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Limits of free speech in an age of terrorism

 
 
 

We live in a world in which revolutions form in part because of digital media. It seems that everyone today has digital media to amplify whatever noise they want to make — good or bad — and can utilize media without a filter.

The right to make “noise” is not absolute. To paraphrase a well-known U.S. Supreme Court decision dealing with limitations on free speech — when the speech in question is imminently dangerous and has no conceivable purpose — “Shouting fire in a crowded theatre” is not allowed.

In light of the pressure brought to bear by the American government on Wikileaks – including pressuring financial companies not to process payments, threatened prosecutions, and the like — a close friend of mine, Nitsana Darshan-Leitner of the Shurat HaDin Israel Law Center, is threatening to sue Twitter for allowing terrorists to use the digital media network.

She is smart, focused, and ideological — a formidable opponent raising a valid point. If the U.S. government deems these organizations illegal and they can’t raise funds, why are they allowed to disseminate their message freely to Americans?

Leitner’s organization is a civil rights organization dedicated to “combating the terrorist organizations and the regimes that support them through lawsuits litigated in courtrooms around the world.” They have done a lot of good worldwide to fight terrorism via “lawfare” — utilizing the courtroom to battle anti-Western interests.

Hezbollah, al Qaeda affiliate al-Shabaab, and others violate American law by using Twitter. [A breakdown of terrorists utilizing social media can be found at ]http://bit.ly/js-rt.]

The ACLU says “The government can’t force private companies to censor lawful speech just because the government doesn’t like the speech or the people making the speech.” Does that mean I can go online and scream fire in a crowded theatre? Can I behave however I want simply because I am online and hidden behind a computer screen?

In light of the fact that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recently cited President Obama as believing that “the more freely information flows, the stronger societies become,” one wonders where the administration will stand if mass rioting is sparked by digital media. U.K. authorities say rioters used social networks to coordinate acts of mass civil disobedience earlier this year in London. State prosecutors in Mexico have accused people of terrorism and sabotage, claiming that their Twitter posts helped spread false rumors about a school attack, leading to real-life violence.

It’s no secret that the terrorists are public relations savvy and very concerned with brand and image. As was recently reported, Al Qaeda is concerned about the baggage associated with its name, and is increasingly going by the name “Ansar al Sharia.” It is also no secret that American public relations agencies have represented Qaddafi and Assad; and just last year Qatar hired a leading U.S. public relations firm to lobby for the Hamas regime in the Gaza Strip.

Darshan-Leitner stopped the second Gaza flotilla earlier this year and has won lawsuits against Hamas, Hizbollah, and the Palestinian Authority. I am sure Twitter’s going to be answering this one pretty soon. I’d venture that a modern “fire in a crowded theatre” discussion may be coming to a courtroom near us very soon.

 

Ronn Torossian
Ronn Torossian is the CEO of 5WPR, a New York-based public relations firm. He is the authior of “For Immediate Release: Shape Minds, Build Brands, and Deliver Results with Game-Changing Public Relations,” available for purchase at: http://amzn.to/rt-fir.
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Learning the lessons of history

We are all too familiar with the rhetorical currency of anti-Semites. Jews control the human and material resources of every society in which they are found, the anti-Semites say, no matter how few in number we may be in said society. They maintain an international conspiracy. They meet secretly, presenting a pleasant and cooperative face to the world, but using hidden teachings of their sacred books to plot the overthrow of societies they consider hostile. They say one thing publicly and the opposite in private. They have learned how to “pass” in society, but even the most “assimilated” Jew may be an operative in disguise. They are quick to cry bigotry, but ignore the teachings of contempt within their own synagogues, schools, and sacred books. They never criticize each other. And, of course, they wish to frustrate the public expression of faith by non-Jews.

 

 

The correct use of Title VI

 

Benzion Netanyahu: An appreciation

Benzion Netanyahu — historian, one-time political activist and father of Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister — died Monday in Jerusalem at 102. An accomplished scholar and the patriarch of one of Israel’s most important political families, he also played a surprising and little-known role in United States political history.

Netanyahu was born in Poland in 1910 to a family deeply immersed in the world of religious Zionism. His father, Rabbi Nathan Mileikowsky, a popular Zionist preacher, brought the family to British-ruled Palestine in 1920. He Hebraicized the family name to Netanyahu.

 

 

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“This school looks like a prison,” one of my fellow travelers whispers.

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