Murray N Rothbard
Member
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2012
- Messages
- 317
Big Tech bans and censorship, etc is not about "safety" nor "free speech," it's about PROPERTY
The news headlines and online reactions I'm seeing to actions by Twitter, facebook, et al are pretty discouraging. Not only do Liberals of course not get it and continue to drag us down the slippery slope of defending these companies on the grounds of "safety" and "reasonable limits" on free speech, but conservatives are even worse. There is so much outrage and butthurt they are practically inviting government to step in and regulate websites and the internet.
What Twitter, facebook, et al are doing might be annoying but we should defend it, and re-frame the entire issue, as in this article (https://mises.org/power-market/property-rights-vs-freedom-expression?page=1). Ultimately this is not about who or what "should be allowed" on Twitter but who has the right to control of their PROPERTY- their data, their servers, all the physical things keeping them online. This is rightfully theirs and not ours to regulate, same as gold and guns. Whether it's banning Nazis or Conservatives or Donald f'ing Duck, for whatever reason, is irrelevant.
I think strategically this is important for a few reasons. a) Property rights are fundamental to us and a basis for almost every Libertarian position. b) Liberals have no concept whatsoever of property rights and helping them use this defense helps when it's applied to other issues c) Many conservatives seem to be losing their own grasp of what property rights are, and need to accept that it's not always pretty.
Principles exist for this exact type of situation, not for when they're convenient or immediately to our personal benefit, but for when it's difficult, unpopular, even painful to defend them. This why books like Walter Block's "Defending the undefendable" (https://mises.org/library/defending-undefendable) are written. We don't "even" defend things like price gouging, prostitutes, drugs, etc, we especially defend them.
/my 2 cents
The news headlines and online reactions I'm seeing to actions by Twitter, facebook, et al are pretty discouraging. Not only do Liberals of course not get it and continue to drag us down the slippery slope of defending these companies on the grounds of "safety" and "reasonable limits" on free speech, but conservatives are even worse. There is so much outrage and butthurt they are practically inviting government to step in and regulate websites and the internet.
What Twitter, facebook, et al are doing might be annoying but we should defend it, and re-frame the entire issue, as in this article (https://mises.org/power-market/property-rights-vs-freedom-expression?page=1). Ultimately this is not about who or what "should be allowed" on Twitter but who has the right to control of their PROPERTY- their data, their servers, all the physical things keeping them online. This is rightfully theirs and not ours to regulate, same as gold and guns. Whether it's banning Nazis or Conservatives or Donald f'ing Duck, for whatever reason, is irrelevant.
I think strategically this is important for a few reasons. a) Property rights are fundamental to us and a basis for almost every Libertarian position. b) Liberals have no concept whatsoever of property rights and helping them use this defense helps when it's applied to other issues c) Many conservatives seem to be losing their own grasp of what property rights are, and need to accept that it's not always pretty.
Principles exist for this exact type of situation, not for when they're convenient or immediately to our personal benefit, but for when it's difficult, unpopular, even painful to defend them. This why books like Walter Block's "Defending the undefendable" (https://mises.org/library/defending-undefendable) are written. We don't "even" defend things like price gouging, prostitutes, drugs, etc, we especially defend them.
/my 2 cents
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