Twitter has imposed a weeklong suspension on the account of writer and political activist Danny Haiphong for a thread he made on the platform disputing the mainstream Tiananmen Square massacre narrative.
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The notification Haiphong received informed him that Twitter had locked his account for âViolating our rules against abuse and harassment,â presumably in reference to a rule the platform put in place a year ago which prohibits âcontent that denies that mass murder or other mass casualty events took place, where we can verify that the event occured, and when the content is shared with abusive intent.â
âThis may include references to such an event as a âhoaxâ or claims that victims or survivors are fake or âactors,ââ Twitter said of the new rule. âIt includes, but is not limited to, events like the Holocaust, school shootings, terrorist attacks, and natural disasters.â
That we are now seeing this rule applied to protect narratives which support the geostrategic interests of the US-centralized empire is not in the least bit surprising.
Haiphong is far from the first to dispute the mainstream western narrative about exactly what happened around Tiananmen Square in June of 1989 as the Soviet Union was crumbling and Washingtonâs temporary Cold War alignment with Beijing was losing its strategic usefulness. But we can expect more acts of online censorship like this as Silicon Valley continues to expand into its role as guardian of imperial historic records.
This idea that government-tied Silicon Valley institutions should act as arbiters of history on behalf of the public consumer is gaining steadily increasing acceptance in the artificially manufactured echo chamber of mainstream public opinion. We saw another example of this recently in Joe Lauriaâs excellent refutation of accusations against Consortium News of historic inaccuracy by the imperial narrative management firm NewsGuard.
As journalists like Whitney Webb and Mnar Adley noted years ago, NewsGuard markets itself as a ânews rating agencyâ designed to help people sort out good from bad sources of information online, but in reality functions as an empire-backed weapon against media who question imperial narratives about whatâs happening in the world.
The Grayzoneâs Max Blumenthal outlined the companyâs many partnerships with imperial swamp monsters like former NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen and âchief propagandistâ Richard Stengel as well as âimperialist cutouts like the German Marshall Fundâ when its operatives contacted his outlet for comment on their accusations.
Lauria compiles a mountain of evidence in refutation of NewsGuardâs claim that Consortium News published âfalse contentâ about the 2014 US-backed coup in Ukraine, copiously citing outlets which NewsGuard itself has labeled accurate sources of information with its âgreen checkâ designation system. It becomes clear as you read the article that NewsGuardâs real function is, as John Kiriakou put it, âguarding the country from the news.â
Then youâve got Wikipedia, which blacklists the same sites as NewsGuard and whose operatives run relentless smear campaigns on anti-imperialist voices, thereby guaranteeing a view of history that is wildly tilted in the favor of empire-authorized narratives. Jimmy Wales, the co-founder of Wikipedia, also happens to serve on NewsGuardâs advisory board.
This idea that anyone can ever be an impartial arbiter of objective reality is logically fallacious and is invalidated by facts in evidence. It is clear that imposing regulations on peopleâs efforts to understand world events on the platforms where people have come to congregate to share ideas and information will necessarily lead to an information ecosystem that is skewed to the benefit of whatever power structure is imposing those regulations. When that power structure is an alliance of oligarchs and government proxies whose interests are served by the ongoing dominance of the US-centralized empire, the information ecosystem will be biased in favor of that empire.
The most impressive feat of engineering in the 21st century has been of the âsocialâ variety. The social engineering necessary to continually keep people confused and blinkered about whatâs going on in the world despite a sudden influx of information availability is one of the most astonishing achievements in the history of civilization, despite its depraved and destructive nature.
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The empire has had mixed feelings about the internet since its creation. On one hand it allows for unprecedented surveillance and information gathering and the rapid distribution of propaganda, which it likes, but on the other it allows for the unprecedented democratization of information, which it doesnât like.
Its answer to this quandary has been to come up with âfact checkingâ services and Silicon Valley censorship protocols for restricting âmisinformationâ (with âfactsâ and âinformationâ defined as âwhatever advances imperial interestsâ). Thatâs all weâre seeing with continually expanding online censorship policies, and with government-tied oligarchic narrative management operations like NewsGuard.
Caitlin Johnstone is a reader-supported independent journalist from Melbourne, Australia. This article was originally published on Medium.