
Guest Post by Alec Rawls
As Congress considers vastly expanding the power of copyright holders to shut down fair use of their intellectual property, this is a good time to remember the other activities that Obama’s “regulatory czar” Cass Sunstein wants to shut down using the tools of copyright protection. For a couple of years now, Sunstein has been advocating that the “notice and take down” model from copyright law should be used against rumors and conspiracy theories, “to achieve the optimal chilling effect.”
What kinds of conspiracy theories does Sunstein want to suppress by law? Here’s one:
… that the theory of global warming is a deliberate fraud. [From page 4 of Sunstein’s 2008 “Conspiracy Theories” paper.]
Freedom of speech requires scope for error
At present, limits on speech are governed by libel law. For statements about public figures, libel requires not just that an accusation must be false, but that it must have been:
… made with ‘actual malice’—that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard to whether it was false or not. [New York Times v. Sullivan, 1964]
The purpose of the “actual malice” standard is to leave wide latitude for errant statements, which free public debate obviously requires. Sunstein thinks that room-for error stuff is given too much weight. He’d like it to see errant statements expunged. From Sunstein’s 2009 book On Rumors (page 78):
On the Internet in particular, people might have a right to ‘notice and take down.’ [T]hose who run websites would be obliged to take down falsehoods upon notice.
Further, “propagators” would face a “liability to establish what is actually true” (ibid).
Suppose you are a simple public-spirited blogger, trying to expose how Michael Mann, Phil Jones, Tom Wigley, and other Team members conspire to suppress the research and destroy the careers of those who challenge their consensus views. If Sunstein gets his way, Team members will only have to issue you a takedown notice, and if you want your post to stay up, you’ll have to go to court and win a judgment that your version of events is correct.
Today that should be doable, at great expense. But before the first and second batches of climategate emails were released there were only tales of retaliation, with one person’s word against another’s. Thus at the most critical juncture, when documentary proofs of The Team’s vendettas were not yet public, even a person who was willing to run Sunstein’s legal gauntlet might well have been held by a judge to be in error.
Escalation
The path from Sunstein’s 2008 “Conspiracy Theories” article to his 2009 On Rumors book is straightforward. According to Sunstein’s 2008 definition, a conspiracy theory is very close to a potentially libelous rumor:
… a conspiracy theory can generally be counted as such if it is an effort to explain some event or practice by reference to the machinations of powerful people, who have also managed to conceal their role. [Abstract]
At this time, Sunstein’s “main policy idea” was that:
government should engage in cognitive infiltration of the groups that produce conspiracy theories….
… government agents or their allies (acting either virtually or in real space, and either openly or anonymously) will undermine the crippled epistemology of those who subscribe to such theories. [“Conspiracy Theories,” pages 14-15]
Government funding of trolls? Sounds like a bad joke, but Sunstein quickly upped the ante. In On Rumors he followed the conspiracy theory as slanderous rumor angle as a way to justify adopting the “notice and take down” artillery from copyright law. So Sunstein already has a history of escalation in his legal crusade against ideas he does not like. If SOPA and PIPA are enacted and the machinery of copyright protection becomes vastly more censorious, its pretty much a certainty that Sunstein will want to use these more powerful tools against rumors and conspiracy theories as well.
Sunstein’s target has always been the very core of the First Amendment: the most protected political speech
In On Rumors, the rumor that Sunstein seems most intent on suppressing is the accusation, leveled during the 2008 election campaign, that Barack Obama “pals around with terrorists.” (“Look Inside” page 3.) Sunstein fails to note that the “palling around with terrorists” language was introduced by the opposing vice presidential candidate, Governor Sarah Palin (who was implicating Obama’s relationship with domestic terrorist Bill Ayers). Instead Sunstein focuses his ire on “right wing websites” that make “hateful remarks about the alleged relationship between Barack Obama and the former radical Bill Ayers,” singling out Sean Hannity for making hay out of Obama’s “alleged associations” (pages 13-14).
What could possibly be more important than whether a candidate for president does indeed “pal around with terrorists”? Of all the subjects to declare off limits, this one is right up there with whether the anti-CO2 alarmists who are trying to unplug the modern world are telling the truth. And Sunstein’s own bias on the matter could hardly be more blatant. Bill Ayers is a “former” radical? Bill “I don’t regret setting bombs” Ayers? Bill “we didn’t do enough” Ayers?
For the facts of the Obama-Ayers relationship, Sunstein apparently accepts Obama’s campaign dismissal of Ayers as just “a guy who lives in my neighborhood.” In fact their relationship was long and deep. Obama’s political career was launched via a fundraiser in Bill Ayers’ living room; Obama was appointed the first chairman of the Ayers-founded Annenberg Challenge, almost certainly at Ayers’ request; Ayers and Obama served together on the board of the Woods Foundation, distributing money to radical left-wing causes; and it has now been reported by full-access White House biographer Christopher Andersen (and confirmed by Bill Ayers) that Ayers actually ghost wrote Obama’s first book Dreams of My Father.
Whenever free speech is attacked, the real purpose is to cover up the truth. Not that Sunstein himself knows the truth about anything. He just knows what he wants to suppress, which is exactly why government must never have this power.
Soulmates (cue music)
You, on the other hand, are the enemy
In climate science, there is no avoiding “reference to the machinations of powerful people, who have also managed to conceal their role.” The Team has always been sloppy about concealing its machinations, but that doesn’t stop Sunstein from using climate skepticism as an exemplar of pernicious conspiracy theorizing, and his goal is perfectly explicit: he wants the state to take aggressive action to make it easier for our powerful government funded scientists to conceal their machinations.
Cass Sunstein may be the most illiberal man ever to present himself as a liberal. He also holds the most powerful regulatory position in existence, overseeing every federal regulation. For a sample of his handiwork, realize that he oversaw the EPA’s recently issued transport and MACT rules, which will shut down 8% of current U.S. electricity generation.
Maybe you don’t think it’s a good idea to unplug critical energy infrastructure just to achieve marginal further reductions in micro-particulates that have already fallen to well below half of their 1980 levels:
Sorry but there is no place in Sunstein’s EPA for such doubts and, as far as he is concerned, no place for them in the realm of public debate either. The environmental bureaucracy has everyone’s best interest at heart. To question that is the very definition of conspiracy mongering.
Next people will be claiming that Obama actually intends for energy prices to “necessarily skyrocket.” Such vile rumors need to be silenced, and this can easily be done. Once the SOPA/PIPA machinery is in place, it will only take one line in some future omnibus bill to extend it from copyright to criticism.


Obama and the EPA are going to freeze us all to death in the dark. Don’t dare complain though when your your family dies. It would be unpatriotic !
I can hardly wait for the day when they start proposing Canada be invaded so they can shut down the oil sands by force. Those Canucks are destroying the planet you know. Make em wear yellow stars !
[SNIP: Policy -REP]
Correction. Obama’s book is Dreams from My Father. A minor detail, but it “from” does have a different meaning than “of.”
Fortunately, there is a remedy for the unconstitutional plague of statist ‘czars’ that The Puppet President and his Marxist handlers have inflicted upon us: it’s called an election.
Short of concocting some kind of ‘national emergency’ and getting the election called off, I think it is very unlikely this gang can prevail upon the American public to give them another term. Of course, the Republicans are always good at pulling defeat from the jaws of victory. But as long as Obambi and company keep trying to assuage the radical left, with decisions like nixing the XL pipeline, and as long as the economy stays in the doldrums, a year from today we should be able to clean house—the White House.
/Mr Lynn
Tattoo this across your chest. Burn it into your souls. You will need it to keep you warm in the coming years.
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“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.”
welcome to the USSA comrades!!!
These people want to rewrite the Constitution. Why? They claim that we have our heads in the “echo chamber,” and so are not fit/informed to carry out the Founding Fathers’ ideal of “participative democracy.”
They belive that now, with vastly more media than the Colonial days, we can avoid a range of views, and so we are not fit to vote or have einput on legislative initiatives, etc.
The solution? REWRITE THE CONSTITUTION.
conradg says:
January 20, 2012 at 4:41 am
You had me on your side until you claimed that Bill Ayers actually ghost-wrote Obama’s book, and that Ayers himself admitted it. You must know that Ayers said that in total mocking sarcasm at the absurdity of the notion…………………………….
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Are you saying Christopher Anderson is incorrectly understood by Rawls?
Rawls: “……………..and it has now been reported by full-access White House biographer Christopher Andersen (and confirmed by Bill Ayers) that Ayers actually ghost wrote Obama’s first book Dreams of My Father.”
I have a feeling the electorate will reverse the mistake they made in electing Big O. I know of nobody that voted for the guy that’s willing to admit it now, or that plans on doing it again. Still, many union hacks out there will support him again as a brainless reaction to their boss’s request since they have received largess for their support of Barry–GM stock being ripped from rightful owners and given to undeserving GM union members is a prime example. And that’s one “conspiracy” Cass Sunstein undoubtedly wants to quash, among many others.
Please, send Sunstein to N. Korea where his ideology is a much better fit and throw his boss in for the (one-way) ride, too.
At 5:59 AM on 20 January, Donna Laframboise had written:
Well, to paraphrase Mae West, “honesty had nothing to do with it.”
Freedom of speech has been considered by incumbent and aspiring politicians as something to be violated whenever and wherever it is expedient to do so. Consider the Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) perpetrated by the Federalists.
Critters like this Sunstein specimen have been warmly embraced by the occupants of the White House – no matter what their party or faction – for close to two centuries, and unless the man taking the presidential oath of office on 20 January next year is an elderly obstetrician named Ron Paul, you can reliably expect vicious thugs “with views so antithetical to free speech” to be continuing fixtures in and around the federal executive branch.
Beliefs and ideas can and do turn into laws. We must be all over the beliefs and ideas of those who wish to serve in government positions. We must also be all over the behavior of those who wish such positions (and if they can’t stand the heat, it is a telling comment on their ability to serve). We may end up with the opposite of what we voted for without such challenges.
The U.S. and its states came into being by such challenges and accusations against the monarchy and our own Constitution. It was even written into our Declaration. But according to this idiot, the Declaration would have to be “taken down”.
A couple places to start reading: 1 Sunstein’ essay noted here. 2 Sunstein’s book, “The Partial Constitution.” This is the info-diet equivalent of his health behavior-focused book “Nudge:” the govt is a series of sticks and carrots to guide our life for the overall societal good. Exactly like “Walden II.”
3. Visit website: http://www.constitutionin2020.org
You can take it from there. The goal is to change media. No longer will it be a free speech ideal. The ideal will be an ‘impartial’ govt board that ensures that a proper mix of viewpoints is present in all media. Yes, an updated ‘fairness doctrine,’
Sunstein sounds educated and reasonable. I have figured out his trick: he states off with an “obvious” given that is wrong. Then, he follows that with good argument and reasoning and examples. He then arrives at his conclusions. [of course, the conclusions are all a world where he and other elitists guide society fromthe top-down, since we rabble don’t know better.] So, if you read ‘the lpartial constitution,’ ‘democracy and the problem of free speech,,’ etc., realize that his trick is to have a slightly wrong premise, with a following argument that is fairly reasonble, or logical.
These rewrite-the-Constitution peopel have another propaganda point: the Declaration of Independence and Constitution fits “extreme right-wing views,”such as pro-life ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” gun ownership, home-schooling choice, state power versus fed, etc.
Since these founding docs, and founding fathers, no longer represent the general public, but only “far right extremists,” they need to be modified, lest our lead governing principles be unfairly biased to favor ‘right-wing extremism.’
You can believe me or not. You should not trust me, but should go get yourself edumacated. Go explore this for yourself.
Rhys Jaggar says:
January 20, 2012 at 5:59 am
But you do the same thing you rant about. For example, do you have a citation (link, whatever) that James Delingpole is cheering on this targeting of the Deputy Prime Minister?
If you don’t you are slitting your own throat on this one.
See how you’ve castigated yourself as unlawful and justified the judge’s sentence of guilty?
“Further, “propagators” would face a “liability to establish what is actually true””
I say there are no unicorns. Under Sunstein’s standards, I could be forced to prove a negative. That’s logically impossible.
By the way, hear hear on Ron Paul.
Further, “propagators” would face a “liability to establish what is actually true” (ibid).
With every threat there is opportunity!
Regarding sites being shut down, I’ve just read that one of the leading filesharing sites, Megaupload, has been closed by the US DOJ, and a number of arrests made. What ever your views on sharing of copyright material, this is a clear warning that governments can and will use all their powers to stifle free speech. IIRC Megaupload hosted one of the many copies of the original UEA leak…
It should also be a warning NOT to rely on “Cloud” hosting of your important files/documents etc.
@Rhys Jagger
“Free speech does not mean saying that ‘Barack Obama’s wife is a frigid cow who spawned two vile pot smoking heroin-injecting nignogs’ is acceptable. It means that someone writing that should be incarcerated into a lunatic asylum.”
What purpose would it serve to put such a person in prison, Rhys? Why would you want to do such a thing? Do you think imprisoning such a person would make such a person moderate their views, or actually give them reason to make them far more extreme? Does preventing them from putting such views in writing mean the views cease to exist? Do the people that read such views not have the ability to determine their own opinion of such matters and thus you desire to impose a ban on the expression of such views to protect these delicate souls?
It seems to me that your only plausible reason for wanting to supress free speech in this way is because you personally don’t like the views that are expressed. Personally I don’t like the views of pro-abortionists, Islamic fundamentalists, Marxists, people that support Manchester City and fans of Justin Bieber. Let’s be fair and ban them ALL from ever saying anything and then maybe we can all live in peace? Or maybe we should be grown up and admit that free-speech is a fundamental human right of exceptional value that should NEVER be challenged or eroded by ill-thought out caveats that are only ever exploited to widen their scope until they become all-encompassing.
Duncan says:
January 20, 2012 at 4:10 am
“Presumably unless you make it illegal to view – the answer is just to use servers outside the US?
Politicians in all countries still don’t get the internets do they?
They either have to shut the whole thing down or clean their own acts up and stop being self serving chisellers. You can’t get this toothpaste back in the tube.”
Well said sir
Tucci78, as I understand it, he was elected PRESIDENT, not Editor, of Harvard Law Review, a campus club producing a journal of the same name, and never had anything to do with the journal. Also, while in prior years only students with exception grades were permitted to run for this office, Harvard conveniently changed the rules at some point prior to his election so that members of minority groups, regardless of their grades, could also run.
Did the other club members REALLY vote for Obama? Has anybody canvassed them to find out? So far, only one person at Harvard has even admitted knowing him. She, a real editor of the Law Review, said that he did not contribute to the journal, did not edit a single article, and rarely even showed up at the Review meetings. The lone example we have of his writing is illiterate, and we’re supposed to believe that someone who doesn’t know how to match noun and verb cases suddenly, with no prior experience, churned out an award-winning masterpiece? Everything about him, from his admission to Harvard to the present is suspect, dubious, weird, illogical, and inexplicable WITHOUT invoking conspiracy theories. He is a wholesale fabrication, but who is the fabricator?
thelastdemocrat says:
January 20, 2012 at 6:09 am
Actually, a lot of people, because we have the Internet, are more supportive of and participating in this “participative democracy” of which you speak than ever before. Obviously, those that don’t have our freedoms at heart but their own power in mind would love to change the status quo.
But one thing I learned recently was a revelation to me–the amount of time in public discourse that led up to the writing of the US Constitution, all the while these ideas were discussed in the editorial columns of every newspaper in the land; a number of thought-provoking pamphlets extolling the virtues of independence coupled with responsibility were best sellers; with the Black Robe Brigade preaching the same ideals from every church pulpit and street corner where crowds could be gathered. It wasn’t just a few months or a few seasons or even decades. It was roughly 60 years!–the time it took back then to have 3 generations. And yet the basic principles apply then as they do now.
(By the way, the vitriol was no less then than it is now, and we’ve all survived to this point just fine. Don’t let anti-freedom forces destroy such an amazing investment in our freedoms. Those that would police freedom of speech are not proponents but are truly antithetical opponents.)
Moving the web site off shore doesn’t necessarily work. The US of A is currently trying to extradite Richard O’Dwyer from the UK for running a website that contravened copyright laws. He broke no UK law, he never left the UK. All very odd.
“When the rumours are not rumours but plain lies, when they are part of campaigns waged by mentally ill psychopaths aimed at destroying genuine democratic plurality, then free speech has got to stop.”
Ugh, no. The answer is more free speech, and the exercise of libel laws.
“unless the man taking the presidential oath of office on 20 January next year is an elderly obstetrician named Ron Paul, you can reliably expect vicious thugs “with views so antithetical to free speech” to be continuing fixtures in and around the federal executive branch”
Seriously? Have you watched how the Ronulans behave? They have thinner skins than the Obamadrones.
Like Jeff Wiita says, Glenn Beck was right on this one. Yes, the man can be over the top on some subjects but, if I treated his pronouncements like I would stock picks, I’d be a very wealthy man.
Just sayin’.
Whether Ayers was being sarcastic or not is of no matter. The evidence is overwhelming that he wrote Dreams. Read these articles from The American Thinker:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/10/who_wrote_dreams_from_my_fathe_1.html
http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/10/evidence_mounts_ayers_cowrote.html
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/06/breakthrough_on_the_authorship_1.html
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/04/the_mathematics_of_dreams_from.html
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/04/simon_schusters_revenge.html
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/07/who_wrote_audacity_of_hope_1.html
/Mr Lynn