Slashdot Asks: Is Trump's Blocking of Some Twitter Users Unconstitutional? (usatoday.com)
An anonymous reader shares an article: Some Twitter users say President Trump should not be able to block them on the social network. The president makes unprecedented use of Twitter, having posted more than 24,000 times on his @realDonaldTrump account to 31.7 million followers. His tweets about domestic and foreign policy -- and media coverage of him and his administration -- has transformed Twitter into a public forum with free speech protections. That's the opinion of two Twitter users, who have the backing of the Knight First Amendment Institute. They are sending a letter today to the White House asking Trump to unblock them on his @realDonaldTrump Twitter account. Both users say they were blocked recently after tweeting messages critical of the President. Holly O'Reilly (@AynRandPaulRyan), whose Twitter account identifies her as a March for Truth organizer, said she was blocked on May 23 after posting a GIF of Pope Francis looking and frowning at Trump captioned "this is pretty much how the whole world sees you." In the letter to Trump and the White House, the Knight First Amendment Institute's attorneys argue that Trump's Twitter account "operates as a 'designated public forum' for First Amendment purposes, and accordingly the viewpoint-based blocking of our clients is unconstitutional." In some other news, Press Secretary Sean Spicer said today "@realDonaldTrump's tweets are official White House statements."
Betteridge's Law of Headlines https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge%27s_law_of_headlines
To learn more about it, follow my Twitter at... oh wait, some other idiot stole my name.
#DeleteFacebook
this is an ask slashdot?
Get your facts right! Ask anyone in the WH!
I think this is a clear issue that transcends party lines. He's using the forum to communicate directly to the people and they have a right to participate. If they become abusive he can appeal to Twitter to suspend them.
The President is under no obligation to listen to you. Ignoring constituents is rather poor form, but it's not illegal or unconstitutional, any more than it is illegal or unconstitutional for current or past Presidents to ignore emails, phone calls, or written correspondence.
Editor, A1-AAA AmeriCaptions
dumbass millenials
He is the new *King of all media*. People can't wait (and apparently will sue) to hear what he'll say next. It's perfect!
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
How is this any different than writing a letter to him? He has people that read them and filter them because he can't possibly read that volume of mail himself. Twitter just mechanized the process.
Lets get Ann Coulter's opinion on blocking of free speech at Berkley.
Not sure the left is going to get much sympathy from me on this one.
If it is illegal for Trump to block them, it is also illegal for Twitter to BAN anyone. Infringement of their access to a public forum, you know.
The left will block people pre-emptively but block them and it's a damn constitutional crisis. Please run The Rock in 2020.
Hmm?
Can't they still see the tweets if they log out?
Most people who I've seen get blocked by The Fat Trumper are really proud of the fact. I would be.
I thought you could just go to https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump without needing any Twitter account in order to see what Donald Trump has tweeted. Now I suppose being blocked would cause an inconvenience for someone logged in via Twitter smartphone app.
CAPTCHA: decorum
What a stupid time to be alive...
He should have turned over his Twitter account to his Press Secretary when he took office and all Tweets should have been vetted and cleared before being sent. But of course that's just the smallest thing on a huge list of things he should or should not be doing, up to and including having run for president in the first place.
He can use their service however he wants. If Twitter was owned by the government, then you'd have something.
Not really. There is several ways we can look at this, but none of them lead to the government censoring those blocked. The first is Trump is using Twitter as an individual, in which case he has all his rights as an individual including the right to not listen to you. Freedom of association. The second is Trump is acting as public official, but in this still doesn't get us there as he is on a private platform. Just like a speaking event can deny you access to the president, Twitter can do the same. It is not interfering with your right to speak as you don't have a right to Twitter's platform as it were. Even if we consider Trump in control here (which he isn't but regardless lets consider it as he has some control) it still wouldn't get us there as freedom of speech is not the right to be heard by a particular party, only the right to be able to speak. Even as a public official, Trump doesn't have to listen to you, and thus there is no violation. You're still allowed to say anything about Trump yourself, even on Twitter, just it wouldn't be carried on his feed. The closest I can see we can get is that these twitter posts could be seen as matters of public record, and therefore accessible by the public which Trump is interfering with by blocking users. However, I don't think this will hold as many public records have blocks to getting them. It is enough that they are accessible via some means through freedom of information requests.
He doesn't have to listen. But if he permits comments from his supporters and uses the account for presidential purposes, then he has to accept ALL comments without editing out those he doesn't like or blocking commenters that he doesn't like. It's not like the question has not come up before in other contexts. Mike Pence even ran into the buzzsaw.
Public officials can either accept comments or not, but they can't selectively curate their audience and the audience's comments to assuage their fragile egos.
Has transformed Twitter into a public forum with free speech protections
If they believe that they need to sue twitter and not the president. Since twitter is what is currently deciding what is and isn't acceptable use of their platform and what is and isn't objectionable speech. They didn't do that for the obvious reason that suing twitter is far less sexier and more likely to produce sound legal opinions than suing someone whose very mention triggers people.
Has any POTUS done this before?
From my silly point - does he not stir in a wasp net? Anyone blocked will go elsewhere and complain about it, just adding to the anti-T sentiment or polarize the whole scene. The pro-T folks will approve and gather momentum that way and the anti-T folks gather moment too.
Who will win, we will see..
How this whole theater evolves is interesting. Aren't people getting tired of this show yet? One thing, another thing and over again.
Somewhere I heard that serious legal guys are working to get this all ended....
does a dos on twitter work?
personally i think the medium is stupid
Holy catshit is it really that hard to read the actual first amendment text? Here's a preview:
"Congress shall make no law"
The presidency is a separate and independent branch of government and is thus not restrained in any way by the 1st amendment. Sorry!
My first reaction would be that, since @realDonaldTrump is his personal account, he can do whatever he wants with it. Of course, with Sean Spicer calling his tweets "Official White House Statements", this muddies the waters a bit. If they're going to insist that these are official statements, I don't think we can excuse it as "It's just his personal account" anymore.
I was about to say "Yes, it is unconstitutional", when I realized one important point: Freedom of Speech doesn't involve Freedom To Have People Listen To You. A spammer can send me a spam e-mail and that's their right. I have the right to block it. A telemarketer can try calling me, but I have the right to not answer. They can't compel me to listen to the call or read the e-mail because of "Freedom of Speech." (Leaving aside, for the moment, that Free Speech only comes into play when the government does the restricting because, in the case of President Trump, he IS a government official doing the restricting.)
Twitter blocks don't prevent a person from seeing tweets or from replying to them. So Trump isn't keeping anyone from reading his tweets and responding "@realDonaldTrump You, sir, are a nitwit." It just means that he wouldn't see the tweets in his timeline. If he got someone banned from Twitter for that hypothetical tweet, then this WOULD be a First Amendment issue (because he's a government official).
I do think he's unnecessarily muddying the waters by mixing his personal and official Twitter accounts, but this is likely to add data retention requirements to his personal Twitter account, not adding any First Amendment issues by blocking users.
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
I'm not sure that analysis is correct. The case you linked to (in the indystar) never went to court. To consider it differently, if you are at a town-hall meeting, and CODEPINK runs in and starts shouting, they can be arrested.
The real question is whether Donald Trump, by having a Twitter feed, has created a public forum or not. Obviously that isn't something the creators of the constitution had thought about when they wrote the amendment, and none of the prior judgements really address the point, so the Supreme Court ruling would be based entirely on the opinions of the members of the court.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
No.
I stole this Sig
Suppose president X gives a televised speech every day at the VFW hall on M street. People can attend in person, or call-in and ask questions. Someone shows up with a picture of Pope Francis looking and frowning at Trump captioned "this is pretty much how the whole world sees you." During the Q&A period, they walk up to the camera with their picture so that it is broadcast. President X asks that the VFW hall not permit the person to take the stage during the Q&A period.
The person can go to the VFW hall, can still bring the picture, and can still hear the presidents speech. They just can't use the Q&A period to broadcast their picture. In reality, this happens all the time with various events that politicians hold. They don't allow certain reporters to attend, and clearly that is politically based. They only go on certain talk shows with certain hosts on certain networks. And the hosts won't allow certain people to ask questions.
I think this analogy is correct because the person didn't have their Twitter account blocked. Their posts just don't show-up in response to the president's comments. They can't respond to the president in his part of the forum.
if politicians are using it as a "public forum"
He has every right to block anyone from HIS PERSONAL @realDonaldTrump account...
He has NO right to block anyone from @POTUS.
Having said that, the legality of using his personal @realDonaldTrump account to discuss matters of state is a whole different can of worms.
PS: IANAL
*** Suerte a todos y Feliz dia!
Why would you even put this here, msmash? I'm more pissed off that you publish this nonsense instead of a real science or tech story.
Twitter is not the Government, and has nothing to do with the Government. President Trump did not make a requirement to petition Government following him on Twitter. Another fantasy (fake) issue won't make you or GP correct. You can petition Government all you want without Twitter, and I'll suggest that in 140 characters or less a Twitter petition is as "useful as a poopy flavored lollypop" (@tm Patches O'Hoolihan).
Claiming a violation of rights is occurring because "hypothetical" seems to be a common trend (see CNN, MSNBC, and other members of the trash we call MSM) yet is a failure of basic logic. if A therefor B is a propositional fallacy in the best case, or you are using a formal syllogistic fallacy. Using circular logic to continue to argue B is plain old insanity.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
twitter (for twists) is run by a rat that crawled out of Hilda's corrupt rotten arse. The legions of minion operatives that troll there everyday should have been banned into oblivion long ago. In fact, many of them should be hung for treason.
wait for it .. a long long time ago in a failed crippled tranny run warped galaxy far far away, yet not far enough away.
There is no constitutional "right" that says anybody has to listen to you
Twitter has already decided it is not a platform for free speech. As such, live with the consequences of your choices assholes.
Given that the left organizes lists to make sure they only hear, discuss, and distribute the official Party narrative, it's amusing to see them complain about their creation used against themselves.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
...of the sort of ceaseless whinging that is ALREADY getting Trump votes for 2020.
Seriously, when the Russia "investigation" determines that yes, some members of the administration did talk to Russians before the election (like Hilary's team did), but that no, there's no actual "there" there, the frothing, insensate masses of the Left will have to pause for at least a moment and realize they've given him 4 more years.
-Styopa
Actually you missed on this one. Mr. Trump has decided to use Twitter as a way to be in communication in his capacity as President of the United States. In addition, he has used his own Twitter ID instead of the POTUS one that was established for these communications. As such, this becomes a channel to reach a government official and selective blocking of that channel becomes a Constitutional issue. The White House Press Secretary has confirmed that official pronouncements come from the RealDonaldTrump account, so he is now SOL with regards to trying to say it is private/personal.
What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
The left bullies Trump and then complains when they are blocked. Classic double standard.
The Supreme court has even ruled such:
"Nothing in the First Amendment or in this Court's case law interpreting it suggests that the rights to speak, associate, and petition require government policymakers to listen or respond to communications of members of the public on public issues." - Minn. Bd. Commun. for Colleges v. Knight.
If someone blocks you not only does it mean you can't Tweet at them, it means you can't see their Tweets. Trump's position for a long time was that Twitter was his preferred method of communication with his followers. If Spicer is claiming Trump's Tweets are Official Whitehouse statements, then the President is interfering with his constituents ability to listen to his communications.
Comments on Slashdot used to be thoughtful. Now they're just boring, thoughtless, right-wing drivel.
the first amendment only prevents the government from censoring free speech. It doesn't compel them to provide one w/ a listening board. Neither Trump, nor anyone, is obligated to allow people who they deem annoying to keep trolling them
The First Amendment puts limits on how the government may limit access to a fully public forum. Check out the case law if you want, but at least take a glance at the Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Real lawyers write in C++
Cases like that not going to court doesn't imply it is unknown. While it depends on the actual situation, the government isn't personally paying for the lawyers and so generally will defend its position whenever it can win. These cases not going to court implies that the government would lose badly.
You WANT to read his tweets now?????
WTF????
Whe I find myself in tweets of trouble
Mother Russia comes to me
Speaking words of wisdom
Covfefe.....
He doesn't have to listen. But if he permits comments from his supporters and uses the account for presidential purposes, then he has to accept ALL comments without editing out those he doesn't like or blocking commenters that he doesn't like.
Really? Find me the part in the Constitution where it says the President is required to accept all comments -- or, in other words, "speech" -- from everyone? So the President is, by law, required to listen to everyone about everything everywhere everytime? The poor man would never get to sleep much less get any governing done! Hell, you could paralyze the government by lining people up and effectively fillibustering the POTUS in the Oval Office!
But I digress. You won't find such a "right" because it doesn't exist. Your voice in the government exists via the ballot box. The government is under no compulsion to entertain your childish drivel about bizarre rights you dreamed up because you think you deserve them. Once the election is over you have to wait your turn -- a difficult concept for entitled snowflakes to grasp, I know -- to get another chance in the next election.
In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Wow. This is what happens when people don't have a clue about the Constitution let alone law. Period.
You people are as stupid as they come.
Does the government have the right to refuse input on issues from specific people?
Yes - it's a right to free speech, not a right to be listened to. If you want a government to listen you have to use your freedom of speech to convince enough voters that you are correct then either they listen or you vote in a government which will at the next election.
Given the number of complete wackjobs out there with every insane point of view you can think of plus a few more it would be madness to require a government to listen to input from everyone. Having to persuade a reasonable number of the population that you know what you are talking about before a government will listen is a very reasonable filter. After all, if you can't persuade your fellow citizens you are unlikely to be able to persuade a government.
Given that the left organizes lists to make sure they only hear, discuss, and distribute official Party narrative, it's amusing to see them complain about their creation used against themselves.
Doubly amusing to see them try to enforce it on /.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
Legally approved answer: Hell no.
Actually a law professor who specializes in the 1st Amendment:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2017/06/06/is-realdonaldtrump-violating-the-first-amendment-by-blocking-some-twitter-users/?utm_term=.665d3b8e73d3
Eugene Volokh walks through the argument and his tenative initial reaction is that Trump on his personal twitter account is probably not violating the 1st Amendment. If it was the @POTUS account it would be different.
Keep watch on that site if you want to see how it debates out among Volokh and his fellow law professors.
Get a law degree and learn about "designated public forum[s]." Or don't. The caselaw is out there, and the right is rooted in the first amendment exactly as summarized in the article.
Freedom of speech is not the same as the freedom to force people to hear you.
If Trump were to use the government to silence these two assclowns, that would be obstructing their freedom of speech. Blocking them from his account because he doesn't want to hear what they have to say is not obstructing their freedom of speech - and they do not have a mandate that forces people to hear them.
Jesus.
Actually you missed on this one. Mr. Trump has decided to use Twitter as a way to be in communication in his capacity as President of the United States. In addition, he has used his own Twitter ID instead of the POTUS one that was established for these communications. As such, this becomes a channel to reach a government official and selective blocking of that channel becomes a Constitutional issue. The White House Press Secretary has confirmed that official pronouncements come from the RealDonaldTrump account, so he is now SOL with regards to trying to say it is private/personal.
By this logic, since the phone in the Oval Office is an "official" one for the President of the United States to use for communication, it's therefore a channel to reach a government official and the government can't block people from calling it.
But I'm pretty sure they do, and I'm pretty sure that no judge would agree that it's an unconstitutional infringement on your right to petition the government. There are many other means to do so, and this is a reasonable time, place, or manner restriction that is narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling government interest - preventing harassment of the President.
Look, I don't like the Cheeto any more than you do, but let's not go off the deep end and insist that it's unconstitutional if we don't have unlimited access to the President.
Because unless the word Twitter is spelled out in the constitution, the answer to the question is a huge NO.
Political fanatics think that people can be forced to listening to their rants.
For any other confused Americans too lazy to google it, "whinging" is apparently a British form of the word "whining". The 'g' is not silent. To your point, the ceaseless whining is a major distraction and threatens to doom us all to 4 more years of this asshole, but I think it hinges much more on the candidate that gets put up against him.
while [ 1 ]; do echo -n -e "\xe2\x95\xb$((($RANDOM&1)+1))"; done
The American public were treated to an entire YEAR of over-tho-top rants that Trump is a RACIST, a SEXIST, a HOMOPHOBE, a PUTIN STOOGE, a CON ARTIST, and basically the worst human being to ever exist. The public was told he would start internment camps, deport everybody with brown skin, destroy the planet, end all life on Earth, etc.
Now that the man is in office, the progressives are screaming their heads off, lighting fires, beating up anybody who supports Trump, breaking windows, sueing him in nearly every court district on nearly every subject, refusing to cooperate with his LEGAL orders and policies, infiltrating the government and leaking anything they can, all to short-circuit his administration.
They have made it so there is NO WAY that Trump, no matter how bad he is/gets, can POSSIBLY underperform and dissapoint millions of people in "fly over country" who voted for him. In fact, a large number of people who might have voted for a moderate Republican, but who stayed home or voted for Hillary because they accepted the Trump-is-supremely-evil meme, may well arrive at 2020 realizing that Trump has NOT killed millions of people and destroyed the economy and sold the nation out to Putin... and they may well end up voting for him to get a 2nd term. There is simply NOTHING awful to say about Trump that has not already been said, and like Al Gore's global meltdown prediction, all the terror-filled predictions of his administration will have been shown to be the fevered imaginings of the insane.
Keep it up, progressives, you are making Trump bulletproof.
Incidentally, when did "progressive" become a presumed-positive thing, other than back before the 1930s when we learned that as a political movement it leads to totalitarianism and mass-death? Progressive rust... progressive rot... progressive decay... progressive collapse... progressive cancer.... an awful lot of uses of the word "progressive" are the sorts of things happily avoided.
You have a right to be able to ask to give an input , but that can be refused. Go ahead and try to give your input to say, army generals, supreme court, or a representant... And see how receptive they are, best case you never get to send them a message, worst case they explicitely tells you they won#t hear you. Heck in the case of the SC, they can explicitely and legally tell you they refuse to hear your case ;).
In that particular case, I think it was more like the police station didn't want to spend millions on a legal fight they didn't really care about. Even if they ultimately won, that would mean they would get to delete comments off their Facebook page. What a victory.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Police do not apologize unless somebody is about to take away their donuts. And even then usually not.
The Doctor Is In!
Does the First Amendment grant you the right to enter my property and make me listen to what you have to say? No. In fact, I can have you arrested for trespassing. Therefore, it's not unconstitutional.
For crying out loud, snowflakes, you're making yourself look like idiots with these absurd claims which amount to nothing other than "I want to force you to have to listen to my shit" even though elsewhere you'll pitch a fucking fit about people wearing Halloween costumes on a college campus claiming that you shouldn't be "forced" to have to look at them. Hypocritical nonsense double-standard!
We'll make great pets
"The government" is obligated to listen to listen to everyone about everything, everytime, per 1st amendment.
Noticed how I dropped one point? "Everywhere". Nope. The government is mandated to designate channels for this communication, which are open to everyone, about everything and everytime. As long as these exist, it's free to create any other channels that have arbitrary restrictions.
All the disgruntled blocked Twitter users are still perfectly welcome to send emails to president@whitehouse.gov and as long as that work they should STFU about 1st amendment.
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First off, that's not how the constitution works.
You have rights until the government takes them away. That's how America works.
Secondly, the government is required to not discriminate based on a number of factors. Whether the POTUS (who is using his account in an official government capacity to give direction to executive orders) is discriminating will be left up to the courts, as usual.
The basis of this makes no sense.
"-- has transformed Twitter into a public forum with free speech protections."
Freedom of speech gives a person the right to set up their soapbox in a public place and talk.
It doesn't require anyone to listen.
It doesn't require private entities to provide the soapbox or the place.
Twitter is a private corporation.
It is not a public place.
Some may think it inapproiate for President Trump to use that forum for public business,
but I don't see how his doing so makes the forum public.
So what they are doing is not attempting to communicate *with* the president which should arguably be protected, and can still be done via private message presumably or some other means.
What they are actually doing is taking advantage of the large following of a public figure to spread their own message to the group. Their messages aren't "for the president" but for the people reading the tweets. As such, I do not see a constitutionally-protected right to take over a POTUS press conference to tell the world about my own platform.
It is obvious from a brief look that he doesn't listen to US people generally, and you can't train stupid.
Yeah that was about to happen. The money for a lawsuit defense wasn't coming out of their retirement fund.
Anyway, that's a stupid way to determine the quality of a lawsuit. It's far more interesting to get into the facts of the case. Do you think by creating a Facebook page, they created a public forum? and if so, what type of public forum? Should the courts create a new type of 'forum' to deal with this situation, or should it be stuck into a category (of forum) they've already created?
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
You have a constitutional right to voice complaints to the Government without fear of retaliation under the first amendment.
Voicing a complaint to the POTUS and having him block you from voicing further complaints or receiving official announcements on this official channel of government communication, in response is pretty retaliatory. (as confirmed by secretarial staff, his twitter handle is an official outlet for government statements, this is mentioned several times elsewhere on this very page)
The complaint that this violates 1st Amendment rights is pretty easy to understand.
The Court does not consider the argument that something is new just because "on a computer." They've been very clear about that.
There is long-standing precedent here. You have to introduce the argument that there even is a new element, and say what that element is. Just saying "twitter" or "facebook" doesn't introduce anything new.
There have been cases, for example, where a city council is having a meeting in rented private space, and refuses access to somebody with contrarian views. That violates their rights. Can't do it. The government isn't allowed to make deny access based on content. There is no equivocation there.
The argument that it is even questionable is pathetic. The reason it is untested when combined with the word "facebook" is that the idiots who blocked facebook users and deleted comments merely stated in public they thought it was OK and maybe something new, and then they talked to their lawyers who told them they're idiots, and then they came out an apologized and reversed the actions to prevent the lawsuit by fixing the problem. Nothing about that situation implies that there is legal uncertainty. That's absurd.
Well, that's definitely a better analysis lol
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Nope. It's either open to comments by all under content neutral standards or it's announcement only. Arbitrary restrictions are not permitted in a designated public forum.
Yet I am sure, since there's a bit more law in this area then the example that I provided. If you pay me, I'll teach you. Otherwise, I've given you more than enough resources and keywords to figure it out in your own.
Law fail. Perry Educ. Ass'n v. Perry Local Educators' Ass'n, 460 U.S. 37, 45 (1983), as explained in Section III.A. of Christian Legal Soc'y Chapter of the
Univ. of Cal., Hastings Coll. of the Law
v. Martinez, 130 S. Ct. 2971 (2010).
If it's published by the government, or a government official, and the general public is invited to read it, it becomes a public accomodation. Meaning, everyone is permitted to read it. Once that becomes, everyone is permitted to read it, except for black people, or everyone is able to read it except for redheads, it becomes unconstitutional discrimination. The government cannot ban someone from something the public is openly invited to read, because that person disagrees with the government. What is all of this "press" nonesense? This is an account that the GENERAL PUBLIC is openly able to follow. It's not a meeting in the White House. The general public is not invited to a meeting in the White House. The are invited to follow the President on Twitter. Man, I miss the elitist Internet. The days when they're were a few thousand people on the damn thing. I mean, you could just sit and watch the average user IQ plummet with ever increasing adoption rates. Fortunately, Facebook confines the worst of them in their digital ghetto, but now even Slashdot is inundated with idiots.
Idiocracy is way ahead of schedule.
Press conferences would end only when every single person present had their questions answered.
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Given that the left organizes lists to make sure they only hear, discuss, and distribute official Party narrative, it's amusing to see them complain about their creation used against themselves.
Doubly amusing to see them try to repeatedly enforce it on /.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
Non sequitur. Twitter posts are not press conferences, and Trump's posts remain open for retweets and replies by those he likes.
Also, nobody said that you couldn't use content-neutral controls like time limits. However, Trump is using his account for official business while selectively blocking only those who disagree with him.
Press conferences are a channel of gathering questions/requests for information from the public, providing answers on the spot. Only select members of public are authorized to participate, only selected from these get to ask the questions. Or do you have some more contrived definition of a channel of communication?
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Jesus H. Christ... another non-sequitur.
The controversy is not over a press conference, it's over a twitter account that allows followers, retweets, and replies, and for that matter one which Sean Spicer has publicly said is an official channel of the Presidency.
I don't give a damn about your theories concerning press conferences, because for Trump's twitter account every non-blocked member of the public is authorized to participate, and every non-blocked member gets to follow, retweet, and reply to tweets. I don't have to have some more contrived definition of a channel of communication because Sean Mother-F'in Spicer says that @realDonaldTrump is an official channel of communication and it's not operated remotely similarly to a press conference.
It's your burden to establish a valid analogy between a Twitter account and a press conference. You're the only one to bring it up in this thread. I utterly reject the premise.
Too bad, this channel is a social media account and not a press conference. Davison v. Loudoun County Board of Supervisors, 2016 WL 4801617 (E.D. Va. Sept. 14, 2016).
Once you open a limited public forum, you cannot exclude those qualified to participate on the basis that they are posting content or expression that you do not like. Full stop, per the Rosenberger Supreme Court case.
thanks
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
What about being disruptive, disorderly and a nuisance to the users and hosts?
Can I just walk into a limited public forum and start screaming through a megaphone whenever someone tries to speak? Can I claim 1st amendment protection on performing a DDoS comprising of political criticism messages?
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Define disruptive, disorderly, and a nuisance. Without using the content of the messages being posted.
Demonstrate that the blocked users screamed through a megaphone whenever anyone tried to speak. I'm thinking that it will be difficult given that this concerns a tweets, there's no volume, and users posting simultaneous replies is inherently part of the platform.
Demonstrate that @realDonaldTrump has even been DDoSed by replies to his tweets.
Keep desperately pretending that these users were blocked for doing anything that any @realDonaldTrump supporter was doing but for being critical instead of supportive in their tweets.
Prove otherwise. The messages are gone, so it's up to you to prove that the administration overstepped the bonds.
Are you going to say that setting cars on fire, as done on the inauguration day, is a protected free speech as well? Or setting a campus on fire, when a speaker for the conservatives is to give a speech? The "opponents" have a long and sordid history of violating the rules of civil discussion, so in absence of solid proofs that this instance specifically this was not the case, I'm strongly inclined to believe you're trying to dig up dirt on the administration where there is none.
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Ok.
There's two. Especially the second one.
You poor, ignorant sod. The messages are not gone -- the users were blocked. The messages remain. The news on this topic even includes copies of many...
Classic whataboutism. Ignored.
Labeling all members of a perceived group according to the worst anecdote that you can recall. Clear due process violation. Ignored.
Proofs provided.
While we're at it, please explain how one twitter message amongst 43K replies can disrupt the discussion