Saturday, November 10, 2018







Congress can remedy the war on free speech by invoking the Interstate Commerce Clause

Banning or demonetizing conservatives by manipulating their stats, shadow banning their comments or messages or blocking their ability to communicate with their subscribers, interferes with the right to contract, from internet social platforms. Monster companies like Google, Facebook, and Twitter et al are actually taxpayer subsidized communication monopolies like the phone companies. The internet is from where millions of users derive their incomes for their creative content. Treating similarly situated people differently based upon their viewpoints and political identity by removing their incomes violates their civil rights and it is patently unconstitutional. 

This makes these media platforms, prime targets for Class Action and Anti-Trust lawsuits. However, the easiest way to stop these massively unconstitutional violations of freedom of speech, freedom of association, interference with the right to vote and for discrimination of a conservative candidate’s rights to campaign on a fair and balanced playing field, is for Congress to sue Google, Twitter, Facebook and others and to use their interstate commerce power to permanently enjoin them from discrimination against their users for their political opinions.

This would be the fastest way to prevent further violations of the equal protection clause and violations of the first amendment, especially freedom of speech of citizens based upon political content and political identity.

 Because the internet is one of the largest engines of commerce across the world and between the fifty states, this blatant discrimination of certain people, can quickly and easily be remedied, by Congress by invoking the interstate commerce clause and requesting a decree for a permanent injunction to be issued by a Judge.
  
Since the companies involved are domiciled in California, a Judge who has already stopped Jerry Brown and his minions from allowing these same companies to make its users pay the same fees as they do in the State of California for internet access would be appropriate This judge has already issued a permanent injunction, based on the same violation of interference with interstate commerce as a remedy which is the primary function of Congress to regulate.

No comments: