Opinion | Twitter May Kill Free Speech
Lawyer, National Review Online columnist and former baseball blogger Dan McLaughlin has delivered a striking warning about the future of free speech if current censorship trends continue on large social platforms.
1. The past few weeks have left me more pessimistic than ever about the future of civil debate in this country, and in particular on this platform. There are people who see civil debate as a threat and will bend their efforts to prevent it.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
2. Twitter can be used for many purposes, but civil debate is one of those – even when "civil" includes a lot of angry rhetoric. We may not persuade each other by arguing, but we allow observers to judge and be persuaded.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
3. The direct and public interaction Twitter permits is fairly unique; few other platforms or social media tools allow totally disparate public figures & public writers to interact and hash things out in the moment. Ideally, that could be a uniquely valuable thing in a democracy.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
4. That ideal has been under particular siege since 2015, and it has gotten worse due to a lot of different sources – longstanding leftist/woke deplatforming & boycott tactics, the Putin/alt-right troll army, the "fight back" MAGA ethos aimed at aping the left.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
5. The key point is that there is now a critical mass of people on Twitter whose view of debate is that you win it not by having better arguments but by taking people on the other side off the field one by one.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
6. Just about everyone of note on the Right has been on the receiving end of this from one or more sources, and frankly it is draining; you spend a lot of your energy just defending your ability to keep speaking.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
7. The real problem is not only that there are people out there with an ethos of "shut the other side up by any means necessary," but that there are increasing numbers of people with big platforms & followings with that ethos, who can command a rage mob at the drop of a hat.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
8. It speaks very, very poorly of the confidence these people have in their ideas that their instinct is to seek out ways to prevent the other side from being heard. And that attitude is spreading. You can see whose followers just don't like debate.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
9. Maybe eventually progressives or MAGAheads will miss having thoughtful people to converse with; I fear not. But at some point, the habits and tactics of Twitter will become ever more standardized elsewhere (we're pretty far down that road). And that is a perlious place.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
10. The culture of free speech can survive rudeness and hyperbole and bald-faced lies a lot better than it can survive intimidation & self-censorship.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
11. Nearly every civil, decent, reasonable, and/or principled conservative writer or pundit I know has faced this over & over, with real, tangible costs & consequences. And when they are done chewing us all up, they will go after the center-left next.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
12. And there is a specially dark place reserved for the people on our own sides who encourage this sort of thing. You may find you need friends some day.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
13. Of course, debate alone does not make for a self-governing society; you need leaders, followers, activists, donors, reporters, etc. But without the part of society that reflects on and refines arguments, we ossify into unexamined warring camps.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
14. Call me an idealist, blame it on my training as a lawyer, but I still believe that civil, reasoned debate serves a valuable function. That so many people have given up on it for the rush of belonging to a crowd or the fear of being contradicted frightens me deeply.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
15. If I stopped believing in reasoned debate, I'd leave political writing in a heartbeat. It's certainly never made me much money compared to what else I could do with my time. I do it because I still believe it matters.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
16. But an awful lot of smart people have come to the conclusion that, despite its great technological and network-effect value for facilitating debate, this is no longer the place for that – or no longer a place where they are safe to try.
They may be right.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) August 30, 2018
Truth and Accuracy
We are committed to truth and accuracy in all of our journalism. Read our editorial standards.
Advertise with The Western Journal and reach millions of highly engaged readers, while supporting our work. Advertise Today.