"Excessive Free Speech" Threatens Our Democracy, The Globe and Mail Explains
Free Speech needs rigid regulation
Our democracy is in grave danger! We already know that it is threatened by humor, the Supreme Court, and white rural voters. WEF and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s adviser, Wharton Prof. Adam Grant, also explained that elections are bad for our democracy.
That is not all; a grave new threat emerged: excessive free speech.
Globe and Mail is Canada's most widely read newspaper on weekdays and Saturdays, so we better take it seriously. Its public affairs columnist, Washington-based Lawrence Martin, looks like a slimmed-down Donald Trump, whom Lawrence dislikes intensely despite close visual resemblance. (I wonder if Mr Martin’s mom cavorted with Fred Trump in the Fall of 1946)
Mr. Martin is very upset that the Internet empowered the masses against establishment forces:
The business model of the newspaper industry Mr Martin represents is threatened by the Internet, which he laments:
Lawrence Martin forgets that the media itself contributes to polarization:
Looking in the mirror, which is never the strong suit of most people, is something that Lawrence Martin should practice occasionally.
In any case, Globe and Mail has a prescription on how to save democracy: rigid regulation of speech. Such a get-tough-on-speech approach will certainly protect democracy and safeguard our most basic freedoms:
The dangerous anti-democratic free-speech lobby, Globe and Mail implies, is just as bad as the baby-killing gun lobby.
I hope, my friends, we all see that our democracy is under threat: it is being simultaneously attacked by white voters, free speech, elections, and the U.S. Constitution.
Do you know any other threats to democracy? Let us know what you think!
The not-so-hidden subtext of the very first statement regarding the awfulness dangerousness of free speech seems pretty obvious to me. “…..they were still largely controlled by the elites.” He’s jonesing for a return to the good ‘ol days, since it was so much better; when the peons did not have a way to get their thoughts and opinions out en masse, and without inference, to the public square.
Globalist shill.
Cancelled my subscriptions to G&M,Wash-Post,NYT, Guardian about 4 years ago.Free agent now.