Sunday, July 12, 2009

Gag the Internet! An Obama Official's Frightening Book About Curbing Free Speech Online


From the New York Post:

When it comes to the First Amendment, Team Obama believes in Global Chilling.


Cass Sunstein, a Harvard Law professor who has been appointed to a shadowy post that will grant him powers that are merely mind-boggling, explicitly supports using the courts to impose a "chilling effect" on speech that might hurt someone's feelings. He thinks that the bloggers have been rampaging out of control and that new laws need to be written to corral them.


Advance copies of Sunstein's new book, "On Rumors: How Falsehoods Spread, Why We Believe Them, What Can Be Done," have gone out to reviewers ahead of its September publication date, but considering the prominence with which Sunstein is about to be endowed, his worrying views are fair game now. Sunstein is President Obama's choice to head the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. It's the bland titles that should scare you the most.


"Although obscure," reported the Wall Street Journal, "the post wields outsize power. It oversees regulations throughout the government, from theEnvironmental Protection Agency to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Obama aides have said the job will be crucial as the new administration overhauls financial-services regulations, attempts to pass universal health care and tries to forge a new approach to controlling emissions of greenhouse gases."


Sunstein was appointed, no doubt, off the success of "Nudge," his previous book, which suggests that government ought to gently force people to be better human beings.


Czar is too mild a world for what Sunstein is about to become. How about "regulator in chief"? How about "lawgiver"? He is Obama's Obama.


In "On Rumors," Sunstein reviews how views get cemented in one camp even when people are presented with persuasive evidence to the contrary. He worries that we are headed for a future in which "people's beliefs are a product of social networks working as echo chambers in which false rumors spread like wildfire." That future, though, is already here, according to Sunstein. "We hardly need to imagine a world, however, in which people and institutions are being harmed by the rapid spread of damaging falsehoods via the Internet," he writes. "We live in that world. What might be done to reduce the harm?"


Sunstein questions the current libel standard - which requires proving "actual malice" against those who write about public figures, including celebrities. Mere "negligence" isn't libelous, but Sunstein wonders, "Is it so important to provide breathing space for damaging falsehoods about entertainers?" Celeb rags, get ready to hire more lawyers.


Sunstein also believes that - whether you're a blogger, The New York Times or a Web hosting service - you should be held responsible even for what your commenters say. Currently you're immune under section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. "Reasonable people," he says, "might object that this is not the right rule," though he admits that imposing liability for commenters on service providers would be "a considerable burden."


But who cares about a burden when insults are being bandied about? "A 'chilling effect' on those who would spread destructive falsehoods can be an excellent idea," he says.


"As we have seen," Sunstein writes, having shown us no such thing, "falsehoods can undermine democracy itself." What Sunstein means by that sentence is pretty clear: He doesn't like so-called false rumors about his longtime University of Chicago friend and colleague, Barack Obama.


He alludes on page 3 (and on page 13, and 14, and 45, and 54 - the book is only 87 pages) to the supposedly insidious lie that "Barack Obama pals around with terrorists." Since Sunstein intends to impose his Big Chill on such talk, I'd better get this in while I can. The "rumor," i.e., "fact," about the palsy-walsiness of Obama and unrepentant terrorist Bill Ayers (Ayers referred to Obama as a "family friend" in a memoir) did not "undermine democracy," i.e., prevent Obama's election. The facts got out, voters weighed them and ruled that they weren't disqualifying.


Sunstein calls for a "notice and take down" law that would require bloggers and service providers to "take down falsehoods upon notice," even those made by commenters - but without apparent penalty.


Consider how well this nudge would work. You blog about Obama-Ayers. You get a letter claiming that your facts are wrong so you should remove your post. You refuse. If, after a court proceeding proves simply that you are wrong (but not that you committed libel, which when a public figure is the target is almost impossible), you lose, the penalty is . . . you must take down your post.


How long would it take for a court to sort out the truth? Sasha and Malia will be running for president by then. Nobody will care anymore. But it will give politicians the ability to tie up their online critics in court.

Sunstein, trying to fair, argues that libel awards should be capped at $15,000, or at least limited for anyone demonstrating financial hardship. But $15K is the limit you'd pay to your opponent. The legal bill is the scary part, and the reason bloggers already have plenty of reason to be careful about what they say, even if they don't much fear a libel conviction.


Sunstein dreams of an impossibly virtuous America: "We could also imagine a future in which those who spread false rumors are categorized as such, discounted and marginalized . . . people would approach rumors skeptically even they provide comfort and fit their own biases." But if his chilling wind doesn't work, Sunstein may try to make good on the implicit threat that runs through his book: that he would redefine libel as the spread of false information and hold everyone up the ladder responsible.


If this happened, the blogosphere would turn into Pluto overnight. Comments sections would slam shut. Every writer would work on a leash shorter than a shoelace.


Sunstein is an enemy to every news organization and blogger. We should return the favor and declare war on him.




By the way, doesn't Cass Sunstein look totally gay. I'm not saying he is gay. He could be all man. But, he looks totally gay, in my opinion. I mean, I wouldn't be surprised if he sat in cars in back alleys performing fellatio on 18 year old men. I wouldn't be surprised at all. In fact, he looks like the submissive gay type. Like the one who would be doing the fellating and laying prone while being anally probed.

That's what he looks like to me.

What do you guys think? What's your opinion?

Please correct me if you think I'm wrong in my impression. I wouldn't want to accidentally start any false rumors, for God's sake.

6 comments:

andre79 said...

The "liberal progressive" at work.

Responsible Commenter said...

You're right about the fellatio. Rumors like that could spread like wildfire on the net.

As could any speculation that he looks just the kind of guy who enjoys being butt-fucked by animals. So I'd better not mention that, you know how these things get around.

Pastorius said...

You say, he looks like the kind of guy who likes to be butt-fucked by animals???

Wow. Could be. You never know.

I wonder if he has claw marks on his back?

Michael Jackson said...

I know it's completely irrelevant to this discussion, but I just thought I'd mention that some guys get their kicks from sucking little boys' underclothes.

revereridesagain said...

Cass Sunstein totally looks like one of those smirking little fascist twerps who thinks he has the right to label as "falsehoods" opposing opinons and embarrassing facts. The type who grins inanely while proposing to duct tape your mouth shut so you can't express what he calls "false rumors". As if I would trust this little p***k to get the time of day right.

I got news for you, Mamma Cass, sweetie, and that is that if you silence me on the internet with your laws and intimidation you will eventually see some of my favorite "falsehoods" and censored comments tagged in fluorescent spray paint in places you'd never expect to find a nice little ol' senior citizen with a cane. And since that will be a royal pain in the ass and disruption of my peaceful retirement, to say nothing of my sleep patterns, the language is not likely to be polite or sparing of your power-mad cohorts.

How does Sunstein plan to decide which "falsehoods", expressed by whom, hurt whose feelings? We've already seen that some people's feelings are hurt if other people say there is no God. Would Sunstein plan to go after me for saying that, or would he expect a more useful "chilling effect" from censoring a "hurtful" statement such as Obama is pals with a malevolent psycho Weathercouple whose fellow gang members blew up a house 3 blocks from where I was sitting and if they think that was just fine I assume he does too. I mean, which opinion is more likely to offend his delicate liberal sensitivities?

Now, I don't support spreading false rumors in cyberspace, but I'd just like to say, HEY SUNSTEIN -- GET YOUR FACE OUT OF THAT DRAG QUEEN'S CROTCHLESS PANTIES AND PAY ATTENTION!

You do not decide for someone else what makes him/her a "better human being". You do not label the opinions of others "falsehoods just because you don't share them. You do not initite force to silence those with whom you do not agree. Because if you do, you become a fascist thug excercising illegitimate power over victims you have rendered defenseless and that makes you what Tom Cruise's looney little clubmates like to call

"FAIR GAME".

Pastorius said...

RRA,
Amen.

I can't figure out is Sunstein looks more like a gay who likes young men, or a bestial submissive. I'm having trouble.