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Former Secretary of State John Kerry has drawn attention with remarks that some critics interpret as a critique of the First Amendment and its protections of free speech. During a recent discussion, Kerry voiced concerns about the role of social media in shaping public discourse and the challenges it creates for democratic governance.
Kerry lamented the difficulty of building consensus in todayās political climate, attributing much of the problem to the decline of traditional fact-checking institutions and the rise of self-selected media consumption. āThe referees we used to have to determine whatās a fact and what isnāt a fact, theyāve been eviscerated,ā Kerry said, adding that the First Amendment poses a āmajor blockā to curbing misinformation from certain media outlets.
He said:
I think the dislike of and anguish over social media is just growing and growing and growing. Itās part of our problem, particularly in democracies, in terms of building consensus around any issue. Itās really hard to govern today. The referees we used to have to determine whatās a fact and what isnāt a fact, theyāve been eviscerated to a certain degree. People go and then people self-select where they go for their news or for their information, and then you just get into a vicious cycle. Itās really, really hard, much harder to build consensus today than at any time in the ā45s For 50 years, Iāve been involved in this. Thereās a lot of discussion now about how you curb those entities in order to guarantee that youāre going to have some accountability on facts, et cetera. But look, if people go to only one source, and the source they go to is sick and has an agenda, and theyāre putting out this information, our First Amendment stands as a major block to the ability to be able to just hammer it out of existence. So what you need, what we need, is to win the ground, win the right to govern by, hopefully, winning enough votes that youāre free to be able to implement change.
-John Kerry
John Kerry Says First Amendment is a Major Roadblock for Government
theyāre putting out this information, our First Amendment stands as a major block to the ability to be able to just hammer it out of existence
originally posted by: FlyersFan
Why is that guy still blathering?
He should have been put in jail decades ago. He tossed his medals over the fence at the White House rejecting them, but then went on to claim them when he ran for POTUS. That's stolen valor. And he went to France and negotiated with the enemy during Vietnam when that was totally against the law in America.
Itās really, really hard, much harder to build consensus today than at any time in the ā45s For 50 years, Iāve been involved in this. Thereās a lot of discussion now about how you curb those entities in order to guarantee that youāre going to have some accountability on facts, et cetera.
originally posted by: DBCowboy
originally posted by: Annee
Question: You have a family of 5.
2 parents, 3 kids various ages (college, high school, grade school).
Do you allow everyone to say whatever they want?
You're equating government to parental status.
Logical fail.
originally posted by: Annee
Question: You have a family of 5.
2 parents, 3 kids various ages (college, high school, grade school).
Do you allow everyone to say whatever they want?
originally posted by: Annee
Question: You have a family of 5.
2 parents, 3 kids various ages (college, high school, grade school).
Do you allow everyone to say whatever they want?
originally posted by: Annee
originally posted by: DBCowboy
originally posted by: Annee
Question: You have a family of 5.
2 parents, 3 kids various ages (college, high school, grade school).
Do you allow everyone to say whatever they want?
You're equating government to parental status.
Logical fail.
Iām equating a group of various thoughts and ages.
Try the simplicity.