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| Selwyn Duke |
Last year’s scamnesty bill had widespread support among the powers-that-be, with the president, the Democrat majority and mainstream media all singing its praises. Yet it went down to defeat, slain by a new-media coalition of talk radio and blogosphere warriors. Working tirelessly to expose the truth and rally the grassroots, they became a David who slew a Goliath.
Forty-three years ago it was a different world. Ted Kennedy had co-authored the “Immigration Reform Act of 1965,” which created a situation wherein 85 percent of our immigrants hail from the Third World and Asia. He took to the Senate floor, claimed his brainchild wouldn’t change the demographic composition of the nation and passed the culture-rending bill under the cover of darkness.
This darkness was not absence of light but that of truth; it was a
media blackout. With no Internet and little talk radio, mainstream
journalists had a monopoly over the hearts and minds of America. And
they knew best. The little people didn’t have to worry their pretty
little heads about actions that would forever alter the face of the
nation.
This is why the old media fears the new one. The latter watches the
watchers, polices the police. It has cut into the Rathersphere’s
market, causing a diminution of circulation, viewership and — this is
what really gets their collars up — power. They can no longer
propagandize with Tass-like impunity, for the e-hills have eyes.
Yet this is no time for a victory dance. The new media is under attack,
as the left aims to silence dissent before it grows strong enough to
block the thought police’s coup de grace. This is the race for the
American mind.
And we are losing.
The attack upon free expression is more varied than one may think, but
I’ll start with the obvious. Most have heard of the euphemistically
named “Fairness Doctrine,” which would essentially eliminate
traditionalist talk radio. People such as Rush Limbaugh and Michael
Savage may then be relegated to satellite — assuming they’re willing to
leap into the ether — and its far smaller audience.
Then we have hate-speech laws, which empower governments to punish
people of politically incorrect passions. In Europe, Canada and
elsewhere, average citizens have suffered persecution for criticizing
homosexuality and Islam and voicing other unfashionable truths. And as
hate speech laws become more entrenched and accepted, the list of
taboos of the tongue grows longer — and more widespread. They’re coming
soon to a theater of social operations near you.
And these laws are netting the famous as well as the anonymous. Two
Canadian “Human Rights Commissions” are investigating columnist Mark
Steyn and the country’s bestselling news magazine, Macleans, because it
published an excerpt from Steyn’s book containing criticism of Islam.
In Britain in 2003, Scotland Yard launched an investigation of colorful
commentator Taki Theodoracopulos — not for using more letters in a name
than one ought — but for “inciting racial hatred” by writing that most
criminals in northern English cities were black thugs who belonged to
gangs. Across the North Sea in Germany, a leftist politician filed
charges against the citizen encyclopedia “Wikipedia” because one of its
entries contained too much Nazi symbolism. Here’s the kicker: It was a
piece about the Hitler Youth. Then there’s Jewish historian Arno
Lustiger, who filed a lawsuit in Germany against Vanity Fair magazine
because it published an interview with a neo-Nazi.
While the stout-hearted Mark Steyn won’t end up cooling his heels or
capitulating, the same cannot be said of everyone. Wikipedia caved
quickly and altered its content, and, although we can expect greater
fortitude from more professional operations, the implications are
ominous. As such investigations, charges and lawsuits become more
prevalent and start to stick, the media will be increasingly gun shy
about publishing politically incorrect views. Fewer and fewer will
deviate from the new Tass line, until news and commentary are banal,
barren and bereft of truth.
Surely, though, some of the millions of blogs and other Internet
sources would not be cowed, and it would be hard to arrest every one of
their operators. But the government won’t have to. There’s more than
one way to skin a Constitution.
While the Internet seems like a wild and woolly land of bits and bytes,
just as information can be transmitted at the touch of a button, so can
it be suppressed. Remember, when spreading your message, you’re at the
mercy of an Internet Service Provider (ISP), hosting company and, to a
lesser extent, services that disseminate information, such as search
engines. And as these businesses have already proven, they’re more
interested in currency than current events.
Consider Google’s well-publicized capitulation to communist China.
Using a filter known informally as “The Great Firewall of China,” the
search engine’s Chinese version censors information about the
independence movement in Tibet, the Tiananmen Square protests and
anything else China’s commissars find objectionable.
It seems like Google’s motto “Don’t be evil” should have a corollary: “But cooperating with it is fine.”
It should be noted that Google censors information in its German and French searches as well (and probably elsewhere).
Then there’s Google’s subsidiary YouTube. Early last year it agreed to
remove a video Turks found objectionable after a court in Turkey
ordered that the site should be blocked in that nation. It took YouTube
all of two days to say mercy.
But direct government action isn’t necessary for censorship, as social
pressure often suffices. In fact, the private sector often enforces
“hate speech” codes even where states do not, such as here in the US.
In 2006, pundit Michelle Malkin’s mini-movie “First, They Came”— it
showcases victims of Islamic violence — was deleted by YouTube after
being “flagged” as inappropriate. Malkin isn’t alone, either, as other
anti-Islamism crusaders have not only had videos pulled, but accounts
suspended as well.
Getting back to Google, it has also been censoring traditionalist
websites from its news search for quite some time now; entities such as
The New Media Journal, Michnews.com and The Jawa Report have been
victims, just to name a few.
While these information sources can still be accessed, such censorship
takes its toll. When the most powerful search engine in the world
strikes you from its news service, it reduces both your readership and
the amount of information at users’ fingertips.
Censorship threatens individual activism as well. There are now
countless everyday folks who disseminate information via email,
sometimes to thousands of recipients. It’s a quick, efficient and, most
importantly, free way to sound the alarm about matters of import.
Yet email is far from sacrosanct. Social commentators Dr. David Yeagley
and Amil Imani had their MSN Hotmail accounts terminated for
criticizing Islam. Then there are the proposals to tax or levy fees on
email, a truly stifling measure. It would make bulk transmissions
prohibitively expensive for the average citizen, thereby robbing him of
a resonant Web voice.
It doesn’t take the prescience of Nostradamus to project into the
future. If political correctness continues to capture minds and hearts,
the pressure — both governmental and social — to call truth “hate
speech” and censor it will continue to grow. What happens when search
engines not only purge traditionalist dissent from their news services,
but also their search results? What about when sites won’t publish
such content for fear of being swept away in the ideological
cleansing? These entities will fold like a laptop.
It could reach a point where ISPs won’t service you if you send the
“wrong” kinds of emails and will block “hateful” sites. Don’t forget
that “access forbidden” prompt. At the end of the day — and it may be
the end of days — hosting companies may just decide that such sites’
business is no longer welcome, and registrars may even freeze their
domains (a hosting company provides a site’s “edifice”; a domain is its
“address”). They may be consigned to Internet oblivion.
While these forces march on, we “haters” are busy educating more people
every day about the their nature. This brings us to the race for the
American mind. If we could influence enough citizens to reject
political correctness and oust public officials who serve its ends — if
we could sufficiently transform the culture — the dropping of this iron
muzzle could be forestalled. By spreading the truth we could ensure
that the thought police wouldn’t succeed in suppressing it.
But there’s a reason why I phrased that in the subjunctive.
We are losing.
Education isn’t easy when people aren’t listening. A great victory for
the left is that it has dumbed-down civilization, making people lovers
of frivolity and vice, comfortably numb. It has created legions of
disengaged, apathetic hedonists who wouldn’t read a piece of commentary
if it was pasted to a stripper. Such people can be led by the nose and,
when they occasionally notice the goings-on in their midst, will
welcome the silencing of the “haters.”
And what of us — you? If you are a “hater,” your voice will grow fainter, fainter, fainter ...
Toward the end, perhaps when tired and old, you’ll have no recourse but
to mount a soapbox and preach on some busy corner, as people nervously
avert their eyes or measure you up for a straitjacket. That is, until
the men in white coats or black uniforms come and take you to a happy
place, or a sad one, the last stop in this world for recalcitrants.
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Selwyn Duke is a columnist, public speaker, and Internet entrepreneur whose work has been published widely online and in print.
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