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Can We Finally Stop Pretending Elon Musk Is A “Free Speech Absolutist”? He’s Not

from the don't-let-him-drive-the-framing dept

A challenge for the mainstream media: can you stop saying that Elon Musk is a free speech absolutist?

Over the past few years, we’ve had a number of posts highlighting just how laughable it is that Elon Musk claims that he’s a “free speech absolutist.” He never has been. Remember that even before he took over Twitter, he had a long history of suppressing and attacking speech that challenged him. He had fired employees who spoke up in ways he didn’t like. He banned someone from buying a Tesla for complaining about a Tesla launch event. He’s fired union organizers. He threatened to sue a Tesla critic and intimidated the guy enough that he stopped writing about Tesla.

And, of course, since taking over the platform, he has shown time and time again that he’s no friend of free speech. Remember, he’s filed at least three lawsuits against critics in some form over their speech. He sued CCDH for a report about hate speech on ExTwitter. He sued Media Matters for an article showing ads next to horrible content. And, most recently, he sued GARM for having the temerity to suggest advertisers check to make sure websites will keep their brands safe before advertising.

All of those are the opposite of free speech absolutism. They are entirely about abusing his own wealth and power to use the power of the state to crush entities for their own free speech.

And yet, Bloomberg is coming along with this ridiculous headline:

Musk’s Free Speech Mantra Collides With Crackdowns on Hate Speech and Disinformation

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And it’s not just the headline writers (often different than the article authors). The piece by reporters Kurt Wagner and Michael Shepard starts out with the same framing:

Elon Musk’s absolutist version of free speech has thrown the world’s richest man and his X social-media platform into the crosshairs of governments worldwide.

In the UK, officials are weighing tougher rules for sites like X after a surge of online disinformation fueled an outbreak of riots. In India, X was ordered this year to remove posts and block certain accounts in response to farmer protests. And in Brazil, Musk is in a running battle with the nation’s highest court over its orders to suspend users who had circulated fake news.

This is not just lazy. It’s wrong. It’s not just accepting Musk’s own false framing as fact, it’s literally misleading readers. Musk often takes to saying that you shouldn’t listen to the mainstream media, and this is one case where he’s right.

Musk’s position has never actually been an “absolutist” version of free speech. He himself has admitted that what he means by free speech is “that which matches the law.”

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Of course, this is nonsensical. The most important concept of “free speech” is that it is to protect against government suppression of speech. Under Musk’s definition, there is no such thing as free speech, because the government is still allowed to pass any laws it wants to suppress speech.

Taking it even further, the idea that it is Musk’s “absolutist version of free speech” that is getting him yelled at by other countries is silly. Musk has willingly bent over to remove speech at the behest of authoritarian leaders he likes, each time falling back on his “that which matches the law” rhetoric to justify it.

He’s only clashed with government requests for takedowns when he personally disagrees with those governments. So, yes, he’s fighting with the UK and Brazil (and before that Australia), but it’s weird to include India in there, as Musk was perfectly happy to pull down content on Modi’s behalf. He was also willing to block content on behalf of Erdogan in Turkey.

As McSweeney’s rightfully parodied, Musk’s position on free speech is a variation on: “I will defend free speech to the death. Or until an autocrat asks me to stop.” Except with one addendum: “but if the leadership of the country is just slightly to the left of my own politics, I will once again stand for free speech.”

Musk’s conception of free speech has never been absolutist by any stretch of the imagination. It has been entirely “we should allow the speech I like, and not allow the speech I dislike.” This, of course, is many people’s incorrect understanding of free speech.

Yes, some people like to pretend that his version of free speech is about allowing more people to say more things on ExTwitter, but even that is false. Musk has been banning people for much more arbitrary and capricious reasons than Twitter ever did before. While he has his own free speech rights to moderate however he wants as the owner of the platform, his own moderation spasms are way more chaotic and stupid than anything that the previous regime did.

Yes, every website learns that it needs to do some level of moderation. That’s the whole content moderation learning curve. Without that, your site is filled with spam and garbage. There can be vast differences in how one travels that learning curve, and some approaches can be more speech supportive than others. But nothing that Elon has done suggests he’s any more supportive of free speech than any other site.

So why is Bloomberg claiming that Musk is taking an absolutist free speech stance?

That’s accepting his false framing of the situation. The reality is that Musk has no principled support for free speech beyond “I want to unban some assholes who got banned by Twitter for violating policies I disagreed with, namely mocking trans people.” Now that he’s in control of Twitter he’s implementing the same kinds of moderation policies, just more chaotic and less principled.

And his constant legal attacks on those who speak out against him should make it clear that he’s very much a censorial litigator, rather than a free speech absolutist.

His claims of being a free speech absolutist and the rare fights he takes on with governments (whose politics all seem to differ from his own) have nothing to do with free speech and everything to do with him. He wants to play to his base who has been deluded by articles like this Bloomberg piece to believe that Musk actually cares about free speech, or he wants another chance to make himself out to be a “free speech martyr.”

Free speech means something. Free speech absolutism means something. Elon understands neither, and the media is doing its readership a total disservice by accepting Elon’s framing.

A true free speech absolutist vision for social media would include things like building on an open protocol, which removes the ability of governments to pressure individual companies to do their censorial bidding. It would also mean regularly standing up to all governments that seek to suppress speech via coercion and threats. Elon hasn’t done any of that.

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Companies: bloomberg, twitter, x

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Comments on “Can We Finally Stop Pretending Elon Musk Is A “Free Speech Absolutist”? He’s Not”

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

If by that you mean the only people who get to speak are the Republicans, Republican-aligned “nobility”, their backers (Russia, China) and assorted fascist authcap rulers, then yes, we know they get to speak with no consequences.

However, for the rest of us, we know what will really happen: we will get shot if we so much as exist in their general direction.

We know that’s what you want.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

However, for the rest of us, we know what will really happen: we will get shot if we so much as exist in their general direction.

Oh please. Drama-queen, much?

Communists like VP Harris and many Biden Regime apparatchiks and their media allies obsessively post propaganda to X. Their attempts at audience manipulation just aren’t as successful as before, since a counternarrative is easily circulated by&amongst The People.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Oh please. Drama-queen, much?

Considering that Singapore’s politicians are effectively marching in lockstep with he Republican Party, right down to selling their country to a foreign power, I am merely stating an opinion backed by plain, observable reality.

Communists like VP Harris and many Biden Regime apparatchiks and their media allies obsessively post propaganda to X.

That means a lot less than you think it is.

Political campaigns try to get as many people as possible and usage of social media to get out a message should not be counted as support.

You should count yourself lucky that the legacy media still covers the white supremacist crimes that is the Republican Election Campaign instead of calling for the arrest of the Republican Party leadership.

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MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Communists like VP Harris and many Biden Regime apparatchiks

Slow your reefer roll there, Senator McCarthy. Neither Biden nor Harris have ever expressed interest in seizing the means of production or nationalizing all industries, but much less made attempts to do so. They’re about as communist as you are a political science PHD.

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Anonymous Coward says:

On Twitter–excuse me, I mean “Х”–I can get in trouble for calling Mr. Musk a cis man. That is proof enough that he is not a free speech absolutist. If there’s some manner of expression he objects to, he’ll come up with some sort of tailor-made rule that allows him to crack down on it. Then when someone violates that rule, he and his fans will point to that rule as an excuse for their continued “free speech” doublethink–and yes, it’s doublethink; they are all for restrictions on certain forms of expression, yet still claim to stand up for free speech. These tailor-made rules are just so they can keep telling themselves they support free speech even though they’re engaging in the very behavior they condemned in the past.

Ah, but that’s just Wilhoit’s Law in action again, isn’t it? It’s censorship when you do it, but it’s free speech when we do it. Mr. Musk probably knows it’s BS, but I suspect a lot of his fans sincerely believe it.

Anonymous Coward says:

“His claims of being a free speech absolutist and the rare fights he takes on with governments (whose politics all seem to differ from his own) have nothing to do with free speech and everything to do with him.”

EVERYTHING he says or does has everything to do with him. He’s a sociopath driven by his massive inferiority complex (well-deserved, actually: he’s an idiot who has failed at everything he’s ever done) and an equally-massive sense of entitlement thanks to daddy’s money. He doesn’t care who or what he damages or destroys as long as he thinks he can get his way; his entire life is one long whining, screaming tantrum, an uninterrupted demand for attention and toys, because he has the emotional maturity of a spoiled toddler.

And unfortunately, we live in a broken society. A high-functioning society would remove him immediately, take away all of his money and power, and put him someplace where he couldn’t do any significant damage. It’s be the best thing for everyone, including him. But unfortunately that’s not what we do, so deranged lunatics like Musk (and RFK Jr and Trump and Ramaswamy and quite a few others) are not only allowed to roam around freely, but they’re actually taken seriously by some people.

Heck, there are actually people who WORK for these maniacs, and I can’t figure out for the life of me why anyone would choose to do that. I cleaned toilets for two years to help put myself through college, and it was awful work, but I would never even consider working for filth like Musk.

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Raphael (profile) says:

And then there's his admiration for Sulla

I think he also once posted that it might be a good idea to have a new Sulla. Sulla, for those of you who don’t know that much about ancient Rome, was a Roman political leader, eventually Dictator, who had large numbers of people in Rome murdered because he didn’t like their political views. Murdering people because you don’t like their politics is not exactly compatible with support for free speech, and neither is expressing a desire to see that happen.

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That One Guy (profile) says:

'But... he's a rich white guy, he can't be LYING!'

‘Journalism’ like that is why I’m neither surprised nor terribly put out when I hear that traditional news agencies are struggling to make ends meet these days, because while I’m aware they can do some good work investigating and reporting on important topics far too often they seem entirely content to just parrot whatever someone rich and/or powerful tells them, with nary a dissenting line lest they risk some ‘exclusive interview’ sometime in the future.

Drew Wilson (user link) says:

Re:

I totally agree. Journalism has many important uses and can produce content that is a public good, but more and more these days, there’s less investigative or informative pieces and more clickbait or agenda driven content.

The quality of the content large media companies produce has definitely dropped considerably in the last decade. This as many outlets trot out how they are the reliable sources of the world today and those online are the ones to be suspicious of for accuracy reasons. Yet, it’s a number of the online sources that are actually continuously setting the record straight on various stories and doing actual proper fact-checking. Yes, there are bad sources online, but there are plenty of high quality sources online as well.

It’s the drop in quality that angers me the most about large media companies these days. More and more, I see these outlets push out content that is either misinformed, incorrect, or flat out disinformation. The link tax debates were a huge highlight on how large media sources are increasingly not trustworthy as many sources push out talking points that are misleading and/or wrong and report them as facts. This when the conflict of interest is ridiculously obvious in their “reporting”.

I know a number of journalists out there are frustrated that they are viewed by a portion of the public as partisan hacks pushing out false or misleading information for political purposes, yet many of them are publishing content that is actively proving those members of the public right. All of this was avoidable if they simply carried on producing decent quality stuff, but no, they had to screw the pooch on this one and just shovel garbage out the door like the above example in TFA. Agh!

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

I wouldn’t go that far as I expect there have been a few who honestly believed that was a good position to take for a short time, it’s just once you see what that sort of position inevitably leads to you quickly come to understand why ‘Anything goes when it comes to speech’ isn’t a viable option.

Anyone who still maintains that position after that point though… yeah, at that point I’d say it’s pretty likely that it’s because they’re using it as cover for some pretty heinous stuff that they don’t want to defend directly.

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