America’s Kristallnacht?

If the US government prosecutes Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, it will mark a point of no return.

Guest post by Robert Gore at Straight Line Logic

We’ll never know what “average” Germans thought on November 11, 1938, the day after Kristallnacht. Perhaps a few recognized it for what it was: a turning point, an acceleration of Germany’s descent into hell. America’s Crystal Night looms, and if it occurs, only a few will recognize it for what it is.

The fate of Julian Assange is the fate of one man, but it is also the fate of one of our most important freedoms. There won’t be shattered plate glass from vandalized businesses littering the streets, synagogues smashed, graves unearthed, or people herded onto trains. But his prosecution by the US government would destroy an inestimable value, one enshrined in the First Amendment, for which generations of Americans have fought and died: the right of the people and its press to inform the people and to hold their government to account.

Aside from armed resistance and revolution, the one defense individuals have against governments is intellectual: the concept of individual rights. There is an argument as to whether those rights come from our Creator (Thomas Jefferson) or from our basic nature as humans and the requirements of our survival (Ayn Rand). Despite starting from different premises, both arguments lead to the same conclusion: individuals have inherent, inalienable, inviolable rights, and the only legitimate function of government is to protect those rights.

The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were explicit attempts to delineate a set of principles that recognized individual rights and tried to restrain government power. Though real-world implementation has fallen short, often far short, they were towering conceptual achievements.

In 1933, the year Hitler assumed power, the government began enacting laws that restricted Jews’ rights to earn a living, gain an education, or work in the civil service. In 1935, the Nuremberg Laws stripped German Jews of their citizenship and forbade them from marrying non-Jewish Germans.

Kristallnacht’s hooliganism was encouraged by the German authorities, and none of the perpetrators bore any legal consequences. More than 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and deported to concentration camps. The government would not protect Jews from the depredations of thugs and the government itself was a thug. Kristallnacht was a point of no return: Jews no longer had any legally enforceable rights. Soon enough no German would.

In America, there is no one villain or group that one can point to as responsible for the erosion of rights. Begun the day the Constitution was ratified, it’s been a gradual process. We’ve reached the point where only a few of the rights guaranteed in the Constitution and Bill of Rights still receive any measure of government solicitude.

Property and contract rights are out the window; the government routinely abridges them. You have no right to your own income, or to conduct your legitimate business or trade free from government regulation and interference. Much of the Bill of Rights is either irrelevant now or has been rendered a dead letter. In terms of individual rights, only the Second Amendment’s much infringed right to bear arms, and the First Amendment—the prohibition against the government establishing a religion, free speech, press, and assembly, and the right to petition the government—are still hanging by a thread.

Which is why the fate of Julian Assange takes on such significance. While the government has prosecuted those like Chelsea (formerly Brad) Manning who have stolen government secrets and classified information, it has not prosecuted the press individuals and organizations who have published them. That is WikiLeaks’ business model: it receives, vets, and publishes stolen information, often from governments.

The government has not gone after publishers because it would be a frontal assault on the First Amendment that it would probably lose. Any exception would swallow the general rule of press freedom. Say the Supreme Court recognized an exception: classified information whose publication would constitute an imminent and grave threat to the security of the United States. Who decides what’s an imminent and grave threat? The government would have the power to classify whatever information it pleases under that exception and put those who publish it at risk of prosecution, their only recourse years of costly litigation spent arguing that the information didn’t fit the exception.

Many Trump admirers resist the notion that their man is interested in the acquisition and use of power, but his and members of his administration’s hostility to individual civil liberties belies that resistance. Attorney General Jeff Sessions is a gung-ho supporter of the civil-liberties-eviscerating-government-power-expanding War on Drugs and civil asset forfeiture.

In the latter, a government seizes assets it claims were involved with crimes and makes their owners jump through myriad legal hoops—including proving the negative that their assets weren’t involved in a crime—even if the owners themselves were never convicted, or even charged, with a crime. Assets that are not “acquitted”—cars, cash, boats, houses, etc.—are kept and used by the government. President Trump has endorsed civil asset forfeiture, and has extended it outside America’s borders via an executive order (see “By Imperial Decree,” SLL, 1/2/18).

Trump’s Secretary of State and former director of the CIA, Mike Pompeo has fashioned a legal approach the administration might use, in a case against WikiLeaks and Assange, to slither around the First Amendment. In April, still director of the CIA, he delivered a speech in which several passages demanded, but never received, careful parsing from the mainstream media. They are still obsessing over a February Trump tweet in which he declared the US media an “enemy of the people.” This is considered a threat to the First Amendment, but Pompeo’s speech was mostly ignored.

Pompeo called WikiLeaks “a non-state hostile intelligence service often abetted by state actors like Russia.” Most press organizations, and almost all that consistently challenge the state, are non-state. WikiLeaks has published state secrets, undoubtedly considered hostile acts by those states, but how is it an intelligence service? Pompeo is arguing that WikiLeaks cannot be considered part of the press, consequently it’s not protected by the First Amendment.

As for the “abetted by state actors like Russia,” WikiLeaks has consistently denied it received the DNC emails from Russia, and nobody has proven otherwise. The best technical evidence indicates those DNC emails were directly downloaded to a portable storage device, indicating an inside job, and not remotely hacked, by Russians or anyone else.

Pompeo argued that “we have to recognize that we can no longer allow Assange and his colleagues the latitude to use free speech values against us.” This is straight from Orwell: you are free to say what you want, as long as you don’t say anything against the government. He claimed that WikiLeaks “pretended that America’s First Amendment freedoms shield them from justice,” and, “they may have believed that, but they are wrong.” Now where would WikiLeaks get such a crazy idea? How about the plain language of the First Amendment?

Finally, Pompeo threatened: “To give them the space to crush us with misappropriated secrets is a perversion of what our great Constitution stands for. It ends now.” Any government “secrets” the press publishes with the full approval of the government probably aren’t going to be terribly revealing. It’s the secrets the government doesn’t want revealed, the ones that are generally “misappropriated,” that reveal the most important secrets, which an informed and free people must know if they are to call their government to account.

From the excerpts quoted above, and the video of the relevant part of speech below, make up your own mind as to who’s perverting the Constitution.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=80&v=0067wS26n_E

Freedom of the press protects the rights of the press, but more importantly protects the right of all of us to be informed, especially about what was once considered “our” government. It amplifies the freedom of speech. Even a small newspaper reaches more people than someone shouting from a street corner.

If Assange and WikiLeaks are tried and convicted in a US court as “a non-state hostile intelligence service,” the government can slap that label on any person or organization publishing or otherwise disclosing its secrets. The case would probably make its way to the Supreme Court. If the court accepted the Pompeo exception to the First Amendment, freedom of the press and speech would become two more of the Constitution’s dead letters.

Just the prosecution of Assange and WikiLeaks would have a chilling effect. Not that most of the US’s supine mainstream and social media would be chilled. The mainstream media that have spoken out about Assange and WikiLeaks have come down on the side of the government. The social media companies, de facto arms of the government, are shutting down politically incorrect voices. Neither mainstream or social media have anything to lose from the termination of First Amendment freedoms because they don’t say, or allow anyone else to say, anything the powers that be don’t want heard.

Trump is a wild card on WikiLeaks and Assange. WikiLeaks’ disclosure of the DNC emails helped his campaign. He praised it back then, but now appears ready to prosecute. Trump administration officials and Trump himself often say one thing while Trump does another. It is not a given that Assange will be either extradited by the British government or prosecuted in the US.

Few totalitarian regimes take their people’s rights away all at once. It’s done gradually to reduce dissent, until that Kristallnacht moment where it’s impossible to evade the reality: there are no rights left. If the Trump administration prosecutes Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, that sinking feeling in your stomach will be the realization that the last remnant of your rights are gone, that the government and Trump are your enemies.

If Assange and WikiLeaks are prosecuted, who will dare tell the truth about the government? Trump will have destroyed one of the last vestiges of individual rights—and the freedom that goes with it—that once made America great.

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51 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
August 7, 2018 12:42 pm

As you note, Kristalnacht was the culmination of a erosion of rights in Germany not the beginning of it. The Nazi party had to prepare the public for it to accept mass arrests, beatings and extreme vandalism.

In America we had an informal arrangement where commonsense ruled our public affairs. The ‘media’ knew many politicians had mistresses but didn’t report on ‘personal matters’. If it became a problem a public official would just quietly resign with his dignity intact. They also did not publish information where it legitimately involved national security. Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson’s columns were about as ‘risque’ as the Washington press corps wanted to go.

Richard Nixon’s presidency marked the end of that era and led to the media becoming a howling lynch mob that, at first, directed its fire at conservatives, but has now gotten so out of control it now is starting to eat its own. How else to explain Julian Assange. He should be the ‘media’s’ hero not a villain?

James
James
  Anonymous
August 7, 2018 12:54 pm

Things really do seem to be reaching a new level of insanity.I would not be surprised if the mid terms “put on hold”,do believe more folks actually awake and now rubbing the sleep from their eyes,how committed they are to this country and what it should be/stand for,time will tell.How much longer will say Platform/SLL and many others be able to be reached?

On a side note,to those who read and at times enjoy more then news/technical skill reading I just finished The Armageddon File by Stephen Coonts,very good fiction based on literally todays reality,I highly recommend it.

Gloriously Deplorable Paul
Gloriously Deplorable Paul
August 7, 2018 12:57 pm

The longer I live the more I despise (ashamed to call it) my government.

James
James
  Gloriously Deplorable Paul
August 7, 2018 1:15 pm

Paul,nothing wrong at all with hating your govt. but loving your country,has been my feeling for decades.

Mike
Mike
  Gloriously Deplorable Paul
August 7, 2018 2:03 pm

Yours? Show us the principle / agent contract you have with “your” “representative”. After all, it would be the most important document you have. Then go re-read Lysander Spooner.

Bob P
Bob P
August 7, 2018 1:39 pm

Excellent article. If Assange is prosecuted, MSM will do nothing to hinder the prosecution; they may abet it, being stooges for the deep state. The vast majority of the public will yawn, either having no clue who Assange is or no clue as to the gravity of the case. His only hope might be Trump. God help him.

Eric Bauer
Eric Bauer
August 7, 2018 1:47 pm

“We’ll never know what “average” Germans thought on November 11, 1938, the day after Kristallnacht. Perhaps a few recognized it for what it was: a turning point, an acceleration of Germany’s descent into hell.”

People still believe this boomer-tier Hollywood narrative crap?

Mousanony
Mousanony
  Eric Bauer
August 7, 2018 2:40 pm

Yeah. And some people still believe there’s this mystical ball of controlled fusion floating about 93 million miles away from Earth. Can you believe that shit?

Darrell Dullnig
Darrell Dullnig
  Mousanony
August 7, 2018 6:39 pm

Thanks, Mous, I needed that!

Socratic Dog
Socratic Dog
  Eric Bauer
August 8, 2018 11:35 am

Robert appears to be not quite Woke as yet.

Try this link as an introduction Robert. You might find yourself weeping for the Jews a little less. 1933 was the year of the official declaration of war on Germany by international Jewery. Kristallnacht was in 1938, 5 years later. I think it is reasonable to compare the position of Nazi Germany with respect to the Jews to our own position. Both are/were infiltrated by a powerful, well funded 5th column, us much more so than them. Both are/were subject of a concerted effort to take them down. We haven’t had the overt declaration of war. However, people don’t declare war any more, they just do it, none more so than us of course.

The fate of Germany is probably an excellent template for what we can expect in the US.

https://www.wintersonnenwende.com/scriptorium/english/archives/articles/jdecwar.html

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
August 7, 2018 2:07 pm

“In America, there is no one villain or group that one can point to as responsible for the erosion of rights”

Robert…I have to disagree with your statement above . The SCOTUS’s expansion of the Interstate Commerce Clause gave those in Congress the right to regulate every aspect of life in America. Clarence Thomas recognized this in the Gonzales vs Raich case that the SCOTUS had completed its expansion of the clause. The SCOTUS is the one villain that the finger can be pointed at…repeatedly …. for the erosion of our rights.

I find that the SCOTUS has provided a consistent pattern of interpreting congressional and executive authority quite broadly, while giving narrow interpretations to Bill of Rights provisions.

“Constitution were explicit attempts to delineate a set of principles that recognized individual rights and tried to restrain government power. ”

Again Robert I disagree. The Constitution never was about restraining the government . The Constitution replaced the Articles of Confederation because Washington and others were aghast that the states were given the power that the Federalists thought they should have. In Washington’s letter to John Warren he talked about the need for control over the 13 states, which was achieved by the Constitution .

The concept that the Cosntitutional Government is limited to the 16 discrete powers the Constitution delegates to it has been dead for some time now. The SCOTUS has found that the Federal Governments powers are unlimited…and we are now it’s subjects….not its citizens .

If you think you are free go build a garage without a permit and tell me how free you are month later .

Jamesjamescarter556@hushmail.com
  BUCKHED
August 7, 2018 2:33 pm

Buck,unincorperated township you can,tough to find places like that but still out there in the US

NoneYaBiz
NoneYaBiz
  [email protected]
August 10, 2018 3:49 pm

Most zoning ordinances are county in nature not city. At least here in Tennessee.

Gilnut
Gilnut
  Robert Gore
August 7, 2018 3:29 pm

“The Constitution, on this hypothesis, is a mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they may please.”

“You seem to consider the judges the ultimate arbiters of all constitutional questions; a very dangerous doctrine indeed, and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy.”

Thomas Jefferson saw this coming, right from the beginning. Too bad that , thanks to GovCo. schooling, that we’ve forgotten the lessons of our forefathers.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Gilnut
August 7, 2018 7:07 pm

Gilnut you are spot on….our Forefathers knew that the judiciary could control thing one day if left unchecked. What is needed is another President who’ll tell the Court to enforce the law…if they can ,

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
  Anonymous
August 7, 2018 7:08 pm

The comment above was mine .

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
August 7, 2018 2:14 pm

Another brilliant essay Robert. The screws are being tightened in a very noticeable way. The kleptocracy seem to now be overtly telling us that we are their slaves and there is nothing we can do about it. Could be that they are situated to kick off the chaos and are ready and willing to stir the masses, enabling the destruction of what is left of our rights and ushering in a new system they have already prepared, or they may just let the chaos have reign until it burns itself out. Another possibly is they feel the grasp of power slipping through their fingers and are in a desperate panic to tighten that grip. I hope it’s the latter because they will over-reach as they always do, and when that happens we will have our chance.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  Grizzly Bare
August 7, 2018 6:21 pm

Grizzly Bare et al,

Excellent observations!

comment image

Allow the problems to escalate and carry on until even the doped-up and distracted devowerers of dopamine hits began to petition their government overseers and DEMAND the Superheroes come in and SAVE them from the socially engineered opiod, bullying cop shooting homelessness lack od living wage job crises…

comment image

Never let a good crises go to waste

comment image

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  PlatoPlubius
August 7, 2018 7:35 pm

REMINDER: The cards shown above were taken from a real playing card game called the Illuminati that was manufactured and distributed back in the mid 80s…

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illuminati_(game)

Illuminati is a standalone card game made by Steve Jackson Games (SJG), inspired by the 1975 book, The Illuminatus! Trilogy, by Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea.

Available expansion sets are: Illuminati Mutual Assured Distraction (2010); Illuminati Bavarian Fire Drill (2007); Illuminati Y2K (1999); Illuminati Brainwash (1985).

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
August 7, 2018 6:06 pm

Robert,

First, let me tell you how much MORE thoughtful and ON POINT this article was compared to last weeks.

I busted your balls last week and although I stand by thoughts about it, your WORK here IS commendable and written with out the divisive rhetoric that drew the ire from some TBPers including myself.

Again, just amazing thoughts and good observations and possibilities that can’t really be argued with. The only thing I might add is when discussing what you wrote below:

Robert Gore said,

“If Assange and WikiLeaks are tried and convicted in a US court as “a non-state hostile intelligence service,” the government can slap that label on any person or organization publishing or otherwise disclosing its secrets. ”

Perhaps they could slap the term “a non-state hostile intelligence service” label on an organization but they already developed another label to take away American citizen’s individual right to habeaus corpus/indefinite detention with the term “unlawful enemy combatant” thanks to the continuation of the never ending War on Terror a la Oceania.

This term was created and used under Dubya with the help of Alberto Gonzales during a major purge of attorney generals throughout the country …

10 facts about enemy combatants

https://www.politico.com/story/2013/04/what-is-an-enemy-combatant-090436

. The full term in relation to this case is unlawful enemy combatant. (More on lawful enemy combatants below.) An unlawful enemy combatant is some one authorities believe is connected with a terrorist group, whether through funding or direct orders or association, among other connectors.

2. So who is a lawful enemy combatant? It’s someone who is commanded by a person person responsible for subordinates, carries arms openly, and conducts their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war, among other criteria, according to The Third Geneva Convention. They would then have to be treated in accordance with Prisoner of War guidelines in the Geneva Convention of 1949.

3. What’s the difference? Lawful enemy combatants can receive Prisoner of War status in accordance with The Geneva Conventions. Unlawful enemy combatants cannot because terrorist organizations like Al Qaeda are non-state actor terrorist groups, according to The Council on Foreign Relations.

4. The term unlawful enemy combatants flared up in its current context following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Former President George W. Bush’s administration declared Jose Padilla an unlawful enemy combatant and he was kept in a military prison after being convicted of aiding terrorists in connection with an uncovered dirty bomb plot. Padilla’s case was eventually transferred into civilian court and he himself to a Miami federal prison.

5. President Barack Obama’s administration stopped using the term “enemy combatant” in 2009, in what The New York Times reported at the time was “intended to symbolically separate the new administration from Bush detention policies.”

6. As the commander-in-chief, the president has the authority to determine whether someone is an enemy combatant, accordingto CFR.

7. Enemy combatants may have their Habeas Corpus rights — the right for anyone imprisoned by America to challenge their imprisonment — suspended. Therefore, they can be imprisoned for an indefinite period of time without being able to challenge it.

8. The Military Commissions Act of 2006gave the president the authority to set up military commissions to try enemy combatants. The act also states: “No alien unlawful enemy combatant subject to trial by military commission under this chapter may invoke the Geneva Conventions as a source of rights.” The defendant does not have the right to file Habeas Corpus petitions and can receive the death penalty. It was amended in 2009 in part due to make the law more in line with the Supreme Court.

9. While authorities decide whether an individual should be tried in civilian court or deemed an enemy combatant, the government can use a public safety exception that allows them to question an individual before he or she is notified of their Miranda rights — if they pose a a threat to public safety, as CBS News reportedhappened to Tsarnaev. In 2011, The New York Times reported that the FBI was instructing its agents not to read Miranda rights to terrorist suspects who posed an immediate threat to public danger.

10. The Supreme Court coined the term in 1942 when it ruled in the case Ex parte Quirin to distinguish between lawful and unlawful enemy combatants : “Unlawful combatants are likewise subject to capture and detention, but in addition they are subject to trial and punishment by military tribunals for acts which render their belligerency unlawful.”

End article…

The scarier aspect of it all is by placing a label over the term CITIZEN like “unlawful enemy combatants” has also influenced the most basic liberty afforded, the legal term “presumption of innocence ” which some believe is an inherent unalienable right where the accusing party must prove the guilt of the accused and not the other way around where the accused must prove their innocence otherwise they are assumed guilty by such a tribunal.

For more on this read

Guilty Until Proven Guilty
https://www.thenation.com/article/guilty-until-proven-guilty/

Again, excellent read. KUDOS!

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  PlatoPlubius
August 7, 2018 7:03 pm

Kind a like this Hollywood scene:

22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
  PlatoPlubius
August 8, 2018 11:28 am

A 1999 classic along with Swordfish and Fight Club!

Thank goodness for AJAX commenting.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius

22wingman,

Agreed…it rocks!!! The old way was way too time consuming for me.

You might appreciate this comment from F.M.’s recent Q drivel thread

The Man with the Power to Discredit & Destroy “Q”

The Man with the Power to Discredit & Destroy “Q”

3″ rel=”nofollow”>

sofa
sofa
  PlatoPlubius
August 7, 2018 8:41 pm

PP, god king, pronouncing judgement upon the works of others inferior to his holiness.

Dude, quit being such an asshole!
^^ me pronouncing judgement on your comments.

comment image
.
have some maple syrup. you’ll feel better.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  sofa
August 7, 2018 9:40 pm

SOFA,

Philosopher King more like it hahaha just as long as I’m the King, more like a neo renaissance man

If you need a safe space, please call your CONgress critter and complain about the microaggressions that you FEEL have been committed against you here on THE BURNING PLATFORM !

Add something of relevance to the discourse or piss off back to where you came before I bust out the preparation H on your ass.

SOFA’s last eye exam

comment image

sofa
sofa
  PlatoPlubius
August 7, 2018 9:52 pm

First, let me tell you how much MORE thoughtful and ON POINT this comment was compared to the previous one. Unlike the previous one, this one meets or exceeds all arbitrary standards set by your editor, your holiness. Your reasoning is thoughtful, insightful, and brilliant.

sofa
sofa
  sofa
August 7, 2018 9:54 pm

PP- Thanks for adding something of relevance to the discourse.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  sofa
August 7, 2018 9:59 pm

I got my own Troll. I feel special.

I must be getting close to the target,

Some humor at The self professed hemmroid, SOFA

Thank you

Wetard.

Maple syrup? How bout you order some chocolate asscream foe yourself.

Hahaha

Amateur

sofa
sofa
  PlatoPlubius
August 7, 2018 10:23 pm

Thank you PP, for further proving my point about your deprecating assholiness.

This is an attempt to mentor you, to give you feedback about your comments, to help you socialize: Quit being an ass. Quit presuming to lecture others on what your expectations are for them. Or expect others to return the favor and lecture you on our expectations for you.

i mirrored your comments but directed them toward you; and that upset your feelings…
(see the example applied to you. now contemplate your direction to others on your lordly opinion of how they should write to please you.)

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  sofa
August 7, 2018 11:02 pm

Sorry,

There is no mentoring me, been learning on my own for most my life. Much apologies in advance if I come off stand offish… Been attacked and mocked and derided and called conspiracy theorist for a long long time…i am what I am…an asshole.

My time here is limited….

Not to mention this is THE BURNING PLATFORM,

All pleasantries aside , my goal is to call bullshit where I see it, admit defeat when it warrants and take no prisoners along the Road to Perdition vanquishing one ignoramus at a time in hopes of shedding light with Truthiness , wit, sarcasm and the Socratic method. Many of the newer regulars probably don’t remember my time here learning during the Bush admin or early Osama admin…fair enough bit oh well.
I have the utmost appreciation for the format of this blog, it’s evolution and my growth and understanding. Just trying to return the favor…

A thousand pardons in advance if this offends you.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  PlatoPlubius
August 8, 2018 11:48 am

And for you astute purveyors and consumers of 80s and 90s porn,
Yes that is Ron Jeremy in the movie scene above…
The Boondock Saints

sofa
sofa
  sofa
August 7, 2018 9:45 pm

Have some maple syrup. You’ll feel better.

BLAnonymous
BLAnonymous
  sofa
August 8, 2018 12:42 pm

P- Whose maple syrup? Mercer me, it all gets confusing.
Just to be vanity fair, whose hive is it? Fire the Bannons matey.

Vanilla/chocolate all in the same store!! LOL Watch out for the ybot.

KaD
KaD
August 7, 2018 10:03 pm

“Emigrate while you still can”- that’s hysterical! It must be nice to have enough money where this is even a remote possibility.

22winmag - short taglines suck monkeyballs-n-more
22winmag - short taglines suck monkeyballs-n-more
August 8, 2018 7:05 am

Kristallnacht was grossly overblown to the point that it borders on myth… so maybe not the best comparison.

LAC
LAC
August 8, 2018 8:45 am

Imagine if all the paper companies imposed a “terms of service and use of their pulpwood” that said nothing liberal can Be printed on our paper nor can our paper be used for any liberal purpose! Is that not the he same as google, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube censoring free speech? They are obvious media companies under the guise of private company status but they aren’t publicly traded corporations. WHat if a restaurant said anyone on their property must only say positive things about Trump and wear appropriately positive things in a conservative manner. The govt would shut the eatery down. We saw this with the cake maker refusing a gay wedding cake. He won and set precedent. It goes both ways. When one person or corporation stop selling another from allowing that persons civil rights and free speech it isn’t a clear violation and can be sued in civil court. Why are we all not suing individually these corporations for civil rights abuses? Mire them in legal fees. How can anyone not see this as collusion between the above mentioned companies as election meddling to shut out conservatives thought 90 days prior to a major election? They have started a soft war and will escalate until it reaches a pinnacle to violence. A war based on rights and you will either decide to live on your knees or die on your feet. I said it would come but would take 50 years. Wow how wrong I was. It’s here, and now…..violent uprising could start within 8 years in a very serious way. It depends on who is in after Trump I feel….

SmallerGovNow
SmallerGovNow
August 8, 2018 9:22 am

Saw this again on ZH Robert. Great post… Chip

SmallerGovNow
SmallerGovNow
August 8, 2018 9:24 am

Comments now being moderated Jim?

Administrator
Administrator
Admin
  SmallerGovNow
August 8, 2018 9:27 am

No moderation. Your comment was in the spam filter. It happens occasionally. I don’t know why.

The Man With No Name
The Man With No Name
Admin
  Administrator
August 8, 2018 9:36 am

It happens because we have automated spam suppression code running on the site. Without it, the Chinese, Polish, and Ukranian spam bots would literally be posting thousands of spam comments a day on this site:

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DRUD
DRUD
  The Man With No Name
August 8, 2018 12:20 pm

I’m intrigued. Where can I get some of this “skinny fiber?”

Wip
Wip
  Administrator
August 8, 2018 9:38 am

Jim, can you email Dutchman’s email to me pweeze?

Wip
Wip
  Administrator
August 8, 2018 9:39 am

Jim, can you email Dutchman’s email to me?

Administrator
Administrator
Admin
  Wip
August 8, 2018 10:46 am

I did.

buffalolips
buffalolips
August 8, 2018 11:13 am

One important clarification to an otherwise excellent article by Mr. Gore: “They are still obsessing over a February Trump tweet in which he declared the US media an “enemy of the people.” What is lost on most people (not considered) is that “journalism” is not the “the enemy of the people”, HOWEVER the “media” (purveyors of propaganda, more often than not motivated by an ideological corporate or government agenda, which is not consistently grounded in truth and is more often than not intentional misinformation, IS an enemy of all free people. President Trump is correct if one considers that journalism and media have divergent objectives, the latter having become a form of organized sedition.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
August 8, 2018 4:41 pm

America’s Kristallnacht? People need to do this to their smart crap but they got a deal on the price so they won’t…

NoneYaBiz
NoneYaBiz
August 9, 2018 4:30 pm

You can’t make any country great when you crush liberty.