| The government isn't a private organization in that only the government can put people in jail. This is what freedom of speech is really about: the ability to say just about anything and not be fined or imprisoned. But it has never guaranteed that you'd have a platform from which to say those things... which is the same guarantee you get from Facebook or anywhere else. Goverment: no guarantee of a place to speak, cannot put you in jail because of the First Amendment. Facebook: no quarantee of a place to speak, cannot put you in jail because they're not the government. Also, it's unclear what legal mechanism could even be put in place to prevent companies from banning and censoring. And it's fraught with problems because you're trying to guarantee a platform, something the First Amendment never intended. Are companies allowed to delete comments? What if they're old comments? Do you have to keep them forever? Who pays for that? Can you delete porn? The First Amendment allows you to say "f--k" over and over and over as long as you're not threatening. Can you imagine people on, say, a religious board posting that over and over? And the organization wasn't allowed to censor it? It's a massive can of worms. Finally, on my blog I want the freedom to delete any comments for any reason or for no reason. |
Here is a deliberately hyperbolic scenario to illustrate the problem:
If a future government sold all their land to private interests who have opinions about what can and cannot be said, then undesirable people have nowhere to stand while doing the speaking, and those private entities can punish those they don’t like thanks to trespass laws.
This feels like it would de-facto remove freedom of speech even if the government itself passed no new laws.
> It's a massive can of worms.
Agreed 100%, that’s the point of my disclaimers about not knowing enough to have strong, well-defined opinions, nor having relevant skills, both near the start and end of my previous comment.