The White House's social media summit is just another stunt to game the refs
The views of the summitâs guests confirm that the event is a giant excuse to push the rightâs tech grievance narrative.
Written by Cristina LĂłpez G. & Parker Molloy
Published
President Donald Trump has repeatedly accused tech companies and social media platforms of censorship and bias against conservatives, taking the age-old approach of âworking the refsâ to a new level. And on Thursday, July 11, the White House will play host to a number of right-wing figures and conservative groups at a âsocial media summitâ featuring what White House spokesperson Judd Deere says will be âa robust conversation on the opportunities and challenges of todayâs online environment.â
Right-wing media really started amping up complaints at social media companies following the publication of a thinly-sourced 2016 Gizmodo story accusing Facebook of suppressing right-wing news. Two curators made the accusation, but others could not corroborate those claimed. Shortly thereafter, Facebook replaced its editors with an algorithm and things snowballed from there. In the past few years we've seen repeated false allegations, and numerous attempts at victimhood. At one point, Republicans even called current Fox Nation hosts Diamond and Silk to testify before Congress.
Trump has long accused the press of having an anti-conservative bias, but it wasnât until a July 2018 Vice story accused Twitter of âshadow banningâ conservatives based on a misinterpretation of the actual term that he expanded his victimization narrative to include tech companies. Since then, heâs written well over a dozen tweets about supposed anti-conservative bias from tech platforms, and Trump said last month that companies like Google and Twitter âshould be sued because what's happening with the bias.â In May, his administration launched a âTech Bias Story Sharing Toolâ that asked followers to share stories of supposed censorship (while also collecting email addresses, ZIP codes, and phone numbers of participants). Thursdayâs summit is, according to Deere, a direct response to the tool.
Trumpâs social media summit is shaping up to be a stunt for right-wing commentators and memesmiths to continue working the refs by pushing the bogus âbiasâ narrative.
Trumpâs White House extended invitations to the summit to a number of like-minded right-wing figures and organizations, some of which have pushed the baseless tech bias narrative in statements that do not stand up to scrutiny.
Will Chamberlain
Human Events publisher Will Chamberlain has argued that access to social media platforms is a civil right, going so far as to compare struggles faced by conservatives who violate agreed-upon social media policies to those experienced by Black people in the 1950s United States. While Chamberlain concedes that the law doesnât currently treat the ability to post on Twitter as a civil right, he thinks that it should. Chamberlainâs âcivil rightâ argument fails to mention that posting hateful content that violates platforms rules isnât an immutable characteristic like race, and it also ignores the reality that access to platforms is obstructed only after engaging in violating behaviors, something users can avoid.
Chamberlainâs post came on the heels of Facebookâs decision to purge its platforms of the accounts of extremist figures -- the majority of them on the far-right -- due to repeated policy violations. On Twitter, where Chamberlain has an account that reaches over 48,000 followers, heâs made this argument ad nauseum.
PLATFORM ACCESS IS A CIVIL RIGHT.
Big Tech companies should not have the power to take away the platforms that are essential to your work
Unless you break the law
â Will Chamberlain đșđž (@willchamberlain) May 15, 2019
FACEBOOK PURGE: @PrisonPlanet, Alex Jones, Laura Loomer, Milo banned. Why Platform Access is a CIVIL RIGHT https://t.co/0TGCyj9kW3
â Will Chamberlain đșđž (@willchamberlain) May 2, 2019
During an interview with Tim Pool (a YouTuber who has a soft spot for âalt-rightâ figures and will also be attending the summit), titled âRepublicans Face EXTINCTION Unless They Stop Online Censorship, Hereâs How They Can Fight Back,â Chamberlain revealed that his argument has more to do with winning elections and power than with inalienable rights:
WILL CHAMBERLAIN: It will become untenable for conservatives to win national elections and and increasingly the conservative movement will become a regional party. The power of social media is both to both hijack the media's hive mind, and also to provide a space where conservatives can essentially lead on thought and motivate their voters to get out and vote. If the social media platforms constrain and constrict conservative speech and ban effective persuaders and influencers on the right, there's a huge boon to the left in terms of elections, so I don't see a way for Republicans to continue to win elections going forward if they let the left destroy them on social media
Tim Pool
Poolâs YouTube channel is peppered with videos with titles such as âGoogle Email LEAKED, Proves Conservative Censorship At Youtube,â âFacebook Caught LYING About Censorship, Regulation Is Coming,â and âConservative Movie Unplanned Being Censored By Twitter?!â These videos amplify the persecution narratives pushed by conservatives, and they are often based on little more than speculation or decontextualized anecdotes. Unsurprisingly, when someone he disagrees with has their Twitter account suspended for one reason or another, Pool's response is far from consistent with his free speech crusade.
For instance, in Poolâs video about the suspension of the account for the movie Unplanned, he amplified a conspiracy theory suggesting that Twitter was âtrying really hard to restrict this information.â As it turns out, the Unplanned account had been suspended because an account that linked to it had been suspended. This was an example of one the steps Twitter has taken to crack down on âban evasion.â As is often the case when accounts get temporarily suspended, it takes some time for the follower numbers to repopulate. In the case of Unplanned, seeing a massive dip in followers upon the accountâs restoration seemed like proof of an even larger conspiracy -- even though this wasnât the case. Throughout the video, Pool suggests that these mistakes all seem to go in a single direction -- against conservatives -- citing as an example the time Trumpâs account was deleted on November 2, 2017, for 11 minutes. What Pool doesnât note is that the man who accidentally deleted Trumpâs account was reportedly an admirer of the president, not a rogue #Resistance figure.
Pool has asserted that âTwitter, by definition, is a biased platform in favor of the left. Period.â As proof, Pool points to the fact that Twitterâs harassment policy bans the misgendering of trans people. Never mind that Twitter bans all sorts of things -- for instance, just this week, the site expanded its hateful conduct policy as it relates to dehumanizing language used against people on the basis of religion. Regardless, Pool has pushed this one specific rule as an example of Twitter being biased against conservatives.
this is what right-wing gaming the refs looks like with tech: presenting speech done with the intention of harassing & silencing as merely a political viewpoint some folks have. also, rich of pim tool to suggest that any harassment he gets is as dehumanizing as deadnaming someone pic.twitter.com/FhBuD31Lnh
â cristina lĂłpez g. (@crislopezg) March 6, 2019
Charlie Kirk
Turning Point USAâs Charlie Kirk has been one of the loudest proponents of the âanti-conservative biasâ narrative, a talking point he was already pushing during a September 22, 2016, appearance on Fox Business. âConservatives are targeted, blocked, and silenced on social media. The left runs social networks with a political, leftist, agenda,â he wrote in a tweet about the appearance. At the time, Kirk had fewer than 75,000 Twitter followers; as of this writing, he has more than 1.16 million followers. This would suggest that either techâs attempts to âsilenceâ conservatives on social media arenât very successful or that Kirk wasnât telling the truth (hint: itâs the latter). Since then, Kirk has continued to regularly spread easily debunked arguments and unsupported claims of censorship online.
For instance, in a May 4 tweet, Kirk suggests a series of hypotheticals. His example, âWhat if an airline says you canât fly if you talk âhate,ââ seems to ignore that there are a number of reasons an airline may already prevent you from flying. For a long time, you used to be allowed to smoke indoors in many places, even airplanes. Thatâs no longer the case. Smoking on planes is now prohibited to keep other users of the service safe, which isnât equivalent to banning those smokers who comply with the rules from flying. Whatâs telling here is that while Kirk opposes what he would likely consider discrimination on the basis of something someone chooses to do, like the content they decide to post, he is in favor of legalized discrimination against people for who they are -- at least when it comes to LGBTQ people.
What if an airline says you canât fly if you talk âhateâ
What if a bank says you canât use them if you talk âhateâ (they already are!)
We will not stand for tech company tyranny
Time to fight back before itâs too late
â Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) May 5, 2019
Kirk often posts retweet-bait designed to increase his engagement metrics while reinforcing his grievance narrative. Often, this takes the form of him saying that he receives âcountless messages a dayâ from people who say they arenât seeing his social media posts
I get countless messages a day that my followers can no longer see my content here on Twitter or that I am no longer in their feed
All ideas and viewpoints should be allowed to be heard without censorship or silencing!!
RT if you have experienced this issue or problem!
â Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) March 22, 2019
He also occasionally posts outright misinformation that suits his agenda. For instance, he was one of many conservatives to share a narrative about right-wing media being suppressed by Google. In fact, the study he cites doesnât say anything like that.
Did you know:
A new audit of Google's search algorithm by Northwestern University researchers confirmed Google's bias against conservatives
88% of news results for top stories came from non-right leaning sources
Only 12% came from sites that could be considered right
đ€
â Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) May 12, 2019
Carpe Donktum
The pro-Trump meme creator known as Carpe Donktum is known almost exclusively because of his wide reach on social media, making claims that there is an inherent anti-conservative bias a bit odd. Heâs cited suspensions of right-wing figures like Milo Yiannopoulos, Alex Jones, and Laura Loomer as evidence of anti-conservative bias and censorship. Each of those accounts were removed from their respective platforms for violating rules that they agreed to. Agreeing to a set of terms, breaking the terms, and then claiming oppression when you get removed as a result isnât anti-conservative censorship.
Why did you wait until the call was coming from inside the house before you figured out that the threat was real. Big Tech has telegraphed their radicalization EVERY STEP of the way.
We BEGGED you to pay attention for the last 3 years and you sent us đ€Ł and âmuh private companyâ
â Carpe Donktumđč (@CarpeDonktum) June 6, 2019
He has argued that being kicked off of a social media platform for violating the rules is akin to being âunpersoned.â
NEW: Laura Loomer invades the Safe Space of Facebook...
Regardless of how you feel about Laura, she has been treated TERRIBLY by Big Tech, censored, banned from literally EVERY social media platform, and UNPERSONED.
Support Laura Loomer https://t.co/z7zZvih3vn#StopTheBias pic.twitter.com/kiq21xXzUW
â Carpe Donktumđč (@CarpeDonktum) May 6, 2019
After popular pro-Trump subreddit âThe_Donaldâ was quarantined by Reddit due to âthreats of violence against police and public officials,â Donktum claimed that there were no such threats and that this was all part of a plan by âBig TECHâ to interfere with U.S. elections. In reality, posts on the subreddit about GOP legislatorsâ potential team-up with Oregon militia groups were littered with comments like âNone of this gets fixed without people picking up rifles,â âburn Portland and Eugene to the ground,â and âNo problems shooting a cop trying to strip rights from Citizens.â
I can CONFIRM John... The_Donald DOES NOT under ANY CIRCUMSTANCE make threats against police.
OR ANYONE ELSE FOR THAT MATTER.
This is Big TECH interfering with US elections... pure and simple https://t.co/sBQuq0lTrr
â Carpe Donktumđč (@CarpeDonktum) June 26, 2019
Brent Bozell
Media Research Center founder Brent Bozell has loudly championed the narrative of tech bias, and he has been rewarded handsomely for it. Bozell has made frequent claims that social media platforms discriminate against conservatives, and thatâs helped buy him a place of influence not afforded to anybody on the political left. In the fallout over a thinly sourced Gizmodo article posted in early 2016 claiming that Facebookâs trending curators were somehow suppressing conservative news, Bozell managed to find a spot along with more than a dozen other conservatives in a private meeting with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Facebook has since bent over backwards to appease conservatives, playing right into Bozellâs hands.
In a tweet, Bozell wrote that Googleâs public statements were contrary to âwhat they have said to us in private discussions,â seemingly oblivious to the fact that his involvement in âprivate discussionsâ with Google means that heâs part of an elite group of people with extraordinary power. This undercuts his entire argument, but it shows just how effective working the refs can be.
When Google made slight adjustments to its YouTube search results to no longer privilege anti-abortion misinformation and gory videos as often, Bozell flipped out and misrepresented the measure taken by the platform. Bozell also chooses to ignore the fact that anti-abortion content continues to dominate social media as a whole.
So now Google/YouTube is putting pro-life search results on a blacklist. This is an Orwellian dynamic where big tech commissars work with leftist journalists to propagandize for the abortion industry. These leftists are just begging to get regulated. https://t.co/0qy6qtDysM
â Brent Bozell (@BrentBozell) January 16, 2019
Like many others on the right, Bozell was insistent that Twitter was âshadow banningâ conservatives long after a bug -- which affected people across the political spectrum -- had been fixed. This was not true, and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey had addressed this rumor.
Shocking revelations that Twitter continues to shadow-ban conservatives such as @Jim_Jordan and @mattgaetz may well constitute FEC violations. I'm calling on Congress to convene hearings with Twitter executives to fully investigate these sleazy and underhanded acts of censorship.
â Brent Bozell (@BrentBozell) July 26, 2018
Ryan Fournier
Students for Trump co-founder Ryan Fournier will also be appearing at the event. After a number of extremist accounts were removed from Facebook and Instagram, Fournier used the opportunity to promote Parler, a conservative social media alternative that hasnât quite taken off due to glitches. Like others, Fournier glossed over the fact that these accounts were not removed simply for holding conservative views, but for engaging in actions that violated the terms all users agree to when signing up.
We must stand with every person who gets censored by big tech and defend their right to freedom of speech!
Day of the Long Knives. Right Wingers Dragged Off Facebook https://t.co/QvEkipj5IT
â Ryan Fournier (@RyanAFournier) May 3, 2019
Conservatives need to wake up.
If mega donors on the right continue to do nothing on big tech censorship, it wonât just be Laura Loomer and Milo getting banned.
It will be you and me! https://t.co/JjkQdZO6jB
â Ryan Fournier (@RyanAFournier) May 6, 2019
Ali Alexander (Akbar)
Ali Alexander (formerly known as Ali Akbar) is another right-wing media personality invited to the White House summit who is known for his large social media following and incendiary content, and he will also attend the summit. Alexander was once briefly suspended from Twitter, seemingly for urging followers to buy ammo and guns in preparation for a coming civil war.
After Voxâs Carlos Maza (a former Media Matters employee) tweeted about his frustration over YouTube not enforcing its anti-bullying rules, Alexander called this a âqueer form of censorship.â
So, Carlos Maza â@gaywonkâ has self-hate issues and doesnât like being a gay, Mexican with a lisp so no one can sell t-shirts with the word âfigâ on them linked from YouTube???
Am I understanding this queer form of censorship correctly?
â Ali Alexander (@ali) June 6, 2019
Despite having the ear of Twitterâs Dorsey, who follows him on the site and has said that Alexander makes âinteresting points,â Alexander continues to insist that there is an anti-conservative bias at work on social media.
I've decided that I'm not going to vote for Donald Trump if he doesn't take agency level action against the censorship. Or sign that executive order.
I'm over it. This market manipulation is anti-American and when we're not even allowed to vocally dissent, it's over.
â Ali Alexander (@ali) May 5, 2019
James OâKeefe
Summit attendee James OâKeefe of Project Veritas has made a number of claims regarding social media censorship that simply do not add up. Known for his sinister screw-ups and supposed exposĂ©s made up of misleading and context-deficient video clips, OâKeefe has taken aim at social media platforms in recent years.
In January 2018, OâKeefe published a series of videos claiming to prove the existence of political bias at Twitter by secretly filming Twitter employees who spoke in a personal capacity. His videos prompted conservative allegations of âshadow-banningâ that were disproved by experts. Twitter also addressed the issue and negated the claims, as reported by Gizmodo:
âThe individuals depicted in these videos were speaking in a personal capacity and do not represent or speak for Twitter,â said a Twitter spokesperson by email, pointing me to a page that explains how and why Twitter accounts are censored or made less visible. âTwitter does not shadowban accounts. We do take actions to downrank accounts that are abusive, and mark them accordingly so people can still click through and see this information if they so choose.â
OâKeefeâs sting targeting YouTube was just as misleading as his videos on Twitter, but it succeeded in fueling right-wing claims of bias against conservatives after the platform removed the video for âprivacy violations.â With the help of an âinsider,â OâKeefe has also mischaracterized Pinterestâs efforts to address abortion misinformation as an attack against Christians. OâKeefe has announced heâll use his appearance at the White House summit to share stories with Trump from tech workers that ostensibly confirm conservative grievances of bias.
If youâre on the inside of a big tech company like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google, or others please reach out to @Project_Veritas ASAP. I want to share your story with @RealDonaldTrump on Thursday. Contact us here: VeritasTips@Protonmail.com pic.twitter.com/mCH4vsw3Hm
â James O'Keefe (@JamesOKeefeIII) July 8, 2019