| > Corporations are not humans (regardless of the "corporate personhood" doctrine) and thus should not be entitled to the full rights of humans. True, but corporations are just connections of people with shared goals. Should groups of people lose "fundamental" rights when they organize? > Fair-weather friends indeed. Yes, I fully support the rights of platforms to do stupid things. Use rumble or whatever if you want. I'll mock those platforms, but I don't think the government should ban them. > Semi-monopolies like Youtube are especially not entitled to use their dominance to manipulate public opinion, given how easily it can be abused. So, you think that we should circumstantially limit constitutionally protected rights, for the greater good? Fair weather friends indeed. |
According to your logic, you should think that common carrier laws should be repealed entirely.
Think, the telephone company blocking certain political groups, or the only water company in town, refusing to deliver water to certain people who say things that they don't like.
It is pretty similar, philosophically. Common carrier laws are pretty uncontroversial.
So it feels weird for you to be making these types of arguments, when it is already established, that there are major counter examples.
So you'd have to either recognize the contradiction, or admit that your position is at odds with other established, and uncontroversial laws.