Everywhere one looks these days, the world seems to be moving away from debate on contentious subjects and toward demands that those who have unpopular opinions â or even just ask impertinent questions â be forcibly silenced.
âYou will never hear me mention his name,â Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said of Brenton Tarrant, the sole suspect in two deadly attacks on mosques in Christchurch. âHe may have sought notoriety but here in New Zealand we will give him nothing â not even his name.â
Thatâs fine as a personal decision, I guess, but not as a top-down decision for her fellow New Zealanders. Even as Ardern spoke, police working for her government were arresting at least two people for sharing the shooterâs live-streamed video of the attacks on social media.
Across the Tasman Sea, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison is calling on the governments of G20 countries to implement measures âincluding appropriate filtering, detecting and removing of content by actors who encourage, normalize, recruit, facilitate or commit terrorist and violent atrocities.â
Letâs be clear about what Morrison, other âworld leaders,â and significant segments of activist communities and even the general public are demanding (and to a frightful degree already implementing): Internet censorship.
This isnât really a new development. The mosque attacks are merely the latest incident weaponized by politicians and activists in service to a long-running campaign against public discussion and debate that requires them to make arguments and persuade instead of just bark orders and compel.
The fictional âmemory holeâ of the IngSoc regime in George Orwellâs 1984 stood for more than half a century as an oft-cited and wisely acknowledged warning. Now that hole is opening up beneath us for real and threatening to suck us down into a new Dark Age of âthoughtcrimeâ and âunpersons.â
The threat is content-independent. Renaming climate change skeptics âdeniersâ and demanding âinvestigationsâ of them, or pressuring media to ban discussions of policy on vaccines is just as evil as suing Alex Jones for promulgating bizarre theories about the Sandy Hook massacre.
The only appropriate response to âbadâ speech â that is, speech one disagrees with â is âbetterâ speech.
Attempting to shut down your opponentsâ ability to participate in an argument isnât itself a winning argument. Forbidding your opponents to speak to a problem doesnât solve that problem.
In fact, those tactics are tantamount to admitting that your arguments are less persuasive and that your solutions canât withstand scrutiny.
Freedom of thought and expression are primary, foundational rights. They make it possible for us to hash out issues and solve problems peaceably instead of by force. Any attempt to suppress them is itself a call for totalitarianism and the alternative to those liberties is social and political death.