reason than to prevent his political opponents from charging that Joe is “creepy,” “perverse,” or “sick.”

And yet like some addict, Biden cannot stop—regardless of the eerie image he projects around the world.

Last week, the president jumped the proverbial shark by embracing a young child in a crowd while on the tarmac of the Helsinki, Finland airport.

In his strangest act yet, Biden kept moving his mouth near the face of the young girl. He was apparently trying to nibble the youngster, almost in turkey-gobbling fashion.

She recoiled.

No matter—Biden continued at her shoulder.

Again, she flinched.

Biden then reverted to form, and sought with a second try to smell her hair and nestle closer.

Had any other major politician in the age of #MeToo committed such an unnerving stunt, he would likely have been ostracized by colleagues and mercilessly hammered by the media.

Not in Biden’s case.

The apparent media subtext was that it was either just “Old Joe” trying to be too friendly, or a symptom of his cognitive decline and thus not attributable to any sinister urge.

Senescence now provides paradoxical cover for Biden’s creepiness—newfound exemption for his old boorish behavior.

Also, during the President’s latest antics, cocaine was found in the West Wing of the White House.

All the White House spokespeople had to do was to reassure the public that the drugs most certainly did not belong to first son Hunter Biden—despite being a frequent guest resident of the White House and a former crack-cocaine addict.

Instead, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre dismissed reporters for requesting such clarification.

Then the official narrative went through several contortions, as to where and how the bag of cocaine was found.

The disinformation only added suspicion that the White House either would not or could not be transparent about the discovery of illicit drugs abandoned at the very nexus of American governance.

Requests for clarity were understandable not just because Hunter has had a long history of drug addiction.

He also has a troubling habit of leaving a public trail of evidence of his drug use.

Hunter forgot his crack pipe in a rental car. He abandoned his laptop that contained evidence of his own felonious behavior. And his unlawfully registered handgun turned up in a dumpster near a school.

In sum, the President and his son both have quite disturbing and all-too public bad habits.

Americans in response assume both would be careful not to offer the tiniest shred of evidence that their pathologies continue.

White House handlers should keep Joe Biden from even getting near small children and young women.

And they should be just as unambiguous that Hunter Biden has never, and would never, even get too close to illicit drugs while inside the White House.

Sadly they can do neither.

These suspicions are force multipliers of the mounting evidence of Biden family corruption. They feed narratives of heartlessness about disowning a granddaughter born out of wedlock. And they add to worries of presidential senility.

The result is the caricature of a first family: one that is utterly dysfunctional—and increasingly detrimental to the country at large.

Monday, July 17, 2023

Officials Claim Math is ‘Racist’

 


Oregon Education Officials Claim Math is ‘Racist’ Because It Demands ‘Right Answers’

Warner Todd Huston, IPatriot

Leftist loons at the Oregon Department of Education feel that math is “racist” because it demands “right answers.”

The department’s recent newsletter promoted an online course intended to “dismantle” instances of ““white supremacy culture in the mathematics classroom.” As an example, the course claims that “the concept of mathematics being purely objective.” This, they say, is “unequivocally false.”

Because math, they feel, is fungible. They say math as racist if two plus two is four. But, their math is not racist because there are no true answers, apparently.

Per Campus Reform:

The program, known as “A Pathway to Equitable Math Instruction,” describes itself as “an integrated approach to mathematics that centers Black, Latinx, and Multilingual students” that provides “opportunities for ongoing self-reflection as they seek to develop an anti-racist math practice.”

The “feedback advisors” for a portion of the program include William Zahner, who is an associate professor at San Diego State University; Melissa Navarro Martell, who is an assistant professor at San Diego State University, and Elvira Armas, who is the Director of Programs and Partnerships for the Center for Equity for English Learners at Loyola Marymount University in California.

“White supremacy culture infiltrates math classrooms in everyday teacher actions,” the guide states. “Coupled with the beliefs that underlie these actions, they perpetuate educational harm on Black, Latinx, and multilingual students, denying them full access to the world of mathematics.”

The newsletter pitched the program to educators “looking for a deeper dive into equity work,” offering to teach “key tools for engagement, develop strategies to improve equitable outcomes for Black, Latinx, and multilingual students, and join communities of practice.”

The Oregon Department of Communications Director of Communications, Marc Siegel, told Campus Reform that math instruction should be built on an “equitable foundation.”

“Building math instruction on an equitable foundation can better ensure all our students have a pathway to success in math,” Siegel said.

Examples of “white supremacy culture” cited by the document include a focus on “getting the ‘right’ answer” and requiring students to show their work.


Along with China, Russia, and other external enemies, liberals are by far the most immediate threat to America.

Friday, July 14, 2023

Harsher Penalties for Child Traffickers- CA???

 


California Democrat reverses position on harsher penalties for child traffickers: 'Bad decision'

California committee blocked measure to increase penalties on child sex traffickers this week

Kyle Morris, Fox News 

A Democratic member of the California Assembly's Public Safety Committee admitted to making a "bad decision" on a bill that would have increased penalties for human trafficking.

"On Tuesday, I made a bad decision. Voting against legislation targeting really bad people who traffic children was wrong. I regret doing that and I am going to help get this important legislation passed into law," Assembly member Liz Ortega wrote in a tweet.

The comments from Ortega, who represents District 20, came two days after the Golden State's lower chamber committee considered Senate Bill 14, which would make the human trafficking of children a "serious felony." Serious felony charges under California law currently include murder, rape and any other crime that may incur the death penalty or life sentence in state prison.

However, instead of raising the felony charges for child traffickers, Democrats on the California Assembly Public Safety Committee blocked the measure on Tuesday.

Prior to her admission about the action she took earlier this week, Ortega had suggested that lifelong sentences for those who traffic children would not put an end to the child trafficking problem that has plagued the country.

"I'm struggling with how do we support you with mental health access, with housing, with education, with good jobs, because it's part of a holistic approach," she said, according to the Washington Free Beacon. "Sending someone to prison for the rest of their lives is not going to fix the harm moving forward. And that's the part I'm struggling with. It's a complex issue."

According to local media, no Democrats on the committee voted for the bill.

Both Republican assemblymen on the committee — Tom Lackey and GOP Vice Chair Juan Alanis — voted to advance the bill.

S.B. 14 was given reconsideration, meaning it could be taken up again by the California Assembly next year. S.B. 14 cleared the California Senate unanimously with bipartisan support in May.

"You know you’re on the wrong side of an issue when you deliver a win for human traffickers. Democrats on the Public Safety Committee proved they have no intention of protecting the lives of Californians, let alone protecting innocent children from the horrors of human trafficking," California GOP Chair Jessica Millan Patterson said of the action taken by the committee on Tuesday.

Human trafficking is an issue that has long been taking place around the country, and certain states are looking to increase penalties and hold those who engage in the practice more accountable.

In Florida, Attorney General Ashley Moody is demanding that Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg explain the high volume of human trafficking across Meta platforms after an eerie report revealed that pedophiles are using the metaverse to sexually exploit children.

Moody sent a letter to Zuckerberg on Monday, inviting the CEO to speak with Florida's Statewide Council on Human Trafficking on what preventative measures, if any, the tech giant is taking to end human trafficking on its sites, such as Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp.

Facebook was reportedly the top platform used for the recruitment of human trafficking victims from 2019 to 2022, according to the 2022 Federal Human Trafficking report, which also found 53% of traffickers use the internet to solicit buyers of commercial sex.


Fox News' Houston Keene and Aubrie Spady contributed to this report.


Tuesday, July 11, 2023

France on the Verge of Chaos?



France on the Verge of Chaos?

Guy Millière, The Gatestone Institute 

• The riots grew bigger. Schools and theaters were destroyed.... churches were burned to the ground; graffiti in red paint on a church in Marseilles declared: "Mohammed was the last prophet". Bank branches were ransacked and ATMs opened with chainsaws. Slogans were shouted: "death to the police", "death to France", "death to the Jews!"

• "We are Muslims," one angry protester shouted, "if the police kill us we have the right to kill; it is written in the Koran!"

• Since the 1970s, France has welcomed an ever-increasing number of immigrants from the Muslim world... Only a tiny minority have assimilated into French society. The others live as they lived in their countries of origin. — Sorbonne University Professor Bernard Rougier, author of the book Les territoires conquis de l'islamisme ("The Conquered Territories of Islamism").

• Radical imams came from the Muslim world and allege that France is guilty of having colonized their countries, that Muslims should continue to live according to the law of Islam and that, in the imams' view, France should pay for its crimes. Many politicians have told the newcomers that France is racist and had exploited them.

• Criminal gangs formed and began ruling these neighborhoods. Radical imams justified the gangs' criminal activities by claiming that the French must pay for what they did in the Muslim world. French political leaders closed their eyes. Meanwhile, these Muslim neighborhoods have grown and crime from them increased.

• During the riots of 2005, then President Jacques Chirac asked imams to restore calm and promised to give even more money to Muslim neighborhoods. The police were ordered not to intervene in them at all; they fell entirely under the control of gangs and imams. It was then that these neighborhoods effectively became lawless "no-go zones" (zones urbaines sensibles), of which there are 750.

• President Emmanuel Macron suggested that creating a "French Islam," supposedly quite different from Islam in the rest of the world, would be the solution, but he quickly gave up on that plan. He then said he wanted to fight against what he called "Islamic separatism" (the no-go zones, neighborhoods where Muslims live separately from the rest of the population). He, too, has done nothing.

• Macron seems to imagine that he has found explanations for these problems: Parents of rioters, he said, do not exercise their parental authority, and video games poison the minds of young people. His comments seemed completely disconnected from reality...

• "The violence is increasing day by day... those who run our country must imperatively find the courage necessary to eradicate the dangers." — Open letter by 20 retired French army generals to the French government and Macron, April 26, 2023.

June 27, 2023. Nanterre, in the western suburbs of Paris, shortly before 8 a.m. Two policemen on a motorcycle try to stop a car. The driver, 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk, is obviously dangerous, driving erratically, barely avoiding people crossing the street. A 15-second video circulating on social networks shows the car stopped, with the two policemen aiming their weapons at Merzouk. One policeman, gun drawn, leans his elbow on the windshield. He tells Merzouk to turn off the engine and place his hands above his head. The car drives off. The policeman shoots at the car. Merzouk is shot and dies shortly after.

The police have witnesses, video surveillance, and data showing that the driver has been implicated five times for refusing to comply with police officers. He had been arrested a few weeks earlier for disorderly conduct against police and consumption and sale of narcotics, and was shortly to appear before a judge. He was only 17, too young even to have a French driver's license.

That day, he was driving a rented $90,000 Mercedes with fake Polish license plates. All of this information, apart from his age, was glossed over by the media and political leaders. The single video, filmed by a passerby on an iPhone and sent to the media, failed to show the entire incident.

Before any investigation, and without any respect for the presumption of innocence, French President Emmanuel Macron immediately said that the policeman's act had been "unexplainable" and "inexcusable". Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said that "the law was not respected" by the policeman, and Yael Braun Pivet, the president of the National Assembly asked the deputies for a minute of silence in memory of the young driver.

Merzouk's mother told journalists that he had been a wonderful and kind person. Several lawyers rushed onto television to say they were representing his family, and that the police had committed a "racist murder." The politician Jean-Luc MĂ©lenchon stated that "no police officer has the right to kill," and that any investigation into Merzouk's past must immediately stop.

The police officer who shot Merzouk has been indicted by a judge for intentional homicide and jailed. His name and home address were leaked on social media, and his wife and children had to go into hiding.

Matthieu Valet, president of the Independent Union of Police Commissioners, spoke on television of the extreme difficulty of police work in dangerous French suburbs. In some neighborhoods, he said, the police were constantly threatened, and many officers felt betrayed by the president and the government. Macron, he continued, by arbitrarily accusing a policeman, no doubt hoped to avoid riots, but riots would take place nevertheless. He was right.

The evening of June 27, riots broke out in all the major cities of France. Hundreds of cars, including police cars, were burned and police stations attacked. Some were robbed by criminals who stole whatever weapons they could find there. The town halls of Val Fourré and Villeneuve-le-Roi were set on fire. Hundreds of stores were looted and burned. Delivery trucks were stopped, looted, set on fire, and their drivers were pushed to the ground and beaten.

The riots grew bigger. Schools and theaters were destroyed. The buses in the Seine-Saint-Denis bus depot were torched; churches were burned to the ground; graffiti in red paint on a church in Marseilles declared: "Mohammed was the last prophet". Bank branches were ransacked and ATMs opened with chainsaws. Slogans were shouted: "death to the police", "death to France", "death to the Jews!"

The Secretary General of the Alliance Police Union, Julien Schénardi, remarked on June 28 that the riots were even more serious than those of 2005. This time, he said, many small towns experienced violence. In 2005, he pointed out, 10,000 police officers had been deployed; in June 2023 the number was 45,000, including units specialized in organized crime. In 2005, he recalled, no store had been looted and burned down in Paris; this time many were destroyed.

A march to pay tribute to Merzouk was organized for the afternoon of June 28, in the town of Nanterre where he had been shot, at the request of his mother and the town's communist mayor, Patrick Jarry. A journalist from RMC radio station, Nicolas Poincaré, described what he saw, "six thousand people, mainly veiled women and men of African and North African origin, some leftists". Slogans shouted included "death to the police" and "Allahu Akbar" ["Allah is the greatest"].

"We are Muslims," one angry protester shouted, "if the police kill us we have the right to kill; it is written in the Koran!" Hundreds of police were injured, many seriously.

As soon as the march ended, Poincaré noted, demonstrators began to destroy street furniture. Several broke into a bank on the ground floor of an apartment building, then the entire building was set on fire. The fire engine that came to try to put out the fire, he said, was attacked, adding:

" In 2005, no apartment building had been set on fire, and no monument had been attacked... [Now,] the memorial to Holocaust victims and members of the French resistance was vandalized and defaced with graffiti".

"This is an absolute outrage and a disgrace," wrote the lawyer Ariel Goldmann on Twitter, posting a video of the vandalized memorial. "Nothing is respected".

"The riots," wrote the journalist Frederic Lassez, "come from a clannish France that thrives in so-called 'sensitive' areas where Islamism and narco-banditry are rampant". It appears, in fact, as if all the rioters with whom journalists were able to speak, do, in fact, live in the those "sensitive" areas. Most seemed to be Arabs or Africans; most seemed to be Muslim.

The situation in which France finds itself is the result of several decades of willful blindness and inaction by the French political authorities, who appeared to hope that by spending billions of euros on immigrants, that these problems would melt away.

Since the 1970s, France has welcomed an ever-increasing number of immigrants from the Muslim world, said Sorbonne University Professor Bernard Rougier, author of the book Les territoires conquis de l'islamisme ("The Conquered Territories of Islamism"), in 2020. Most newcomers are housed in low-cost buildings in the poor suburbs of big cities. Some work, others live on welfare. Only a tiny minority have assimilated into French society. The others live as they lived in their countries of origin.

Radical imams came from the Muslim world and allege that France is guilty of having colonized their countries, that Muslims should continue to live according to the law of Islam and that, in the imams' view, France should pay for its crimes. Many politicians have told the newcomers that France is racist and had exploited them.

Criminal gangs formed and began ruling these neighborhoods. Radical imams justified the gangs' criminal activities by claiming that the French must pay for what they did in the Muslim world. French political leaders closed their eyes. Meanwhile, these Muslim neighborhoods have grown and crime from them increased.

During the summer of 1983, violent clashes took place between the police and a criminal group in a Muslim quarter of VĂ©nissieux, near Lyon. The French government at the time responded by granting massive financial aid to the Muslim quarter and its inhabitants. Sympathetic organizations later organized a "March for Equality and Against Racism" and demanded that all Muslim neighborhoods receive massive financial aid. Successive French governments spent hundreds of millions of euros to comply. In 1984, a group called SOS Racism was created and accused French police of constant racism against young Muslims. The police were ordered by the government to avoid any incidents that could lead to accusations of racism.

In 2005, police wanted to arrest two young Muslim criminals, Zyed Benna and Bouna Traoré. The two teenagers had entered an electricity substation to hide and unfortunately were electrocuted. The police were sanctioned and indicted for "not assisting persons in danger". Riots broke out, lasted three weeks and only subsided because then President Jacques Chirac asked imams to restore calm and promised to give even more money to Muslim neighborhoods. The police were ordered not to intervene in them at all; they fell entirely under the control of gangs and imams. It was then that these neighborhoods effectively became lawless "no-go zones" (zones urbaines sensibles), of which there are 750.

President Nicolas Sarkozy, elected in 2007, promised to put an end to no-go zones. Sarkozy, however, did nothing. President François Hollande, his successor, also did nothing.

Macron suggested that creating a "French Islam," supposedly quite different from Islam in the rest of the world, would be the solution, but he quickly gave up on that plan. He then said he wanted to fight against what he called "Islamic separatism" (the no-go zones, neighborhoods where Muslims live separately from the rest of the population). He, too, has done nothing.

In the past, riots have broken out following violent incidents in which young criminals from no-go zones resisted arrest. Each time, those who were punished were the police. The riots affected one or two towns, not the whole country, and after two or three days of destruction and looting, calm was restored.

This time, however, the riots took on a scale that was unprecedented. The government appeared helpless and the country seemed on the verge of chaos. The police, according to investigative reporter Laurent Valdiguié, were ordered to avoid any action that could lead to the injury or death of a rioter. The government believed that the result would just intensify the violence. "The government prefers that the conflagration calm down gradually," Valdiguié said, adding that the government did not want to declare a state of emergency for fear that such an announcement would not restore calm.

Macron seems to imagine that he has found explanations for these problems: Parents of rioters, he said, do not exercise their parental authority, and video games poison the minds of young people. His comments seemed completely disconnected from reality; social media was quick to mock them.

Political leaders say that calm must return, but none of them offers a solution. The only exception is former journalist Éric Zemmour, now leader of the right-wing Reconquest party. On June 30, in a lengthy interview, Zemmour described the situation as the "precursor symptom of a civil war", stressed that "civil war is almost here" and that it may well destroy the country. What is happening, he said, is "an ethnic uprising" resulting from "crazy immigration.... Macron has abandoned the police and chosen submission". At present, Zemmour concluded, it would take "ferocious, firm and ruthless repression" to restore calm, but "there is no one among those in power ready to act in a determined way and make the necessary decisions."

"The seeds of a civil war," columnist Ivan Rioufol wrote on June 29, "are just waiting to explode.... Emmanuel Macron's inconsistency puts France in mortal danger."

A June 30 press release from the two main French police unions, titled "Now that's enough," stated:

"Today the police are in combat because we are at war. Tomorrow we will enter resistance and the government should be aware of this."

It is not certain that the government is even slightly "aware of this".

In 2021, twenty retired French army generals published an open letter addressed to the French government and Macron: "The situation is critical. France is in danger. Several mortal dangers threaten it". The letter spoke of "suburban hordes" and of the "detachment of multiple parcels of the nation to transform them into territories subject to dogmas contrary to the French constitution... The violence is increasing day by day... those who run our country must imperatively find the courage necessary to eradicate the dangers".

At the time, the letter was treated with contempt. Today, it looks as if its signatories got it absolutely right.


Dr. Guy Millière, a professor at the University of Paris, is the author of 27 books on France and Europe. 

Friday, July 07, 2023

Protect Free Speech On Social Media


Judge Issues Injunction To Protect Free Speech On Social Media Platforms

Andrew Torba, CEO, Gab.com

While we were all enjoying the fireworks on the 4th of July a significant development that could have profound implications for the relationship between the government and social media platforms was unfolding in the courts. A federal judge has issued a preliminary injunction restraining key agencies and officials of the Biden administration from engaging with tech companies in matters related to the suppression of protected speech. This ruling was initiated in response to a lawsuit brought forth by Republican attorneys general from Louisiana and Missouri and marks a pivotal moment in the fight for free speech.

This legal action was prompted by allegations that government officials had overstepped their boundaries by urging social media platforms to address posts that could incite vaccine hesitancy during the COVID-19 pandemic or influence elections.

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic the battle for free speech intensified as governments and social media platforms grappled with the challenge of moderating content related to the origins of covid, the vaccine, masks, lockdowns, and other related information. While many platforms succumbed to the pressure to censor information at the behest of the government, one platform stood firm in its commitment to freedom of speech: Gab.

Gab became a haven for individuals, including many doctors and medical professionals, seeking an outlet to express their opinions without fear of censorship. As COVID-related discussions flooded the digital landscape, Gab emerged as a crucial platform where diverse perspectives could be shared, debated, and challenged openly.

During the pandemic various external entities, including government officials, the media, and advocacy groups, exerted immense pressure on social media platforms to censor COVID-related content. Gab steadfastly resisted such pressure, choosing instead to allow the free exchange of information and ideas to flourish. This unwavering commitment to free speech distinguished Gab from other platforms that succumbed to external influences, thus positioning itself as a beacon of liberty and open dialogue.

Thankfully we now have a promising ruling on the subject of the government demanding private social media companies censor content on their platforms. On Independence Day District Judge Terry A. Doughty granted an injunction effectively preventing multiple federal agencies and top officials from pressuring social media companies to remove or suppress content that contains protected free speech on their platforms. The injunction also prohibits these officials from flagging such content or influencing the companies’ content moderation guidelines.

It further restricts their involvement with entities like the Virality Project, previously known as the Election Integrity Partnership, and the Stanford Internet Observatory, which have been accused of exerting censorship pressure on social media platforms. The Stanford Internet Observatory in particular has repeatedly targeted Gab with this strategy in the past and we have stood our ground against their demands for censorship.

This preliminary injunction carries substantial implications for the First Amendment, signaling a potential disruption to the longstanding collaboration between governments and social media companies in censoring Americans’ speech. Judge Doughty’s order imposes constraints on executive agencies, including the Department of Justice, State Department, Department of Health and Human Services, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While the final ruling is still pending, Judge Doughty’s preliminary injunction suggests his inclination to favor the arguments presented by the plaintiffs. In his opinion, he stated that the evidence provided demonstrates a concerted effort by the defendants to suppress speech based on its content. Comparing the United States government’s actions to an Orwellian “Ministry of Truth” during the COVID-19 pandemic, Judge Doughty expressed his lack of persuasion by the defendants’ arguments.

The opinion also highlights the gravity of the case suggesting that if the allegations made by the plaintiffs are true this could be one of the most significant attacks on free speech in the history of the United States, as the federal government and the defendants are accused of flagrantly disregarding the First Amendment’s protection of free speech.

Judge Doughty’s order does permit certain exemptions, allowing communications related to national security threats, criminal activities, or voter suppression. The Biden administration has denied the claims of collusion in censoring Americans.

This lawsuit specifically targets the federal government’s role in content censorship on social media, in contrast to previous complaints that primarily focused on the actions of tech companies themselves. Moreover, the injunction extends beyond restraining government-technology company communications and also prevents collaboration between government agencies and academic groups dedicated to studying social media, including the Election Integrity Partnership.

As 2023 unfolds, it is becoming a significant year for free speech in the United States. The Supreme Court has issued several decisions that bear implications for free speech, including a recent ruling that established a higher threshold for punishing speech as a “true threat.”

Governments should not collude with tech companies to suppress protected speech. This ruling highlights the importance of platforms like Gab, which prioritize the preservation of free speech and offer an alternative to mainstream social media platforms that have faced criticism for their content moderation practices. At Gab we have been standing our ground against government censorship and pressure from outside academic groups for years. It’s great to finally have a ruling on the side of our actions and on the side of free speech.


Wednesday, July 05, 2023

Rise of Feds’ Orwellian Speech Police

 


Chilling revelations on the rise of feds’ Orwellian speech police

By Benjamin Weingarten, New York Post  

Imagine an America where the feds surge actual speech police wherever chatter on social media questions the integrity of the vote — speech police who then take to the airwaves to attack those making the claims.

If this sounds far-fetched, consider that last summer a national-security agency actually mulled the idea of deploying a “rapid response team” to local jurisdictions to help election officials fend off “mis-, dis- and mal-information” (MDM)-related “threats,” including through communications — an idea one federal official called “fascinating.”

That revelation comes from a new report from the House Weaponization Subcommittee on a little-known Homeland Security sub-agency called the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

And it was followed Tuesday by a blockbuster preliminary injunction from a federal judge barring contact between Team Biden and social-media companies, who cited evidence of a “massive effort” by the White House and federal agencies to “suppress speech based on its content.”   

Despite its anonymity, CISA has served as the linchpin of government-led speech policing.

It has coordinated with federal agencies and a coterie of often federally funded “anti-disinformation” NGOs to chide, cajole and collude with Big Tech companies to impose a mass public-private surveillance and censorship regime on the American people.

That regime has silenced those who voice unauthorized opinions and even inconvenient facts on social-media platforms under the banner of combatting “dangerous” MDM.

This amounts to a conspiracy to violate the First Amendment, resulting in rampant election interference, the stifling of crucial debates for example on COVID-19 and the chilling of incalculable amounts of speech on much else — all in service of ruling class power.

Now House Republicans are striking back; the subcommittee’s report is part of the backlash.

By exposing CISA and its partners’ centrality to the censorship regime, Republicans are taking the first step towards terminating it.

The report tells of how an agency tasked with combatting foreign cyberattacks and defending the grid came to target Americans’ tweets questioning mass mail-in balloting as if they were mini-terrorist attacks on “cognitive infrastructure.”

CISA Director Jen Easterly has said “cognitive infrastructure” — that is, what people think — is “most critical,” hence the need for her agency to control Americans’ speech.

Consistent with this view, as the report shows, during the 2020 presidential contest, CISA collected and reported offending content Americans posted about elections to social media companies, which often censored it — a process known as “switchboarding.”

During and after that election, CISA colluded extensively with cut-outs, one of which was CISA-funded, to get content purged.

As its efforts grew more ambitious, CISA formalized its coordination with the cut-outs and social-media companies, convening an Orwellian subcommittee for MDM.

The report adds rich color to this underreported story.

It shows CISA and its partners casting aside concerns about targeting Americans’ speech, even as some expressed surprise and concern.

It shows specific instances of a CISA-funded partner working to get posts, including those of Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, taken down by social-media companies.

Perhaps most important, the report shows CISA & Co. knew what the sub-agency was doing was unlawful and “routinely attempted to conceive methods” to “surreptitiously outsource its surveillance and censorship to non-governmental third parties.”

“It’s only a matter of time before someone realizes we exist and starts asking about our work,” a former CIA lawyer serving on the MDM Subcommittee warned in a May 2022 email.

CISA eventually scrapped the subcommittee and scrubbed evidence of its domestic-speech targeting.

The cover-up would seem to be an admission of guilt.

We still don’t know the full scope of any underlying crimes, but Congress’ probes may reveal them.

That oversight is critical, because lawmakers need a comprehensive picture of the surveillance and censorship regime to inform legislation to dismantle it.

Those efforts in fact have already begun.

The House Armed Services Committee recently adopted an amendment to its annual National Defense Authorization Act halting federal funding to purported anti-disinformation outfits that have gotten conservative outlets blacklisted and demonetized.

The Homeland Security Committee adopted an amendment in its annual appropriations bill — one I supported, including in testimony — defunding any DHS speech-policing activities.

These efforts are imperative to saving free speech in America.


Benjamin Weingarten, editor at large at RealClearInvestigations, recently testified before the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations and Accountability on federal speech-policing.