Commentary
-
Our commentary partners will help you reach your own conclusions on complex topics.
With political correctness having already prevailed for decades over America, then-augmented by the imposition of Wokeism via a burgeoning civil society DEI administrative state, and reinforced by a public-private censorship regime, Americans’ right to think and speak freely was already under heavy assault.
But the recent escalation in the War on Wrongthink, under which dissent has literally been criminalized, has killed the First Amendment.The long-term consequences of our Ruling Class’s effort to crush its political foes are hard to foresee, but in the immediate term it would seem free speech is destined to face a big chill.
Consider some recent events, and the logical conclusions to which they lead us. While President Trump was being indicted in Manhattan, over in Brooklyn Douglass Mackey, a social media influencer, was being convicted over a satirical meme – facing a long stint in jail for a literal thought crime.
He jokingly tweeted out to his followers that they could text a number to vote for Hillary Clinton in the days before the 2016 election, with the hashtag #ImWithHer. 4,900 people did text that number on or around election day – though we have no idea how many of them were actually eligible voters, whether they were actually trying to vote, and if they would’ve ever seen the tweet had the media not given it extensive coverage.
The government characterized this as a dangerous disinformation campaign, as a fraud, but didn’t charge it that way. Instead it convicted him of “Conspiracy Against Rights stemming from his scheme to deprive individuals of their constitutional right to vote.” He faces up to 10 years in prison under a law that punishes people who “injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate” others – that is, who engage in actual aggression against people that violates or threatens to violate their rights, not for sending a meme, an obvious joke. To think his tweets are criminal is anything but a laughing matter.
As former Assistant US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Andy McCarthy put it, the case was a “three-fer: the prosecutorial creation of a crime Congress has not prescribed, the trivialization of civil-rights law, and the intrusion of government as a monitor of political speech.”
So you have to think twice now about what you meme if it relates to politics. And politics is a core part of First Amendment protected speech. What about the right to peaceably assemble, and petition government for a redress of grievances – protesting?
January 6th has put an end to that, at least if you’re on the right. After it was announced that President Trump would be indicted, he called for people to peacefully protest. Few did. On social media the response among prominent pundits and activists alike was this: “Why would I want to end up in a DC gulag like the January 6ers?” As we’ve covered, authorities have treated the Capitol breach as one of the worst terrorist attacks in America history. They have slapped hundreds of defendants with a charge from the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation responding to the Enron scandal never applied before, “obstruction of an official proceeding,” and put the fear of G-d in people who would think about protesting on behalf of the wrong cause.
Jokingly, but with a hint of seriousness, the expectation expressed on social media was that feds would be trying to entrap people – engaging on social media platforms to try and rile them up, get them out on the streets, and then crack down on another insurrection.
How about challenging your local school board? Well as the House Weaponization Committee has clearly demonstrated, the FBI targeted concerned parents, baselessly, as domestic terrorists. So you might want to think twice about questioning your kids’ curriculum.
What about just going to Church? Well now we’ve learned that at least in Virginia, the FBI was targeting “Racially or Ethnically Motivated Violent Extremists in Radical-Traditionalist Catholic Ideology.” The FBI, relying on at least one source there, sought to use local religious organizations as “new avenues for tripwire and source development.”
So be careful about where and how you worship too. And then of course there’s President Trump, facing an indictment without the underlying crime being listed. So who wants to serve at a high level, or any level now? Who wants to staff a future Republican administration given what Trump and everyone in his circle and even at far remove from it who supports him has faced. It is unimaginable what won’t be said about an ever-growing list of highly subjective, contentious, and critical issues – including the most important ones of church and state; it is unimaginable the decent, intelligent, patriotic people who will sit on the sidelines and avoid entering the fray in relation to these issues.
What all of this comes down to is that no dissent from state orthodoxy can be tolerated. In this brave new world, courage, a characteristic already in low supply, is destined to prove the most critical of traits.
So too will prudence and tact. Combatting these literal speech police is going to be one of the defining challenges of our time. Americans of all political persuasions must take it on, or risk losing everything.
-
GEC shutdown strikes a blow to government censorship
The U.S. State Department’s Global Engagement Center (GEC), criticized recently by Elon Musk and Senate Republicans, is set to be shut down as President-elect Trump prepares to take office. The center, tasked with countering foreign disinformation from terrorist organizations and powerful rivals like Russia and China, has faced Republican accusations of overreaching and of targeting… -
Biden’s pardon of Hunter leaves questions unanswered
President Biden’s sweeping pardon of his son, Hunter Biden, has sparked controversy and debate among Americans across the political spectrum. While a father’s pardon of his only living son might be the humane thing to do, as The Economist notes, Biden’s pardon is also unusually broad in its scope, and it could set “a dangerous… -
Jack Smith drops Trump cases, but witch hunt may not be over
The judge overseeing President-elect Trump’s federal election interference case dismissed the charges after special counsel Jack Smith recommended they be dropped, citing a Justice Department policy barring the prosecution of a sitting president. Smith also moved to drop his appeal in the classified records case against Trump, which was dismissed in July 2024 by Trump-appointed… -
Russia-Ukraine war heating up as Biden exits, Trump returns
The Russia-Ukraine war has been heating up in recent weeks following North Korea’s deployment of over 10,000 troops to assist the Russian war effort. President Biden, citing that development and following years of public criticism, is now permitting Ukraine to use U.S.-made long-range missiles against select targets in the Kursk region of Russia. Putin, in… -
Trump’s loyal cabinet picks to drive his policy agenda
The prospective nominees for key cabinet positions in President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming administration have taken Congress by surprise and have triggered alarms from both Democrats and Republicans. Unlike in 2016, when Trump initially assumed office, he is steering clear of anyone he deems insufficiently loyal. Watch the video above as Straight Arrow News contributor Ben…
Latest Opinions
-
Congress unveils stopgap bill to avert shutdown
-
GrubHub agrees to $25m settlement for ‘deceptive’ practices
-
Disney pulls transgender storyline from upcoming Pixar series
-
RFK Jr.’s lawyer: NYT report over polio vaccine petition ‘categorically false’
-
'Dirty Dancing,' 'among 25 films named to National Film Registry
Popular Opinions
-
In addition to the facts, we believe it’s vital to hear perspectives from all sides of the political spectrum.