House Democrats, Targeting Right-Wing Cable
Outlets, Are Assaulting Core Press Freedoms
Democrats' justification for silencing their
adversaries online and in media -- "they are
spreading fake news and inciting extremism" --
is what despots everywhere say.
By Glenn Greenwald
February 24, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - Not even
two months into their reign as the majority
party that controls the White House and both houses
of Congress, key Democrats have made clear that one
of their top priorities is censorship of divergent
voices. On Saturday, I
detailed how their escalating official campaign
to coerce and threaten social media companies into
more aggressively censoring views that they dislike
— including by summoning social media CEOs to appear
before them for the third time in less than five
months — is implicating, if not already violating,
core First Amendment rights of free speech.
Now they are going further — much further. The
same Democratic House Committee that is demanding
greater online censorship from social media
companies now has its sights set on the removal of
conservative cable outlets, including Fox News, from
the airwaves.
The House Energy and Commerce Committee on Monday
announced a February 24 hearing, convened by one
of its sub-committees, entitled “Fanning the Flames:
Disinformation and Extremism in the Media.” Claiming
that “the spread of disinformation and extremism by
traditional news media presents a tangible and
destabilizing threat,” the Committee argues: “Some
broadcasters’ and cable networks’ increasing
reliance on conspiracy theories and misleading or
patently false information raises questions about
their devotion to journalistic integrity.”
Since when is it the role of the U.S. Government
to arbitrate and enforce precepts of “journalistic
integrity”? Unless you believe in the right of the
government to regulate and control what the press
says — a power which the First Amendment explicitly
prohibits — how can anyone be comfortable with
members of Congress arrogating unto themselves the
power to dictate what media outlets are permitted to
report and control how they discuss and analyze the
news of the day?
But what House Democrats are doing here is far
more insidious than what is revealed by that creepy
official announcement. Two senior members of that
Committee, Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Silicon-Valley) and
Rep. Jerry McNerney (D-CA) also sent their own
letters to seven of the nation’s largest cable
providers — Comcast, AT&T, Spectrum, Dish, Verizon,
Cox and Altice — as well as to digital distributors
of cable news (Roku, Amazon, Apple, Google and Hulu)
demanding to know, among other things, what those
cable distributors did to prevent conservative
“disinformation” prior to the election and after —
disinformation, they said, that just so happened to
be spread by the only conservative cable outlets:
Fox, Newsmax and OANN.
In case there was any doubt about their true goal
— coercing these cable providers to remove all cable
networks that feature conservative voices, including
Fox (just as their counterparts on that Committee
want to ban right-wing voices from social media) —
the House Democrats in their letter said explicitly
what they are after: namely, removal of those
conservative outlets by these cable providers:
Congresswoman Eshoo
boasted on her official site about these
efforts, lauding herself and McNerney for “urging 12
cable, satellite, and streaming TV companies to
combat the spread of misinformation and requesting
more information about their actions to address
misinformation, disinformation, conspiracy theories,
and lies spread through channels they host.”
For the last four years, we were
inundated with media messaging that Trump
posed an unprecedented threat to press freedoms.
The Washington Post even
flamboyantly
adopted a new motto to implicitly ratify that
accusation (while claiming it was not
Trump-specific). Other than the indictment of Julian
Assange — which most Washington Democrats cheered —
what did the Trump administration do in the way of
attacking press freedoms that remotely compares to
Democrats abusing their majoritarian power to force
the removal of conservative cable outlets from the
airwaves, just days after doing the same with
dissident voices online?
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There is not a peep of protest from any liberal
journalists. Do any of the people who spent four
years pretending to care so deeply about the vital
role of press freedom have anything to say about
this full frontal attack by the majority party in
Washington on news outlets opposed to their
political agenda and ideology?
Evidently not. While many conservative outlets
are
covering this story, it is difficult to find any
liberal outlets writing about it at all. An
article from The New York Times was one
exception, though it largely attempted to justify
these censorship efforts, with paragraph after
paragraph purporting to demonstrate the dangerous
misinformation spread by these channels. The only
nods to the dangers of press freedoms in the article
came from statements by Fox News and a GOP member of
the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
Revealingly, these same two members of Congress
who sent this threatening letter to cable providers
said during the Trump years that freedom of the
press must be safeguarded at all costs. “The First
Amendment prohibits Congress from making laws that
abridge the freedom of the press, and we cherish our
country's culture of free expression,” they intoned
when
writing to the FCC in 2019 to complain that
Russian news outlets were concealing their
affiliation with the Kremlin. “We're not requesting
any press censorship,” they assured the FCC under
Trump. Yet they are clearly doing exactly that now.
In a
statement he emailed to me and publicly posted,
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr denounced the
Democrats’ actions as a “marked departure from First
Amendment norms.” He said “it is a chilling
transgression of the free speech rights that every
media outlet in this country enjoys.” In response to
my inquiries, Commissioner Carr added in a separate
statement to me:
The greatest threat to free speech in America
today is not any law passed by the
government—the First Amendment stands as a
strong bulwark against that form of censorship
by state action. The threat comes in the form
of legislating by letterhead. Politicians have
realized that they can silence the speech of
those with different political viewpoints by
public bullying. The letter sent by two senior
Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce
Committee to cable companies and other regulated
entities, and the Committee’s own hearing this
week on “disinformation in the media,” are the
latest examples. They are singling out selected
newsrooms for their coverage of political events
and sending a clear message that these media
outlets will pay a price if they do not align
their viewpoints with Democrat orthodoxy. That
is a chilling transgression of free speech and
journalistic freedom. No government official
has any business inquiring about the ‘moral
principles’ that guide a private entity’s
decision about what news to carry.
Carr’s GOP colleague on the FCC, Commissioner
Nathan Simington, similarly
accused House Democrats of seeking to
“intimidate into silence those who would distribute
on their platforms disfavored points of view.”
The way Democrats justify this
to themselves is important to consider. They do not,
of course, explicitly acknowledge that they are
engaged in authoritarian assaults on free speech and
a free press. Not even the most despotic tyrants
like to think of themselves in that way. All tyrants
concoct theories and excuses to justify their
censorship as noble and necessary.
Indeed, the justifying script Democrats are using
here is the one most commonly employed by autocrats
around the world to silence their critics. Those
they seek to silence are not merely expressing a
different view, but are dangerous. They are
not merely advocating alternative ideologies but are
destabilizing society with lies, fake news, and
speech that deliberately incites violence,
subversion and domestic terrorism.
In her
boastful posting, Rep. Eshoo says her efforts
targeting these cable outlets are necessary because
“misinformation on TV has led to our current
polluted information environment that radicalizes
individuals to commit seditious acts and rejects
public health best practices, among other issues in
our public discourse.” This is the rationale invoked
by virtually every repressive state to imprison
journalists and ban media outlets.
The Democrats sound a great deal like the
Egyptian regime of Gen. Abdel el-Sisi. Just two
weeks ago, Sisi’s regime finally
released an Al Jazeera journalist who
had been imprisoned for four years based on
accusations that he had “spread false news” and was
guilty of “incitement against state institutions and
broadcasting false news with the aim of spreading
chaos.” Sound familiar? It should, since that is
precisely what House Democrats are saying to ennoble
their multi-pronged assault on free expression.
Accusing one’s domestic opponents of being
subversives and domestic terrorists is by far the
most common way that despots on every continent
justify their censorship and silencing campaigns of
oppositional media outlets. In 2014, the French
journalist Valeria Costa-Kostritsky
warned in the Index on Censorship that
anti-terrorism laws and accusations of promoting
subversion were becoming the primary means which
authoritarian states from Turkey and Jordan to
Russia and the UAE use to justify the silencing of
journalists:
Anti-terror legislation seems to be the
perfect tool for a state seeking to crack down
on opposition. “It’s so elusive. You can [see]
anything as terrorist propaganda. There needn’t
be any evidence of violence, any praise of
violence. Plus, if you blame someone for having
a connection with the [Kurdistan Workers’ Party]
the public buys that argument easily, especially
in a country that is suffering from terrorism,
as Turkey is,” said Sevgi Akarçeşme, former
editor-in-chief of Turkey’s Today’s Zaman
(the English-language edition of daily Zaman),
who had her newspaper taken over by the
government in March 2016.
A similar means used by repressive governments to
silence disfavored media outlets is to claim they
are promoting “extremism.” As Costa-Kostritsky
detailed:
There’s another word one can use to browse
through reports published on the [Mapping Media
Freedom] map: “extremism”. Anti-extremism
legislation is used to intimidate journalists in
post-Soviet countries, particularly in Russia.
On the map, of the 35 incidents flagged with
“extremism”, 11 took place in Russia, and seven
in Crimea, others include Belgium, Italy,
Hungary, France and Spain. Five reports
connecting the media to “extremism” took place
during the first half of 2016. They include
website closures and journalists being put on a
list of extremists. In Russia, most cases using
anti-extremism legislations against journalists
happen via Roskomnadzor, the national media
regulator.
And accusing journalists of spreading “fake news”
— always a dangerously vague term from its inception
— is equally commonplace when government authorities
want to silence media outlets. The Washington
Post
reported that “as 2019 draws to a close, there
are 30 journalists in jail worldwide on charges of
‘false news’ — or, as it’s also called these days,
‘fake news.’” In sum:
It has now become commonplace to throw around
fake-news accusations in the United States. But
in other countries around the world — like
Egypt, Turkey, Somalia and Cameroon — such
charges can have very chilling and stifling
impacts on the press, according to an annual
report by the New York-based Committee to
Protect Journalists.
In Egypt — where General-turned-President
Abdel Fatah al-Sissi has been overseeing a
crackdown that human rights groups say is
harsher than any before — there are 21
journalists in jail for allegedly publishing “false
news,” according to the CPJ’s data. In
practice, press freedom advocates say, these
charges stem from a simple fact: The journalists
published news that Sisi didn’t like.
In a passage that the Post would only
publish about foreign countries but never about
House Democrats, even though it now applies equally,
they observed: “There is a serious global problem of
disinformation spreading online and sowing distrust
and sectarianism. The problem, say press advocates,
is that the laws regulating fake news all too often
are a means of stifling the media rather than
fostering a more transparent environment online.”
This framework is hardly rare in the west
either. When the Obama administration
collaborated with the UK Government in 2013
to detain my husband David Miranda at Heathrow
Airport in connection with the work he was doing
in the Snowden reporting, they
cited an anti-terrorism law to
justify his detention, and repeatedly threatened
to prosecute him for terrorism if he
did not cooperate by providing all of his
passwords to them. He ultimately
prevailed in his lawsuit against the U.K.
Government on the ground that it constitutes an
illegal assault on press freedoms and human
rights to abuse anti-terrorism frameworks to
intimidate or silence journalists.
Justifying the silencing of journalists by
accusing them of inciting domestic terrorism and
extremism is now the most common means used globally
for censorsing the press. The Committee to Protect
Journalists in 2013
said they had “tracked a significant rise injournalist imprisonments.” The culprit,
said the group, was “the expansion of anti-terrorism
and national security laws worldwide” after the 9/11
attack, which had been repeatedly abused to
criminalize media outlets. “The number of
journalists jailed worldwide hit 232 in 2012, 132 of
whom were held on anti-terror or other national
security charges.” In sum: “CPJ’s analysis has found
that governments have exploited these laws to
silence critical journalists.”
Are there conspiracy theories and disinformation
sometimes found on the conservative cable outlets
which House Democrats want taken off the air? Of
course there are: all media outlets
disseminate conspiracy theories and fake news at
times. MSNBC and CNN spent four years endorsing the
most deranged conspiracy theory imaginable, one with
very toxic roots in the Cold War: namely, the
McCarthyite script that the Kremlin had taken over
control of key U.S. institutions through sexual
blackmail over the President, invasions into the
nation’s heating system and
electric grid, and
criminal conspiracy between Moscow and the Trump
campaign to hack into Democrats’ emails.
All of that was false, just as the one-month tale
told
over and over by the media about a pro-Trump mob
murdering Brian Sicknick by bludgeoning him to death
with a fire extinguisher
was false — a story which remains unretracted or
corrected by most who spread it.
Just imagine if, during the Trump years, the GOP
Senate had abused its power to bully cable outlets
into removing MSNBC from their platforms, or banning
liberal journalists and activists from using social
media platforms, on the grounds that they were
spreading conspiracy theories and fake news. It is
hard to overstate how extreme the rhetoric would
have been that Trump and the Republicans were
engaged in authoritarian measures to destroy free
speech and a free press.
And I would have joined in those denunciations
(as I
did with the Assange prosecution): as much as I
loathe so much of what those outlets do, it is not
the role of the government to regulate let alone
silence them. The corrective is for journalists to
rebuild trust and faith with the public by exposing
their misinformation and proving to the public that
they will do accurate and reliable reporting
regardless of which faction is aggrandized or
angered.
But corporate media outlets and Democrats (excuse
the redundancy) who spent the last four years
posturing as virulent defenders of press freedoms
never meant it. Like so much of what they claimed to
believe, it was fraudulent. The proof is that they
are now mute, if not supportive, as Democrats use
their status as majority party to launch an assault
against press freedoms far more egregious than
anything Trump got close to doing.
Glenn Greenwald is a journalist,
constitutional lawyer, and author of four New York
Times bestselling books on politics and law. His
most recent book, “No Place to Hide,” is about the
U.S. surveillance state and his experiences
reporting on the Snowden documents around the world.
Prior to co-founding The Intercept, Greenwald’s
column was featured in The Guardian and Salon.
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