The EU’s Disinformation War
The EU is using the Israel-Hamas conflict as a fig leaf for extending its control of the internet—but online censorship will not solve the problem of Islamism.
The EU is using the Israel-Hamas conflict as a fig leaf for extending its control of the internet—but online censorship will not solve the problem of Islamism.
Brussels is once again demonstrating its policy of double standards and blessing the Golob government’s actions against conservative Slovenian media.
The Ontario Department of Education recently directed schools to ensure library books are ‘inclusive.’
If the continued mistreatment of those accused of ‘non-crime hate incidents’ is anything to go by, individuals who pray silently are not yet in the clear.
Considering much of the music made available to children today, they could really do a lot worse than “Fat Bottomed Girls.”
The technocratic crusade against so-called disinformation is in fact nakedly political and anti-democratic.
The reason for the forty-day journalism strike was not the new editor-in-chief’s professional shortcomings but his ideological beliefs: Lejeune is of a decidedly rightist bent.
Echoing remarks from French President Emmanuel Macron, a European Union Commissioner has suggested that social media platforms could be shut down if they fail to remove content that incites rioting and urban unrest in the wake of the French riots this month.
As rioters use social media apps like Snapchat and TikTok to coordinate their violent activity, President Macron’s threat to block the sites has led to accusations of “authoritarianism.”
Should Germany follow through with its censorship policies, a legal clash will be inevitable. But for now, the right to pray and gather peacefully has been affirmed.
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