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Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
The most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from the government and I'm here to help.
Ronald Reagan
When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
Thomas Jefferson
rather, it shall be centered upon whether or not the populace is too reactive and within their lack of education there is implicit cause for over reaction and potential dangerous behaviours motivated by a social medium that fails to implore research and sociological comprehension of their fellow interactors.
Will I be arguing that internet censorship is valid?
No. An Emphatic No.
we can't necessarily adhere to the notion that free communication will result in favorable reactions.
What this would mean is that any ruler, in any country, that saw opinions of him or her, moving in a direction they did not care for, could shut it down. Any ideology could control our currently most powerful voice.
The Nadhmi Auchi webscrubbing continues. Martin Bright of The New Statesman reported April 22, 2008, that the UK's Guardian/Observer "has been forced to pull down five articles about Nadhmi Auchi, the Iraqi businessman convicted of fraud in France in 2003.
This would be the single most powerful weapon a dictator possesses; far exceeding any nuclear arsenal or mass of soldiers.
I don’t believe the Communist Manifesto could have put it any better…
He says this:
Will I be arguing that internet censorship is valid?
No. An Emphatic No.
And yet this:
we can't necessarily adhere to the notion that free communication will result in favorable reactions.
Rationed Items
Tires
Cars
Bicycles
Gasoline
Fuel Oil & Kerosene
Solid Fuels
Stoves
Rubber Footwear
Shoes
Sugar
Coffee
Processed Foods
Meats, canned fish
Cheese, canned milk, fats
Typewriters
At what point to we, as free people agree to get our information on a "Need to Know" basis? Who is it we value and trust enough to decide what we need to know and what we do not?
Who do we give the power to shut us up to?
Socratic Question #1:
"As you mention education in your opening, what level of education do you think a person needs to have a valuable opinion?"
Socratic Question #2
"If a ruler had an Internet Kill Switch, what would prevent them from censoring out information after the switch was thrown?"
Originally posted by semperfortis
Please follow along with us, as I am sure my Opponent will give me a good battle, but in the end I am sure you will decide that:
This has already happened, perhaps not from a dictator but from a British billionaire, which not only highlights the significance of corporate use of legal means to have unfavorable content removed but underscores the motivation for an internet off button...
As presented, there is precedence all ready for the removal of unflattering content from the web
The media is already influenced by corporate interest and is still being manipulated to the extent where it is a possibility that world events and the media's reporting upon them are not only orchestrated but perpetuated in order to control the perception of people
Indeed, a lack of communication globally would be preferable to the often confused communications resulting from the propagation of basic ideology and misdirection that results in a misinformed and reactive population.
Prior to getting caught up in political labels, I would ask the readers to look at the situation instead of being directed by such connotation that is implied by the use of "Communist". The term as it was propagated prior and during The Cold War is a great example of manipulated information propagation.
And this is true. How can one predict that an individual will not get carried away when encountering false information that is believed to be the truth?
What this amounts to is nothing more than a rationing of our attention and resources in times that call for it. Does no one remember how we required the rationing of resources during the second world war?
Nowhere in the proposed bill is there any stipulation that an "internet kill switch" is permanent. It is for the possibility of a cyber attack,
Socratic Question #1 - Are there not protocols in place already to provide information to the populace on a "need to know basis"?
Socratic Question #2 - What possible safeguards can be implemented to prevent any one person from having the power to "shut us up"?
I also hold that the capacity for people to objectively look at a topic/issue to be sorely lacking. There is much personal bias inflecting opinion on any given topic, from religious and moral upbringing to economic concerns.
A duly appointed oversight committee that was forcibly immune to corporate and government influence.
But as I stated earlier, information censorship has already taken place and without this "internet kill switch".
Socratic Question #3 - What is preventing anyone now to censor information on the internet?
Socratic Question #4 - Is it easier to hide relevant information by omitting it all together from the internet or to mix it in with irrelevant social issues?
Socratic Question #5 - Has the internet proved anything more than a means for people to speculate, with bias and lack of information more than it has proven to be a vehicle for populace oversight on corporate/government implementations?
But allotting them an opportunity to remove internet communications does not give them the ability to impinge on our freedom of speech nor does it allot them the ability to keep their skeletons hidden.