Larry Mantle (AirTalk, scpr.org); Seth Auberon, CC Liu, Ashley Wells (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
How can the Biden administration block all dis- and mis-information and inconvenient truths?
Me! I'll decide what's true and what's disinfo. |
In recent years it seems more and more North Americans are willing to openly embrace alternatives to government truth, particularly as high-ranking government officials, including the a president, amplify the voices of those spreading information the government dislikes.
Greg Palast investigates (gregpalast.com). |
Don't look up. There's nothing there. |
Some congressional Democrats want to get in on the effort, too: In December, members of The Congressional Task Force on Digital Citizenship sent a letter to the then-Biden transition team proposing a blueprint for how Joe's administration can combat the flow of disinformation, which includes:
creating a multi agency "task force" whose job would be to better "educate" Americans [by sending them to "reeducation or labor camps" if necessary] on disinformation and ensure that centralized power federal agencies have tools to fight it.Big Gov't and the Thought Police are watching.
"Expert" Joan Donovan, Harvard |
This is a society where individuals who would most likely benefit from a centralized campaign against disinformation are the same people who distrust anything the federal government says or does.
"Expert" Ilya Somin, George Mason |
How can Biden fight information he doesn't like at the federal level as well as the challenges, legal and policy-wise, that he might face along the way to shutting down dissent and debate. More + MP3 AUDIO
- GUESTS: Joan Donovan, adjunct lecturer in public policy and research director of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy at Harvard U. Tweets @BostonJoan
- Ilya Somin, professor of law at George Mason U. (Antonin Scalia Law School). where his research areas include constitutional law, democratic theory, and federalism. Tweets @IlyaSomin
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