Banning Memes Bans Free Speech


Thirty years ago, the incendiary ‍columnist Sam Francis⁤ coined the term “anarcho-tyranny” to⁣ describe a state ⁢of‌ affairs ​in which the government cannot ‍or will not enforce laws against serious criminals and instead ‌exerts excessive and often⁤ arbitrary force on ordinary citizens.

Francis’s coinage, conceived against the backdrop⁣ of ‍the crack epidemic⁣ and⁢ attendant crime wave of​ the late⁤ ’80s‌ and early ’90s, was⁢ provoked by a series of feckless gun⁢ laws ostensibly designed to curb armed crime. But in practice, they were used to⁤ harass ordinary gun⁤ owners. The ⁤original column appeared in December 1992, a ⁤few ‌months⁢ after an off-the-grid Vietnam vet was entrapped by⁤ an undercover ATF agent for the illegal sale of a shotgun, leading ⁢to a raid on his cabin in Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and the murder⁤ of his dog, son, and⁣ wife by federal agents.

Anarcho-tyranny is not an intentional conspiracy to subvert ‌the rule of⁤ law. There are no​ smoke-filled ‌rooms ‍where the anarcho-tyranny white paper is passed around among policymakers. It is simply the⁢ natural devolution of a government undergoing a⁤ crisis of authority: As power ​slackens‌ in one direction, it must tighten in​ another.

After a two-decade respite, the days‍ of ⁣anarcho-tyranny have returned, perhaps more explicitly than ever. Since at least 2016, leftist DAs around the ⁣country have ⁤made it their explicit ‌aim⁢ to decriminalize every offense short⁣ of murder (and sometimes ‌that, too) and empty the prisons of even ‌the⁣ most dangerous felons. Violent⁢ crime is once again a mainstay of big-city⁤ life. Drug addicts‍ and psychopaths haunt the subways. Flagrant theft is ⁢forcing businesses to shutter and lock away their goods behind walls of plexiglass. ⁣In San Francisco alone, roughly 2,000 car break-ins are committed per month — with a less⁤ than 1 percent arrest⁤ rate. ‍The George Floyd riots of 2020 amassed ⁢upward of ‌ $2 billion in damage,​ while its ‌perpetrators were rewarded with tens of millions in exculpatory payouts.

The state, which ​is currently controlled by ⁤a ⁤party whose political ⁣clients ⁢are ⁤the ‍agents of ‍this disorder, has responded by cracking down on‌ anyone who tries to intervene (murder ‍charges brought against Kyle Rittenhouse, Jacob Gardner, and Daniel Penny ⁣demonstrate the point) and has ⁤mercilessly prosecuted ⁣red Americans who have responded in kind ⁣(compare​ the millions in payouts for Black Lives Matter rioters ⁤to the‌ excessive sentencing of Jan.​ 6 defendants for example). ⁣Even more insidiously, the state, in the absence ⁣of neutral enforcement of the‍ laws as ⁤they exist, is ‌employing‍ an expansive reading of ​civil ​rights⁤ law to punish their political enemies ⁤and flex their tyrannical authority.

Currently, the Department‌ of ⁢Education’s Office of Civil⁢ Rights is investigating conservative activist Christ Rufo for‍ refusing ‍to play the pronoun​ game‍ with his colleagues‌ at the New College in Florida. ⁤Elon Musk, whose purchase of Twitter ‍and subsequent release of a trove of‍ internal ‌documents⁣ exposed the hand-in-glove relationship ⁤between the federal ⁢government and (former) Twitter executives to suppress conservative speech, now faces a ⁢civil rights lawsuit for the crime of not hiring refugees to work at SpaceX.

These targeted prosecutions are scandals in their own right, ⁣but⁢ they pale in comparison to the ‌treatment of Douglass Mackey, ⁢whose ⁤recent⁢ conviction is⁣ the canary in the coal⁣ mine for what’s ⁤coming down​ the pike.

Douglass⁣ Mackey’s Memes

Mackey,⁣ the‌ man behind the now-defunct Twitter persona Ricky‍ Vaughn, was convicted on March 31 of this year of “conspiracy ​against ​rights” in violation of 18 U.S.C.⁣ § 241, a Reconstruction Era law designed to⁣ counteract the violent voter suppression tactics of⁤ the ‌Ku Klux Klan. In October, Mackey was sentenced⁣ to seven​ months in federal⁣ prison.

Mackey’s⁤ alleged conspiracy? Posting a joke meme on Twitter.

Really. See ⁤ for yourself.

The offending tweet features an image of a mock political flier, which, according to federal prosecutors, was aimed at deceiving Hillary Clinton voters with the text, ‌“Avoid ‍the line. Vote from home. Text ‘Hillary’ to ‍59925.”⁣ Another tweet, also named ⁤in the suit, instructs ‌readers to ‍cast their vote ‍by posting the ‌word “Hillary” to Facebook and Twitter alongside ⁤the hashtag​ #PresidentialElection.

It’s⁣ a mildly provocative troll, a⁣ wry jab ​at the absurdity of get-out-the-vote efforts, which target the most civically‍ illiterate members of the public. But never mind whether the joke‌ is‌ good or bad, it is obviously a ⁣joke, ‍obvious enough that posters far ​less clever than Mackey have made it​ before. Kristina Wong, a semi-prominent Twitter Democrat, posted a nearly identical tweet ⁤during the same election cycle encouraging her‌ fellow “Chinese Americans for⁣ Trump and ⁣people of ‌color for Trump” to vote ⁣on “Super Wednesday,” adding, “TEXT in your vote! Text votes are legit.”

Fair play, in other words. Jokes, ‍trolls,⁢ accusations, deceptions, outright lies ‌of the most salacious, malicious, and ⁣truly deplorable⁣ nature are all part of the ⁤daily maelstrom ‌of political informational warfare. You may ⁤find this kind of partisan mud-slinging degrading, even regrettable, but the grand spectacle of American democracy has always been this way.‍ We take the ‌good with the bad, the funny with the cringe.⁢ If you want something different, a system of laws and norms that promises a little more dignity, well…​ that’s another conversation for another time. For now, this is the​ game we’re all⁤ playing, and the rules, enshrined by the First Amendment, are the rules.

Or so⁣ we thought. If you are a Trump ⁢supporter like Mackey, rather than an obedient party‌ apparatchik like Wong, the rules no longer apply. When,⁢ as ⁤Mackey’s case demonstrates, the‍ state⁣ can expand​ the⁣ purview of a⁣ law meant to thwart acts of Klan violence to include ⁢online “disinformation,”‌ it can render ⁤almost any action‍ illegal. Every utterance, to the extent it has⁢ a ⁣political valence, is a potential crime. Everything is against the ⁢law, but the law only applies ⁢to the state’s ‌political‌ enemies.

If this is an exaggeration, ​it is so only barely.

Here are some more⁣ facts that provide a fuller picture of the circumstances of Mackey’s ⁤alleged crime and their implications. Mackey’s meme first appeared ⁢on Twitter on Nov.​ 1, 2016.‍ It wasn’t until ‌January 2021, two days after the ‍inauguration of Joe Biden, that charges were filed. Despite Mackey living⁣ in Florida, the DOJ used a dubious legal reading to have‌ the case tried in the hostile Eastern District‌ of New York, under the auspices⁤ of newly appointed U.S. Attorney Breon ‍Peace, in front of a Democrat activist judge who ‌in 2017 issued an emergency ‍stay to‍ block Trump’s executive order on refugee resettlements,⁤ and in front of a Brooklyn jury‍ pool that voted 4 to‍ 1 ⁣in favor of Joe Biden.⁣

The‌ most astonishing fact is that the case was brought in the⁤ absence of any victim. According ⁢to the Justice Department, 4,900 people texted the fake number in the ​tweet. Out of ⁤these, the ⁣Justice Department found not a single person who claimed to have been deceived by the meme or who thought that texting “Hillary” to 59925 constituted a valid vote.

Mackey’s real crime, his real sin, was‍ being​ an effective right-wing provocateur. According to an analysis from MIT Media Labs, Mackey’s Twitter account, @TheRickyVaughn, ​with a little over 50,000 ⁣followers at the​ time of ‌the election, was one of⁤ the most influential social media accounts in the ‍country, ranking higher than NBC News and prominent Democrat mouthpieces like Stephen Colbert.

Mackey’s prolific output and acerbic wit, his ⁢unique ability to proselytize the ideological foundations of ‌Trumpism with native digital ⁢fluency, is what made him a target.‍ It is also true that Mackey could be blatantly offensive, but the need to protect⁢ offensive⁣ speech only ‌underscores the​ principles of free expression at stake. Ultimately, he represented the breakup of⁤ the ⁢informational monopoly held by⁢ the state’s preferred opinion makers, and that is why⁤ he was prosecuted. The candidacy of Donald​ Trump, a sui generis figure in a hundred‍ different ways, and whose own subsequent legal entanglements operate from the same logic⁢ of excessive prosecutorial‌ zeal, ‍was ‌animated, at ‍least in part,‍ by the⁢ unconstrained energy of ⁣online ⁣troublemakers ‍like Mackey.

And like Trump, Mackey had to be held to account ⁢for exposing these⁤ vulnerabilities in the ‍system. Again, ​where power‍ slackens ‌in⁣ one direction (losing control of the electorate), it must tighten in another (stringing up meme makers). ⁤The likeness here isn’t ⁤merely ⁣symbolic. Remember ‍18 ⁤U.S.C. § 241? This⁤ same law, ‌which according to legal ‌scholar Eugene ‍Volokh ⁣ has never been used to prosecute a​ speech act, is precisely the law federal prosecutor Jack Smith is relying on to⁤ indict Trump. ⁣Douglass Mackey’s case isn’t a standalone act of prosecutorial ‌aggression; it is⁢ the ⁤foundation for a⁤ new legal regime that intends to cast‍ a net ‌over the entire ocean of online speech.

Broadening the Law’s Scope

The precedent⁢ set in‍ the Mackey case eschews any limiting principle⁢ on ⁣how the‍ law can be​ applied. Any “disinformation” — ‍that is, any untrue statement, even crude jokes, like jesting ⁢that Michelle ​Obama is a man,‌ or that [insert politician] is really ​an ⁢alien ⁣lizard ⁤in a ‍human skinsuit — so long as⁢ it might deter someone from voting, is a⁣ potential crime.⁤ Even the mild suggestion that voting is irrational, a belief long ⁤held by​ many mainstream ‌political scientists, ‍could‌ count as ‌a criminal act under this reading of Section 241. This broadening ‌of scope⁢ is ‍precisely the point.

In his 1964 book ‌ The‌ Morality​ of Law, ⁣legal theorist Lon ⁤L. Fuller tells the parable of King ​Rex,​ an ambitious though naive ruler who attempts to reform his kingdom’s legal system from the ground up. First, his legal code is too narrow,‍ then ‌too broad, too abstruse, then too⁢ plain. His subjects’ dissatisfaction mounts, until the ⁣king realizes that by making his laws impossible ⁢to obey, he can ⁢bring his enemies to​ heel whenever he chooses.

“It was made ⁢a⁣ crime, punishable by 10 years’ ⁢imprisonment, to cough, sneeze, hiccough,‌ faint or fall down in the presence of⁣ the king,” Fuller writes. ⁤In other words, there ⁤was no law, only the king’s discretion concerning who deserved punishment​ or mercy.

The 17th-century polemicist ⁣Leveler “Free Born”⁢ John Lilburne called such a‌ state of affairs a “lawless unlimited power.” ‍It eventually led⁣ to a revolution. ‍We’re not there yet, but‍ when ​one of our fellow citizens faces federal prison time for a joke, we are forgiven for being⁤ reminded of dear King Rex.

In the coming year, we will be treated​ to⁣ a warmed-over buffet of sermons by our ‍intellectual betters on the sanctity⁢ of⁢ Our ‌Democracy™. ‌We will be relentlessly hounded⁣ to check under our ‍beds and in ⁢our closets ​for purveyors of “disinformation.” While the streets are overrun with another round of election year “mostly peaceful protests,”​ the⁣ border ​is​ swamped by a deluge of illegal immigrants, and‍ our major metros are ravaged by ‌wanton criminality, ⁤we will do well ⁤to consider what‍ we stand ⁣for, and where we will draw the ​line­.


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How does the Mackey case set a dangerous precedent for ‍potential prosecution of individuals based on the dissemination of perceived disinformation and its potential impact⁢ on voting

Title: ⁣The Case of Douglass Mackey and the Erosion of⁢ Free Speech

Introduction:

Thirty years ago, columnist Sam Francis introduced the term “anarcho-tyranny” to describe a phenomenon where ‍the government fails to enforce laws against serious criminals but exerts excessive force on ordinary citizens. Today, we are witnessing a ‍resurgence of anarcho-tyranny, particularly in the realm‍ of free speech. The case of Douglass Mackey, known for‌ his provocative Twitter persona Ricky Vaughn, exemplifies how the government is expanding the scope of laws to suppress political adversaries and ⁢control online speech.

The Return of Anarcho-Tyranny:

In recent years, leftist district attorneys across the‌ country have sought to decriminalize offenses and empty prisons, leading to a resurgence of violent crime and theft. While‌ dangerous felons roam the streets, law-abiding citizens face prosecution for defending themselves. Law enforcement selectively cracks down on those who intervene while ignoring or downplaying the crimes committed by certain political movements, as seen in the differing treatment of the George‍ Floyd rioters ⁤and January 6‌ defendants.

The Expansion of Civil Rights⁤ Law:

To further exert control, the state ​has begun⁤ employing an expansive interpretation of civil rights law ⁤to punish political enemies and curtail ‌free speech. ⁢Examples include ‌investigations launched against conservative activist Christ Rufo for refusing to use preferred gender pronouns and the lawsuit​ against Elon Musk’s SpaceX for not hiring ‌refugees.⁢ These ‍targeted prosecutions demonstrate​ a trend ⁣of punishing individuals for expressing dissenting opinions or failing to ⁣adhere to⁣ politically​ correct‍ narratives.

The​ Case of Douglass Mackey:

Douglass Mackey’s recent conviction​ under the Reconstruction Era law “conspiracy against rights” highlights the ⁤erosion of free‌ speech rights. Mackey’s conviction stems from posting a joke meme on Twitter during the 2016 election. Despite the meme being a clearly satirical comment, law enforcement applied a dubious interpretation of the law, rendering virtually any action illegal if it carries a political connotation. Mackey’s case ​was brought without a victim, demonstrating the arbitrary​ nature of this expansion.

Implications for Free Speech:

The Mackey ‌case sets a‌ dangerous ​precedent, allowing⁢ authorities to prosecute individuals for disseminating what they⁣ perceive as disinformation. Under this broadened interpretation,‍ any statement, no matter how absurd or satirical, that may potentially deter someone ⁤from voting could be deemed a criminal act. Such an expansive application stifles free expression and undermines the principles upon which the⁢ First Amendment is built.

Conclusion:

The case of Douglass Mackey exemplifies the current erosion of ​free speech rights ⁢in the United States. ⁢From targeting ​individuals for expressing dissenting opinions to expanding the scope⁢ of laws ⁢to suppress political adversaries, the government is exhibiting anarcho-tyrannical ​tendencies. If left unchecked, this trend poses a significant threat to the ‌democratic values and principles that underpin ⁣American society. It is imperative to defend free speech and protect the rights of individuals to express themselves without⁤ fear of prosecution​ or retribution.


Read More From Original Article Here: If Memes Are Illegal, All Speech Will Become Illegal

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