Author Topic: Free Speech Has a Milo Problem  (Read 679 times)

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Offline EasyAce

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Free Speech Has a Milo Problem
« on: February 21, 2017, 07:27:51 pm »
Conservatives deserve a better poster boy for their right to free expression.
By David French
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/445079/milo-yiannopoulos-bad-poster-boy-conservative-free-speech-rights

Quote
To understand the core of the free-speech challenge in this country, consider the case of a hypothetical young woman
named Sarah. In college, Sarah is a conservative activist. She’s pro-life, supports traditional marriage, and belongs to a Christian
student club. Her free speech infuriates professors and other students, so the administration cracks down. It defunds her student
club, forces her political activism into narrow, so-called free-speech zones, and reminds her to comply with the university’s
tolerance policies.

What does Sarah do? She sues the school, she wins, and the school pays her attorneys’ fees. The judge expands the free-speech
zone to cover the whole campus and strikes down the tolerance policy. The First Amendment wins.

Sarah graduates. A brilliant student, she gets a job at a Silicon Valley start-up and moves to California to start her new life. Just
as they did in college, politics dominate her conversations, and within a week she gets into an argument with a colleague over
whether Bruce Jenner is really a woman. The next morning, Sarah’s called into the HR department, given a stern warning for
violating company policy, and told that if she can’t comply she’ll need to find another place to work.

What does Sarah do? She shuts her mouth or she loses her job. Her employer isn’t the government; it’s a private company with
its own free-speech rights, and it expects its employees to respect its “corporate values.”

In a nutshell, this is America’s free-speech problem. The law is largely solid. Government entities that censor or silence citizens
on the basis of their political, cultural, or religious viewpoint almost always lose in court. With some exceptions, the First Amendment
remains robust. Yet the culture of free speech is eroding away, rapidly.

The politicization of everything has combined with increasing levels of polarization and cocooning to create an atmosphere in which
private citizens are increasingly weaponizing their expression — using their social and economic power not to engage in debate but
to silence dissent. Corporate bullying, social-media shaming, and relentless peer pressure combine to place a high cost on any
departure from the mandated norms. Even here in Middle Tennessee, I have friends who are afraid to post about their religious
views online or express disagreements during mandatory corporate-diversity seminars, lest they lose their jobs. One side speaks
freely. The other side speaks not at all.

There is no government solution to this problem. The First Amendment prohibits the state from mandating openness to debate and
dissent, and corporations aren’t designed to be debating societies. Nor can the government prevent (or even try to prevent) the kinds
of social-media shaming campaigns and peer pressures that cause men and women to stay silent for fear of social exclusion. The
solution is to persuade the powerful that free speech has value, that ideological monocultures are harmful, and that the great questions
of life can’t and shouldn’t be settled through shaming, hectoring, or silencing.

It is thus singularly unfortunate that the “conservative” poster boy for free speech is Milo Yiannopoulos.

Milo, for those who don’t know, is a flamboyantly gay senior editor at Breitbart News, a provocateur who relishes leftist outrage and
deliberately courts as much fury as he can. How? Please allow my friend Ben Shapiro to explain:

Quote
Jews run the media; earlier this month he characterized a Jewish BuzzFeed writer as a “a typical example
of a sort of thick-as-pig shit media Jew
”; he justifies anti-Semitic memes as playful trollery and pats racist
sites like American Renaissance on the head; he describes himself as a “chronicler of, and occasional fellow
traveler with the alt-right” while simultaneously recognizing that their “dangerously bright” intellectuals
believe that “culture is inseparable from race”; back in his days going under the name Milo Wagner, he
reportedly posed with his hand atop a Hitler biography, posted a Hitler meme about killing 6 million Jews,
and wore an Iron Cross; last week he berated a Muslim woman in the audience of one of his speeches for
wearing a hijab in the United States; his alt-right followers routinely spammed my Twitter account with anti-
Semitic propaganda he tut-tutted before his banning (the amount of anti-Semitism in my feed dropped by
at least 70 percent after his ban, which I opposed); he personally Tweeted a picture of a black baby at me
on the day of my son’s birth, because according to the alt-right I’m a “cuck” who wants to see the races
mixed; he sees the Constitution as a hackneyed remnant of the past, to be replaced by a new right he
leads.

Oh, and this week recordings rocketed across Twitter that showed Milo apparently excusing pedophilia and expressing gratitude to a Catholic
priest for teaching him how to perform oral sex. (Later, on Facebook, he vigorously denied that he supports pedophilia, saying he is “completely
disgusted by the abuse of children.”)

Milo is currently on what he calls his “Dangerous Faggot” tour of college campuses, which has followed a now-familiar pattern: A conservative
group invites him to speak, leftists on campus freak out, and he thrives on the resulting controversy, casting himself as a hero of free expression.
Lately, the leftist freakouts have grown violent, culminating in a scary riot at the University of California, Berkeley.

Operating under the principle that “the enemy of my enemy must be my friend,” too many on the right have leapt to Milo’s defense, ensuring
that his star just keeps rising. Every liberal conniption brings him new conservative credibility and fresh appearances on Fox News. Last week
Bill Maher featured him as a defender of free speech, and – for a brief time — he had been expected to speak at the nation’s largest and arguably
most important conservative gathering, CPAC. (CPAC rescinded its invitation today.)

Let’s put this plainly: If Milo’s the poster boy for free speech, then free speech will lose. He’s the perfect foil for social-justice warriors, a living
symbol of everything they fight against. His very existence and prominence feed the deception that modern political correctness is the firewall
against the worst forms of bigotry.

I’ve spent a career defending free speech in court, and I’ve never defended a “conservative” like Milo. His isn’t the true face of the battle for
American free-speech rights. That face belongs to Barronelle Stutzman, the florist in Washington whom the Left is trying to financially ruin because
she refused to use her artistic talents to celebrate a gay marriage. It belongs to Kelvin Cochran, the Atlanta fire chief who was fired for publishing
and sharing with a few colleagues a book he wrote that expressed orthodox Christian views of sex and marriage.

Stutzman and Cochran demonstrate that intolerance and censorship strike not just at people on the fringe – people like Milo – but rather at the
best and most reasonable citizens of these United States. They’re proof that social-justice warriors seek not equality and inclusion but control
and domination.

Milo has the same free-speech rights as any other American. He can and should be able to troll to his heart’s content without fear of government
censorship or private riot. But by elevating him even higher, CPAC would have made a serious mistake. CPAC’s invitation told the world that
supporting conservative free speech means supporting Milo. If there’s a more effective way to vindicate the social-justice Left, I can’t imagine
it.

David French is a staff writer for National Review, a senior fellow at the National Review Institute, and an attorney.
« Last Edit: February 21, 2017, 07:28:35 pm by EasyAce »


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geronl

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Re: Free Speech Has a Milo Problem
« Reply #1 on: February 21, 2017, 07:36:47 pm »
You don't have a "right" to be invited to places to give speeches. You don't have a "right" to get TV time or space in a newspaper's op-ed page.

Free speech means you can advocate legal pederasty, but it does not protect you from the reaction.