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Two articles are popping today that I believe are related. Both are reasons for censorship or reasons the left has used to justify censorship.
https://twitter.com/scottgottliebmd/status/1612548694762745856?s=46&t=0qCqhJLXqMO-wn5FoPsWKg
The best he has is some anonymous account saying “execute this bastard”. Obviously with anonymous accounts anyone can just randomly vent and say something mean. It could even be Scott Gottlieb saying this about himself so that he can then asks for censorship of others in the name of “violence”.
Obviously people shouldn’t be threatened but a random message board comment I don’t think rises to the occasion of a real threat - though I’d agree those accounts should be suspended banned that make violent threats. They shouldn’t be used to censor non violent debates.
And the rest of the tweets he cited are not threats but calling him a murder and bastard. Being that he’s citing tweets that are not calls to violence does that means he total received only one anonymous threat to justify censorship of dissenting scientist?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/01/09/russian-trolls-twitter-had-little-influence-2016-voters/
Another claim for censorship especially in 2020 and especially for the Hunter Biden laptop was Russian troll/bots interferes with the 2016 election and now we need to censor people. NYPost/Zerohedge got censored on these justifications.
At first I thought these were both solid culture war stories to post about but didn’t feel like doing two posts. Then I realized their connected and both are weak reasons that have been used for significant censorship and deplatforming.
I agree with your premise, insofar as you're arguing that Twitter engaged in censorship for political purposes that can't be justified by normal standards of rationality. What I don't understand is why I should care. Businesses make decisions all the time, both political and otherwise, that I find disagreeable, but only rarely do they rise to the level that some sort of public call to action seems warranted. And what action is warranted vis a vis Twitter? The people who put these policies into place no longer run the company. Some would argue that government intervention is warranted, but it seems unusual that those (such as yourself, presumably) who are coming at this from a more conservative position would really find this to be the ideal solution, especially considering that a large component of this scandal is that there was already too much government influence of Twitter's content policies.
Twitter is basically the public square and plays a huge role(probably the hugest role) in deciding what will and won’t be newsworthy. Their censorship policies affect us all for that reason.
I feel like one crucial distinction between Twitter and the "public square" is that Twitter is not "public" (as in owned by the public or government or similar entity).
FWIW, the Supreme Court seems to think that, functionally, it is indeed the public square:
Packingham v. North Carolina, 137 S. Ct. 1730, 1737 (2017).
Note also that there is at least an argument that social media companies are state actors because of that functional equivalence, Robins v. Pruneyard Shopping Center, 23 Cal.3d 899 (1979) [Private shopping center cannot bar signature gathers because shopping centers are the modern equivalent of central business districts]. That is not to say that the argument would be a winning one, but @hydroacetylene's argument has a strong pedigree.
Edit: By "That is not to say that the argument would be a winning one," I mean that the argument is not likely to be successful nowadays. My point simply is that OP's argument is not per se illegitimate. It is consistent with past cases, even though it would be an extension thereof, and one not likely to be adopted.
I feel like "the government can ban you from accessing a website" and "website operators are obliged to let you access their site" are quite different legal questions. When I hear discussions about Twitter being a public square it seems much more in the vein of objecting to being banned from Twitter by Twitter, rather than the government.
Also not clear to me what traditional governmental function Twitter is providing that would be analogous for Pruneyard.
The relevant critique is being banned from Twitter by Twitter at the request of the government and whether or not someone would have been banned buttfor the government requests and the implied governmental interventions into Twitters business if they refuse.
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