George Soros’s Hypocrisy
About Facebook and Much Else
February 5, 2020
The investor George Soros objects that Facebook is
doing what the U.S. Government allows it to do, but he doesn’t object to the
U.S. Government’s allowing it. Yet, he claims to be opposing the Republican
Government of Donald Trump, while he demands that the leadership of Facebook be
replaced — supposedly for violating a law that the Trump Administration maybe
isn’t enforcing. Is Soros really that incoherent? Or is there an ulterior
motive here?
He headlined an op-ed in the January 31st New
York Times, “Mark
Zuckerberg Should Not Be in Control of Facebook”, and he closed there by saying, “I repeat and
reaffirm my accusation against Facebook under the leadership of Mr. Zuckerberg
and Ms. Sandberg. They follow only one guiding principle: maximize profits
irrespective of the consequences. One way or another, they should not be left
in control of Facebook.”
He cited, for blame in this, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which allows passive online media — media that exercise no editorial
control over what their users post online — to be not responsible
for, and not subject to lawsuits for, whatever is posted to
their sites.* Soros noted that Facebook is not censoring posts
to its site in a way that will help Democratic candidates, but instead in
a way that will help Republican candidates. He apparently wants censorship, but
it must be his type of censorship, not theirs. He
is clear about his support for some sort of censorship. But is
he proposing that the Government will somehow force this change from a
Republican Facebook to a Democratic Facebook, or instead that Facebook’s
stockholders will, somehow, do this — get rid of their founder and two top
leaders? Soros doesn’t respect his readers enough to so much as even just touch
on that basic question in his presentation — is the Government to get rid of
Zuckerberg and Sandberg, or are the stockholders supposed to do it? Soros is
addressing his commentary only to fools who don’t care about what case he’s
trying to persuade them to believe. If his article were, at all, serious, it
would have been less holier-than-thou against businesses that supposedly adhere
to “only one guiding principle: maximize profits irrespective of the
consequences,” and it would have outlined a proposal — and not just asserted
“One way or another, they should not be left in control of Facebook.” But why shouldn’t
they? He really doesn’t say. He doesn’t cite even a single concrete example. He
presents no case, at all.
He didn’t object that by Facebook’s doing any
censorship at all, Facebook doesn’t actually fit into Section 230
of the Communications Decency Act and Facebook is instead serving as
an online publisher (a member of the press) and therefore is supposed to be
legally responsible for what is being posted to their site — responsible for it
in just the same way that the New York Times and Washington
Post and NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC, are responsible for
what they publish (responsible, that is, to civil suits,
but not to any criminal laws). Soros isn’t hiring lawyers to
present such a case against Facebook, which would be a serious case to present,
holding Facebook liable for any libels that it has published; he is instead
trying to smear the leaders of Facebook, without supplying facts, or, really,
any case, at all.
He is not objecting to the Trump Administration’s
prejudicially granting this non-enforcement to Facebook, the
publisher — the Trump Administration’s treating them as if they weren’t
being publishers, but just passive information-providers; treating
them as if Facebook weren’t selecting what to transmit and
what not to transmit on their networks, to their audience. (Facebook, and other
online media such as Twitter, don’t even hide the fact that they exercise censorship,
while they claim to be only “passive” media and thus protected by
Section 230. Like I said: this case against Facebook would be serious, if it
were brought, because these online platforms really do censor-out
whatever they wish to censor-out.)
Why did Soros object to Facebook’s controllers, Mark
Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, instead of object to Donald Trump — who
is granting this prejudicial treatment, to that publisher
(allowing it to be treated in accord with the Section 230 exemption)? Is it
because Soros is too stupid to know better, or to understand the difference?
Soros knows enough to be expressing his viewpoint in a
partisan manner, as a Democrat who spends tens of millions of dollars each
election-cycle in order to support conservative Democrats against progressive
Democrats. (For example: in the 2016 Democratic Presidential primaries, between
the conservative liberal Hillary Clinton and the progressive Bernie Sanders,
Soros’s spokesman said that “Soros is
supporting pro-Clinton super PACs because ‘Mr. Soros believes Hillary Clinton
is the most qualified candidate to be president.’” He said this after Hillary’s disastrous record as Secretary of State, such as on Libya, “We came, we saw, he died, ha ha
ha!!”) And,
then, in the general election, Soros supports conservative Democrats (such as
that same conservative liberal Clinton) against sometimes even more
conservative Republican Party nominees, for the given federal office. (The idea
that Soros pumps about himself, that he’s progressive, is one big fat lie: he’s
nothing of the sort.)
Why would he not be objecting to
Trump here — the Republican who will soon be running against whomever the
Democratic Party chooses to be its nominee? The reason is that Trump
isn’t really his target here: this is not the
season during which the President will be chosen, but is instead the season in
which each Party is to be selecting its nominee to then run
against the other Parties’ nominees. And, since Soros is addressing,
really (and only), fellow Democrats, his agenda could reasonably be viewed as
being to affect whom they will be voting for in the present primaries.
In other words, George Soros wants as free a hand as
possible, as a Democratic Party mega-donor, in order to determine whom the
Democratic Party’s nominee will be. He wants Facebook to be
censoring his way, not their way. Then, later, if that nominee suits his
purposes, Soros will donate funds proportionately, to that Democratic Party
nominee, against Donald Trump. Perhaps right now Soros is using the
opinion-page of the Democratic Party’s New York Times in order
to warn Facebook to avoid using its censorship so as to favor and oppose ‘the
wrong’ Democratic Party candidates. And, maybe, that newspaper favors and
opposes the same candidates that Soros does, and so perhaps that’s why they
published his tripe here, rather than higher-quality submissions they could
have chosen instead to publish.
Google, during the 2016 election-cycle, was slanting
its ‘news’ to favor conservative Democrats against progressive Democrats, and
then to favor the Democratic Party nominees against the Republican Party’s
nominees, whereas Facebook was slanting its ‘news’ to favor Republican Party
nominees against Democratic Party nominees. Twitter censors-out whatever neither Party
wants the public to know, such as that
Julian Assange is being tortured awaiting his extradition to the U.S. — for a
trial that will likely never
happen — all
of these years of his imprisonment, lately in solitary confinement moreover,
and never once being tried in a court of law, for anything, at all.
Since George Soros is a Democratic Party billionaire,
he is objecting against Facebook instead of against Google.
Similarly, Republican Party billionaires (and the ‘news’-media that they
control) attack Google and other pro-Democratic-Party media.
Thus, Soros says “Facebook can post deliberately
misleading or false statements by candidates for public office and others, and
take no responsibility for them” instead of: “President Trump is not enforcing
federal laws that hold publishers liable for lies they publish.”
After all: Soros himself was — along with the U.S. Government and the
Netherlands Government — one of the top three funders of a television station in Kiev Ukraine that
promoted ethnic cleansing against the predominantly ethnic Russian
residents in far eastern Ukraine where 90%
of the population had voted for the democratically
elected President, Viktor Yanukovych, whom America’s Democratic Party President
Barack Obama had just
overthrown in a very bloody coup that was covered-over by ‘popular
demonstrations’ which
had actually been organized inside the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine and which had
aimed at creating in Ukraine a rabidly anti-Russian government on Russia’s
doorstep. Obama had even been planning by no later than June
2013 to install in Crimea a U.S. naval base to replace Russia’s largest naval
base, which was
(and remains) located there, in Crimea. The ‘popular demonstrations’ against
Yanukovych didn’t even start until 21 November 2013, and they were organized
starting on 1 March 2013 inside America’s
Ukraine Embassy.
The organizing for them started by no later than June 2011. The ethnic cleansing was acknowledged by Ukrainian officials and was very effective, but Soros wanted yet more of it to be done, and
he urged an additional $50 billion for it to be
publicly financed as an ‘investment’ in ‘democracy’. So, Soros knows, and understands, a thing or two
about propaganda. And, of course, he knows that Julian Assange is his enemy,
just as much as Assange is, say, an enemy of Google’s Eric Schmidt, and of Cambridge Analytica’s Peter Thiel (who
supported Trump).
This is just a game that virtually all of the
billionaires play, against democracy itself. They want to control the country.
Ever since around 1980, they have been accustomed
to doing so.
* The U.S. Constitution, in its First Amendment, prohibited any type
of governmentally imposed censorship but allowed censorship by members of
the privately owned “press.” Section 230 was written to exclude passive
online providers from being referred to as being “press” or a
“publisher,” but it was poorly written, by lobbyists for corporations in the
same category as Facebook and Google, and has yet to be revised by lobbyists
for their print and broadcast competitors, who might define more
precisely Section 230’s key phrase “interactive computer service” so
as to state explicitly that only passive ones
are being referred to by that phrase. Right now, even the New York
Times online could conceivably qualify as being not a
“publisher” and therefore not liable as publishers have been in the past. A
corrupt government writes laws corruptly (such as
Section 230 is)
so that the laws reflect little else than the contending mega-corporate
interests; and Section 230 is an example of this (as are most of our laws).
With a big enough budget for its lawyering, any mega-corporation or association
of large corporations can get the laws, in a corrupt country, written so as to
serve its interests. Of course, such a country is no democracy. (But a corrupt country will have a corrupt press so
that the public will think it’s a democracy.) Under such
circumstances, judges make the final decision in particular cases. There
already do exist some legal
precedents for
interpreting “interactive computer service” to apply only to
passive ones. However, most billionaires are probably similar to Soros in
wanting the internet to continue being used so as to propagandize the public —
shape people’s attitudes and beliefs — instead of to inform
the public (which entails no censorship whatsoever and is
therefore overwhelmingly disfavored by billionaires and their
corporations and their PACs and their lobbyists). Julian Assange is an example
of the way a billionaires-controlled world treats leading anti-censorship
activists. America is becoming a bastion of censorship, as one would expect of
any dictatorship. This is certainly not what the people who wrote the U.S.
Constitution had intended or even expected. After 9/11, it has become a
seemingly permanent police-state. It’s what one would expect from a country
that’s controlled by its billionaires. The 2020 U.S. elections should be about
this problem, but, of course, are not.
Eric ZUESSE
American writer and investigative historian
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