Quantcast

Dupage Policy Journal

Wednesday, May 8, 2024

‘The Censorship Industrial Complex’: Underwood votes against House Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government

Laurenunderwood

U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood | underwood.house.gov

U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood | underwood.house.gov

Naperville-based U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood (D-Ill.) was one of the votes against creating the U.S. House Judiciary Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government. 

The subcommittee has been actively investigating censorship of truthful information posted to social media websites that were removed by the Biden administration in what free speech advocates have deemed “The Censorship Industrial Complex.” The subcommittee was created on Jan. 10 on a 221-211 vote. All House Democrats voted against the subcommittee’s creation. The subcommittee has revealed damning information detailing a massive domestic censorship campaign carried out by the federal government. 

"The hearing will consist of two panels to discuss the politicization of the FBI and DOJ and attacks on American civil liberties," according to the schedule details of the first hearing posted by the House Judiciary Committee.

It later held a hearing on Twitter files last March 9. The Twitter files exposing the role of intelligence agencies in successfully burying the New York Post’s bombshell reporting on Hunter Biden’s laptop was the precursor to the increasing scrutiny of intelligence agencies. Peoria Standard noted that this reporting revealed a series of emails revealing questionable relationships, including millions of dollars provided to the president’s son, along with photos of him in sexual situations with prostitutes and smoking what appears to be a crack pipe. It was censored from social media and the New York Post’s Twitter account was taken down altogether, limiting its traction before the 2020 presidential election. 

In the latest installment of the Twitter files, journalist Matt Taibbi described how the censorship effort transformed quickly from an attempt to remove demonstrably false content from social media platforms to censoring true commentary that did not fit political narratives.

“This story is important for two reasons. One, as Orwellian proof-of-concept, the Virality Project was a smash success. Government, academia and an oligopoly of would-be corporate competitors organized quickly behind a secret, unified effort to control political messaging,” Taibbi wrote. “Two, it accelerated the evolution of digital censorship, moving it from judging truth/untruth to a new, scarier model, openly focused on political narrative at the expense of fact.” 

“THE BEGINNING: On Feb. 5, 2021, just after Joe Biden took office, Stanford wrote to Twitter to discuss the Virality Project. By (Feb.) 17, Twitter agreed to join and got its first weekly report on ‘anti-vax disinformation,’ which contained numerous true stories.” 

Stanford’s Virality Project was shown to have successfully pushed social media companies to remove truthful content regarding side effects from COVID-19 vaccines, social media users opining that vaccine passports were removing American freedoms, the deaths of celebrities post-vaccination and breakthrough cases of COVID-19 post-vaccination, among many other instances. Most notably, Taibbi revealed internal communications from the Virality Project in which the group notes it successfully sought the censorship of “true content which might promote vaccine hesitancy.” 

Taibbi is the author of 10 books, including four New York Times best sellers. He currently publishes Racket News on Substack. In 2008, he was awarded the National Magazine Award in the category "Columns and Commentary" for his Rolling Stone columns. Taibbi also won a Sidney Award in 2009 for his article, "The Great American Bubble Machine." In 2020, he was awarded the Izzy Award, which honors the independent journalism of I. F. “Izzy” Stone. Despite his long resume, he was derided by Democrats as a “so-called journalist” doing the bidding of the Twitter owner and the world’s wealthiest individual Elon Musk.

In testimony before the subcommittee, Taibbi and journalist Michael Shellenberger described the massive censorship project undertaken by intelligence agencies which was greatly expanded under the Biden administration. 

“American taxpayers are unwittingly financing the growth and power of a censorship-industrial complex run by America’s scientific and technological elite, which endangers our liberties and democracy,” Shellenberger said in testimony later adapted into a column for the New York Post. "The Twitter files, state attorneys general lawsuits and investigative reporters have revealed a large and growing network of government agencies, academic institutions and private groups that are actively censoring American citizens, often without their knowledge, on subjects including the origins of COVID, COVID vaccines, Hunter Biden’s business dealings, climate change and many other issues.” 

The law, Shellenberger said, "allows Facebook and Twitter and other private companies to moderate the content on their platforms, and I support the right of governments to communicate with the public, including to dispute inaccurate and misleading information.” 

Shellenberger said murky groups funded by the nation’s intelligence apparatus have been involved in “creating blacklists of disfavored people and demanding that the social-media platforms censor, deamplify and even ban them.” Oftentimes the censorship is aimed at political conservatives, but also targets unbiased journalists who report on items that run counter to the federal government’s narrative.

“Past influence operations have involved convincing journalists and social media executives that accurate information is disinformation, that valid hypotheses are conspiracy theories and that greater self-censorship results in more accurate reporting,” Shellenberger said. “The censors are driven by the fear that the internet and social media platforms empower populist leaders and policies, which they view as destabilizing.” 

Shellenberger projected that “for that reason, in a few short years, federal government officials, agencies and contractors have gone from fighting ISIS recruiters and Russian bots to censoring and de-platforming ordinary Americans and disfavored public figures.” 

“And the censors have stepped up their efforts to influence and even control conventional news media organizations,” he said. 

In 2008, Shellenberger was awarded Time Magazine’s Hero of the Environment – Leader and Visionary.

More recently U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ) suggested social media companies censor truthful information regarding the burgeoning banking crisis after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank and the recent takeover of Credit Suisse.

The subcommittee will hold another hearing on Thursday. It will investigate the Missouri v. Biden case "challenging the administration’s violation of the First Amendment by directing social media companies to censor and suppress Americans' free speech." 

On Monday, U.S. House Judiciary Committee chairman and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) wrote to Treasury Secretary of the United States Janet Yellen and the new commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, Daniel Werfel, concerning an unannounced visit of an IRS agent to Taibbi's home during his testimony on March 9

Underwood represents Illinois’ 14th Congressional District, which includes parts of the counties of DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, McHenry and Will. The district includes all or parts of the cities of Aurora, Batavia, Campton Hills, Crystal Lake, Geneva, Huntley, McHenry, Naperville, St. Charles, North Aurora, Oswego, Plainfield, Plano, Sycamore, Warrenville, Wauconda, Woodstock and Yorkville.

MORE NEWS