Tuesday, May 17, 2022

The Left hates free speech, continuing saga

Red State: "Chuck Schumer Makes a Cowardly Move After Tucker Carlson Calls His Bluff."

I've said this before but the Left loves to pontificate from the stage of "Hamilton" when they know there is zero chance of a rebuttal.  Same with Chuck Schumer.  Here was an epic chance to go right into the devil's den, but Chuck declined, because running away from debate is what they do.


8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Chuck Schumer telling Replacement Theory Tucker Carlson he can suck it isn't an alibi for the blood on Carlson's and Fox's hands.

You're confusing the lack of compelled speech with the speculative fear of free speech.

Three years ago, Tucker Carlson taped an interview with historian Rutger Bregman, but edited the segment out of his show because Bregman got Carlson to flip out and look foolish. So maybe slow down on deciding who's the free speech coward who fears rebuttals and runs from debate.

Anonymous said...

Also:
The Right loves free speech, a fantasy series

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/library-apps-book-ban-schools-conservative-parents-rcna26103

Conservative parents take aim at library apps meant to expand access to books

Some parents want the apps to be banned for their children or even for all students. And they’re getting results.

A school superintendent in a suburb of Nashville, Tennessee, pulled his system’s e-reader offline for a week last month, cutting access for 40,000 students, after a parent searched the Epic library available on her kindergartner’s laptop and found books supporting LGBTQ pride.

In a rural county northwest of Austin, Texas, county officials cut off access to the OverDrive digital library, which residents had used for a decade to find books to read for pleasure, prompting a federal lawsuit against the county.

And on the east coast of Florida, the Brevard County school system removed the Epic app from its computer system, saying it didn’t want kids to have access to material its own school librarians hadn’t vetted.

“Over 20 years, there’s not really been any history of a sustained challenge like this to our public library service,” said Steve Potash, the founder and CEO of OverDrive, which has been a gateway to e-books for two decades through apps such as Libby and Sora.

“The terrifying thing is that they can be censored with the flip of a switch, without due process, without evaluating the substance of the claims,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, the director of the Office for Intellectual Freedom at the American Library Association.

Anonymous said...

Dingleberry returns, must be out on parole.

Tito Puraw said...

They should make Dingleberry head of the 'Ministry of Truth'.

Roger Bournival said...

...for the blood on Carlson's and Fox's hands.

I see little slander boy is back.

Anonymous said...

Nothing substantial to say about the Tucker Carlson Massacre, eh?

The fact that dummies like you are still allowed to be here is enough to disprove the Great Replacement Theory.

Roger Bournival said...

It's tough to comment on something that didn't happen.

Anonymous said...

You're referring to the Tucker Carlson Massacre?