Criminal cases for online political speech are now
commonplace in the UK. As The Independent‘s James Bloodworth reported, “around 20,000 people in Britain have been investigated in the past three
years for comments made online.”
But it is by no means neutral. To put it mildly, not all
online “hate speech” or advocacy of violence is treated equally. It is, for
instance, extremely difficult to imagine that Facebook users who sanction
violence by the UK in Iraq and Afghanistan, or who spew anti-Muslim slurs, or
who call for and celebrate the deaths of Gazans, would be similarly prosecuted.
In both the UK and Europe generally, cases are occasionally brought for
right-wing “hate speech”. But
the proposed punishments for such advocacy are rarely more than symbolic:
trivial fines and the like. The real punishment is meted out overwhelmingly
against dissidents and critics of the establishment view.
You’re allowed, by our generousity of liberty, to privately harbour
opinions. But if you try to publicly advocate them on Facebook or Twitter,
convince others to believe them, or teach them to your children, then you are a
dangerous criminal who belongs in prison. Needless to say, no judge would
lecture, let alone sentence, anyone for “holding to an ideology” that advocates
violence by the British government in foreign countries, nor parents who
indoctrinate their children to join the British military, nor those who led
that country to invade and destroy Iraq in an aggressive war. The point is that
this is the state punishing expression of some viewpoints while sanctioning others.
This is about criminalising specific views anathema to the government’s
policies and outlawing particular contrary value systems.
This eagerness to criminalise political speech becomes more
compelling as social media vests ordinary individuals with greater autonomy to
disseminate news as well as their views. We longer dependent on corporate media
institutions acting as “responsible gatekeepers” of public opinion. Individuals
all over the world are now able to collate their own news and circulate their
own information via the internet. Many ordinary people now have video cameras
on their mobiles and a Twitter account, which meant they were regularly
uploading video which prevents journalists from ignoring or diluting events.
This democratising effect of political discourse have long
been heralded as a future potential of the internet, but it is now a promise
finally being fulfilled, and it is scaring the entrenched elite all over the
world. Many westerners received news about daily developments in the “Arab
Spring” from previously unknown Arab citizens using Twitter and Facebook rather
than from Reuters or AP media outlets. That significantly increased sympathy
for the protesters, now more humanised than ever before, at the expense of the Western-supported
tyrannies (long protected by the media) which they were attempting to uproot.
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