Why Censorship Further Divides America, and How Young People Are Protecting the First Amendment
While younger Americans are finding ways to engage in much-needed discourse outside mainstream platforms, we must develop resilience to accept the consequences of free speech (9 min read.)
The freer a nation, the harder it is for that nation’s government to suppress the voice of its people. On this note, the First Amendment is our best defense against the government—and the most effective weapon against tyranny and totalitarianism.
Protecting the heart of the First Amendment means guarding the flow of ideas and inviting discussion around those ideas. The biggest misunderstanding about the First Amendment is that it protects individuals against offensive language and harmful ideas spurred by their fellow citizens.
Reasoning vs. offense taken
When we are at the receiving end of passive-aggressive comments or downright harsh words, it is not unusual to feel upset or outraged and start conjuring thoughts of revenge. Unfortunately, this kind of intense, emotional response has plagued colleges for several years now, inspiring protests to ban speakers perceived as hate-mongering or divisive, leaving their ideas unchallenged.
The problem is that the outrage and offense taken are incompatible with dispassionate reasoning.
Consider the following: to pass any regulation of speech through government checks and balances requires a compelling interest deemed necessary instead of preference or choice. For example, the necessity to prevent fraud is a compelling interest.
An agreement following a dialogue that results in fraudulent activity is not a form of speech that someone can choose to ignore, as might be the case with experienced “hate speech.” There is no better way to regulate such speech than to ban it entirely; it is a lawless act described objectively, which can deny an individual of their livelihood and property.
Yet, many advocates contend that hate speech can be clearly defined as “public speech that expresses hate or encourages violence towards a person or group based on...race, religion, sex, or sexual orientation.”
But how is hate speech defined, and which—wait for it—expert gets to provide its definition. Many of us cynical skeptics would say whatever Apple, Google, Twitter and Facebook say it is on a given day or, more to the point, whatever the powers-to-be with overriding influence on these mammoth bigger-than-government companies say it is going to be.
Hate speech does not equate to physical violence
As we experience it, hate speech can be very unpleasant to sensitive beings. Yet, as unkind and displeasing the nature of hate speech, it is not physical violence.
To those of us who hear words spewed from a place of ignorance or hostility, it might be challenging to differentiate such language from actual physical violence, especially when feeling distraught. Some would even argue that the pain felt might lead us to self-harm.
However, when someone punches us in the face, it is almost impossible to ignore them. Unlike the act of physical violence, hate-ridden words will do as much damage as we allow. Moreover, some will indeed struggle more than others. We can block a particular user, strategically argue with that annoying co-worker and challenge someone’s rhetoric, assuming they are open to listening.
The risk of equating physical violence to hate speech is that violence itself may become a justified response. For example, suppose someone feels provoked enough to lash out at the wrongdoer spewing hate speech and then declares that such a reaction is justified towards the perpetrator.
Considering the case of Brandenburg vs. Ohio (1969), the Supreme Court examined whether a Ku Klux Klan speaker was convicted adequately under an Ohio criminal syndicalism law. The Court established that speech advocating illegal conduct is protected under the First Amendment and put forward a test: (1) speech can be prohibited if it is “directed at inciting or producing imminent lawless action” and (2) it is “likely to incite or produce such action.”
In other words, speech that may result in lawless acts fails this test. Speech that may lead someone to engage in lawless conduct but is not considered imminent fails this test. Nowadays, out of caution, an ex-boyfriend might receive a knock on the door from the police if he threatens to harm his former girlfriend on social media.
Building emotional resilience and assertiveness
Let us play a spade as a spade. Currently, in America, major cities have been awash with demonstrations and protests. However, when a public speaker with a libertarian or conservative disposition promotes ideas that many find offensive, are we going to conclude the speaker is engaging in hate speech and have their voice restricted?
In China, harshly criticizing the Chinese Communist Party can reduce someone’s social credit score, depriving them of transportation benefits, or even be made to ‘vanish’ depending on the severity of the criticism. In Russia, playing Pokemon or reposting a video to raise awareness of the ills of child abuse can get someone arrested.
Every justification for surrendering freedom will knock off another brick from the framework of American civilization.
Freedom of expression comes at the cost of potentially feeling upset and cast aside. Therefore, we must rise to the challenge of asserting ourselves against offensive speech, whether passive-aggressive, unintentionally hurtful or abrasively disrespectful. When confronted with repugnant ideas, we cannot hide behind the government because we do not have the stamina to assert ourselves and then allow our self-esteem to crumble.
Where are the bastions of free speech today?
Colleges, in particular, are often considered champions of free speech. Seriously, if there is one place in America given to exploring and debating ideas without the fear of being bullied off campus, it should be at college.
Yet, we have learned that multiple colleges have taken it upon themselves to disinvite conservative speakers like Ben Shapiro and John Derbyshire. Alternatively, activist groups have shouted down speakers, such as Nicholas Dirks, whom they failed to ban due to disagreements with that speaker’s perspective and were highly offended by their presence.
For all the attacks on the First Amendment by de-platforming users from social media networks, silencing medical doctors who question the consensus of The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and knocking off Republican politicians who post “harmful” information, there is still—as hard as it may be to believe—there is still hunger and desire among young Americans to exchange and debate ideas, however uncomfortable this might make some people feel. Because this is America.
The framework of America and its ideals, given to us by the Founding Fathers, continues to stand against every un-Constitutional blow because there are still enough people in America who are willing to live by those ideals—even if they’re not fully aware of it.
Originally from New Zealand, millennial Hamish McKenzie co-founded Substack in 2017. The online newsletter platform is pretty hands-off around content moderation. Consequently, the site has hosted writers such as retired tech entrepreneur Steve Kirsch, who has shared and discussed a wealth of statistical and medical data relating to the efficacy and safety of the post-lockdown injections while banned elsewhere on the Internet.
Another millennial, Andrew Torba, is an entrepreneur from northeastern Pennsylvania. As a conservative and Christian, he launched the social media website Gab.com in 2016 after leaving Silicon Valley. Torba and his team have worked to keep Gab online despite being de-platformed from payment processors and mobile app stores in response to the company’s firm stance on free speech. Consequently, Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, banned on Twitter earlier this year, can use Gab to share her message with millions of users.
A more recent online streaming platform, cozy.tv, was launched in late 2021 after the site’s CEO, Gen Z political commentator and activist Nicholas J. Fuentes, was banned from streaming on DLive. Although Fuentes has expressed that he doesn’t believe in free speech “in itself,” the platform has witnessed growing discourse between streamers across the entire political spectrum, allowing much-needed and often uncomfortable conversations between Gen Z-ers and millennials. This includes the nature of transgenderism, the commercialization of Pride month, the 13th Amendment and solutions toward reducing bigotry. It is a glimpse into the uncensored interaction between a subset of young people in America when gloves are off, which many viewers might consider vulgar, offensive and discriminatory. However, what is significant is that one experiences the tension between differing viewpoints and, against the occasional throw of insults, a genuine attempt to understand one another.
Free speech is the only defense against ideas that don’t work
Indeed, one of the roles of the First Amendment is to invite debate, discourse, dispute and discussion. Speech can often be very provoking: it may attack preconceived ideas and have deeply troubling effects on prejudices as ingrained beliefs are challenged against another viewpoint.
It is a fact of life that, sometimes, no amount of effort to build bridges will diffuse tensions between communities or throw a wedge into the ideas that one might consider harmful toward fostering a shared national unity.
So let us find the strength to develop resilience within ourselves without surrendering one of our cherished freedoms enshrined in the First Amendment. For example, speech that stirs animosity towards another or triggers behavior that may result in violence can be challenged with ideas that promote solidarity and, to a degree, mutual understanding.
Suppressing the language of perceived flawed ideas does not eradicate those ideas: they are pushed into small echo chambers and, if left unchallenged, gain more momentum to influence younger and younger minds.
It is impossible to completely vaporize an idea from existing in the minds of others: it will continue to linger after the original genius who composed a particular viewpoint is long gone or forgotten by the history books.
The only way to challenge and expose an ill-conceived idea is to break down and dispute that very idea with reasoning and then offer a superior alternative. It will be problematic to dissolve such ideas by pushing them into the midst of the dark web or online forums such as 4Chan or 8Chan. In other words, censorship will merely add more oxygen to these ideas, and they will continue to grow.
Only through confronting these ideas and participating in an intellectually robust debate will we be able to distinguish between ideas that work and ideas that are poorly thought-out and often contradict the American ideals.
Achieving solidarity and societal growth
Finding ways to live in the same space, and sometimes that will mean keeping a safe distance apart, will not come to fruition if people with diverse viewpoints cannot express their ideas without fear of being shouted down. And this is precisely why those who adamantly stick to poor ideas are likely to squash dissenting views because, deep down, they accept their ideas will not rise to the challenge of being scrutinized in an intellectually robust discussion.
In a historically democratic republic, and a very young republic—yes, that is America and not China, North Korea, Russia or Iran—when ideas are discussed and debated freely, we are being invited to discover strategies that allow for societal progress and foster solidarity among fellow citizens. It is another powerful reason why we have the First Amendment.
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