Weekend Linkage

Paleo Retiree writes:

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Is Platform Access a Civil Right?

Fenster writes:

In the newly-resuscitated online journal Human Events, Will Chamberlain asserts that platform access is a civil right, and makes a modest proposal regarding how government can play a positive role in furthering those rights and the benefits he believes will flow from such action.

Platform access is a civil right.

You should now have the same right to speak on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram that you do in a public park.

This is not the current state of the law. The Supreme Court has made it clear that the First Amendment does not prevent private actors from restricting speech, except in rare circumstances. And no current legislation recognizes platform access as a civil right.

At this early stage in Chamberlain’s argument I was having my doubts.  I tend to instinctively recoil at arguments made in “rights” terms.  Many goods that government may choose to provide–or not–are often championed as being necessary to further this or that “right” (see, for instance, this list of 3.8 million Google hits for the phrase “right to higher education”).

My skepticism does not arise from a right-wing aversion to government.  In fact it arises from something of the opposite: I generally feel that subject to self-made boundaries like constitutional ones government is sovereign and ought to be able to do what it likes in furtherance of the public interest.

Do we choose to provide free higher education to all?  I may not agree with that policy prescription (and I do not) but if we choose to do so–fine, let us do so.  But that is a choice not an instance of our having to follow the demands of a newly-discovered “right” to higher education.  And in my own view of the world, which partakes of New England pragmatism, this would be a choice even if proponents,  in the securing of some invented right, relied on the Platonic version.

But there is more than one way of making an argument based on rights.  The weaker way, per the above, presumes a commandment of some sort based on a Writ of Heaven, a newly-found emanation/penumbra from the Constitution or just passion and interest passing itself off as self-evident compelled virtue.

By contrast the stronger way accepts that humans are in the main responsible for figuring out how they wish to order the world in which they live, and that the establishment of rights—by humans, by consent—is a perfectly acceptable way to do that.

Yes, the constellation of rights we take to be American are rooted in a Constitutional vision that was in its own way influenced by natural rights arguments.  But just as courts should not be overly active in extending rights via emanations and penumbras so too should legislators refrain from a too-zealous assertion that some abstract non-existent right compels a given outcome.

Perhaps you think my two paths represent a distinction without a difference.  Granted, a right asserted to have prior existence may be revealed on close examination as simply a contrivance we’ve invented because we favor the outcome it may secure.  But there is a distinction, I believe, and a valid one, when one considers the process of government.

We take ourselves to be a republic.  That is a form of self-government, one that relies on subtle virtues that appear in short supply.  My distinction turns more on those virtues than on the nature of the right itself.

Haven’t we already lost too many habits of self-government?  The assertion that we are compelled to an outcome because of a right risks more self-enervation when we plainly need less.  The growth of the administrative state is in large part a result of the legislative branch losing its nerve.  Better we should have lawmakers willing to play the difficult cards the Constitution has dealt them, and to face issues squarely.

The good news relative to the article is that as Chamberlain goes on it becomes apparent that he is advancing his rights-based argument more on the latter approach than the former one.  He does not assert that we are compelled to act on abstract principle.  The gist of his argument is that government has an obligation to create a world that its citizens find satisfactory, and that the nation will be better off by extending free speech into the ostensibly private realms of Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

It is true that he uses something of the emanations and penumbra approach: the new public forum is not the same as the old public square but there is a more than a hint of it in there.  True, the First Amendment may not apply to Facebook.  But would it be better if we opted to extend its general embrace of free speech by law in this particular case at this particular time?  His answer is yes.

Free Speech is more than the First Amendment, which only protects you from the government infringing on your rights. In 2019, that is woefully inadequate. Access to the large social media platforms – Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram – is a prerequisite to meaningful free speech in 2019.

While jurists should be reluctant to extend rights that plainly are not in the Constitution there is nothing wrong with legislation that reasons from Constitutional principles in making arguments for measures where values found in the Constitution are at stake.  That is in fact what legislatures should do.

So Chamberlain makes a modest proposal—an honestly modest one, not of the Swiftian variety.

Conservatives should focus on passing legislation – at BOTH the state and federal levels – that protects all citizens’ access to large social media platforms on civil rights grounds. Access should be forfeitable only if one engages in unlawful speech on a platform.

If a large social media company wrongfully denies you access to or removes you from their platform or, you should be able to walk into court, get an injunction against the company that forces them to restore your account, and be awarded substantial statutory damages.

Under this view, government would not attempt to set itself up as a censor or anti-censor of actual content.  The path would be simpler than that: extend to internet platforms by legislation the free speech requirements set forth in the Constitution relative to public actors.

Not all conservatives like government playing a role.  A conservative Washington Examiner columnist grouses as follows:

what do you do when the GOP loses control of the White House & Congress? That day will come, even if only temporarily. When it does, do you want President AOC appointing the regulators?

Chamberlain rightly dismisses that as facile if government’s role is limited to the protection of speech, not regulating it directly.  Courts, not regulators, would adjudicate complaints relative to platform denial, and would use whatever standards the legislation laid out.  That could be as straightforward as a mandate to follow Constitutional interpretation as to what constitutes free speech in a First Amendment context.

Private property rights are great. But that does not mean that we, as a society, had to let private restaurant owners and private hotel managers turn away customers because they were black. We didn’t have to accept a world in which black people had to defecate on the side of the road because they weren’t allowed to use a privately-owned restroom.

We, as a society, do not have to allow private companies to violate Americans’ civil rights.

Chamberlain’s idea that the new public square requires a reconsideration of the scope of free speech is not a new one.  Framing it clearly in policy terms amenable to immediate legislative consideration is somewhat new, and as far as I am concerned let’s have more of it.

 

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I am Spartacus! Meme Set

Fenster writes:

New!  I am Spartacus! Meme Set, updated for 2019.

Recently Updated10-001

Currently available: Alex Jones, Louis Farrakhan, Milo Yiannopoulos, Laura Loomer, Paul Joseph Watson, Tommy Robinson.

Upcoming!

Sean Hannity   May 7, 2019

Sharyl Atkisson   May 12, 2019

Kimberly Strassel, Tucker Carlson, Joe Rogan    May 15, 2019

Noam Chomsky, Paul Mate, Jimmy Dore     May 22, 2019

Jordan Peterson, Pewdiepie, Ben Shapiro, Charlie Kirk, Diamond & Silk, Mike Rowe, Dr. Phil, Candace Owens, Kanye West, Devin Nunes    May 25, 2019

Collect the whole set!

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Weekend Linkage

Paleo Retiree writes:

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Weekend Linkage

Paleo Retiree writes:

  • An interesting history of the index card. Dinosaur that I am, and despite going around with an iPhone in my pocket, I’m still a regular user of 3×5 cards. It’s a big inconvenience that most index cards sold in office-supply stores these days are made of such thin card stock that they can’t be written on while being held in the palm of the hand. So I’m stuck buying either these really nice but expensive cards from Levengers or these somewhat cheaper but still nice cards from Amazon.
  • With his latest book, bad-boy novelist Bret Easton Ellis has lost one of his early fans. Has he become, well, too white?
  • Predictably, globalist/po-mo propagandists are making noises in favor of repairing Notre Dame’s roof and spire with steel, glass and zigzags. Steve Sailer gives one such thinker a going-over.
  • Take a look at what the globalist/po-mo set is going to be building next to Manhattan’s American Museum of Natural History. As my wife said, “Why do they want everyplace to look the same?”
  • This makes a whole lot more sense to me.
  • Teen Vogue, most important political publication of our era.
  • Given how hysterical and irresponsible most of their Russiagate claims were,  I was pleased to see the New York Times publish this editorial and the Washington Post publish that one.
  • Here’s a good, quick survey of some of what the press has gotten wrong about collusion and obstruction.
  • Glenn Greenwald checks in.
  • Despite the Mueller findings I don’t think this is likely to happen.
  • Was it racism at Columbia/Barnard, or just campus safety officers doing their job?
  • White Nationalists rampage in Chicago!
  • Those damn white male chefs, is there no end to the misery they cause?
  • Nope, nothing sinister about this.
  • Interesting to learn that Israel doesn’t give a damn about Global Warming.
  • Thumbs up to this humorous and brainy chat between two brilliant evolutionary psychologists, Gad Saad and Geoffrey Miller.
  • I recently enjoyed this Timothy Taylor lecture series for The Great Courses. It’s a survey of world economic conditions since World War II that’s meant to add some depth to your daily scan of the newspaper. Taylor, who has a lot of boyish enthusiasm, keeps things consistently informative and unpretentious, and he has a healthy — an open and uninsistent —  attitude towards mainstream academic econ. So: nothing radical, nothing mind-blowing, and the course has one very real drawback, which is that it was recorded in early 2008, before the financial collapse. But it’s very helpful and enjoyable anyway, and it’s currently being offered for a very good price.
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Clown World Watch: Notre Dame Edition

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

What did I say.

Posted in Architecture, Philosophy and Religion, Politics and Economics | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Clown World Watch: Notre Dame Edition

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

“The international contest will settle the question of whether we should build a new spire, whether we should rebuild the spire that was designed and built by (Eugene) Viollet-Le-Duc, in identical fashion, or whether we should… endow Notre-Dame cathedral with a new spire adapted to the techniques and the challenges of our era.”

Gosh golly, I can’t wait to see what our rootless neoliberal global elites come up with. It’s too bad the entire cathedral can’t be rebuilt from scratch, after all, to quote an esteemed Harvard architecture historian, it “was so overburdened with meaning that its burning feels like an act of liberation.”

  • Some people are really upset that rich people have pledged money to repair the building:

Nevermind that people in the West have given billions (trillions?) in charity over the decades. Nevermind also that people in the West have given billions (trillions?) in foreign aid over the decades. Nevermind that real estate development already costs hundreds of millions to billions of dollars in major Western cities. For example, here in NYC, it cost $4b to build the WTC Transport Hub and $25b to build Hudson Yards. Hatred of the rich is so acute that we’re going to begrudge them giving money to restore one of the most historic buildings in Western history, a building that generates hundreds of millions (billions?) in tourist revenue every year? I guess all of that goes out the window so long as there is a War on Poverty to “win.”

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Advance to Barbarism, A Continuing Series

Blowhard, Esq. writes:

As soon as I heard about the fire at Notre Dame, I said to friends that two things would happen: 1) this would kick off a decade of political wrangling over what to do about the damaged structure, and 2) we would be inundated with horrible fucking ideas from the architectural and arts establishments over how the building should be restored. Mere minutes later, writer-director Paul Schrader, last seen beating his breast over the existential threat of climate change, posted the following on his Facebook page:

A great architectural challenge will confront the French in the upcoming months. Fortunately the French are architecturally inventive and will most likely arrive at a creative solution. The options are: (1) reconstruct the cathedral like the Germans reconstructed Dresden. This feels not only wrong but wildly financially unfeasible. (2) Build a small simulacrum in the ruins of the present cathedral–which will have to be reinforced to stay standing. (3) Build a modern cathedral which incorporates the remains of Notre Dame in the manner of the Pompidou Museum.

When you’re a joyless commie, all spaces must be turned into moral and aesthetic vacuums for your authoritarian notions of “progress.” Perhaps Bruce Charlton is right that Notre Dame shouldn’t be rebuilt, because we are not worthy of it. What are the chances that some modernist cancer will not be grafted onto it by our betters?

Related

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Weekend Linkage

Paleo Retiree writes:

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The View from the Back of the Theater, Further.

Fenster writes:

I wrote here of Andrew McCarthy’s analysis of the current political situation that

while McCarthy sticks to the facts and builds hypotheses carefully on the basis of what is actually known, he is left hanging, unable to come up with a good answer, on a central question.

That nagging question:

Why did Mueller allow the investigation to continue for well over a year after it must have been patent that there was no collusion case?

I found this style of analysis admirable and all-too-rare in our hyper-partisan era: don’t let your desired conclusion drive your reasoning.  Just build from facts to hypothesis and then test your hypothesis, allowing doubt and new information to guide you.  Indeed, while McCarthy’s legal analysis is strong in this fashion he is comfortable concluding that he does not know in the least where it takes him.  What is going on?

That style of analysis is once again on display in his most recent column on Julian Assange.

McCarthy wonders why there was no Russia-Sanders probe when the case made against Russia was premised helping Sanders deny the nomination to Clinton.

He wonders about the “weak and potentially time-barred” indictment of Assange.  He could have been charged with the Russian collusion that has people so hot and bothered but the indictment only concerns the allegation of assistance in the theft of secrets by Chelsea (then Bradley) Manning, an event all but certainly beyond the statute of limitations and pretty weak tea from a prosecutorial, punishment and extradition point of view.

He wonders about the connection in all this to the charges brought by Mueller against Russian operatives.

I can’t do justice to the step-by-step legal reasoning McCarthy employs.  But I will note his conclusion.  Once again:

What is going on here?

In other words, the most reasonable conclusion to be reached given as thorough an analysis that can be made is that we don’t know what is going on.  But something is course going on, so the next reasonable inference is that this all makes sense somehow but that we do not yet have the facts or tools to understand.

I am OK with that.  Indeed it would be the height of folly to assume we know much of anything given that we are dealing with the collision and collusion of forces dealing with intelligence.  The hall or mirrors often described in spy fiction is on ample display here.  I naturally assume there are riptides present with respect to truth, allegations of truth, lies, allegations of lies, sunlight and shadow play.

My guess is that it has something to do with the secrets Assange is still keeping.  But I am agnostic for the most part on the particulars as they are developing.

All that said I am skeptical about one of McCarthy’s central assertions–that he “accept(s) the intelligence agencies’ conclusion, echoed by Mueller, that Russia was behind the hacking of Democratic email accounts.”

McCarthy’s view is that while Trump is essentially clear of Russian collusion the same cannot be said of Assange, whom he views as “a witting, anti-American tool of Moscow.”  Therefore, there should be no reason for Trump supporters to argue for Assange’s good name–Assange could well have conspired with Russia to get DNC secrets even though there was no Trump collusion.

But what is the basis for McCarthy’s conclusion that Assange and Russia collaborated on stealing DNC secrets?  His reasoning on that is outlined in this column.

I just don’t find his argument that persuasive.

Reflecting on the difference between an intelligence matter and a criminal one, McCarthy notes that

if you think about what intelligence agencies are for, their humility about the uncertainty of their judgments makes sense. They are protecting national security. When American lives are at stake, we do not wait to take action until the threats against us can be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. We make judgments, as the agencies’ Russia report admits, based on sources of information and analytic reasoning.

The information on which these judgments are based is often fragmentary and so highly sensitive — e.g., covert agents who would be killed if revealed — that it cannot be exposed publicly without compromising top-secret intelligence operations, which would endanger the nation. The analytic reasoning gives us not courtroom proof of fact but the intelligence agencies’ perceptions of probability. Intel analysts are highly trained and expert in their field; nevertheless, their conclusions are often highly debatable or wrong — which is to be expected: The information inputs are of varying quality, so the best output they can give you is often mere probability.

In other words; give the benefit of the doubt to the intelligence agencies, and if they jointly come to a conclusion don’t worry overly that their argument cannot be proven in a court of law or even made transparent to the public.  This is what they do.

Counterarguments?  For one there is the politicization that McCarthy himself acknowledges:

All four agencies were run by Obama appointees. The Obama administration had a history of politicizing intelligence to serve administration narratives, and the intelligence judgment in question cannot be divorced from politics because it was announced just as Obama’s party was fashioning a narrative that Russian espionage had stolen the election from Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

Consider also that if–as seems increasingly likely to me–the Deep State shenanigans extended pretty far back before the election the “politicization” is not just an abstract argument unmoored to actual conditions.  There could well have been specific reasons for the agencies to have thrown the analysis.

McCarthy also acknowledges this:

Inexplicably (given how central the server system is to the controversy that has roiled the nation for a year), the Justice Department never compelled the surrender of this server system to the government so the FBI could conduct a forensic examination. Instead, for this essential analysis, we are expected to rely on CrowdStrike, a private DNC contractor.

He backs away from the implications of this a bit in going on to say that CrowdStrike has a “good reputation”.  But in his most recent article he is more pithy and direct:

The Justice Department and FBI did not perform elementary investigative steps, such as taking possession of, and performing their own forensic analysis on, the servers that were hacked. Instead, they relied on CrowdStrike, a contractor of the DNC, which has a strong motive to blame Russia.

That seems pretty significant.

McCarthy goes on to make yet another acknowledgment: that with respect to the conclusion of Russian-Assange perfidy there have been

ongoing private investigations that cast doubt on the judgment’s probability.

The best known of these, to date, has been produced by the left-leaning Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS), given notoriety by the left-leaning publication The Nation. The VIPS naysayers, who are primarily former NSA officials, contend that the operation against the DNC was a not an overseas hack but an insider theft — “a download executed locally with a memory key or a similar portable data-storage device.” This probability assessment is largely based on the transfer speeds of megabytes of DNC data.

He goes on to point out that there have been critiques of the methods of the VIPS analysis.  But it remains a fairly significant point, IMHO, and McCarthy can only wave it away:

Cyber-analysis is not my area of competence,

followed by a reiteration of his default view–

but I’m predisposed to believe our agencies.

Add to this that as far as I know Assange has a good track record with the truth–far better than spy agencies I will wager–and that he has said over and over that Russia was not the source of the emails, and he has broadly hinted that it was an inside job.

All of this suggests to me the following:

1. McCarthy is right we don’t know what is going on.

2. His argument that we should believe the agencies is a very weak one.

2.  What is going on probably has less to do with the Chelsea Manning affair and more to do with still undisclosed secret information.

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