Semantic f**kery. Government bodies don’t need to suppress free speech when their supporters are able to do it for them. But more importantly, free speech is a bigger concept than the US Constitution. It is a human right.
It's not semantics at all, it's an entirely different argument between Twitter choosing to ban or censure whomever the f**k it likes, and Twitter banning or censuring whomever the f**k the government wants them to ban or censure.
If you can't see the difference you're a f**king moron.
Like I said, Twitter can do whatever the f**k it likes with it's platform provided it adheres to the law, if you don't like it, simple, you don't be a customer and you don't allow them to monetize your patronage. Twitter itself does not owe you or your views a platform.
f**k really, you need to be childish?
There is no god.
See how this works.
Semantic f**kery. Government bodies don’t need to suppress free speech when their supporters are able to do it for them. But more importantly, free speech is a bigger concept than the US Constitution. It is a human right.
Is it?
Seriously, we curtail speech in all kinds of ways and for all kinds of reasons, can you think of a jurisdiction anywhere in the world where you can say what ever the f**k you wanna say without consequence?
So we accept it's not a universal or absolute human right, there are degrees and we protect certain forms of speech, yet punish others in various ways. So it is inarguable that freedom of speech is only a right by degrees, meaning that quite literally there is wrong-speak that can come with some pretty serious consequences.
So accepting that as fact, the only viable positions are that either that is wrong, and the right should be absolute, or, where is it reasonable to draw the lines, who is entitled to make those decisions and in what circumstances can they be made.