Western censorship ratchets up amid the Israel-Hamas conflict
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Within the span of a single week this month, 
the European Union’s censorship commissars have sent letters to three different 
major online platforms demanding to know what they’re doing about 
“disinformation” as the conflict in Gaza between Israel and Hamas heats up. How 
about buzzing off, already, comrades?
The “problem” seems to be that there’s a very high risk that people who don’t 
parrot the conventional Western narrative will take advantage of democracy’s 
theoretically non-negotiable cornerstone of free speech to log on and post 
something raw that risks undermining the establishment narrative. Or that one or 
both parties to the conflict are leveraging these platforms to wage grotesque 
influence campaigns. Kind of like the Kardashians do whenever they have 
something to sell.
The EU Commission has requested that, by this week, Meta (Facebook’s parent 
company) “provide more information on the measures it has taken to comply with 
obligations related to risk assessments and mitigation measures … following the 
terrorist attacks across Israel by Hamas, in particular with regard to the 
dissemination and amplification of illegal content and disinformation.”
A similar message was also sent to the video- sharing platform, TikTok.
Indeed, they should provide the bureaucrats information about how they’re going 
to ensure that the online playing field stays level and that comments like the 
EU’s evocation of “terrorist attacks across Israel by Hamas”, as the EU says, 
are balanced out by mentions of Israel bombing Palestinian civilians. Something 
that the EU evidently often fails to do itself.
The platform, “X”, formerly known as Twitter, has also received a letter from 
the EU noting that it was under investigation by the bureaucrats in Brussels 
related to the platform’s handling of things like “illegal content, 
disinformation, and gender-based violence.”
EU internal affairs commissioner, Thierry Breton, said in a recent address to 
the EU parliament that “illicit content and disinformation” creates a risk of 
stigmatization of certain communities and destabilization of democratic 
structures. Indeed, there’s no more stable government entity than one with no 
dissent or turbulence. Division and vigorous debate or resistance to the 
establishment quo is one of the very hallmarks of a healthy and stable 
democracy. Yet Breton has said that “we will not let terror and disinformation 
divide us or undermine our democracy.” OK, then let’s all just wait for the 
official government propaganda on every contentious issue and fall in line. 
Sounds super democratic.
Breton underscored the need to suppress violent content to protect children. 
Sorry but that’s the parents’ job. Or at least it was when I was growing up. Why 
does the state figure that it’s now expected to step in and take their place on 
everything from childcare funding to ensuring that the entire internet is one 
giant safe space that accommodates the definition of what a bunch of desk 
jockeys figure that kids should be exposed to? Why is it X owner Elon Musk’s job 
to parent other people’s kids? He has his hands full already with at least 11 of 
his own.
Critics of platforms like X routinely evoke its lack of reactivity related to 
what they call propaganda. Most of the time, those complaints tend to favor one 
side of a given conflict, even when both sides have committed violent acts 
against civilians of the other side.
Then there’s the oft-leveled criticism that allowing publication of 
terrorism-related material constitutes its promotion, attributing outsized blame 
to Big Tech and effectively obscuring debate over the fact that these same 
states have failed to curtail some of the top facilitators of terrorist 
recruitment within their own control. Those include their failure to eradicate 
terrorist recruitment within their own state-run prisons, or to champion the 
protection of innocent civilians on all sides equally rather than just those who 
happen to be on the side of allied Western interests.
And again, if you’re old enough for mom and dad to let you use the internet, 
then you’re also old enough to have them explain to you what a "terrorist video" 
is. If not, then they can just go back to blowing stuff up in video games until 
they’re of the right age to understand.
If this level of censorship had existed back in the day of George W. Bush’s War 
on Terror, then we never would have been able to get a good laugh at the 
Taliban’s monkey bars training camp videos.
The bottom line is that the EU is using the Israel-Hamas conflict as an 
opportunity to strong-arm these platforms into an arranged marriage with the 
Western establishment-funded think-tanks that the EU works with to control 
information under the guise of dodging any mere specter of harm to democracy. 
Musk called one such entity a “ scam” and suggested that it be disbanded 
immediately when an online user pointed out some of its own peddling of 
fake-news under the guise of fact-checking.
Musk and others who paid billions for their online businesses should be able to 
run them as they see fit. If they’re indeed seen as too big to fail — or to be 
granted freedom — then let these same governments fork over tens of billions to 
buy and run them … and then watch everyone flee elsewhere in search of raw 
information that helps the average person make up their own mind outside of 
their Orwellian echo chamber.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN