Piers Morgan, fascist liar, says he's for free speech, but then goes on and castigates Musk for re-instating Ajax Jewns to X

Apollonian

Guest Columnist
Here's professional liar, Piers Morgan, who says he's for free speech (his first lie), next lying about Sandy Hoax and Ajax Jewns. Whole pt. about free speech is freedom to express opinion--which is what Jewns did--and actually did it so well against the Sandy Hoax which is what Morgan most opposes. Morgan is actually a total fascist which he covers w. lies about his defending free speech. Morgan speaks for globalist-satanists and it's why he's against 2nd Amendment--he wants to lay the premises for gun-confiscation so that the people can't defend themselves against ZOG globalist-satanists. And that's why Jew-owned and -controlled FOX News has hired him to come on and lie for kikes and globalist-satanists

 

The Multifront Attack On Elon Musk​

BY TYLER DURDEN
MONDAY, DEC 18, 2023 - 07:20 PM
Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The Brownstone Institute,

Link: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/multifront-attack-elon-musk/

Elon Musk is the world’s richest man but also the number one target of the world’s richest governments and their associated industrialists. The reason traces entirely to his independence of mind and the actions that follow from that.

In times of censorship, he bought and now protects a free-speech platform, the only one remaining with any real reach into the public mind. Countless millions of people are deeply grateful, even if the platform is a long way from profitability.
Further, he is innovating in a time of stagnation with Tesla, Starlink, and SpaceX. He is outspoken against the many forms of despotism of our time. This is the whole reason he is fending off attacks from every angle.
In the latest assault, the European Union’s Digital commissioner Thierry Breton has posted on X (formerly Twitter) that he believes Elon has infringed on the EU’s rules.
He set out the alleged infringements in a post on the social media platform.
  • Suspected breach of obligations to counter #IllegalContent and #Disinformation
  • Suspected breach of #Transparency obligations
  • Suspected #DeceptiveDesign of user interface
Elon has been very clear that he works to respect the laws of every country, even those with which he strongly disagrees. This pertains to the EU’s aggressive censorship, which was deployed through the Covid era at the expense of scientific freedom and in defense of governments that locked down their citizenry, forced medical treatments on citizens that they did not want or need, and then covered up behind-the-scenes machinations.
It’s rich to have Breton go after Elon for a lack of transparency when the whole point of the EU’s regime is to force a lack of transparency. Adding to the irony, Breton knew that Musk would not censor the note on the world’s largest platform for free speech. He is thereby deploying the use of freedom in opposition to its existence.
And before we sniff at the censorial Europeans and their intolerance toward free speech, consider that the same thing – or some version of it – is happening to Elon in the US. After March 2020, there was a concerted effort led by deep-state actors to gain full control of social media to squelch any dissent. It affected every platform, including Twitter. Amazon and all app stores even banned Parler because it was becoming too popular.
As things died down, Musk bought the Twitter platform and purged 4 out of 5 employees, including the many government agents who had been hired to turn Twitter into a government propaganda machine. Since then he has upheld the First Amendment and innovated a series of tools that allow for internal and crowd-source fact-checking to make his renamed platform the most reliable source of news and opinion in the world.
Since he took over, he has faced a barrage of state-generated attacks.
The SEC has sued Musk over the purchase of the platform.
According to the New York Times, “his takeover has been the subject of several lawsuits and investigations by the federal authorities. The Federal Trade Commission has probed whether X had the resources to protect users’ privacy after he laid off much of its staff and several senior executives responsible for privacy and security resigned. The agency has also sought to depose Mr. Musk. Former Twitter shareholders have also sued Mr. Musk for fraud in a case related to his belated disclosure of his stake in the company.”
The FTC has demanded internal X documents.
Says The Hill: “the FTC has sent more than a dozen letters to Twitter since Musk completed his acquisition in October. It states that the agency has demanded Twitter provide internal communications “relating to Elon Musk” from any Twitter employee, information about the platform’s Twitter Blue verification subscription service and the names of journalists who were granted access to Twitter records.”

The Biden Department of Justice has sued SpaceX…get this…for not hiring refugees for secret rocket technology.
CNN says: “The suit claims that ‘from at least September 2018 to May 2022, SpaceX routinely discouraged asylees and refugees from applying and refused to hire or consider them, because of their citizenship status, in violation of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA),’ according to an August 24 DOJ news release.”
The Biden Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission have sued Tesla over improper perks.
Forbes says: “The widened investigation comes after federal prosecutors and the SEC began probing a secret Tesla project known as Project 42 that employees described as a glass house for Musk in the Austin, Texas, area near Tesla’s factory, the Journal reported in August.”
The Biden Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation against Tesla over self-driving cars.
Reuters reports: “The U.S. Department of Justice launched the previously undisclosed probe last year following more than a dozen crashes, some of them fatal, involving Tesla’s driver assistance system Autopilot, which was activated during the accidents, the people said.” The presumption here is preposterous: that Elon doesn’t care if his product is flawed and doesn’t desire improvement.
There is a federal investigation of Neuralink.
Reuters again: “Elon Musk’s Neuralink, a medical device company, is under federal investigation for potential animal-welfare violations amid internal staff complaints that its animal testing is being rushed, causing needless suffering and deaths, according to documents reviewed by Reuters and sources familiar with the investigation and company operations.”
Then there is the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission investigation over harassment at Tesla.
The EEOC says: “Since at least 2015 to the present, Black employees at Tesla’s Fremont, California manufacturing facilities have routinely endured racial abuse, pervasive stereotyping, and hostility as well as epithets… Slurs were used casually and openly in high-traffic areas and at worker hubs. Black employees regularly encountered graffiti, including variations of the N-word, swastikas, threats, and nooses, on desks and other equipment, in bathroom stalls, within elevators, and even on new vehicles rolling off the production line.”
Finally, we have the aggressive advertising boycott on the part of major corporations, including Disney, CNBC, Comcast, Warner Bros, IBM, and the Financial Times, among many others. Musk has refused to be intimidated by these people. He has said that he refuses to be blackmailed by money and instead told the companies to “Go f*** yourself.” Which is rather remarkable and really does speak to a major problem in social media today, which is the extent to which so many platforms are willing to do the bidding of the corporatist system in order to serve the bottom line.
That is fully nine direct lines of attack, but probably the company and Elon could list another several dozen such cases like this once you consider all levels of government everywhere Musk’s companies are operating.
And yes, it all sounds like something straight out of a novel by Ayn Rand. The successful and innovative entrepreneur is attacked on all sides by institutions and people who live off the system rather than innovate around and beyond it.
We truly do live in a new age of envy, powered by states and their industrial allies more wedded to their own profitability lines and plans rather than what the people want and what great entrepreneurs can create.
This is very clearly a crony attack.
What’s striking is that everyone knows that and yet it is tolerated in any case.
It’s a great recipe for killing off the wealth-generating machine for a generation or two.
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Al Gore Says Non-Mainstream Media ‘Must Be Banned’ To Save Democracy​

Link: https://thepeoplesvoice.tv/al-gore-says-non-mainstream-media-must-be-banned-to-save-democracy/

December 13, 2023 Baxter Dmitry

Screen-Shot-2023-12-12-at-11.22.21-PM-678x381.png.webp


Access to information outside of mainstream media sources is a “threat to democracy” according to Al Gore who used his appearance at COP28 in Dubai to demand that social media platforms must ban alternative news sources.

According to the former vice president, democracy is under threat because people are no longer receiving their news from the same mainstream news sources and no longer “share the same base of knowledge.”

Gore whined that social media had “disrupted the balances that used to exist that made representative democracy work much better.” Watch:

[see vid at site link, above]

AL GORE – At COP28.

Listen carefully. He says Democracy is under threat because citizens are no longer all getting the same print news (propaganda)

Algorithms (that governments can’t control) are threatening democracy.

It’s like he thinks we are stupid or insane … oh pic.twitter.com/aQe41iOhNY
— Elander & the News (@ElanderNews) December 7, 2023

According to Gore, people are being pulled down “rabbit holes” by algorithms that are “the digital equivalent of AR-15s – they ought to be banned, they really ought to be banned!”
Gore claimed that non-mainstream media is “an abuse of the public forum” and that people were being sucked into echo chambers.
“When people are pulled down these rabbit holes, do you know is at of the rabbit hole? That’s where the echo chamber is.
If you spend too much time in the echo chamber, what’s weaponized is another form of AI. Not artificial intelligence. Artificial insanity. I’m serious,” said Gore.
TRENDING: WEF Orders Govt’s To Arrest Whistleblowers Who Expose Depopulation Agenda

Apparently, Gore’s own rabbit hole is the only echo chamber that should be allowed to exist, where the earth is constantly on the brink of destruction thanks to the masses refusing to obey his technocratic mandates.
Perhaps Gore is unhappy at his own misinformation being fact checked by individuals who have access to information not produced by corporate media sources that are funded by the same globalist elite overlords.
Gore infamously predicted that the north polar ice cap would be “ice free” by 2013.
It didn’t happen.
As Thomas Cartenacci documents, Gore has a history of making climate change predictions that turn out to be spectacularly wrong.
No wonder he wants to ban dissent.
 

EU to Force X to Shut Down if Musk Does Not Ban Independent Media From the Platform​

by Belle Carter | Natural News
December 26th 2023, 1:37 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/eu-t...-not-ban-independent-media-from-the-platform/

Announcement of probe comes weeks after microblogging site was asked to provide assurances that it was complying with the terms of the European bloc's DSA

The European Union (EU) launched “formal infringement proceedings” into X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter owned by Big Tech mogul Elon Musk, accusing it of failing to counter illicit content and disinformation, a lack of transparency about advertising and “deceptive” design practices. The European Commission’s executive branch also vowed to permanently shut it down if the platform doesn’t immediately ban alternative media.

“The evidence we currently have is enough to formally open a proceeding against X,” Margrethe Vestager, the 27-nation bloc’s executive vice president overseeing digital policy, said in a statement. “The Commission will carefully investigate X’s compliance with the [Digital Services Act] DSA, to ensure European citizens are safeguarded online.”

The announcement of the probe comes weeks after the microblogging site was asked to provide assurances that it was complying with the terms of the European bloc’s DSA, a regulation to update the Electronic Commerce Directive 2000 regarding illegal content, transparent advertising, and disinformation. It was submitted along with the Digital Markets Act by the European Commission to the European Parliament and the Council in December 2020. Under the law, which came into effect in August, a company can be fined up to six percent of its annual global income or banned from operating in the EU if it is found to have breached the sweeping legislation.

Independent media outlet Infowar‘s Alex Jones called the public to defend Musk as the “unelected body” has embarked on its plan to silence Americans ahead of the 2024 election. “This amounts to a foreign coup!” Jones commented, appending the hashtag: #DefendElon on his post.

Meanwhile, Thierry Breton, the EU commissioner responsible for the law’s enforcement, wrote in a post on the social network: “Today we open formal infringement proceedings against X,” adding that the move had been taken in response to a “suspected breach of obligations to counter illegal content and disinformation; suspected breach of transparency obligations” and “suspected deceptive design of user interface.” (Related: Emergency breaking news! EU officially comes for Elon Musk.)
https://www.givesendgo.com/savealex
𝘌𝘔𝘌𝘙𝘎𝘌𝘕𝘊𝘠 𝘉𝘙𝘌𝘈𝘒𝘐𝘕𝘎 𝘕𝘌𝘞𝘚 – EU Officially Comes For Elon Musk!

Unelected Body Launches Plan To Silence Americans Ahead Of 2024 Election. This Amounts To A Foreign Coup! #DefendElon

Report: https://t.co/IX8RW0nnNs pic.twitter.com/5xTz1UJ6eg
— Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) December 19, 2023

Musk replied to Breton’s post questioning if the body was also taking action against other social media. “Because if you have those issues with this platform, and none are perfect, the others are much worse,” the tech giant executive lamented. A lot of the billionaire’s followers agreed. “This is political, personal, and intentional to try and thwart free speech on the platform,” one user commented while another one said: “They will not attack other social media because X is the only social media that fights pedo pornography and free speech is a weapon to fight it.”

Are you taking action against other social media?

Because if you have those issues with this platform, and none are perfect, the others are much worse.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 18, 2023

X, which was subject to a multi-billion-dollar takeover by Musk last year, said it was focused on “creating a safe and inclusive environment” for its users, which it said it balances against “protecting freedom of expression.” At the time of the takeover, Musk branded himself as a “free speech absolutist.” Then on October 10, the EU warned the site in a formal letter that it had received ‘indications” that it was “being used to disseminate illegal content and disinformation in the EU” related to the militant group Hamas’ attack in Israel on October 7. X Chief Executive Linda Yaccarino wrote a letter to Breton saying that the tech firm was “working to address the operational needs of this fast-moving and evolving conflict.” She added that X had removed hundreds of Hamas-affiliated accounts from the service.

EU’s analytics: X has more “fake news” than other social media platforms​

Back in September, an EU report indicated that X spreads more false information than other social networks. The bloc’s analytics firm TrustLab said it studied activity on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, LinkedIn and X, which was still referred to as Twitter in the report in Poland, Slovakia and Spain, searched for “disinformation keywords” and then analyzed how many of the posts containing those keywords spread misinformation using fact-check websites. The topics that were covered included politics, health care and the Russia-Ukraine war.

The results found that engagement was higher on posts with false information on X and YouTube, while TikTok had the opposite effect. EU then used the report as a benchmark, while the firm plans to conduct more detailed studies in other countries.

European Commission Vice President for Values and Transparency Vera Jourova called out X’s performance in the study at that time and urged other social networks to do more to prevent the spread of misinformation. “Russian propaganda and disinformation is still very present on online platforms,” Jourova claimed. “This is not business as usual. The Kremlin fights with bombs in Ukraine but with words everywhere else, including in the European Union.”

The study was commissioned by Meta, YouTube, TikTok and LinkedIn as part of the European Commission’s Code of Practice, something Musk pulled out of when he took over Twitter.

Head over to Censorship.news for more stories related to governments’ actions to control social media content.
 
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Centralizing Information Control! Inside the EU’s Latest Proposal to Censor the Media​

ByTaylor Hudak August 4, 2023

Link: https://childrenshealthdefense.eu/e...-the-eus-latest-proposal-to-censor-the-media/

The European Commission proposed a new law seeking to centralize the EU media sector into a single market overseen by the Commission and national regulatory authorities through a new European Board for Media Services.
The European Media Freedom Act (EMFA), proposed by the Commission on Sept. 16, 2022, is portrayed as an effort to promote media independence and pluralism while safeguarding against disinformation and foreign interference in the media sector by establishing a set of standards in the form of EU law.
A core component of the EMFA is the establishment of the European Board for Media Services, which will consist of representatives from national regulatory authorities as well as a representative from the European Commission. It will be the duty of the Board to monitor the EU media sector, to issue opinions on market concentrations, to provide special advice and to ensure uniform compliance with the Regulation, among other tasks.
While the EMFA proposal has received some praise for its stated objectives – namely to protect media freedom – it continues to be scrutinized by various press organizations and members of the European Parliament for loopholes that would allow the surveillance of journalists while paving the way for unprecedented interventions in the internal media market by the European Commission.
Despite this criticism, the EMFA continues to progress through the EU legislative process. On June 21, 2023, the European Council secured a mandate for negotiations with the European Parliament. One month later, on July 20, the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs (LIBE) adopted its opinion on the proposed legislation, bringing the Regulation one step closer to becoming EU law as the Commission intends to conclude negotiations before the next EU elections.

The current framework

To understand the significance of the proposed EMFA Regulation, one must revisit the existing framework the EMFA will expand upon – The Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD). The AVMSD’s current advisory body to the Commission, The European Regulators Group for Audiovisual Media Services (ERGA), will be replaced by the new European Board for Media Services (the Board).
The current framework, the AVMSD, only applies to audiovisual media services, defined as “a service providing programmes, under the editorial responsibility of a media service provider, to the general public, to inform, entertain or educate, using electronic communications networks, either broadcast or on-demand.”
The EMFA, however, applies to the more broadly defined “media service provider” (MSP) which is described as “a natural or legal person whose professional activity is to provide a media service and who has editorial responsibility for the choice of the content of the media service and determines the manner in which it is organised.”
Therefore, this means that in contrast to the ERGA, the Board will oversee not only audiovisual media services but the press sector as well. The ERGA’s November 2022 position paper on the EMFA proposal suggested that the Board’s authority to regulate the press may be problematic for Member States.
“Given the sensitivity of press matters, as well as national specificities (including constitutional), ERGA wishes to explicitly and unambiguously state that it is neither its vocation nor its intention to regulate the press sector.”
Excerpt from the ERGA’s position paper on the EMFA
Ilias Konteas, Executive Director of the European Magazine Media Association (EMMA) and the European Newspaper Publishers’ Association (ENPS), whose legal specialization is in European media law, told Children’s Health Defense Europe that the Board’s competency over the press sector would undermine a core component of press freedom – the principle that the free press is solely responsible before the law and the courts for its content.
“The press should remain free from any European regulatory oversight,” said Konteas. “Since in the vast majority of Member States the press is self-regulated, the delegates in the Board would have tasks, at the European level, that are outside of their national mandate.”

Regulating the media, quite literally

The most apparent difference between the Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD) and the Proposal for a Regulation on the European Media Freedom Act (EMFA) is in the name itself. The current legislation, the AVMSD, is a directive, and had to go through national transposition and implementation, whereas the EMFA is a regulation, and will not be subjected to the same level of oversight by the European Parliament.
In the EU, there are several types of law: directives, regulations, decisions, recommendations and opinions. For the purposes of understanding the EMFA proposal, this section will briefly focus on the differences between a directive and a regulation.
A regulation is a type of EU law that sets an objective and defines how to achieve it. Once the law is adopted, it is effective immediately in all EU Member States. It is legally binding, supersedes national laws and Member States are limited in their ability to determine how to achieve the set objective.
A directive is a type of EU law that sets an objective but does not define how to achieve it. Member States may determine how to achieve the set objective through the establishment of national laws.
Executive Director Konteas says media policy has primarily been a competence of the Member States. “This triggered some debate on whether the Commission was allowed to propose a media regulation.”

History​

The initiative for a new media freedom act was first mentioned by European Commission President Ursula von Der Leyen during her State of the Union speech in September 2021, in which she said, “Media companies cannot be treated as just another business. Their independence is essential. Europe needs a law that safeguards this independence – and the Commission will deliver a media freedom act in the next year.”
Several months later, in December 2021, the Commission announced a call for evidence for safeguarding media freedom in the EU, which was open to the public for feedback and consultation until March 2022.
In May of that year, the Commission constructed its impact assessment report and submitted it to the Commission’s Regulatory Scrutiny Board (RSB), whose duties are to provide “quality assurance,” support the Commission and provide assessments during the early stages of the legislative process.
It is worth noting that the RSB is portrayed as an advisory board to the Commission and is described as “an independent body,” according to its website. However, the RSB consists of nine members, five of whom are from within the Commission itself, including four high-level Commission officials and a Commission Director-General as the chair of the RSB. The remaining four members are recruited from outside the Commission.
One function of the RSB is to review and issue opinions on impact assessment reports. An impact assessment report must include the socioeconomic and environmental impacts of the initiative, who and what will be impacted by it and how, as well as the results of and the strategy taken during the consultation process.
The RSB may issue one of three opinions on an impact assessment report: “positive,” “positive with reservations” or “negative.” A proposed initiative may only be adopted if it receives a “positive” or “positive with reservations” opinion. If a “negative” opinion is issued, the draft report must be reviewed and resubmitted to the RSB.
Furthermore, it is important to consider that the RSB is a technical group, whose main function is to complete and verify impact assessment reports. In this instance, it is presumable that a key objective was to ensure that all areas within the internal media market were addressed and therefore subject to the Regulatory oversight of the Commission. The following section should be understood in this context.

Unpopular from the start?

Just one month after the Commission submitted its impact assessment report on the EMFA initiative, the RSB returned a negative opinion in June 2022.
RSB Impact Assessment Report Opinion
RSB Impact Assessment Report Initial Opinion
The RSB’s initial opinion stated that the EMFA impact assessment report failed to explain the single market failures and the regulatory gaps. It did not explain with sufficient evidence the problems the EMFA seeks to address, how the measures will address these problems nor the prevalence of such problems across different media markets and Member States.
Furthermore, the opinion stated that the report did not clearly demonstrate the need for and effectiveness of certain measures and lacks transparency with regard to the stakeholders’ differing views during the consultation process.
Following the negative opinion, the Commission submitted a revised impact assessment report on July 11, 2022. Several weeks later, the RSB issued its second opinion: “positive with reservations.”
RSB Impact Assessment Report 2nd Opinion
RSB Impact Assessment Report 2nd Opinion
The second opinion stated that the revised impact assessment report of the EMFA still contained significant shortcomings, and in particular, it lacked the use of evidence to define or describe the problem it seeks to address. Additionally, the third point of concern read: “the analysis of single market and distributional impacts, among different media services and between Member States, is not sufficiently developed.”
Despite this, the Commission was able to proceed, and on Sept. 16, 2022, it published its proposal for “establishing a common framework for media services in the internal market,” which it named The European Media Freedom Act (EMFA).
The Explanatory Referendum of the EMFA draft legislation states the regulation “seeks to tackle a series of problems affecting the functioning of the internal market for media services and the operation of media service providers.”
According to the proposal, the EMFA will adhere to and expand on existing policies while addressing the regulatory gaps. Furthermore, it is constructed on four objectives:
1. “Fostering cross-border activity and investment in media services by harmonising certain elements of the diverging national media pluralism frameworks, in particular to facilitate cross-border service provision.”
2. “Increasing regulatory cooperation and convergence through cross-border coordination tools and EU-level opinions and guidelines.”
3. “Facilitating provision of quality media services by mitigating the risk of undue public and private interference in editorial freedom.”
4. “Ensuring transparent and fair allocation of economic resources in the internal media market by enhancing transparency and fairness in audience measurement and allocation of state advertising.”
The extended text on each of the four objectives may be read in the original draft EMFA proposal.
At first glance, the language used in the text of the proposal may instill a positive impression on the average EU citizen, resident, journalist, publisher or MEP. The use of phrases like “quality media services,” “fair allocation of economic resources,” “editorial freedom,” in addition to the name for the legislation, “European Media Freedom Act,” may suggest this proposal could empower and protect journalists and media professionals of various sub-sectors. That is, however, only in the absence of a closer look at the actual text.
Behind the fluff and buzzwords woven throughout the introductions, the media appearances and the speeches celebrating the EMFA proposal, in-depth examination of the text of the proposed Regulation unveils an unprecedented effort to establish a unified EU media sector under the central control of a newly established European Board for Media Services, which has the authority to censor and restrict the press.

A closer look at the EMFA

The Committee on Culture and Education (CULT) is the committee responsible for the EMFA. The Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs (LIBE) and Internal Market and Consumer Protection (IMCO) committees serve as associates. The procedure is led by Special Rapporteur Sabine Verheyen, an MEP from the Christian Democratic Party of Germany.
Given that the EMFA proposal is still in the legislative process, there are several opinions and amended versions of the proposal. The subsequent text will analyze the Council’s negotiating mandate.

European Board for Media Services

(Author’s note: The bold text in the images indicate changes to the original draft EMFA proposal.)
The EMFA establishes the European Board for Media Services (the Board), which will replace the existing European Regulators Group for Audiovisual Media Services (ERGA). According to the Commission’s original EMFA proposal, the ERGA lacks the resources and ability to solve cross border issues, to manage regulatory matters and is limited in its scope of action.
The Board is portrayed as an independent body. Article 9 asserts “the full independence of the Board” and states that the Board “… shall neither seek nor take instructions from any government institution, person or body. This shall not affect the competences of the Commission or the national regulatory authorities or bodies in conformity with this Regulation.”
Article 9 - Independence of the Board
Article 9 – Independence of the Board
This means the Board shall act independently, however that independence shall not interfere in the areas in which the Commission and/or national regulatory authorities are, according to the legislation, involved in the Board’s functioning, management and execution of tasks.
On examination of the structure of the Board, its secretariat and its tasks, as described in Articles 10 to 12, it is clear that the Commission has a significant role in the Board’s operations and overall composition.
This has raised questions about the legitimacy of the independence of the Board asserted in Article 9. Even the ERGA’s position paper makes note of this contradiction in the following excerpt:
“The independence of the Board formulated in Article 9 is contradicted in practice by several provisions contained in the following articles on the internal functioning of the Board, the secretariat and the Board’s tasks.”
ERGA’s position paper on the EMFA

Structure of “the Board”​

The Board will be composed of representatives from national regulatory authorities and each member will have one vote. A Chair and Vice-Chair will be elected by the Board members and may serve a maximum of two one-year terms. It will be the duty of the Chair to keep the Commission informed about the Board’s activities and to consult the Commission in preparation for its work programme.
Article 10 - Structure of the Board
Article 10 – Structure of Board
Additionally, the Commission will designate a representative to the Board who will participate in the Board’s “deliberations” but will not have voting rights.
“During an event a few months ago, the Commission said that they plan to assign eight to 10 people to the Board, which is quite significant even without voting rights,” said Konteas.
Furthermore, the Board must adopt its rules and procedure and the development of its work programme only after having consulted with the Commission. While the Board may invite experts to attend meetings, permanent attendees may only be permitted if the Commission agrees.
“If in any Member State, the government appointed a person to participate in all meetings and activities of the national media regulator, this would immediately ring some alarm bells for the risk of government interferences.”
Furthermore, even the staff of the Board is assigned by the Commission. As stated in Article 11, the secretariat will be provided by the Commission.
Article 11 - Secretariat of the Board
Article 11 – Secretariat of the Board
The Secretariat shall assist the Board with administrative and organizational activities and work closely with the Board and its Chair “drawing up on deliverables.”
However, the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection (IMCO), and The Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs (LIBE) Committee opinions both seek to some what limit the role of the Commission.
Article 11 of the IMCO opinion removes the provision stating that the Secretariat shall be provided by the Commission, and instead states that “The Board shall be supported by an independent bureau.” However, both Committee’s uphold Article10(5), which allows the Commission to appoint a representative to the Board.
It will be determined during the later stages of the legislative procedure if such opinions will be adopted.

Tasks of the Board

Similar to the ERGA, the Board acts in an advisory and supportive position to the Commission. Unlike the ERGA, the Board has a much broader scope of competency and has regulatory authority over the press sector.
Article 12 - Tasks of the Board
Article 12(1) – Tasks of the Board
According to Article 12(1), the Board shall advise the Commission on media matters within its range of competence and promote and ensure the consistent application of the Regulation. The Commission is frequently referenced in the text of Article 12.
Article12(d-f)
Article 12(d-f) – Tasks of the Board
“When requested by the Commission” the Board shall provide opinions on technical and factual issues. “In Consultation with the Commission” the Board shall draw up opinions regarding requests for cooperation between regulatory bodies and requests for enforcement measures in case of a disagreement between natural regulatory authorities on national measures. “Upon the request of the Commission” the Board shall draft opinions on media market concentrations.
It is worth noting that while the ERGA’s position paper welcomes the new tasks given to the Board, it urges for a reduced role of the Commission:
“It is therefore inappropriate that the EMFA only or mainly provides for tasks of the Board to be executed either ‘in agreement with’ or ‘at the request of the Commission.’ The position paper requests that requests with ‘in an agreement to the Commission’ should be deleted.”
Excerpt from the ERGA position paper on the EMFA
Article12(h)
Article 12(h) – Tasks of the Board
Furthermore, as outlined in Article 12(h), it is the duty of the Board to merely “assist the Commission in drawing up guidelines with respect to the application of the Regulation” including Articles 23(1), (2), (3) and (4) as well as the factors to consider when assessing media market concentrations.
A new provision added by the Council allows for the Commission to place time limits when requesting advice or opinions from the Board.
The Board shall also offer mediation in the case of disagreements between national regulatory authorities and ensure the harmonization of standards related to design of devices or user interfaces. The Board will organize dialogue between very large online platforms (VLOPs) and media service providers (MSPs) and report those findings to the Commission to ensure the best practices for audience measurement systems.
One of the key objectives of the EMFA is to promote media pluralism. This raises questions as to how the Board will ensure news consumers have access to a wide range of opinions and perspectives from varying sources. An examination of Article 12(k) and Article 16 provide further insight into how the Board will manage media services established outside the EU.

A “serious and grave risk” to public security

In Article 12(k), it is a task of the Board to “coordinate national measures related to the dissemination of or access to content of media services from outside of the Union that target or reach audiences in the Union.”
Article12(k)(l)(m)
Article 12(k-m) – Tasks of the Board
Therefore, the Board may limit or restrict access to content from media services outside the EU that target audiences within the EU through “national measures” if that media service is deemed “to present a serious and grave risk of prejudice to public security.”
If the Board, in consultation with the Commission, considers a media service from outside the EU to pose a “serious and grave risk” to the public, then news consumers within the EU may not have access to this content. While this is already happening with the banning of outlets like RT and Sputnik, the EMFA Regulation would provide a further legal basis for restricting access to content outside the EU that is deemed a threat to public safety and security.
This appears to be a key component of the EMFA, as outlined in Article 16.
Article 16 - Coordination of measures concerning media services from outside the Union
Article 16 – Coordination of measures concerning media services from outside the Union
It states that media services or media service providers established outside the EU, “irrespective of their means of distribution or access, target or reach audiences in the Union where, inter alia in view of the control that may be exercised by third countries over them… present a serious and grave risk of prejudice to public security.” This indicates that by default, if a media service provider originates outside the EU, it is considered to be subject to control by third countries, and therefore is a risk of prejudice to public security.
Article 16(3) states that the Board, in consultation with the Commission, shall establish the criteria to be used by national regulatory authorities “when exercising their regulatory powers over media service providers.”
This is a clear admission that the national regulatory authorities monitoring the media sector at the direction of the Board and the Commission will have regulatory powers over media service providers.
In summary, while the Commission is concerned that media services originating outside the EU may present a risk to public security because they may be controlled by third countries, it simultaneously seeks to control the domestic EU media sector through the Board.

The great irony

Many organizations have expressed doubts over the EMFA proposal. Hundreds of press publishers and press publishers associations from various European countries have signed an open letter to the EU Co-legislators on June 27, 2023.
The open letter, which requests that the EMFA “lives up to its name,” addresses numerous issues with the proposal. It opens with a broad remark stating that several provisions of the EMFA are, in fact, counter-productive to protecting press freedom.
One of the many issues raised surrounds censorship, which has become a greater problem following the Digital Services Act (DSA), which gave social media companies and online platforms the right to remove and restrict content that does not comply with their terms and conditions.
“EMFA does not go far enough to safeguard freedom of expression and pluralism online and prevent censorship by very large digital platforms (VLOPs), that is becoming a widespread problem. The protection of freedom of expression must be considerably strengthened to guarantee the unfettered distribution of lawful European press content, and for pluralistic information to remain freely accessible online without undue interferences from VLOPs…”
Excerpt from the open letter, “The EMFA Must Live up to its Name”

More power to online platforms​

Article 17 establishes the functioning and management of media service providers’ content in relation to the providers of very large online platforms (VLOPs). According to the original draft proposal, a VLOP provider is defined as “a provider of an online platform that has been designated as a very large online platform pursuant to Article 25(4)” of the DSA.
In April 2023, the Commission designated several entities, including but not limited to Amazon Store, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok and others, as VLOPs.
Article 17(1) - Content of media service providers on very large online platforms
Article 17(1) – Content of media service providers on very large online platforms
Prior to a media service provider (MSP) publishing content to a VLOP, it first must enter into a contractual agreement with the VLOP provider in which it confirms that it is an MSP, that it is editorially independent of Member States and third countries and that it is subjected to the regulatory requirements and complies with a co- or self-regulatory policy.
Unlike the original draft proposal, the Council’s negotiating mandate includes an additional provision which would require MSPs to provide the contact details of the relevant national regulatory authority, so in cases where an MSP is suspected to have not complied with point (c), the VLOP provider can contact the national regulatory authority for confirmation.
According to Article 17(6), “the Commission shall issue guidelines to facilitate the effective implementation of the functionality referred to in paragraph 1,” to ensure the consistent application of the article.
Article17(6)
Article 17(6) – Content of media service providers on very large online platforms
Therefore, MSPs must declare their independence from Member States and third countries while submitting to control and regulation by national regulatory authorities and the Commission via the Board.
“Any labelling and/or allowing VLOPs or ‘civil society organisations, fact-checking organisations and other relevant professional organisations’ to question media companies’ self-declarations is problematic as it allows third parties to restrict the rights of media companies,” said Konteas.

Suspensions, restrictions​

If there were any doubts that providers of VLOPs would censor or restrict content, Article 17(2) makes it clear.
Article17(2)
Article 17(2) – Content of media service providers on very large online platforms
Providers of VLOPs will suspend MSPs for failure to comply with the Regulation and will restrict the visibility of content published by MSPs that is considered incompatible with its terms and conditions.
When this occurs, the provider of the VLOP must warn the MSP prior to the suspension or termination period and allow an opportunity for the MSP to respond. If an MSP considers that it has been repeatedly suspended without justification, the two parties must engage in a discussion about the matter in a timely manner, at the request of the MSP.
While it is unclear what specifics would justify suspension, restriction or removal of content, one can assume that MSPs deemed to produce “harmful” content and “disinformation” may be subject to repeated measures.
Article 18 - Structured dialogue
Article 18 – Structured dialogue
In Article 18, it states the Board shall meet regularly with providers of VLOPs, representatives of MSPs and members of civil society to ensure the best practices for the implementation of Article 17 “and to monitor adherence to self-regulatory initiatives aimed at protecting society from harmful content, including disinformation and foreign information manipulation and interference.”

What about media freedom?​

While much of the EMFA seems to place further restrictions on MSPs and media services both within the EU and originating outside the EU, many may be left to wonder where the “freedom” in the European Media Freedom Act is.
Article 4 outlines the rights of MSPs and is the only article dedicated to this subject. It states that MSPs have a right to exercise their economic activities within the EU as long as the MSP complies with Union law. Member States must respect effective editorial freedom of media service providers and along with their national regulatory authorities must not try to interfere with or influence the editorial policies or decisions of MSPs and must respect the protection of journalistic sources.
Furthermore, Article 4(2a) addresses the rights of MSPs in the context of what Member States and national regulatory authorities must not do. Much of the controversy surrounding the EMFA is its loophole which allows Member States to spy on journalists, MSPs and their associations if deemed a national security threat.
Article 4(1)(2) - Rights of media service providers
Article 4(1-2) – Rights of media service providers
What is arguably one of the most overlooked aspects of the EMFA, is that MSPs are not provided protections from the potential abuses of power by the Commission and national regulatory authorities, which are given unprecedented controls over the media like never before.
“Once the risk of political pressure over editorial decisions has been acknowledged, it would be naïve to exclude the possibility that it might happen at European level,” said Konteas. On behalf of the EMMA and ENPS, he said that they are very concerned that there is no safeguard against the risk of interference by the Commission.
“In fact, we suggested to extend the protection of Art. 4(2), and especially of 4(2)(a), to potential threats coming from the European Union, its agencies and bodies, which should be just as bound to respect media freedom and independence as the governments and authorities of the Member States.”
In the context of the rights afforded to MSPs, the EMFA’s focus is to protect from potential abuses by Member States but not by the Commission, while reducing the role of Member States and granting significant authority to the Commission.

The prospects​

If the EMFA were to be incorporated into EU law, one can only imagine the myriad of ways in which the EU media sector would change. A once self-regulated sector would then come under the control, albeit indirectly, of the European Commission, an unelected and largely unaccountable body.
“Europe is a diverse region. Europe has always relied on the diversity of its culture, on its geographical diversity, on its linguistic diversity and the media markets across the Union have been built on these elements. So we don’t feel that there is one common market that justifies the regulatory intervention by the European Commission … The supervision from a central authority, this European Board, is unprecedented for our sector. What we feel is also problematic is the direct involvement of the European Commission. It’s like you have a European government supervising the media. I don’t think this fits very well.”
Excerpt from Ilias Konteas during a debate on France24, November 2022
The Commission, via the Board and national regulatory authorities, seeks to monitor the media, yet it is the job of the media to monitor them. While the EMFA Regulation would apply to any person or entity who meets the criteria for the broadly defined “media service provider,” it is important to consider how the field of journalism, which is intended to be a check on the powerful, will be affected.
A journalist’s duty is not to any government, governmental body or corporation. A journalist’s duty is to the public. This very principle, that has for so long been cherished, could be greatly jeopardized if the EMFA becomes law, especially in its current form.
Yet, the EMFA does not just include provisions that restrict and control journalists and “media service providers,” it also seeks to control you – the reader, the consumer of news.
During the past three years, the language of public health was used to destroy our health under the guise of protecting our health. Now the language of media freedom is being used to control and destroy the media under the guise of protecting the media.
The EMFA will regulate your access to information, under the guise of protecting you from “harmful disinformation” and “foreign manipulation.” Should the European Commission and the European Board for Media Services determine what it is true or what is false, what you should read or what you should not watch? You, the reader, should be left to decide that on your own.
The Committee on Culture and Education (CULT) is expected to issue its opinion on the proposal in September of this year, and then it will enter into a trilogue negotiation with the Council. The Commission, Parliament and Council all seek to conclude negotiations on the EMFA Regulation before the European Parliament elections in Spring 2024.
 

There Is A War On Free Speech, And They Won’t Ever Be Satisfied Until It Is Completely Eradicated​

Michael Snyder
MARCH 5, 2024

Link: https://www.activistpost.com/2024/0...sfied-until-it-is-completely-eradicated.html/


This article was originally published by Michael Snyder at The End of the American Dream.
The freedom to say whatever we want is one of the most fundamental rights in a free society. If we are not free to speak up, it is just a matter of time before all of our other rights are taken away as well. So it should deeply alarm all of us that free speech is under attack like never before.
Much of the population has become convinced that “hate speech” is a special class of speech that does not deserve protection. Of course in practice “hate speech” ends up being whatever forms of expression that the leftist elite hate. That is why “hate speech” laws are always written so vaguely. That way they can be used to go after whoever the leftist elite feel like going after at the time.
It is not always easy to have a society where people are allowed to say whatever they want. People say things all the time that deeply, deeply offend me. And there are some that have said things about me that are tremendously hateful and untrue.

But if we are going to have a free society, people have got to be free to say whatever they want. So we should never support freedom of speech being taken away from anyone, because once we start going down that slippery slope it is just a matter of time before they come after our freedom to say what we want.
That is why what is happening in the state of Washington is so alarming. A new law would allow private individuals to collect up to $2,000 every time they report someone to the new “hate crimes and bias incidents hotline”…
Senate Bill 5427, after it is signed into law, would allow private individuals (note: this is not limited to American citizens) to report “bias incidents*” (see definition below) to the State Attorney General’s Office, with the possibility of receiving up to $2,000 of taxpayers money for this noncriminal incident. The bill was very clear: this is a non-crime which they will then forward to local law enforcement to investigate. What’s to investigate? No crime, no investigation.
The Progressives & Marxists who sponsored this bill say it is intended to help “victims of hate crimes” before a crime even happens. Say what? In reality, SB 5427 would create a “tattletale hotline,” undermine legitimate criminal investigations, and freeze, not just chill, speech & the press in Washington State. People will stop talking to others and writing to others except very close friends & relatives, for fear a greedy “Karen”will report them to Washington’s version of the Gestapo.
This is crazy.

Do we live in East Germany now?
It has been pointed out that those who use social media could make a fortune reporting their fellow citizens to the new “tattletale hotline”
“Spend five minutes on Twitter on any given day and I assure someone would say something offensive under this law that we could call a ‘hate crime’ and collect $2,000 from the attorney general,” Conservative Ladies of Washington Founder and President Julie Barrett told the Senate Ways and Means Committee at a Feb. 20 public hearing. “It potentially target people for actions they don’t like, but are not actually hate crimes. In collaboration with bills like HB 1333, this would create sort of a ‘tattletale hotline’ to report people one doesn’t agree with or doesn’t like.”

Of course, we have seen similar efforts in other states.
In New York, Governor Kathy Hochul intends to massively expand the hate crime laws in her state…
Governor Kathy Hochul today highlighted her groundbreaking State of the State proposal to expand the list of charges eligible to be prosecuted as hate crimes and announced grant funding to strengthen safety and security measures at nonprofit, community-based organizations at risk of hate crimes or attacks because of their ideology, beliefs, or mission.
“The rising tide of hate is abhorrent and unacceptable – and I’m committed to doing everything in my power to keep New Yorkers safe,” Governor Hochul said. “Since the despicable Hamas attacks of October 7, there has been a disturbing rise in hate crimes against Jewish and Muslim New Yorkers. In recent years we’ve seen hate-fueled violence targeting Black residents of Buffalo and disturbing harassment of AAPI and LGBTQ+ individuals on the streets of New York City. We will never rest until all New Yorkers feel safe, regardless of who they are, who they love, or how they worship.”
And in Michigan, last year a bill was introduced that would have made it a felony if someone felt “terrorized, frightened, or threatened” by your words…
Last month, the Michigan House passed Bill 4474—legislation that would expand the state’s existing Ethnic Intimidation Act beyond current protections for religion, ethnicity and race, to categories including sexual orientation and gender identity or expression. HB 4474 would make it a felony hate crime offense to cause someone to “feel terrorized, frightened, or threatened” with words—deliberately misgendering someone, for example—subject to a potential penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
The Left has been pushing its “words are violence” premise for some time. But Michigan’s willingness to go the extra mile and criminalize gender-related speech has summoned a ghoul from some dystopian fever dream.
I certainly do not like hate speech.
Every day, people say things that are horribly offensive to me.
But I support their right to say those things because I don’t want my freedom of speech to be taken away.
And the leftist elite will never be satisfied until they take things as far as they possibly can.
For example, a new law in Canada allows courts to put people in prison for the rest of their lives for “hate crime offenses”…
It also amends the Criminal Code to create a new standalone hate crime offence that would allow penalties up to life imprisonment to deter hateful conduct, as well as raise the maximum punishments for hate propaganda offences from five years to life imprisonment for advocating genocide.
“I’m the father of two youngsters and, like parents and grandparents around Canada, I’m terrified by the dangers that lurk on the internet for our children,” said Justice Minister Arif Virani Monday, as the Liberals unveiled the bill.
“I’m also a Muslim. The hatred that festers online is radicalizing people and that radicalization has real world impacts for my community, and for so many other communities,” added Virani.
So what constitutes a “hate crime” in Canada?

Well, over the years the rules have been written so vaguely that they could be used to go after just about anything.
As a result, many Canadians are now deeply afraid to say anything that is even remotely “offensive”.
Now this new law which is being pushed by Justin Trudeau will make things even worse. If you can believe it, this new law would actually allow authorities to take certain kinds of actions even before a hate crime has been committed
Trudeau’s bill is called Bill C-63, and it’s a “hate crime bill” that primarily affects “social media” and essentially “criminalizes a human emotion.”
“If you have quote ‘fear of hate’ … you can get a judge to issue a kind of restraining order against your enemy before he does anything, before he says anything, and that restraining order can include house arrest, giving up any lawful firearms, limiting who he can talk to directly or indirectly, limiting the places he can go, and requiring him to to take urine and blood tests – just because you are quote ‘afraid’ he might in the future say some hate speech,” he explains, adding that the so-called perpetrator “doesn’t have to have done anything in the past” to be required to go through the process, making it “a pre-crime bill.”
What in the world has happened to Canada?
Once upon a time, it was such a nice place to visit.
The laws that seek to restrict how we express ourselves are never enforced uniformly.
Instead, we have seen example after example where conservatives are specifically targeted.
Here in the United States, the left believes in being very soft on violent criminals, but they will go after pro-life activists with all the fury they can muster.
Right now, a 59-year-old grandmother is probably going to spend the rest of her life in prison because she was attempting to convince women not to go into an abortion clinic…
In prison, every move an inmate makes is controlled. Ms. Idoni, 59, is getting used to that. She must, because she is facing more than 41 years in prison—the rest of her natural life.
Her sentence is expected to be the longest in the United States for someone charged with violating the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act,
a 1994 law that prohibits interfering with anyone obtaining or providing “reproductive health services.” It was seldom used until the Supreme Court’s decision on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization reversed Roe v. Wade in June 2022, which returned abortion regulation to the states.
Her crime: sitting near or in front of the doors of abortion clinics to give sidewalk counselors a few moments to talk to women before their abortion appointments and potentially change their minds. Nine women out of 10 give them the middle finger and keep walking, Ms. Idoni said. But some women do change their minds, and sidewalk counselors say the life of every baby saved is worth the risk.

More than 60 million babies have been killed in the United States since 1973, but those responsible for the killing are not being held accountable.
Instead, those who are trying to do something about the relentless slaughter are being viciously targeted by authorities.
We really do live in an upside-down society.
Good is being called evil, and evil is being called good.
And if you try to speak out about what is happening, you could find yourself in an enormous amount of trouble.
They intend to completely crush all dissent, and they will never stop until they have achieved their goal.
 
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Canadian PM Justin Trudeau’s Brother Exposes Him As Globalist Shill​

Infowars.com
May 13th 2024, 1:56 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/canadian-pm-justin-trudeaus-brother-exposes-him-as-globalist-shill/

[vid at site link, above]

New World Order installing puppet politicians around the world

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s half-brother Kyle Kemper joined Tucker Carlson over the weekend for a discussion about the globalist puppet and the future of humanity.
Kemper said he sees Trudeau as a pharma salesman working for the corporate interests who actually control Canada.

In fact, the prime minister’s kin claimed he warned the global elite would roll out a mass vaccination scheme years ahead of the Covid pandemic.
Kemper explained he believes Trudeau is well-meaning but not actually in power.
https://www.infowarsstore.com/ultim...video&utm_medium=banner&utm_content=ugobanned
“Justin’s like the captain of the hockey team. He’s not the manager of it, is not the owner of it,” he said.
Joe Biden is no different as the intel agencies and international bankers prefer politicians who are basically hired actors rather than wild cards like Donald Trump who want to implement their own agendas.
 
Ajax goes on about his book on "the Great Reset," but he's a Jew shill and a gate-keeper for them--despite his pretence as martyr being persecuted by ZOG.

 
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