It's nothing new. There are times when liberal reporters get it
right. As we say often, a broken clock is right twice a day, or a blind
squirrel finds a nut. In some instances, very rare instances, the few
who haven’t gone full-communist offer more grounded commentary than any
of their colleagues. Bill Maher has done excellent commentaries on
political correctness, cancel culture and radical Islamic terrorism. He
did a good analysis of the Capitol Hill riot, notably avoiding comparing
the people who stormed the building to the wider Trump and GOP base.
Michael Tracey has been excellent at shredding woke and identity
politics hysteria, along with being one of the original reporters on the
Left to shower tons of skepticism on the Russian collusion allegations.
Glenn Greenwald is another reporter who was forced to flee the
publication he co-founded, The Intercept, because, well, he wrote some
not nice things about Joe Biden.
Greenwald also appeared on Fox News this weekend
to offer his commentary about the state of the media and touched on a
well-known and simple question that was directed at Big Tech: what
credentials do these people possess that allow them to be the
information Stasi? In what universe can social media platforms be the
information police who dictate to us, the customer, which information is
acceptable, and which is not. This comes as Twitter announced that any
account that posts information they considered to be too kooky on COVID
vaccines and the like will face a permanent ban from the platform.
It’s
not a new question, but one that’s disturbing, nonetheless. Greenwald
did note that Silicon Valley never wanted to be the KGB of information,
regulating speech, and purging conservative voices. They wanted to just
be a platform for people to communicate and share their opinions. He
noted that they wanted to be akin to a telephone company. He also added
that what’s even scarier than Big Tech taking this politburo approach to
what’s on their site is Congress leading the charge to regulate speech.
Greenwald noted these people are the targets of journalism. They cannot
be allowed to turn the tables like this.
From this segment with Howard Kurtz, you’d think that Greenwald was a
dyed-in-the-wool conservative. He’s not. The Intercept was founded for
whistleblowers to come forward and leak information without fear of
retaliation.
Still, I think there are also plenty of liberals who
are wary of Big Tech’s power, though for entirely different reasons,
both sides zero in on what bothers them about these companies. They’re
too large, too powerful, and could chip away at democratic norms. For
conservatives, it’s the censoring, purging, and regulation of speech.
For liberals, more or less, it’s the spending of political ads and the
extraction and storage of personal data used for microtargeting. Both
are very powerful tools that these platforms possess. Are they private
companies or public utilities? They’re sprinting into becoming the
latter.
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